zapatos rojo

I can’t believe today is our sixth full day in Buenos Aires. I’m so glad we had the opportunity to spend over a week in the city — I really have a sense of the city and all of its neighborhoods now, and feel like we’ve really gotten to do all of the things we initially listed out during our trip planning phase.

Today we had a much later start since we didn’t head to bed until after 2 AM. After our breakfast of coffee and media lunas — the Argentine equivalent of miniature, sweeter croissants — we took the good ol’ 152 almost its entire route to the El Caminito section of La Boca, a very touristy area of the same neighborhood where Erica lives. El Caminito is known as the birthplace of tango, and the two, small streets of the area are easily recognized by their brightly painted buildings.

Alison and I have been doing slightly touristy things, but for the most part, we’ve been wandering on our own, not taking group tours and avoiding being stared at too dramatically since Alison speaks fluently. In El Caminito men were talking to the three of us left and right, pushing fliers for their restaurants in our faces, asking if we wanted to stand in tango poses for photos, asking where we were from and telling us we were muy linda, very beautiful. After ignoring their cat calls we took lots of photos and wandered through the various art studios and souvenir stores.

Today was the first day we had sunshine and blue skies, and aside from the photos I posted of San Telmo, might have been my favorite photo day. We opted for lunch at Proa, a beautiful modern art space with an adorable cafe, delicious sandwiches, and very enticing large couches and low tables.

Gorgeous restaurant (and incredible view) from our lunch cafe

After a leisurely two hour lunch, and a delicious brownie, we got in a cab down to the Congressional Plaza. The Congressional building looks similar to the U.S. White House, with a beautiful dome atop the center of the building. After asking two different security guards about the tours for the day and getting two, very different answers, we returned to ask yet more questions. The guard, instead of being annoyed by the silly gringa chicas, decided to personally walk us into the building, through the temporary special art exhibit and show us the beautiful chamber room where all 257 deputies sit and vote. He let us look more at the art and then we made our way out and back downstairs — a perfect little peek inside!

From there we walked north on Callero Ave and did some shopping, and I purchased a beautiful pair of deep rojo (red) lace up oxfords with a wood kitten heel. I’m already obsessed, and can’t wait to wear them! Alison wanted the same pair in camel, but they were out of her size, so we’re on a mission to check out one of their other locations to find them for her.

From there we hoped on the metro a few stops back to our hostel, grabbed some olives, cheese and bread and are currently relaxing in the lobby of our B&B before picking our dinner destination!

I’m working on photos now, and will get up a second post soon with links to those!

Mas patatas

I am sad to admit that though I made lofty promises of a crazy Saturday night spent out on the town, Alison and I had a delicious Italian dinner a few blocks from our hostel and promptly walked back to our B&B, climbed into our beds, and passed out. In my defense, I equate my exhaustion to not napping. Oh well! I’m thoroughly enjoying the carefree attitude and relaxation that come with being on vacation — I’m here to see South America and the cities we’re staying in, but I’m also here to relax, and if that means heading to bed by 12:30 on Saturday night, so be it!

Sunday — Day 4

Sunday was the same overcast, mid-60’s weather we’ve been having all week, but despite the gloom we made our way down to Plaza de Mayo and the Casa Rosada for a formal tour. Thankfully we had a bilingual tour guide, who did our entire tour in English and Spanish (poor woman — as a tour guide I truly appreciate her dedication!) so I was able to understand most of the explanations. The Casa is a much larger building inside than I had even anticipated. One thing Alison & I have noticed throughout the trip is how deceptive Argentinian architectural facades are — we go to restaurants and discover they’re actually quite deep and expansive (or even two or three levels) and realize that buildings we knew were big are actually vast, with countless rooms we had no idea existed.

After our tour, and a million photos later, we met up with Erica to wander the San Telmo market. When asking everyone for advice on the best things to do in BA, hands down the number one recommendation was to check out this market — the equivalent of a massive flea market meets farmers market down a single, quite narrow, cobblestone street, where you can buy anything your heart desires. Three packs of Nike socks for 10 pesos (approx $2.50), beautiful handmade silver jewelry, floral scarves, leather jackets and purses, the list goes on and on. Not to mention the homemade, incredible, pollo empanadas, fresh squeezed orange juice and plethora of kettle corn and cotton candy.

We munched on street food, perused the endless stalls and attempted not to stumble on the cobblestones and loose one another in the crowds. Despite the rain clouds that threatened most of the afternoon, aside from a few minutes of drizzle we lucked out. I bought a beautiful, hand-carved, wooden key holder for my new NYC apartment (!!), Alison got a gorgeous pair of leather, kitten heeled, lace up booties and a cute apron for her boyfriend’s mom, and Erica bought socks as to avoid doing laundry for another day.

After wandering the market we walked down into La Boca, the downtown neighborhood where Erica is staying. It has a bit of a bad rap for being unsafe and not a great place to be at night, but her apartment is off the main street and we felt completely fine walking to/from her neighborhood. Our goal was to head to the Boca Junior futbol stadium to buy tickets for the 7 PM game, but after multiple, fruitless inquisitions with police officers standing guard on every corner and walking through crowds of staring Boca Junior fans and we decided to head back to Erica’s apartment (just a few blocks from the stadium) to rest our feet and make a game plan.

A few google searches later helped us determine that tickets almost always sell out on the day of the game, and are upwards of $200 pesos to sit in the safer sections, so we decided at $40 US it wasn’t worth it, and instead stayed in and made delicious homemade chicken parm, pasta and broccoli.

The true Argentine adventure came after dinner, when we decided to grab the 152 bus down Santa Fe back to our B&B. Little did we know that despite the massive crowds at the half a dozen bus stops along the street near Erica’s apartment, the buses don’t make their regular stops on game days. Unbenownest to us, we stood for at least 30 minutes, probably longer, waiting for the bus that simply never showed up. After Alison spoke to a woman who had been waiting an hour and a half, and overhearing two American students talking about how long they had been waiting, we gave up and hailed a cab.

We were hesitant the driver would rip us off, or worse, but luckily he was an extremely friendly guy and he and Alison spoke in Spanish the entire cross-city drive. A cab ride like that would have cost an easy $80 or $100 in Boston, but we paid $62 pesos, or $17 dollars. Granted the bus would have cost us $2.50 pesos (50 cents) each, but we decided all things considered, it was a well spent $8 bucks each.

Monday, Day 5

To start our week off, Alison and I set an earlier alarm than we’ve been used to and got up for breakfast and to shower around 9:30. We made our way down to San Telmo, the neighborhood with the street market we were at yesterday, and found the El Zanjon site. After discovering their website has false information (tours in English and Spanish are, in fact, not offered every hour on the hour) we had an hour to kill before the next English tour, so we made our way down to Puerto Madero, the waterfront section of the city.

The waterfront reminds me a bit of Boston’s — very up and coming, with more modern apartments, upscale restaurants and classy bars. The water, however, is a putrid brown color, and not exactly picturesque. We had another very gloomy day (sans the 10 minutes of sunshine where we finally glimpsed some blue sky) so taking pictures was a bit of a challenge, but we wandered for about 40 minutes before making our way back to the site.

El Zanjon is an absolutely beautiful brick structure which has been reconstructed after a 20 year excavation project discovered the building, hiding beneath a crumbling and ruined facade. The structure, constructed in the 1830’s, belonged to a single wealthy family who held multiple African slaves, and who lived in the home until the 1870s, when they fled and abandoned the building to avoid a Yellow Fever epidemic which struck in San Telmo. The structure was then partially rebuilt as a tenant house, where 23 families lived. In 1985, when someone bought the land to develop a restaurant, they discovered sloping floors and began to dig. What they discovered was beautiful arched brick tunnels, built decades ago to protect a forked river that ran through, what were then, the outskirts of town.

Over the last 20 years, a private estate has worked tirelessly to restore the property, rebuild the brick walls and tunnels, and discover as much about the buildings and properties as they can. It was a steep $15 dollar tour, but well worth it to see the beautiful reconstruction efforts.

After our tour we came back to Palermo, and grabbed lunch down the street where we had our first language misunderstanding — despite Alison’s fluent Spanish. We each ordered sandwiches but on the menu, Alison’s was listed as coming with french fries, and mine was not. Alison asked what the portion size on the fries was and our waiter, in a very fast, rushed Spanish, responded “un pocito” — small. After confirming, at least we thought, that mine did not come with patatas, Alison ordered me a side of what we were told were sweet potato fries.

Ten minutes later, two plates, loaded with large sandwiches and huge helpings of thick cut  french fries, arrived at our table. And then, a few seconds later, a second dish, heaped with more french fries, was brought to the table. All we could do was laugh at the massive amounts of potatoes we had to consume. They were good, but definitely not sweet potatoes, at least not as far as we could tell. Luckily, Carolyn (Alison’s sister) was arriving from New York in just a few hours, so we brought her back a snack.

After catching up with Carolyn, we headed out into Palermo to wander and show Carolyn our neighborhood, which both Alison and I are completely obsessed with. Picture Soho boutiques lining every street, with gorgeous trees and cobblestone streets. Aside from the taxi drivers racing down the roads and a few piles of dog poop you have to carefully avoid, Palermo Soho is picturesque and beautiful, and I’m so glad we’re staying out in this section of town.

We did some shopping — Alison bought a beautiful tan wrap dress — and tried on some ridiculous items (floor length horse print skirts, for instance), then came back to do some research and decision-making about the Uruguay portion of our trip. We booked Buquebus ferries from Buenos Aires to Montevideo and then from Colonia to Buenos Aires. We’ll be taking a bus between Montevideo and Colonia, and are flying out of BA to head north to Iguazu after that portion of our trip. Around 10:30, we left the B&B to grab dinner at our first parillio — the famous Argentine steakhouses.

We picked Don Julio’s: highly acclaimed, well rated and only 3 blocks from our B&B. Our food was incredible — we shared a bottle of Malbec, a delicious salad, and three entrees: a half chicken, a rib eye steak and an order of pumpkin and spinach ravioli. We were up to our eyeballs in food, but everything was absolutely delicious, and our total (with tip) was only $380 pesos — $82, less than $30 each!

It’s 2:30 AM and I’m exhausted, but pictures will come tomorrow, I promise!

First three days in Buenos Aires

It’s hard to believe we’ve already been in Buenos Aires for 3 days — they’ve flown by! I think the number one thing about Argentine culture that I love is how laid back and genuinely helpful everyone seems to be. I know we’re in a relatively safe and sheltered neighborhood, and that there are areas of the city that are very rough, but overall all of the people we’ve met have been invested and interested in helping us out, which I truly appreciate.

We’re staying in Palermo Soho, the southern section of the Palermo neighborhood, located west of the more central, downtown area. Our B&B is through a simple, almost hidden, wooden door on a smaller side street, and the interior has gorgeous exposed brick and spacious rooms. We’re in a triple (I’m sleeping on the top of a bunk bed — Tawonga throwback!) so that when Alison’s sister gets here on Monday we can all share a single room. There are only 4 or 5 other rooms in the B&B, which is owned and operated by two sisters, both of whom are so so sweet and incredibly helpful — they give us great advice and suggestions as to what to do, where to go and, most importantly, how to get there!

Day one — Thursday

On our first day, we walked north east to check out the botanical gardens and the zoo, since they were both close to where we are staying. We were a bit underwhelmed by both — the zoo is massive with a wide range of animals, but isn’t well kept like American zoos, and most of the animals looked sad and a bit out of place, which was strange. Throughout the zoo grounds, there were hundreds of guinea pig-like creatures that looked like a cross between a jack rabbit, rodent and overgrown squirrel. We could not figure out what they were to save our lives, despite asking one of the zoo workers who was far from helpful. After lots of googling, I discovered they are a breed of Patagonian Mara. Sort of creepy, mostly cute — Alison and I were just glad they didn’t attack us for food the way we thought they would!

Here are my pictures from the zoo & botanical gardens, though they’re not exactly my best.

We walked down to Plaza Italia and split a veggie calzone for late lunch, then window shopped as we wandered back to our B&B, perusing all sorts of local adorable Palermo shops.

After some relaxing, we made our way to La Fabrica del Taco, a Mexican taco restaurant. A bit more expensive than we were anticipating, but absolutely delicious nonetheless. Alison ordered a Michelada — beer mixed with salt, lemon juice and hot sauce — which was actually way better than it sounds. My mouth is watering just thinking about it!

Day two — Friday

On Friday we braved the Buenos Aires bus system and took the 152 all the way down Santa Fe Ave. to San Martin Plaza, where we began a walking tour of downtown BA I’d found in my guidebook. We saw the plaza and walked down Florida St., a pedestrian avenue filled with leather and clothing shops, and then saw the Colon theatre (pictured below), one of the oldest theaters in BA, where you can still see orchestra, opera and ballet performances.

When it started to rain, we had a quick bite to eat at their cafe to avoid getting soggy, then wandered down to the judiciary building and out to Plaza de Mayo. Friday was a national holiday in Argentina, so much of the city was closed, but there was a huge celebration being set up in the Plaza, where the Casa Rosada (the BA version of the white house, painted pink) is. All along Ave de Mayo were street vendors selling empanadas, jewelry, Argentinian flags, and other knick knacks. We wandered along the fair and then up to Cafe Tortoni, one of the most famous BA cafes. We had heard great things about the cafe, but I think we ordered wrong — since we were craving salt instead of sweet we opted for a cheese platter, which was far from impressive. I did get to try Quilmes, the Argentinean equivalent of Bud Light, which is just as tasteless, and also unimpressive. We were pretty disappointed, but we stayed and relaxed for a bit before hopping on the metro back to our B&B.

Though our intentions were to get back to room and relax for a bit before meeting up with my friend Erica, who is in BA for a month doing research for her Northeastern honors thesis, we accidentally fell asleep for 3 hours. Being a tourist is tiring!

The other interesting thing about BA — which I can’t decide if I love or hate — is their timing for dinner. We met up with Erica for dinner at Bio, a vegetarian restaurant in our neighborhood, around 10 PM, and even then, we were early for a dinner seating! Everyone in BA starts their night at midnight, and parties through the entire night, until 8 or 9 AM. It’s certainly a whole other world, especially compared to the 1:45 AM last call in Boston.

After a leisurely and delicious dinner, we met up with Katie, a friend of Justin, a mutual friend that both Erica and I both know from Northeastern. The four of us drank two delicious bottles of Malbec at an outdoor table in Plaza Serrano and had a great time chatting and getting to know each other. By 2:30 AM we were exhausted and ready for bed, so we headed back to our B&B to crash.

Day three — Saturday

Because we had a late Friday night, we set a later alarm this morning and didn’t end up eating breakfast until after 11:30. We decided to try taking the bus again, but this time we almost got on the 110 in the wrong direction. Thankfully, the bus driver was smart enough to ask where we were trying to go, and when we explained he quickly told us we needed to get off and cross the street. Oops!

We took the bus down to the Recolata neighborhood, where we saw what we thought was a gorgeous old church. After wandering inside, we discovered it was actually an engineering school building and not a church at all. I didn’t get a picture, but this is what it looks like from the outside: a gorgeous old building!

We made our way to the Recolata cemetery, one of the more famous tourist sites in the city, where many famous and wealthy Argentinians are buried. The cemetery isn’t what I had pictured and is drastically different from American burial grounds — coffins are held in ornately decorated mausoleums above ground. There are no headstones and no grassy fields, instead there are thousands of mausoleums: row after row everywhere you look and turn, all lined up adjacent to one another with neat paths in between. Many have huge statues or bust sculptures in front of them, but others don’t have much upkeep, and their gates are rusted and covered in cobwebs. It was certainly an interesting visit, and though I appreciated the beautiful structures, because we wasn’t familiar with any of the individuals buried there, it was a bit strange for Alison and I to be wandering through a plot of mausoleums.

From there we spent a while checking out the neighboring church and wandering through the artisan market that had been set up outside. We walked past over a hundred stalls selling mostly hand-made jewelry, leather goods, children’s clothing… really anything you can imagine, including a plethora of empanada stands. I bought a beautiful pair of earrings made with inca rose stone, and Alison and I each bought beautiful silver link bracelets.

Erica came and met us in the area and we wandered a bit through the neighborhood before settling on a cafe that served sandwiches and delicious looking helado (ice cream). We sat and ate and relaxed for almost two hours before we decided we were exhausted and ready to head back to the B&B to nap. Siestas are addicting! We’re still deciding what the plan for tonight should be — we may do another late dinner and wine like last night before we crawl into bed, or head to a tango club Alison’s friend suggested. Or, maybe we’ll experience the Argentine party life and stay out until all hours of the morning — TBD. I’ll keep you posted!

Pictures!

Hi friends —

I’m still trying to figure out the best way to post photos from my trip. I had initially thought Flickr was the best way, but the free account limits you to 200 photos, and I’m already up to 175. Do you think it’s worth it to pay the $7/3 months, but then have my photos disappear at the end of the summer? I had thought about using Picasa via Google+, but does that option give you a public link? Anybody have any suggestions? It’s a pain to upload a ton of photos into wordpress posts, but I’d love a way to embed a slideshow or photostream into my posts…

Does anybody have suggestions?

In the mean time, there are a few dozen photos from day 1 in Santiago up on Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/35324653@N08/sets/72157629868587566/

Days 2 & 3 in Chile

On my second day in Chile, Alison and I took a bus out to the coastal town of Valparaiso, an hour and a half north-west of Santiago. Valpo, as the city is often called, is situated on dozens of steep hills right off the coast, all of which are densely populated and covered in brightly painted houses and apartments. Prior to the existence of the Panama Canal, all major ships had to pass through Valparaiso, so the city was very wealthy and well-developed in the 19th century. Over the last decade, it has become more run down, but the vibrant colors of the houses and street graffiti are an incredible sight nonetheless.

We spent the day wandering the hills (me taking way too many photos and Alison waiting patiently) and finding the best lookouts, then stopped at an adorable cafe for coffee and a quick sugar hit before heading back down the hills toward the bus station. Everywhere you look in Santiago and Valpo there are dozens of wild dogs. They’re all relatively tame, and for the most part just like to lounge in the sun, mostly in the way of everything and everyone.

Once we got back into Santiago, we took the Metro back to Alison’s to make dinner — grilled chicken with a side of roasted onions, peppers & potatoes. Then came the task of packing: somehow fitting 18 days of clothing (plus shoes and toiletries) into our relatively small backpacking backpacks. Several hours, and many tough decisions of what to leave and bring, later, we passed out from exhaustion.

On Wednesday, we spent the morning walking over to downtown Santiago, where Alison gave me the grand tour of all the important and historical buildings of the city, including the Gabriela Mistral Center, a beautiful new center of the arts the city has developed in the last year. We met Ignacio for lunch at the Cultural Center and then headed to the Claro (a cellphone provider) store, where I got a lesson in Chilean patience. Alison and I were put on a bit of a wild goose chase, since she wanted to unlock her phone so it could be used with an Argentinian SIM card/chip, but every Claro store we entered told us we had to go to a different location, even though the one before had told us we needed to be at the other location instead. Finally, we reached the right place and then had to stand in line for 45 minutes. However, unlike in America, the dozens of people ahead and behind us in line were not impatient whatsoever. Nobody huffed or puffed or even complained, they just stood there in silence, waiting patiently. A very bizarre scene.

Once Alison’s phone was successfully unlocked we did some more wandering up onto Santa Lucia Hill, a small hill in the middle of the city that is home to a gorgeous yellow and white structure that looks almost like a mansion, and Fort Hidalgo, a fort overlooking the entire city of Santiago. I fell in love with the views and the architecture, and couldn’t take enough pictures. Then we went back to Alison’s apartment, where we had an hour to finish packing and organizing before heading to the airport. Once we got in our taxi we zipped straight to SCL, checked in and then had a very gourmet dinner at Ruby Tuesdays, considered a high-class steak joint down in Chile, and an expensive one at that. We had a very easy flight over to BA, and once we paid our $160 entry fee into the country (steep, I know!) we found our arranged taxi driver, who was very chatty and gave us a great tour of the city as he drove the 33 kilometeres to our bed and breakfast. After the owner showed us our room, we both crawled into bed and knocked out!

Day 1: Santiago!

Today is my last day in Santiago before we head out to Buenos Aires (and then to Uruguay and Iguazu Falls) for 18 days. I’ve been staying in Alison & her boyfriend Ignacio’s gorgeous studio apartment — they live on the 13th floor of a high rise building in Santiago Centro (downtown Santiago) a block out of Providencia. They have absolutely incredible views of the Andes and Santiago skyline, not to mention a gorgeous rooftop pool! Of course, their rent is 1/3 of what I’ll be paying when I move out to NYC. Nuts!

Anyways, they picked me up at the airport on Monday morning and we had no trouble finding each other. Luckily all of the taxi drivers with signs waiting to pick people up from the terminal mostly left me alone — I’ve been told I don’t stand out immediately as a gringa (the slightly offensive Spanish word for a white, American foreigner) which is a good thing in some ways, but when people start to speak rapidly in Spanish to me assuming I understand, I can do nothing but give them a blank stare.

After I showered and we ate some breakfast, we left their apartment to do some wandering. It was a national holiday in Chile on Monday, so the streets were eerily quiet — Ignacio and Alison were both shocked at how dead the city was. It was easy to wander down to Plaza Italia and down through the city, past a beautiful library where Alison often does work. We grabbed lunch at an Italian eatery (pizza and pasta are very popular in Chile) and then made our way over to a really cool sculpture garden. Santiago has a ton of public spaces and gardens that are integrated well into the city — it makes the city seem much more accessible, which is definitely nice. From there we walked up to the base of the San Cristóbal Hill, which seems rather out of place when you first get to the city, as its this huge hill rising out of nowhere. It houses the city’s public zoo, an amphitheater and apparently, a huge statue of the virgin Mary. We considered making our way to the top, but it was a smoggy day so we knew the views wouldn’t be great, so we decided against it.

After using a public restroom (which you have to pay 200 pesos to use) we walked back down to an ice cream shop (another incredibly popular food in Chile) through a beautiful residential neighborhood, where a lot of richer Chileans live. Similar to other cities and countries in the world, Santiago has a lot of stray dogs that wander the streets. The majority of them mind their own business and don’t bother you, but it’s strange/sad to see homeless dogs, who are often absolutely adorable, just hanging out on the streets.

After ice cream, the three of us found ourselves exhausted and in a bit of a food coma, so we came back to Alison’s apartment for a quick siesta. Ignacio went to a friend’s to watch Game of Thrones (he’s obsessed) and we went out to meet two of her girlfriends for Indian food. Now, I know what your thinking. You came all the way to Chile and you’re eating every type of cuisine but South American food! The problem, mainly, is that Chilean food is mostly meat and potatoes, so it’s hard to eat out when you’re vegetarian (or, semi vegetarian in my case, since carne and pollo are often mixed here). Considering how far we are from India, and how spoiled my best friend Swati has made me in ordering incredible Indian food for me, our food was delicious and perfectly spicy, though a bit heavy. I did laugh a little with the restaurant owner, in perfect English, welcomed me back and was shocked when I told him I’d never been to his restaurant before!

An interesting thing about South America is the customer service policies. Here, you have to practically flag down your waiter or waitress like it’s a sport, and you tip a very standard 10% everywhere you go, definitely not like in the US.

Of course it’s the beginning of the trip and I’m already a day behind in blogging, but I promise tonight when I’m on the plane I’ll write about our day in Valparaiso yesterday, which was incredible and there will be more photos up on Flickr soon! xoxo

And I’m off!

I’m sitting in the Toronto airport in disbelief. In the last 72 hours, I put everything I own into cardboard moving boxes, shipped a handful of clothing to Los Angeles, sold all of my furniture, and loaded a 14 foot uHaul filled with all of those boxes (plus a few suitcases) and drove it from Boston to a storage facility in Middletown, Connecticut. I can now confirm that my life fits neatly into a 5 x 10 foot storage room — a very surreal feeling. I painted my gorgeous turquoise and hot pink walls back to a sad, dull, white, donated a slew of stuff to Goodwill and Pine Street Inn, and said goodbye to some of my best friends and the city I’ve learned to call home over the past 6 years. It’s so surreal that just a few months ago I was dreaming of quitting my job and traveling the world, and now the day I’ve been anticipating is finally here.

I spent my quick hour and a half flight up north to Canada (and yes, it is backwards that I had to fly north to then just fly straight back down south, but these flights were $500 cheaper than the other option, so I’m just as happy this way!) reading my Peru guidebook. I can’t wait to spend 11 days on my own, exploring the country. I’m especially excited to spend some time in Cusco — I’ve heard nothing but fabulous things, and I can’t wait to get there.

Thanks to my online media classes at Northeastern, I remembered how to create a personalized Google map project, so last week, I made a fun one for my trip with all the destinations I’ll be visiting. Not too shabby for 5 weeks! My itinerary isn’t completely solidified yet, but my basic plans are as follows:

May 20/21 – Fly down to Santiago from Boston

May 21 – 24 – Greeted at the airport by Alison & Ignacio! Then spending time in Santiago exploring/relaxing.

May 24 – In the evening, fly out to Buenos Aires with Alison

May 24 – June 9 – Spend 8-9 days in Buenos Aires, with two sidetrips – one to Uruguay to see Montevideo and Colonia, and one to Iguazu Falls to hike and explore.

June 10 – First thing in the morning, fly back to Santiago, spend the day relaxing/doing laundry and possibly meeting a family friend.

June 11 – At 8 AM, fly up to Cuzco, Peru via Lima. Spend the rest of the day adjusting to the altitude and exploring.

June 12 – Spend the day in Cusco. Possibly take a half day tour of the four Inca ruins sites surrounding the city. Get to the tour offices for my trek pre-departure briefing.

June 13 – June 16 – For four days, I’ll be hiking, rafting, biking and ziplining my way from Cusco to Machu Picchu. This trip is going to be a huge personal challenge in terms of all the physical activity, but I absolutely cannot wait. I won’t be too out of my comfort zone since we’ll be staying in hostels every night, which I’m definitely thankful for! I booked the trek with a well known tour group, Green Toad Bus Tours, you should click that link and check out my trip — it looks phenomenal!

June 16 – 17 – I’ll spend the rest of the day I arrive back from my trek plus the 17th

June 18 – Through the same tour company, I’ll be taking an 8 hour bus ride (don’t worry, we stop four times for lunch and visits to ruins and tour sites on the way down!) to Puno, on Lake Titicaca. The ride is part of a bus hop plan, which takes you from Cusco down to La Paz in Bolivia, with stops in Puno and Copacabana.

June 19 – Spend the day in Puno, with a half day trip out to the Uros Islands, a floating island in the middle of the lake. Then I’ll hop on a 3 hour bus ride to Copacabana and cross the border into Bolivia!

June 20 – 21 – I’ll have a day and a half to spend in Copacabana, probably checking out more floating islands on Lake Titicaca and doing more exploring. Then on the evening of the 21, I take another short bus ride down to La Paz.

June 22 – June 24 — Three days of exploring La Paz that I absolutely cannot wait for. On my to do list is more research on this leg of the trip since my guide books don’t include Bolivia, but I got some great advice from a friend who was there and I’m very excited that I’ll have the chance to be in a fifth country!

June 25 – I will spend the morning in Santiago, then head to the airport to get on my Air Canada flight to Los Angeles!

Goodbye, Boston

I am doing the unthinkable.

Well, that’s a little dramatic. But I am taking a huge risk, one that many people, including my parents, think I’m insane for taking.

Today, I put my two weeks notice in at work — without a new job offer. I rented a uHaul, reserved a storage unit and began to list all my furniture on Craigslist. I organized a goodbye party with friends, booked a Zipcar for a donation trip to Goodwill, and began taping up boxes.

As a Northeastern University graduate, I was driven toward career goals from the moment I stepped onto campus at age 18. Completing 3 co-ops and watching older classmates graduate to secure jobs in our field, Northeastern students are compelled to do the same — searching for employment the second we begin our senior years, ensuring that when we walk out of Boston’s TD Bank North Garden on the first Friday of May, we have a solidified answer to the dreaded “what are you doing after graduation?” question we all came to despise during our last semester.

And as a class of 2011 graduate, I did just that. A month before graduation, I secured two jobs — both of which were at companies where I had co-oped. I joined the working world three weeks after graduation. Don’t get me wrong, I’m so thankful. I can’t tell you how many people I know who are my age, or older, frantically searching for jobs, especially in the journalism industry. And here I am, giving up two of them.

TechTarget has been an incredible working environment for me to learn and grow. My time there taught me what I am passionate about, where I really see myself in 5 years, and that, most importantly, I still have a lot to learn. I acquired valuable online media and journalism skills that will serve me well in my career, and I formed friendships and working relationships with dozens of wonderful people.

Blogging for Boston.com as a nightlife writer has been, literally, a dream come true. I have the city of Boston at my fingertips, have had the opportunity to connect with some truly incredible people, and a perfect excuse to spend multiple nights a week out on the town. There are billions of young, aspirational bloggers out there, putting their posts onto the interwebs, but I was lucky enough to have Boston.com in my URL, and to have weeks where some of my posts saw upwards of 10,000 visits.

So why give that up?

At nearly 24 years old, I have the travel bug. I want to get out, I want to see the world. Upon moving across the country in 2006, I’ve strived to ensure that I have lived my life with no regrets, but one of my biggest thus far is not studying abroad for a full semester while I was in college.

Alison, one of my best friends from high school, has been living in South America for the past year and a half, and has decided she wants to spend a month traveling in the southern hemisphere before moving back to the US. The cards fell into place and I couldn’t resist. Did I mention she speaks fluent Spanish?

So after much debate and contemplation, and a few tears, I’ve decided to take the jump. On May 20, I’m flying down to Santiago, Chile to explore her new hometown. From there, we will be traveling through Argentina for 3 weeks. She has a trip planned with her parents at the end of June, so we’ll part ways and I’ll spend 10 days in Peru (in Lima, Cuzco and at Machu Picchu) before I fly back home to Los Angeles. I’ll spend a few weeks at home in LA, possibly do a mini west coast road trip with a friend from college, then fly back east to New York City, which I’ve officially decided will be my next home base.

I’m nervous. Actually, to tell the truth, I’m terrified. All I can think is “What if I’m destined to be unemployed for the rest of my life?” But I know that’s not true. And, more than anything, I’m excited. I can’t wait to travel in South America, in countries that I know close to nothing about. I’m excited to experience the culture, to be immersed in Spanish, to actually see Buenos Aires and Iguazu Falls in person, and not just in photographs. No one I know has ever said they regret taking time off to travel, and that’s exactly what I plan to do. Take in the world, learn to live out of a very small suitcase for a month (that will be the real challenge), and learn that much more about myself.

Of course, I’ll be blogging the entire adventure, so be sure to check back here for posts, pictures, and updates of my travels. I’ll leave you with some inspiration:

‎”You can’t connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something — your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.” — Steve Jobs