Friday, August 21, 2020
Cuenca Perspectives by Jim: CUENCA ECUADOR -- MICHAEL WAGNER -- MASTER CHEF
Cuenca Perspectives by Jim: CUENCA ECUADOR -- MICHAEL WAGNER -- MASTER CHEF: This is a video of Master Chef, Michael Wagner, a graduate of Cordon Blue Academy in his hometown of Lima, Peru. Michael lives with his wi...
CUENCA ECUADOR -- MICHAEL WAGNER -- MASTER CHEF
This is a video of Master Chef, Michael Wagner, a graduate of Cordon Bleu Academy in his hometown of Lima, Peru. Michael lives with his wife and three children in Cuenca, Ecuador. He is the top caterer chef in the city. The video shares Michael's background, his lessons in cooking classes available to the public and tourists. His culinary genius, and his depth and spread of dining and food selections which are available for all occasions, and breath-takingly presented in this video. Enjoy, a feast for the eyes!
Thursday, August 6, 2020
Cuenca Perspectives by Jim: THE PHENOMENAL IGUAZU FALLS OF BRAZIL - ARGENTINA
Cuenca Perspectives by Jim: THE PHENOMENAL IGUAZU FALLS OF BRAZIL - ARGENTINA: After Paul and Juana returned from the glaciers of Calafante, we spent a couple of days in Buenos Aries. We then flew to Iguazu Falls on the...
THE PHENOMENAL IGUAZU FALLS OF BRAZIL - ARGENTINA
After Paul and Juana returned from the glaciers of Calafante, we spent a couple of days in Buenos Aires. We then flew to Iguazu Falls on the Brazilian/Argentinian border, which was almost a two hour flight. I guess I didn't do my due diligence, because I was unaware that their were two international airports by Iquazu Falls. One airport on the Brazilian side is Foz de Iguacu/Cataratas International Airport, and is about five miles from the waterfalls. The Argentinian airport is called Cataratas del Iguazu International Airport, which is about the same distance as the Brazilian airport to the Iguazu Falls National Park.
We landed on the Argentinian side. Our Airbnb hostess who was going to pick us up at the airport; informed us when she learned our flight tickets were for the wrong airport, that we would have to rent a taxi and drive to the border, pass through customs with our passports, and then she would pick us up on the Brazilian side of customs. It turns out that the town on the Argentinian side is called Puerto Iguazu. While the town on the Brazilian side is Foz do Igacu, (Portuguese) and our Airbnb was in Foz do Igacu. It took almost an hour of riding with no more than ten minutes in customs, possibly because of wherever the customs office was located on the border, it may have taken us further away from the Falls.
Foz do Igacu is spread out like a typical suburb in the U.S. A car is needed to go practically everywhere. We were fortunate in that our hostess or her son, often took us to destinations. Otherwise we used taxis, since there is no Uber service in the town.
We did some grocery shopping, got settled in to our Airbnb, and rested for the next day's adventure.
The Falls are impossible to capture in one panoramic view. They extend quite a distance.
Below is the Iguazu River.
Wherever you find a you-tube link under a photo, click on it. You can experience the rushing sounds and sites of the moving falls.
Click on my Iguazu Falls 1 video here:
Click on my Iguazu Falls 2 video here:
Click on my Iguazu Falls 3 video here:
Click on my Iguazu Falls 4 video here:
Click on my Iguazu Falls 5 video here:
Juana and Jim
Click on my Iguazu Falls 6 video here:
Click on my Iguazu Falls 7 video here:
Below is an elevator that takes people down to the parking lot level.
People debate which side is it better to view the falls--the Ar gentian side or the Brazilian side? Although we only visited the Brazilian side, it is the best for panoramic views of the falls. On the Argentinian side it is best for getting up close and personal to the falls. There are four walking or hiking paths on the Argentinian side. The lowest brings you to below the falls, and you get very wet. The second path takes you above the falls, as if you are looking down immediately above them. The other paths offer different proximity to the falls as well. It will take at least one full day to visit the Argentinian side, and two days if you choose to explore and walk all four paths.
The afternoon tour in February (I try not to do morning anything, if I can avoid it on any day) was warm in the mid-80's, some humidity, and the forest around us was temperate. In this part of Brazil, we were not in a rain forest. Juana and I had great walking paths, and plenty of shade from the trees. Our guide would appear at different locations along the way to be sure we were all right, and she provided a very good background of what to expect before the hike began, as she drove us to the entrance for the water falls in the national park.
Paul returned to the Airbnb later. He was disappointed in the boat ride. He didn't get close enough under the falls to make it exciting. The ride was too long, and those who were on the tour with him and chose not to do the boat ride, basically walked on their own or stayed on the dock waiting for the boat to return. Paul also said their hiking paths offered little shade, so the sun made it very hot. I would recommend the half day tour on the Brazilian side that Juana and I took. The Iguazu Falls are spectacular, and a must see on any visit to Argentina/Brazil.
The following link will take you to the folder where all seven videos of the Iguazu Falls appear together in You Tube:
Friday, July 24, 2020
Cuenca Perspectives by Jim: CALAFANTE, ARGENTINA: GLACIER NATIONAL PARK
Cuenca Perspectives by Jim: CALAFANTE, ARGENTINA: GLACIER NATIONAL PARK: Well, I need to progress toward completion of my trip to Argentina, even if no one is traveling at this time. There is always hope for ...
CALAFANTE, ARGENTINA: GLACIER NATIONAL PARK
Well, I need to progress toward completion of my trip to Argentina, even if no one is traveling at this time. There is always hope for another time in the future for those who enjoy traveling.
When Paul, Juana, and I arrived in Buenos Aires, they spent a couple of days with me. Paul and Juana, being from Ecuador, had only seen snow once before in their lives in the high altitude area of the Andes in Ecuador. They were excited to go to Calafante, Argentina to the National Glacier Park. The National Park is located southwest of Buenos Aries almost to the tip of Argentina and close to the Chilean border. In air miles, Calafante is approximately 1,266 miles from Buenos Aires and takes about 3 and 1/4th hours to fly.
I have seen all the ice and snow and cold I ever want to experience in my life being from the Midwestern U.S.A. I chose to remain in Buenos Aries, and complete our plans for the last part of our trip in Argentina. Paul and Juana were off, stayed the first night upon their arrival, explored the National Park the next day, slept in Calafante that night, and by the following afternoon, they returned to Buenos Aires.
Juana, being older, took a different trip from Paul. Paul went with a group who were allowed on the glacier itself.
The silence was something to behold, and the quiet and stillness was greatly enjoyed by both Paul and Juana, especially after their time in the large noisy cities of Lima and Buenos Aries and being around such large crowds of people. Often the sounds to be heard were from voices in the group, or the crunching of snow as they walked.
The tranquility and beauty of the ice and snow made Paul and Juana's visit to the glaciers the highlight of their trip to Peru and to Argentina. Both very much enjoyed the town of Calafante, and wished they could live there as well.
In the photo below, you can see the group as they trek through the glacier surrounded by its open isolation.
People often think that South America is hot the year round, which is generally not the case. The Equator, located in northern South America and running through Ecuador, and the attitude of the Andes, as well as ocean currents all play a role in the heat index in South America. The further one moves south of the Equator the more likely, like in Argentina, one will experience the four changes of the seasons. Buenos Aires, for example, can get snow and get cold in their winter months, which would be the North American summer months; but even then it will not be as cold and snowy as the North American Midwest or Northeast in the United States. As one continues south toward the tip of Argentina, which is also the tip of South America, one is getting closed to Antarctica; and therefore, glaciers like in Calafante become a reality.
Naw, there were no penguins in sight. I just threw this photo in to amuse you or to amuse me.
*Photos taken and provided by Paul Tacuri.
Sunday, April 26, 2020
Cuenca Perspectives by Jim: BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA--BACKGROUND AND TEATRO COL...
Cuenca Perspectives by Jim: BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA--BACKGROUND AND TEATRO COL...: By Tuesday morning on February 11th; Paul, Juana, and I said goodbye to Leo at the airport as he returned to Chicago. Then the three of us...
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