Sunday, May 30, 2010

Time Spent Not Traveling

Since going to La Serena a couple of weeks ago I've been staying in Santiago for the weekends. School has been a bit busy with presentations, papers and tests, but now it really feels like we're in the last leg of classes.

Outside of school I've had a lot of funny lately. Some of us had a girl's night making spaghetti and brownie mix while watching movies. I also ate dinner at the restaurant Agua Para Chocolate when a family visiting their daughter here took a bunch of us out to eat. It's a really lovely restaurant with amazing food. There was also a costume birthday party, I went as Professor Quirrell from Harry Potter (hey, I didn't pack thinking "what would make a good costume?").

Then yesterday we had a university sponsored trip to the town of Pomaire, known for it's pottery. We got to see the "back room" aspects of the pottery and even got to make some pots on a pottery wheel and clay piggy banks! I bought four bowls, a sugar dish, two salsa bowls, five good luck pigs and two vases for less than $9. It's that cheap! Almost every house and restaurant in Chile uses clayware from Pomaire, so it'll make a good keepsake.


Pomaire, the hills are so green!



Oh, and I bought a crochet needle and some thread. Some of the other students studying here knit or crochet, and I thought it looked like a really good activity to take with me when I go traveling. So far my scarf looks acceptable and relatively straight...

I am trying to figure out my travel plans for the rest of the semester. It would be amazing to go to Macchu Piccu, but I'm not sure if I could do anything else. Otherwise I was thinking about visiting the Atacama Desert with my friends and making some smaller trips to other parts of Chile by myself (such as Chiloe and the Lake Country?). Another option would be fly to Lima, Peru, and hang out there for a week with some people I know. Any thoughts?

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Desert Rain

Last Thursday I headed north with some friends. We headed to La Serena, Chile's second oldest city after Valparaiso. Although the city itself wasn't supposed to be a big tourist draw, it is close to several quite interesting sites such as a penguin reserve, Chile's major pisco valley and quite a few of the world's largest telescopes. Our plan to visit these attractions went down the drain when the weather decided that last weekend would be the perfect time for La Serena to receive it's monthly inch of rain. The tour of the penguins islands was a off for fear of boats capsizing (although whenever the sun shone the tour agencies told us it would be fine, these people must not check weather forecasts), and we obviously couldn't view the far reaches of the universe through the clouds. So here's what we did do...

We began Friday very positively, enjoying La Serena's colonial-style buildings over a deliciously yummy breakfast. Flavored hot chocolate anyone? After visiting the vineyards of Pisco Elqui, we returned to the hostel for the best part of the day: preparing an amazing spaghetti with garlic break for ourselves. It was awesome and included flaming bread.



Initially we hoped to go see penguins on Saturday, but when that didn't turn out well we explored La Serena. Their Japanese Gardin is supposed to be very relaxing and beautiful, but was... closed. Like everything else, right? However, we did stumble upon a free zoo with ostrichs and condors and giant tortoises and chickens, as well as a very random herd of billy goats, sheep and llamas that were just walking around a bunch of jungle gyms. Not fenced in, just walking around. And in the evening we went to a circus! To end the day we spent a few hours chilling in a restaurant. We ordered a variety of chocolatey treats--hot chocolate, ice cream and a milkshake-- and mixed them all up to make our own "mixed" beverages.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

The Best Food in Chile

According to one guidebook I came across, the best food in Chile is in... Mendoza, Argentina? Well, I guess Argentina is known for their beef. Add in Mendoza's wine and chocolate, and it doesn't sound half-bad. It's not hard to say that the food in Mendoza was not only slightly cheaper than in Chile, but also that it tasted delicious.

Let me begin by saying that Mendoza seemed to be what the told us Chile would be: very late night-life where the party doesn't start until 12 or later, and lots of meat. Oh, but they also speak clear Spanish and don't have Santiago's unfortunate smog problem.

There was some last-minute panic regarding the bus (I ended up leaving on a different bus from everyone else I was traveling with - not my fault!). And a nightime journey across the snowy Andes, though I slept through most of it, once the eighties music videos stopped playing. I woke up long enough to get through customs, which was the simplest process of entering a country I have ever experienced. Before falling asleep again I tried to see out my window. Being night and all, it was a bit dark, but I could see the black sky and mountains covered with stars and snows. It was beautiful.

I got into Mendoza before the others, since I traveled in a mini-bus. Once they got in we ate a wonderful breakfast of croissants. The cappuccino I ordered was much better than the kind I have had here in Chile, and a couple of the other girls got Submarinos, literally "submarines," which was basically a chocolate bar in warm milk. We walked across town to a hostel, then spent the rest of the day wandering and enjoying Mendoza's lovely parks. Thinking I would be able to go Sunday morning before leaving, I chose a nap over visiting the large park to the north of the city. Unfortunately, I never did go on Sunday. I only took eight pictures (8!) the entire trip, and here are two of them: Josie enjoying our lunchtime parrilla, "grill," and the park with all of the painted tiles.






In the evening we went to a tenedor libre, literally "free fork," basically a buffet, called Las Tinajas. I just looked up that name and it means "The Large Pitcher." Not quite The Leaky Cauldron, but I'm willing to bet the food was much much better. As part of the all you can eat, watch it get made smorgasbord of yummy there were more seafood dishes than I've seen in Chile (I ate mini octopus legs! and paella!) chocolate drizzled dulce de leche wontons, flan, crepes, any kind of grilled meat that is served in Mendoza, pasta, thousand layer cake, and so on. In addition to the food there was live entertainment, i.e. reallllly loud speakers for a guy singing karaoke by himself on a balcony. With artificial smoke. And at several points females from the audience singing along. We left right around/before midnight, and there were still families, grannies, and priests coming in to begin their dinner.

Saturday we headed out for the bicicle wine tour. I'll separate the trip into stops.
First stop: Grand estate, with olive orchard in back, llamas, and scrumptious desert wine.
Second stop: Italian family winery, converted into museum, awesome tour, and samples of olive oil with bread! I bought two bottles of wine here.
Third: Bad wine, cheap lunch.
Fourth: Wine "Museum" also running winery. Huge casks. Really huge.
Five: No wine. Homemade chocolate, olive based dips, and various liquors. I tried the absinthe. No I did not hallucinate; yes, it burned. Ran out of money here.

We didn't do much else that day, although two of the girls went to the nearby bars and (I heard) got banana split! Wow, I missed out on so much in Mendoza. First the park, then the banana splits... and we never even went paragliding!

Coming back to Santiago went well. On our way out of town we barely squeezed in enough time to get McFlurries--flavor Cadbury tres sueƱos. Since we left in the afternoon we got to see the countryside. Fall is beautiful. For some reason I wasn't actually expecting the leaves to change color and fall here, but they do.

So now that I wrote that, I'm going to leave again (in about ten minutes!). I'm heading north this time, to the town of La Serena. If everything works out, I'll be able to tell you about penguins, pisco and stars when I get back!

Thursday, May 6, 2010

A bit about service

I should really be writing an essay for Spanish right now (a review of the movie "El Chacotero Sentimental") but decided to do this instead. Why does it need to get done tonight? Because I'm leaving for Argentina in a couple of hours! But more about that when I get back.

Today I hung around after my classes and met up with Estela Rojo, one of our two ND coordinators here. She's started helping out at a Casa de Acogida - literally, Welcome House.

The way Chilean foster care works is that if a judge rules that a child is in a bad environment, they get taken out of their home and put into a communal house, or Casa de Acogida. These can be government run, or privately run. The Congregation of the Holy Cross, the religious order associated with Notre Dame, runs five of these casas in Chile. Three of them are in Santiago.

Anyway, back to my story. Estela started teaching a class to a group of young kids and found out that one of the teenage girls wanted help with her English. She basically doesn't know any and it's a requirement for university. So today I went with Estela to visit, then hung out with the girl (whose name I can't remember, gah!). She's fun and I helped her study for an upcoming test on Countries, Nationalities and Languages.

Gotta go get ready, chao!