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Curious woodpecker in the mountains |
After our six weeks of volunteer work in Salta we are now
exploring the northwest corner of Argentina, and enjoying wonderful weather,
good food and wine, comfortable lodgings, and long hikes in interesting and
beautiful mountains and valleys.
Our last few days of work in Salta were quite hectic. Lin
made purchases of educational games and books as a donation to the foundation
where she was working. Sandy gave his final lessons and established plants in the
garden at his two comedores. We both had touching farewells and presentations
of mementoes. We hope that our work will have a more than transitory effect –
certainly the signs for sustainability are good. We also had an enjoyable
farewell lunch on Saturday with our FSD friends.
We have been struck over and over with how safe Argentina
feels and how friendly the local people are. In the little town of Cafayate
where we stayed for three nights, doors are rarely locked and bicycles are left
leaning against trees or walls apparently without any fear that they will be
gone when the owner returns.
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Confusing keys |
Argentinian house and room keys are rather
peculiar…they appear symmetrical, but they only “work” if inserted correctly in
the lock. We have had two incidents when we could not get into our lodgings and
had to climb in through the window. At our home in Salta the lock was “stuck”,
but luckily there was someone inside who kindly opened the shutters and passed
out a chair which we put on the sidewalk so that we could climb in through the
window. It was a little trickier in Cafayate, where the hostel owner had forgotten to
give us a key and had locked up for the evening. No one answered our frantic
hammering and shouting, so eventually Sandy removed some screen and squeezed
into our room through the window. Several people saw us but nobody seemed to
think it was out of the ordinary.
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Getting ready to sample some local products |
Cafayate is about 3 hours from Salta on a bus which takes
you through a spectacular canyon to a high dry valley that boasts 320 days of
sunshine a year and a large wine industry – reputedly the highest vineyards in
the world with some at over 2000 meters (6,500 ft.). We spent our two days
there hiking up the sides of the valley through vineyards and desert-like
scrub, and visiting bodegas, wine bars, and a museum devoted to wine and grapes.
They are famous for a strong white wine that smells fruity and tastes dry and
crisp called “Torrontes”, which we had never tasted before we came to
Argentina, and we have become big fans. We hope we’ll be able to find it in the
US at an affordable price. Here it is the equivalent of US $3.50 a bottle,
though some are much more.
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Loud parrot |
Cafayate also had some interesting bird life,
including a nonstop screeching chorus of rather dull-colored burrowing parrots,
which descend on the town at dawn every day and go back to their nests in the
mud cliffs of the canyon at 5 PM sharp.
Our second stop was Tafi del Valle, even higher in altitude,
and accessed by bus over a somewhat terrifying 3000 meter (10,000 ft) mountain
pass appropriately called “Infiernillo” (Little Hell). Tafi is a spread out
little town of mostly summer cottages, where people escape the heat of the
pampas. It is very green. We are regularly surprised by the amount of water,
streams and springs in areas which seem to have little rainfall. Most of the
rain appears to fall in the mountains and then flow underground down into the
valleys. As a result there is plenty of pasture for horses and cattle and water
for lawns and gardens. Again we spent our days on long hikes in the cool
mountain air. We are nearly always the only people walking on the trails,
though we regularly see local people in small adobe houses and farms. On one
hike up to a beautiful waterfall we were thrilled to see two huge (10 ft.
wingspan) condors soaring above us.
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Jesuit cheese |
We also happened on a small “estancia”
founded by the Jesuits in 1779, where they still make delicious cheeses from the
milk of the local cows. We could not resist buying a half-kilo cheese and
eating large chunks then and there. Local buses to and from the high valleys
stop when flagged down and are full of friendly people curious to see two elderly
gringos with backpacks. Another walk along the shore of a small lake took us to
a huge cemetery with graves covered in vividly colorful plastic flowers, most
likely especially abundant because the locals have just celebrated the Day of
the Dead.
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Menhirs, from about 1,000 BC |
In a small town with an archaeological park we saw over 100
“menhirs”, of which the meaning and purpose has been lost in time. They were
quite similar to menhirs we have seen in Brittany, but not so old – the
Stone Age went on far longer here than in Europe.
Today (Saturday) we traveled from the high mountain valleys
down into the plains for a long bus ride through endless countryside – with a
few cultivated areas and some with huge herds of cattle. It really brought home
how empty this country is with only 40 million people in a country with 1/3rd
of the area of the US, and most of them live around Buenos Aires. (Argentina has
38 people per square mile compared with the UK’s 650 and the US 84). We spotted
three greater rheas – huge flightless ostrich-like birds nearly 6 feet tall in
the shade of a tree. Pity we couldn't get a photo.
Tomorrow we are off to Cachi -- another small mountain village
-- for more hikes and relaxation before spending a couple of days in Salta and
then heading home.
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Argentina is full of freely wandering animals, like these horses |
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...and these donkeys, near our favorite icecream shop |
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...and this fierce looking bull, which turned out to be quite docile. |