Saturday, October 4, 2008

merrymaking

Let me share with you some of the swell times recently had prior to my wife's departure...

Birthday dinner with the girls at Miranda.

My sposita & I.

Colleen & buddy Mateo.

James, Col's family friend of many years, stopped over in B.A. on business and we were lucky enough to meet up with him for dinner at Osaka and a rooftop party in San Telmo...

Dinner at Osaka (Japanese-Peruvian fusion.) Perhaps some of the best food I have ever eaten in all my life. This round of tapas came out up in flames...

No hay palabras...

The lovely Yessica.

Becca, Grego, Mariuxy, Johanna & I at Sugar.

Becca, Col, & I with new Aussie friends at Il Ballo de Mattone- a favorite spot here in P.Hollywood.

Adrian, Col & I.

Me, Romuald, Mathieu, & Adrian at Conga.

Yessica, Julieta, & the Spositas at rooftop terraza party.

Una noche lindaaaaa.

cumple + despedida

The festivities have been in full force these past few weeks...my personal favorite gathering being the shindig we threw at the apartment- a feliz cumple to me and a goodbye to Coller :( All of our bestest friends were in attendance and spirits were on high. Makes it hard to think about leaving these people I have grown so close to these past six months...

Julie, Colls, & Juliets do their thang.

Robin, Becca, Durban & HB.

La profesora Julieta & her students :)

Jenni, Mathieu, Juancher & I.

I met/gave Don & Marie massages the night before- fabulous couple just recently relocated to B.A. for a while (I knew I liked these guys when Don asked me post-session, "You wanna stay and have a caiparinha w/us?!") Marie and HB (Becca & Durban's friend from Portland) really hit it off- "He's my brotha from anotha motha!" she kept shouting...

Besotes grandotes!

The fab five always on the d-floor. "Somos el nucleo!!!"

Becca, Durb & I...slash I've got Bec in a headlock.

Adore this photo of Becca & Juan...

She never fails us...

Californians unite: Robin, Mikey, Col & I.

HB & Bec. Straight love right there...

Baaaaaam!!!!!

one beautiful night @ la rica vicky

I dedicate this post to that unexpected night of slumber a few friends and I shared a couple weeks back w/one kickin' group of Peruvians in one unassuming Peruvian joint known as "La Rica Vicky". We found ourselves at this horribly lit, no frills eatery quite randomly one evening as we wandered the streets post-Bomba (Monday night percussion show) in search of sustenance. It was Julie from France's birthday, and so of course, we all brought our festive energy into Vicky's, and immediately passed it along to the two other tables in the restaurant- giving way to one bizarrely beautiful noche. I suppose this was to be expected though, for when you throw a few Californians together with three Frenchies, two Argentinas, and a handful of Peruvians (plus a few rounds of cerveza)...good times are a given.

Newfound friends.

Mathieu buys not one bouquet, but he makes the flower vendor's night and buys all of them for his lovely Julie.

We made quite the scene running from table to table snapping photos of our motley crew.

We then tried to get photos with all of the staff...even managed to get the shy cook to come out!

Mathieu starts popping open the bottles of bubbly...

Coller, Mathieu, & Julieta.

Julie the birthday girl w/beer soaked hair (thanks to the Peruvians who literally poured glasses of brew on her head.)

Please note the bottle of Quilmes that big red mama has between Mathieu's spread-eagled piernas...

The hooting and hollering coming from these ladies was priceless..."Eso!Eso!Eso!Eso!"

After about 5 minutes of the whole restaurant chanting "Torta! Torta!" our waitress brought out this jello whipped cream creation...and without a candle to light, we topped this sucker w/a ciggy and started in on the "feliz cumple"...

Photo sessions taken out of doors...

Not sure where this bici came from...???

Saluuuuud!!!

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

rasta!rasta!

There is no shortage of creativity found in the Buenos Aires hairstyle department. It's incredible, the way these Argentinos sport the dos...especially when it comes to the "rastas"- Argentine for "dreadlocks". Whether it's five dreadies shooting straight out the back of a shaved cabeza, or one lone dread running the span of one's back, I find myself intrigued, and yeah, one might say a bit inspired. I don't think I personally could rock the lock, but hey, to those who can...cheers to you!



Saturday, September 6, 2008

mendoza: storms of dirt n' ice

I do consider myself a positive individual, but there are times on ones journey when things, well, they just suck. The whole being optimistic bit- you just have to fess up, face the facts, and drop it :) ... a good sense of humor being an absolute must. Last week upon our reuniting w/Brit and Erasmo in Mendoza, things just weren't happening for us. I had had high hopes for this last minute escape from the city. We were going to the the highly raved about wine country of Argentina, and clearly, we would be sipping wine at the foot of the Andes...The city of Mendoza? I'm gonna have to go ahead and say it was 'okay'. No sparks, none at all. Some might say a little 'blah'. It did feel good to lounge in the sunshine at the park, and her tree-lined streets and plazas were pleasant, but I'm going to stick with 'ehh' to sum up my thoughts. Most travelers stay in Mendoza and then pack their days full of activity in the surrounding area- rafting, hiking, wining, and the likes. I suppose the first of our comical run-ins with disaster came on our "bikes n' wine tour" in Maipu. With Napa Valley in mind, we were picturing rolling vineyards, a charming country road, perhaps a crisp breeze wafting through...but I am assuming we came in the off season, because no era asi. I found Maipu to be a bit of a dumpy town, not the most attractive of places...and the neverending whistles from the male population was out of control. The majority of our 'wine tour' was set along the towns main drag- semitrucks and beat up roadsters blowing past we pedaling foreigner, creating some serious hot exhaust-debris inhalation. Not your healthiest bike ride. I must say though that the road did become more charming as we got farther and farther from town- as can be seen in the first few photos below. But don't be fooled...one bodega was perched right behind a gas station.
On our return trek, the scorching skies decided to deliver a windstorm of sorts, picking up all of the dust and dirt from Maipu's sunbaked tierra and lofting it about. Have you ever seen the movie Twister? Yeah, like that. Trash filled skies, alarms being sounded, branches falling on the unlucky (Brit being one of them)...oh it was madness. Biking in such conditions wasn't the most pleasant experience, as ones vision was entirely impaired and lungs were filled with the grit of a city whose name sounds like "my poo". We were basically in the dustbowls of Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath.
Back at the hostel in Mendoza, we thought, "We've gotta get out of here..." and after a few hours of indecisiveness, we jumped on the 2:30am bus and headed for the peaks of Las Leñas. And the story goes something like this: After scanty sleep, we arrive at the mountain at 7am. Snow is dumping. Brit and Erasmo are sick. Colleen is in a cotton dress. And I, well I don't love cold weather. Can we say, unprepared? Now, we can't afford to stay at the resort-esque hotels that lie at the base of the slopes, so we are without a place to go...and oh yeah, the bus that heads down the mountain and to Malargüe (where we will find a cheap hostel)- it doesn't leave till 5:30pm. Perfect. Our homeless, entirely ill-prepped for the snow day consists of four tired and hungry haggards hanging in a ritzy hotel lodge, riding the transit bus around, and dropping a ridiculous amount of plata on a measly bfast...and with loads of time to kill, thinking the whole time "Please don't kick us out..." Brit and Ras, who are really not feeling so hot (and with 6 hours until that bus departure) think it best to find lodging, and so after a few hours of catching up on shut eye in their room, Col and I bajar the mountain and head straight for Malargüe...

Now I have never been to Fargo, North Dakota, but Malargüe certainly brought up images of those stretches of nothingness from the movie entitled Fargo. Let's just say there wasn't a whole lot going on in the town I renamed 'Malargo'. As we wandered her frozen streets in search for a decent meal, we thought, "Where are we right now?" As you might guess, we never found that decent meal...and the hostel? "Ehh." The laughter was uncontrolable...both of us in that hysterically negative, make fun of everything mode...the decor of the hostel taking the major verbal beating- a given though, as it resembled a nursery school slash cafe, with a tumbleweed of monstrous proportions perched above the entrance armoir. The following day we packed up and headed back up the mountain to meet up with Brit and Ras. As Brit was still pretty beat, and as I wasn't dying to ski nor throw tons of money down for a few hours on the slopes, we kicked back in their toasty room while Col and Erasmo rocked the mountain (this, of course, came after 2 hours of frustrating haggle with the skipass grinch who wouldn't accept Col's voucher...never fails.) And so...the story ends. We parted ways once again and Col and I jumped on our lengthy bus ride back home to Buuuenos Aiiiiires...hallelujah.