30 enero 2006

Moving Pictures

For your enjoyment, some moving impressions from the adventures of Señor Hans:

http://esnips.com/web/senorhansmovies

The movies are of various sizes and quality. Please ask your (geographically) nearest computer expert if you are having problems viewing them.

Thanks to Rachelita, Thorben, Leonard and Monique.

28 enero 2006

Córdoba y Mendoza - Impressions










To Chile !

Well, I did find that pool. But only today, my last day in Argentina (for now). It´s full-on high season at the moment here and all the nice and affordable places in tranquil surroundings including swimming pools were booked full until well into February. (Why don´t all these Argentinians just go to Holland for their summer holidays?)


So I spent a few days in Mendoza, which was a bit of a letdown. Nothing to do and too hot to do anything, or nothing for that matter. Today was the big one: 41 degrees. Perfect day for the pool. Hoorah ! We, my nice friends Jim and Mel from the hostel and I, got kicked out of the kiddy pool twice though, for not being children ... it didn´t matter that all the kids were in the big pool and the kiddy pool was empty ...

Anyway, I will try another Parilla tonight Jim and Mel and head off to Valparaiso in Chile in the morning. And I have already been informed by agent Maartje that it´s cloudy and it rains there. Double hoorah !!

PS. The ladies are lucky today. I happened to find an Argentinian hunk for them while I was skimming through my pictures. Is this good enough ?


PPS. He *is* a bit on the fat side, isn´t he ? ;-p

25 enero 2006

Córdoba

I have been spending the last few days roaming around the city of Córdoba, the second-biggest in Argentina after Buenos Aires. It´s positioned nicely in the middle of the country; "el corazon del pais", as they like to put it here.

Like its Spanish namesake it is infernally hot in the summer (don´t forget it´s summer here!) But that doesn´t spoil the fun; on the contrary, I like the feel of it all. The streets are wide and it is lively all around. It is not touristy here and you don´t feel like you stand out because of it. If it wasn´t for the fact that I have to open my mouth from time to time, I could almost blend in. (On a sidenote: I don´t know what it is that they babble around here in Argentina, but it sure doesn´t sound a lot like the Spanish I know. Just stick to the language, people!)

So I have been wandering around, soaking up the atmosphere and trying not to overheat too much - a real danger here ... I can´t put my finger yet on the Argentinians, but I´m getting closer. All the luxuries of the modern world can be found here, but you also see a horse-drawn carriage going down the streets. Big supermarkets and trendy malls, but also loads of the little neighbourhood shops. It´s like a crossroads of the "poor" and "rich" world. Sometimes you think you are in southern Europe and *poof* ... you´re in the USA. But it´s all Argentina ! :-)

Icecream parlours, yellow cabs, big sunglasses, baguettes with bacon and cheese, weird door keys, air-conditioned buses, cooking shows on TV with nuns, fast computers (I finally got to play some Civilization IV - thanks Ries) and finally: friendly, polite and frighteningly beautiful people.
But not much rest allowed in the city. I´m off to find some peace and quiet (and a pool). I bet they have that here too in Argentina.

24 enero 2006

Salta - Impressions












23 enero 2006

Mission Salta

Agent Señor Hans reporting:

After arriving in Salta and scouting out the town for a day or two with Agent Monique for enemy activity, mainly from the sunny terrace of the New Time Café, I decided it was time for action. The rumours of possible malicious intent around Salta were becoming more frequent.

Fresh agents Maartje and Sander, who I recruited in Sucre Bolivia, were called in and the three of us rented a "Volkswagen Gol" (no typo) to investigate the area, keeping a low profile. Before we even left Salta, suspicions were raised that the French were involved. We were constantly tailed by derelict 70s Peugeots and Renaults, driven by dark-haired personas with dubious driving styles ...

Our first target was the village of San Antonio de los Cobres, which we reached after a few hours of splendid views and bad roads, losing the Frenchies in the process, using the common knowledge that a French car can´t even scale a speed bump without breaking down.

The village was a let down. There was not much to do, let alone anything suspicious by unsavoury elements. But bad behaviour had already occured a few miles south. Already having scaled the 4000 meter pass to San Antonio, we planned to take the 800 meter higher pass south as the shortest route to the next target village of Cachi. It was closed. The enemy had beaten us to the pass, rendering it unusable for anything but a 4x4. We had to go back through the canyon, losing valuable time.

Looking for a place to stay the night south of Salta, we discovered the enemy had struck again. Hostelerias were closed or couldn´t been found. They were forcing us back to Salta, with a vicious trap probably waiting for us. So we did the unthinkable. Already late in the day, we decided to daringly cross the Parque Nacional de Los Cardones west to Cachi. Despite sandy rocky roads, cloudy passes and darkness we managed to reach the vibrant town late in the evening.

Apparently this had blindsided the enemy. We doubled back a bit towards the national park to check out the "cactus army" and the stupendous views we missed in the darkness of the night before, but no sign of bad stuff. So for the rest of the day we performed the standard spy activities: checking in into luxury hotels, lounging by the pool, tasting the local produce and enjoying the sight of the masses of young Argentinian girls in Cachi who seemed to have two main hobbies: having wonderfully sexy legs and showing as much of it as possible :-)

But duty called and there was one more possible hotbed of threatening activity to investigate: Cafayate in the south. The weather gods were clearly with the enemy. It had rained all night and still rained in the morning. The sandy rollercoaster road south was littered with huge pools of water and even bigger patches of mud. And although joy and fun were being had slipping and sliding along the river bank south, the enemy was not idle.

Close to the village of Angastaco they struck. Waiting on the other side of a blind curve with a huge 4x4, Agent Sander had no chance. They struck us front left side to front left side on the muddy road, leaving our vehicle inoperable whilst being able to escape themselves. We were stranded.

But not for long. Angostaco was on our side and with help of the locals and fellow traveller-spies we were dry in the local Hosteleria, sipping warm drinks looking at the rainy road awaiting our replacement vehicle. At midnight it came. We were back in action !

And what action: the next day was sunny and bright, and as we pulled into the lovely shady plaza of Cafayate, the blows of the day before were all but forgotten. The enemy, assuming us eliminated, was nowhere to be seen, so we enjoyed the vineyard-filled valleys of the region, took in an ancient ruin as well and sped back to Salta in high spirits and impeccable style.

It wasn´t over yet. Back in Salta the criminal mastermind finally revealed himself. It was the very evil rent-a-car man himself ! Although we clearly had maximum damage payment clause in our contract, he wanted us to pay for the entire damage of the car, which was more than twice that sum. This was the final battle, mano a mano, Agent Señor Hans vs Evil-Rent-a-Car-Man. I had sent Agents Maartje and Sander to their 6 ´o clock bus, having only so much time myself as transportation to my next assignment would leave at 8 sharp from the same local terminal.

I went in for the kill with all the logic at my disposal. My travels in South America here had already tought me however, that the concept of logic had not yet caught on in these parts, so I had no success there. My wanderings had also shown me one that was effective though: the "man in uniform" (preferably with whistle). My man in uniform didn´t even use his whistle and was pretty effective indeed in explaining the "maximum damage" concept to the Evil Mastermind. The forces of good won the day ! Or did they ? Would our hero reach his next mission in time ?!?

When I left the police station at the plaza, the clock showed 10 to 8, while the sky opened up to pour down its rain. No taxi in sight, probably all being occupied by enemy agents, and an 11 minute run to the terminal. The bus was just pulling out when an out-of-breath Agent Señor Hans threw himself on the windshield ... and while it picked up speed south I looked down at myself, drenched but in big luxury leather seat, smiled and thought: "Agent Señor Hans, you look damn sexy when your trousers are wet ...".

18 enero 2006

History in the making ...

(start of recording)

I want it recorded that yesterday evening, January 17 2006, between 9.30 and 11pm, I, Señor Hans, did enjoy in Salta ...

The utterly most deliciously succulent meal ever to be enjoyed by a Señor Hans since the conception of succulent meals. Argentinian meat ... it melts in your mouth ... I cannot describe it. Just drool with me.

(end of recording)

17 enero 2006

Bolivia - Impressions

Bolivia ... the country of adventures, colourful cities (and white ones), bustling markets, mines, downhill biking, lakes, mountains and much more incredible nature. And I have only seen the altiplano.

The people could be a tad friendlier and the ones in the tourist industry are mostly outright liers and cheaters, but everything is so cheap anyway, a heavenly joy for the frugal misers of this world like Señor Hans :-D

Three times I signed my life away (biking, mountain climbing and mines) in 33 days , traveling 3000 kilometers on 2 times 3000 bolivianos.

And then the special people I met: the maidens of Paris, Mathilde and Rachel; Señora Leonor of the Happy Days hotel in La Paz; "Shit Happens" Eyal, who withheld me from climbing the mountain, so I have to try again... ; the market sales(wo)men of La Paz; the incredible downhill bike group, especially my mate Clive; Heleen & Pieter, who proved that wherever you go, you can´t outrun the Belgians; Sander & Maartje, whom I met here in Salta again (we went to King Kong yesterday - amazing!); the Argentinian tourists who shared their "Mate" with me (more on that later); Niamh and Tadhg "Ireland will be one again"; and last but never least (she wouldn´t allow it): Monique.

I am afraid I will come back :-)















Uyuni - Impressions Days 3 & 4