Sunday, February 21, 2010

We’ve arrived in Paris

We have finally arrived in Paris! Our two and a half months in Argentina have flown past. After two months in Buenos Aires polishing up our Spanish, becoming familiar with every step and kick of the tango and doing a lot of sleeping and resting, we ventured forth to see Iguazu Falls in the north and the lakes area on the border with Chile.

The falls were spectacular. We got up close - standing on the edge at the top and amidst the spray at the base - on both the Argentinean side and the Brazilian side. Finally we had a wonderful panoramic view from the Brazilian side. We took a boat trip at the base which went under the spray thrown up by the thunderous water pouring down. The river is 6 metres higher than normal at the moment so this was rather exciting!

We flew from the falls to Bariloche west of Buenos Aires on the border with Chile. After a couple of days recovering from stomach upsets in a lovely hostel (luckily with private bathroom!!) we hired a car and drove north around a circuit known as the seven lakes circuit. We camped for three nights and stayed in a hotel for two when the weather got too cold, and for five days feasted our eyes on ink blue lakes backed by blue black mountain ranges, green pine forests, white snow covered peaks and skies, blue or grey depending on the weather. Magnificent. Then it was back to Bariloche and the last of the wonderful parrillas - a sort of BBQ Argentinean style - and Malbec, a fabulous Argentinean red wine.

A very comfortable flight across the Atlantic where we got a surprising amount of sleep brought us to Madrid as our first stop. We were in the central district of Puerta del Sol. Lots of tiny cobbled streets winding this way and that were full of cafĂ©’s with great tapas - paella and prawns our favourite. Three days was just too short a time and we are determined to return for a longer stay. We were pleased to be able ask for pretty much anything and be understood. The last time we were in Madrid was pre any Spanish.

Last Friday we took a short flight up to Paris and a taxi to 22 rue du Cloitre de St Merri right in the heart of the Marais district next to the Seine. Our landlord runs a gallery beneath our apartment, which is on the fifth floor (no lift - it’s to counteract all the gateaux and cheese we are eating). Saint Merri is a 16th century church and our windows look onto it. It was built between 1500 and 1550 and has the oldest bell in Paris - cast in 1331! At four this afternoon we went to a free concert on a grand piano by a very young man (surely he can’t be more than 12). It was wonderful - lots of old favourites. We are struggling with French, having thoroughly trained ourselves to say Gracias and si to everything. The woman sitting next to Ange asked her something in French and Ange answered “Parlez Anglais” - wanting to say ‘I speak English’ but instead ordering the woman to speak English.

We have explored the weekend markets and bought lots of lovely food: brie to die for, cakes, langoustines (like giant prawns or small crayfish), and a pork knuckle to name a few. Better run those stairs a few extra times!

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Photos of New York

Here is a collection of photos from New York to give you a glance at our life here.



This is our room in the Loft Hostel, a converted warehouse in Brooklyn in the East Williamsburg. Williamsburg is VERY cool! We had to buy new clothes to walk the streets. We stayed here the first four nights until we moved to a sublet in midtown Manhattan.
We go back for another four nights today. Not so happy about that since our unit is more like a home.






Beautiful brownstones in Brooklyn Heights. These are typical of some areas of NY. This was a particularly beautiful street since it had trees.













Brooklyn Bridge from the Brooklyn side.












We went to see Tosca at the Metropolitan Opera House. We queued for rush tickets and missed so we were standing right at the very back. The view was magnificent. You could feel the excitement.












In the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) I tried to see the subtle shades of black on this painting. Subtle.

















The view from our Manhattan apartment at night looking north.












Ange being creative with the camera angles inside our apartment. I am sitting at the eating bench in the kitchen area. Behind Ange is the bed.












We hired bicycles on a beautiful sunny Sunday and cycled through Central Park for two hours. Fabulous!














One lunchtime we went to a free jazz concert at the Lincoln Centre. From the biogs of the players I calculated that there was not a player under 75! They were wonderful. The audience was mostly white haired too. We felt quite young!







After the concert we were walking through the forecourt in front of the Met when we happened upon this performance. This man was walking with no safety net and no safety harness!! I swear the crowd below were holding their collective breaths until he reached the other side. When he wobbled a metre from the edge I thought I would throw up with fear.







We went to an evening at Joe's Pub in Greenwich. Larkin Grimm, pictured , sang political and humorous songs. She had a wonderful voice. There were also two book readings. The writers then had to perform something on stage that they had never done before. The French author, Tanguy Viel, explained the rating system for friends he had devised as a teenager. Stephen Elliot made out with a member of the audience - there were no shortage of volunteers! The MC Amanda Stern was extremely funny, talked like a young Barbara Streisand!


The view of the south end of Manhattan from the Empire State Building. Neither of us had been up before so we set off at 8.30 in the morning and missed the crowds. The views are as awesome as you would expect.








We took the ferry across the Hudson River in the late afternoon and sat in a bar watching the lights come in Manhattan on for a couple of hours. This was a tip from a woman sitting beside us in the Marriage of Figaro, who lives on the River on the New Jersey side.





Sunday, October 4, 2009

Cooler in New York City

We decided we were too hot and so got a cheap flight up NYC - $150! and a cheap hostel and then sublet. Only one night in a 14-women dorm - an experience - when they were overbooked. The Loft Hostel ( a lovely warehouse conversion with high ceilings and white sheets!) was in Brooklyn in a very groovy part. We enjoyed exploring the area for a while. Now we are in mid-town Manhattan in a studio sublet which is gorgeous. We have well and truly mastered the subway and have done lots of exploring of Brooklyn and Queens. We have been eating and drinking ourselves silly after the deprivations of Mexico - all that good weight loss is being undone too!

We went to an opera, Tosca, last Monday - tried for rush tickets but missed out so got standing room ones. The legs gave out after act two but we got to see Tosca's kiss - a stabbing. It was going to be all downhill in Act III - both hero and heroine die, so going home won. We also went to hear James Elroy read (wrote LA confidential among other things). He talks like he writes - scary! Loved it.

Yesterday we decided to go to a "Lavish, Broadway Musical" and managed to get half price tickets to Mama Mia in the seventh row from the front! Our choice was based in part on what was available but we were VERY happy with it. It was just so over the top lavish fun - and of course we know all the words! Ange has been singing all the songs ever since!

On Friday afternoon we went to Moma (Museum of Modern Art) filled with amazingly famous paintings (saw Van Gogh's - Starry Nights) all for free (Friday afternoons free). After that we went to West Village to hear some jazz at a bar - certainly was a different experience especially when a man off his face on drugs came and sat at our table!!! Several men around the bar got up and surrounded him but the barmaid talked him into leaving - I hardly heard the music during that time.

The bar was next to the Stonewall Inn (a gay mecca) and oddly Ange had a Chris try to pick her up as she was taking a photo - and Chris was a man - optimistic? Fiction and reality mingle.

Off to walk in Central Park in the cool sun!

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Belize - hot, hot, hot!

Belize
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We took the ferry from Corrozal just over the border in Belize to a seaside fishing village of Sarteneja. As we approached the wharf we were amazed at how small the town was - the guide book made it sound much bigger - this was but the first misinformation gleaned from the Belize Lonely Planet guide. There was no information, no map and no one about except someone mending a boat who spoke only Creole (a strange mix of English and Spanish and something else entirely) when we walked down the wharf. The boat man pointed up a road so we just started wandering in to town. As we wandered around a young woman on a bicycle rode up and asked if she could help, in English! “We’re looking for Backpacker’s Paradise”, we explained. She was Natalie, the very charming French owner of the hostel. She had been swimming nearby keeping and eye out for anyone getting off the boat. We set off. About 20 minutes later and in melt down (the temperature is VERY hot and humid) we arrived. It was nothing like the guide described. Perhaps it just looked like the beds were all king size because the rooms were little bigger than the beds!
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Anyway it was idyllic except for the heat and mosquitoes. The streets are all white coral sand. We rode bicycles about everywhere as there are few cars and no buses, swam in clear Caribbean water and generally lazed about. On Sunday we went with Natalie to see a baby manatee that had been rescued being fed milk from a bottle. It sucked on my fingers while waiting. It felt just like a poddy calf (see Ange's blog for a photo).
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Another ferry ride took us to San Pedro of Madonna fame (I fell in love with San Pedro - Ange sang it for days!). This is very much geared for the US tourist so we only stayed one night and then took another ferry to Caye Caulker. This is a coral cay island and very small and laid back. There is a fringing reef out a few hundred metres forming a quiet and very warm lagoon where we swam. We ate lots of lobster - the specialty here- with breadfruit, which I had read about as a 12 year old in Robert Louis Stevenson’s Coral Island. It’s sort of like a potato but more aerated.
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Our first hotel here was a mistake, as there were a lot of sleazy vendors opposite, so we moved to a much quieter end of the island and ended up staying a week. It was extremely hot and any activity during the middle of the day is just impossible, so we did the Caribbean thing and rested then.
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In search of cooler climes we decided to head for the jungle. Another ferry took us to the capital Belize City , which is really just a big town. Lots of wooden houses on stilts. And then we took an “economico” bus down south - that means no air-conditioning and late comers did not get a seat for the hour or more journey. Luckily we got on early! You cannot imagine how hot it was!
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The bus dropped us off at the Maya Centre. The guidebook suggested that you buy supplies there as there were none available to Cockscomb Nature Reserve, where we were headed. We were directed to the “big” shop by a group of women swinging on hammocks at a gift shop near the road. We bought up the best the shop had to offer: two mouldy carrots, a capsicum, tomato and onion, packet of biscuits, a tin of mackeral, four eggs counted out into a plastic bag and 4 packets of two minute noodles! We did buy more two minute noodles at the Nature Reserve, but we may have lost weight for the three days we were there!
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This reserve is famous for its population of jaguars, somewhere between 50 and 80 depending on who you believe. We went out in the early morning and late evening with great hopes and saw birds, fireflies, but not much else. I guess it is a very big reserve and they prefer the quiet places too.
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Twice we hired old truck inner tubes and after walking through the jungle for about 20 minutes you can get in the river and float along, over the occasional little rapid, through dense jungle on either side of the river for an hour. It was great and reminded me of doing similar as a child at Marysville - not through the jungle of course, just bush. There were a lot of clearly marked walking trails through the jungle. Two walks led to waterfalls. The water was crystal blear and a copper blue and, blissfully, COLD!
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After Cockscomb we headed north to Orange Walk. The Mennonites who farm in this area are easily distinguishable by their clothes and healthy air. The men wear blue shirts and denim dungarees and the women wear dresses that cover everything. They do not vote, do not have to do military service and pay no taxes. They grow most of the food for Belize. They seem to be very hard working especially as they do not believe in using modern technology - like motors.
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The reason for coming here was to take a launch south along the river for about an hour to see some Mayan ruins at Lamanai. This is the only Mayan civilization still operating when the Spanish came - converted to Catholicism of course! We climbed the huge edifaces trying not to think of Bec’s sister Sarah who fell down oner of these. It was unbelievably hot and steamy there and by the time we got back into the launches we were literally dripping - I never knew I could sweat from my face.


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Then it was back to Mexico to visit the Caribbean coast.

Friday, September 4, 2009

From Paradise in Mexico to ...Paradise in Belize

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We are now in Belize and our internet access is limited- this is being written at an internet cafe but thank goodness with an English keyboard. English is thhe official language here but Spanish and Creole is more commonly heard.
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We left our paradise at San Agustinillo on Monday the 17th August and went to Puerto Escondido - a beach further north famous for the "pipeline" surf. The Quicksilver Surfing Championships were being held there so we joined the crowd on the beach and cheered the contestants in final heats and the finals. We watched a surfer disappear under a wall of white foam only to appear a few seconds later still standing - the crowd went wild! Very exciting.
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We broke a rule never to take an overnight bus (some of you will remember the sword/dagger story from our China adventure) as there was no other way to San Cristobal in the mountains. Thirteen hours later and thankfully lacking any swords or daggers we arrived in the hilltown. It is yet another pretty colonial town but has a surprisingly sophisticated vibe - excellent wine at the Vino de Bacco may have coloured our view! We decided to stay a week and work on the Spanish (which had been getting worse) while we waited for a three day trip to the Lacondan Jungle beginning the following weekend.
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We enrolled at Escuela Jovel and opted to stay with a Mexican family - partly to practise our Spanish. So on the Friday we moved in with Ricardo and Marianna and their two teenage children. Our homestay family were very friendly and patient with us and our lack of sensible words.
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Before starting classes we went on two excursions: a horse ride around the surrounding hills and villages and a boat trip up a twenty odd kilometers of canyon. The horse ride was remembered for many days (ouch - wooden saddles at a trot for half an hour because one horse got rid of its rider and took off) but the canyon will be remembered for a lifetime - it was incredible. We saw lots of birds: ibis, brown pelicans, vultures; and an aligator on the shores!


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We worked hard each day and at night relaxed, I with an Argentinian Malbec (introduced by Jode and Bec) and Ange a Chile Chardonay accompanied by free tapas. While there we also saw lots of movies in English or with English subtitles. One was about the Last Lacondonians, the peole of the jungle where we would be staying the following weekend. Lack of work and a decreasing jungle are driving the young people to the cities - unfortunately not a unique story. We also relaxed with "A Street Car Named Desire" - what a great old movie. We were on tenderhooks for the "Stelllllaaaa" (Seinfeld fans will understand).
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On Saturday we packed up and at 7 am set of for the jungle. On the way we visited some water falls - Agua Azul and Misol-Ha. At the jungle camp we stayed in a tiny bamboo hut, open at the front onto the river there. There was a hammock just begging to be swung in on the verandah. Don't worry there was a bed with sturdy mosquito net for the night.
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The next day we were up early and went by van to the river which forms the border between Mexico and Guatemala. A long thin outboard-powered launch took us up the river (Rio Usumacinta) for about an hour to some ruins (Yaxchilan). We strolled for anbout an hour throught the ruins. Our guide was very knowledgeable - the Mayan history is a bit of an obsession of his.
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Then it was back to the camp and straight out on the water for rafting. It was a rubber raft that took about 8 people. Ang and I sat in the front. We were schooled in four commands - adelante! fuerte adelante, atras, abajo! As we approached the cascades (everything up to about four metres high!) it was forward (adelante), unless we were approaching at the wrong angle then it was backwards. As the front of the raft neared the edge of the cascade it was "fuerte adentate" (forward strongly) just as the raft tipped over it was "abajo" - which means slide down in the raft - did I mention we were sitting
on the edge of the rubber raft until then. I may have gone abajo early a couple of times and it took about four cascades before I could go over with my eyes open. On one big one I had my mouth open (there may have been some noise coming out) and the water splashed right into my throat! VERY EXCITING! After about an hour we got out and began the long junge walk back. Our guide this time was one of the locals and kept up a cracking pace allong the overgrown path. Finally we caught up with the others at another waterfall for "lunch" - it was 5 pm by this time and all were weak with hunger.
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The next morning we went to more ruins - Bonampak - famous for very detailed and colourful painting of celebrations and wars. For something done 1700 or so years ago it was incredible to see.







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Finally we made the hot trip back to Palenque the very famous and somewhat touristy Mayan ruins. Once again our guide was fantastic. We left the group there and took another cabin in the jungle - again over a stream. The next mroning we awoke to the early morning chorus of howler monkeys - they sound like jaguars howling for blood. What a great experience. We were exhausted and it was a lovely position so we stayed on for three nights. One day we went back to the Palenque ruins and took a more liesurely stroll through the ruins in the jungle to absorb it all quietly.
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Again we found that the only bus to our next destination ran at night, so with our new found bravery we booked a ticket. It left an hour and a half late which was not the disaster you may think because that meant arriving in Chetumal at 6 in the morning rather than 4.30! That was this morning. We took a local bus to the border and another beyond to Corozal. Here we are filling in a few hours before our ferry leaves for a tiny place called Sarteneja, where we hope to REST at a place called Backpackers Paradise - I hope so!
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Sunday, August 16, 2009

Paradise at San Agustinillo

This is a picture of paradise. That's me standing on our breezy veranda, reading my Spanish grammar of course. Ange had waded out into the water to take the photo just to show how close we were to the thunderous sound of surf (not at that moment obviously). Our veranda catches the breeze being up a bit and so is cooler than most places here - it's VERY hot.



The trouble with extravagance and paradise is that you get used to it. It just raises the bar. You want to live like this for ever. We have moments, sitting on our veranda, sipping passable wine in the cool evening breeze, asking the question - could we afford to stay here for months?




We have amused ourselves sitting in the shade of palm leaf shelters, reading novels, doing crosswords and staring uselessly at our grammar cram cards, sipping corona or margaritas. Ange has done lots of body surfing, I bob in the surf. The water is the warmest outside a bath I have ever been in. We have also caught up on our blogs, emails etc because we have wifi in our room... How did we ever get it so good? Here is another picture of our room with me working.




Here are more photos of the room and the view from our balcony of the surf and the rocky outcrop between beaches. We are on the edge between two beaches opposite the rocks. The high tide makes them an island and then late in the afternoon you can walk out to them. Last night there was an huge tropical storm . We sat on our veranda watching a man sit in the pouring rain on top of the rocks. It has been so hot he was probably just enjoying the cool. Being the scientists we are we were a little worried about his capacity to be the most likely conductor if the lightening came too close.







Finally we watch the fishing boats come and go from our balcony. They often come in with big plastic tubs full of fish - tuna, sharks and lots more we can't identify. We eat fresh fish almost daily - in soup (a whole fish cut in half in a tomato broth) fried with garlic, or with spaghetti.


A couple of days ago we went out early in the morning with them. They wait between waves and then shoot straight out. Coming back it is reversed - they drive straight for the beach, up onto the sand and rollers logs.


Once out on the water, we went to see Roca Blanca - indeed a big white rock because so many birds roost there, then we went out further and saw lots of turtles on the surface of the water. They are mating at the moment and the male hooks on to the females back for 24 hours!! The poor females have their heads under the water a lot of the time but I was assured that they wouldn't drown. We also saw lots of dolphins playing in the waves.


Tonight we are going to see the turtles laying their eggs on the beach. It started last night and only goes on for two or three nights apparently. It is at a marine reserve about half an hours drive away.


Tomorrow we reluctantly move away from paradise. We go to another beach for a couple of days and then take a huge bus trip (12 hours) to San Cristabel higher in the central mountains and near jungle. After that it's across to the Caribbean coast. Excitement calls. It's not just extravagance to remember it is adventures too.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Ange’s Birthday week 27 July - 2 August- Oaxaca, San Jose del Pacifico, San Agustinillo

The bus trip south from Mexico City to Oaxaca went through some mountainous areas, past a huge canyon and hillsides covered by cacti. It was suurprisingly spectacular.


Cactuses on hillside enroute to Oaxaca >>>>>>>Huge canyon enroute to Oaxaca




We had decided to go to Oaxaca and do a walk in the Sierra Norte for Ange’s birthday. The guidebook made Oaxaca City sound like a place to settle for a while and learn some more Spanish. We spent our first day walking the hot streets selecting an expedition. To the north we found the city very picturesque but it seemed to have a high proportion of American tourists, and to the south, where our budget hotel was, seemed to be for the Mexicans but fairly ugly and noisy. However later that afternoon Ange got incredibly sick - as sick as I’ve seen her - vomiting, diarrhoea and a very high fever. After some tense hours wondering if we should be decamping to the nearest hospital it abated - but that was the end of plans to walk.



The next morning we decided to go to the mountains. We wondered if it was partly heat stroke (all that walking in the morning heat). Ange found a lovely place with cabanas in the book and with truly awful Spanish we called them and found that they did have one available. So we took a mini bus up to San Jose del Pacifico at 2750 metres. The trip up was spectacular - green swathed mountains with vertiginous drops from the winding road. The bus driver dropped us off at the door and we were soon settled into our cabin with incredible views to valley and it was so cool that we could have a log fire.



View from our room >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> View of our cabins from the town of San Jose









In front of our fire >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>On the verandah of our cabin

The only down side was that they had a room for two nights but not for the night of the 31st July - Ange’s 50th birthday! Oh no! Another change of plans.


On Friday, Ange’s birthday we left most of our luggage and just took small bags on another three hour minibus trip down the other side of the mountains, this time to the coast. The journey was just as spectacular and just as scary. We made our way form the bus station at Pochutla to the coastal town of San Agustillo by both sitting in the front bucket seat of a taxi doing 90 along a highway - did I mention that there were no seat belts? Ange commented later that we were like Aunt Augusta (Travels with My Aunt) not waiting to inch, day by day, towards the “final wall”, but out there doing it. Just as well our parents are not still alive - although they are safely ensconced within us, still whispering in our ears.


We decided on San Agustillo on the advice of Brenda a friendly and slightly overenthusiastic American who lives in Mexico with husband and two teenage sons. They were in San Jose and heading for San Agustillo. She found us a room right on the beach - the view out the door was across the sand to the waves of the Pacific. Not bad for a birthday!



Ange at our cabin door >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> The beach outside our door




We lazed away the afternoon on the beach and in water so balmy it was like a bath. Ange even caught some waves. Many of the beaches along here are really too dangerous for non-surfers (surfers love it) but this one is protected by outcrops of rocks on both sides and is doable.



Best of all, that night we found a place right on the beach, Restaurante Linda (linda means nice in Spanish!), where they made the second best margaritas in Mexico - we had a second one just to be sure. (see photo)


Ange's birthday margaritas!!







Then we had a lovely dinner of fresh fish with a reasonable glass of wine.



We slept very well that night - well until the 3 o’clock hour when you lie awake swearing never to drink so much again. They next day was spent on deck chairs on the beach eating more fresh fish but drinking just one margarita, swimming and reading in the shade of palm trees. Well someone has to do it!






The following morning we came back up to the mountains again for another five nights here. But before we left we booked a very spiffy (expensive) place right on the beach as a belated birthday present for Ange (next week). Now I will quote Aunt Augusta from Travels with My Aunt: “You must surrender yourself first to extravagance. Poverty is apt to strike suddenly like influenza; it is well to have a few memories of extravagance in store for the bad times.”



At San Jose we have had walks each day through the forests in the crisp mountain air, studied our Spanish, wrote our blogs, read our books in front of log fires, and generally rested. Our second cabin has an even better view of the valley than the first. (see photo) Unfortunately it has been back to bistec and frijoles and beer (no wine and of course no Ms). There is a butcher in the village about half a kilometre away where the meat is cut and hung out to dry (see photo). On Friday we return to our extravagance on the coast.


>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >View from our window in the mountains


Ange studying Spanish! Me reading by our fire (two photos to come when the connection improves!!)




view from one of our walks >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Meat drying inSan Jose del pacifico