Tuesday, July 10, 2012

My last days in Argentina

Finally getting around to finishing this up. The last installment.


Day 110- Monday June 18th

I had my normal class this morning and then I stayed in the café to work on my online homework and the other projects that are due this week. I got nearly everything done for my online class, so the next time I work on that, I will probably be back in the US. I went home and had stuffed zucchini for dinner with my host parents and just kept working on my final photo project and studied for my two tests in Spanish and history tomorrow.

Tuesday June 19th- Day 111

I took my finals for Spanish and history and I think they both went alright. After the history test, Susan, Nathan, Maddie, and I went to Cono Pizza for lunch to test out the pizza cones. They were interesting, pretty good, but they had a lot more cheese than regular pizza. After that I headed back home and got to see Eleonora for a few minutes and my host dad gave me a bad time because I haven’t made the second cake that my mom sent me yet. They all left for a while and I kept working away on my photo project that I needed to get done. After my empanada dinner with my host parents, Susan, Nathan, and I went out to a bar that is owned by some guys from California who moved here about 7 years ago and they brew their own beer. Tomorrow is a holiday, so we stayed there for a while and we got a chance to talk to one of the owners very briefly.

Wednesday June 20th- Day 112

Feliz Dia de la Bandera! It’s flag day in Argentina! They are celebrating the 200th anniversary of the flag here this year. The Argentinean flag was raised for the first time in Rosario, so the big festivities are right down the street from me! I met with Susan down at the Monument and we watched the military parade. Argentina is also home to the longest flag in the world so we got to see that (and even touch it!). It is pretty ridiculously long- blocks, and blocks, and blocks! After that we walked to the opposite side of the central district to a park that was supposed to have a bunch of stuff to do. We didn’t really find the stuff, but we got some food and just sat and enjoyed the nice weather. I came home late in the afternoon and worked a little bit on my project, almost done! My host mom made polenta for dinner since I had never tried it and it was pretty good. She put some cheese in the middle and sauce on top. After dinner I finally made the cake for my host dad and let Eleonora know that she needed to come over soon if she wanted to get any of it again!

Thursday June 21st- Day 113

I got up and started working on editing my photo project since I had all but one of the 15 themes done. I got most of the way through them and then Eleo came over for lunch so I ate with her and my host mom quick before class and I was asking them about the different gestures Argentineans use for the last theme of the photo project and Eleo got to be my photo model. We dug into the cake a little while my host dad was out and about, but he got his share later! I finally made it to class and then I stayed for a short while after to turn in the last of my things for my online class and Spanish things and then I headed home. My host mom and I ate chicken milanesas and French fries for dinner and then I went out for a while with a few of the others from Simpson, one girl from the group that’s here from Pennsylvania right now and a couple ambassadors. We had fun and didn’t get enough sleep, but we’re trying to enjoy the last little bit of time in Rosario!

Friday June 22nd- Day 114

All of our group had to get up and have early class this morning and we talked about the last movie we had to watch for project class and then we presented some of our favorite pictures from our semester here to all of the 3 Spanish professors. After that we had a little “graduation” ceremony and my host mom made it even though she thought she wasn’t going to because they had a grandparent’s day at Ramiro’s preschool. We had a goodbye lunch after that at PasoSport where we had out welcome lunch back at the beginning of March. After that I headed back and started getting my things packed for Salta. I took a bus to the bus station and then our bus to Salta left around 8pm and I spent the majority of the time sleeping.

Day 115- Saturday June 23rd

We arrived in Salta around 12:30pm and checked into our hostel and put our things away. I was rooming with Kelsey and Nicole and we hung out and ate some snacks for a lunch for a little while and then we headed out for the afternoon. We went to an archeological museum first that is affectionately known as “museo de las momias” in Salta or to us “the mummy museum” as it was built to house 3 mummies of Incan youth that were found near the top of a volcano in 1999. They only have one of the mummies on display at any given time and we saw the boy who was about 6 and a half or 7. There is also a 6 year old girl and a 15 year old girl who were sacrificed as gifts to the Incan Gods a few hundred years ago. It was pretty interesting to see and read about. After the museum we walked around the town and looked in different shops and things and got some ice cream before we went back to the hostel. Nicole, Kelsey, Susan, Maddie, Caitlyn, and I went to a folklore show and dinner later at night and it was pretty good. We heard a couple different groups and saw some dancing.

Sunday June 24th- Day 116

We had a free day today so we didn’t wake up too early. Nicole, Kelsey, and I ate breakfast in the hostel and then we went to ride up the teleferico (ski-lift, gondola type thing) that took us to the top of a large hill/small mountain where there are some great views of the city and a couple artisans. It was a really nice day and warmer than I expected it to be. We spent the rest of the morning looking around the many artisan stands that were at the bottom of the mountain and then we went back to the hostel to eat something for lunch. After that, we accepted Susan’s offer to go climb a mountain with her and Nathan. We got there around 3 and came back down around 6. It was a lot of fun and it was definitely not an easy hike, I think we all got a good workout for the day. We headed home and got cleaned up and got some meat, cheese, crackers, and some vegetables to have a little picada for dinner.

Monday June 25th- Day 117

Today we had to get up early and leave for a group tour to Humahuaca in the province of Jujuy. Our first stop along the way was a view of “Cerro del siete colores” or seven color hill and it was very pretty. After the view from along the highway we went into the little town of Purmamarca where there were a bunch artisans and things to look at in the square and a popular view of the seven color hill from up a street in the town. After that we headed to Tilcara where there is an old, partially restored village that I believe some indigenous people used to live in. It was really pretty and the views from atop there were also gorgeous. Salta has a lot of mountains like some other parts of Argentina and it is around the pre-Andes range. After Tilcara we headed into Humahuaca and had lunch and walked around the city for a while and checked out some more artisans and then we headed onto the next tiny town of Uquia that has a famous little cathedral that has an altar made of gold and a few more artisans and then we headed home and went through the capital of Jujuy province. Susan, Nicole, Kelsey, and I went to a restaurant on the square and shared a delicious pizza for dinner and then headed back to the hostel. My room went to bed early because the tour the next morning was extra-early.

Tuesday June 26th- Day 118

Our tour to Cafayate today left at 7:30am and we headed south. We made different stops with nice views of the mountains along the way and looked at different natural rock formations that look like things such as a sinking Titanic, a frog, and a Franciscan monk. When we got into Cafayate we got to visit two bodegas and go on short tours with a little wine tasting after. Many of the wine tours there are free, so they weren’t quite as thorough as the ones I went on in Mendoza, but they were still good. After that we ate lunch in the square and I had the locro. It was good, but I still think the locro I had in Mendoza wins. We had a little bit of time to look around at the artisans and try a little sample of tuna ice cream. Thankfully, in this case tuna does not mean the fish, but a kind of sweet alcohol that comes from a fruit from a cactus. I just tried a tiny bite of someone else’s, but it was good! On the way back towards Salta we made a couple more stops to see different things. We saw some rock formations that look like little castles and then we stopped at the amphitheatre which is a part of a mountain where there used to be a waterfall and you walk in and it looks like an amphitheatre. Next we stopped at La Garganta del Diablo (devil’s throat) which bears the same name as the biggest waterfall in Iguazu. This was formed the same way as the amphitheatre, but looks different inside. You could climb around a ways and a few of us climbed to the furthest part back that you can and it was fun and a nice break for our legs after being on the bus so much the last couple days. After devil’s throat we headed back to Salta and Kelsey, Nicole, and I decided we really like the pizza from last night and went back and split the exact same thing we’d gotten the night before and this time we gave in to the dessert fridge and got some chocolate cake we’d be eyeing since last night since we hadn’t had ice cream or anything for a while.

Wednesday June 27th- Day 119

We got to sleep in a little later today and ate the breakfast at the hostel and then checkout out. It was the first day that was dreary and not sunny, which was unfortunate because we had a free morning and were walking around. Nicole, Kelsey and I went to the big artisan fair first and looked around for souvenirs, but didn’t have much luck so we headed towards the square and looked in some of the shops and finally found some things. I finally bought a mate that I liked and we tried to waste our time looking around a lot. We finally decided we were cold and wanted to go sit in a café or eat lunch so we found a restaurant and got the lunch special since we wouldn’t be eating dinner on the bus. We had the best cheese empanadas I have had on this entire trip there and the sorrentinos were really good too. That pretty much used up the rest of our time and we went back to the hostel, changed into comfortable clothes, walked to the bus station, and off we went back to Rosario at 4pm. On the bus I finally finished knitting the scarf I’d been working on and we watched a couple movies before I finally took some Dramamine and went to sleep.

Day 120- Thursday June 28th

We rolled into Rosario right around 8am and I took the bus home. I wasn’t too tired, so I checked some emails after being computer-less for the last 6 days and then got ready for the day. I spent some time packing my suitcases and being sad. I can’t believe I leave the day after tomorrow to return to the US. It doesn’t feel like I’ve been here for four months! I met Nathan in the park later to eat ice cream. He was trying out the kilo challenge (eat an entire kilogram of ice cream in one sitting) and I just stuck with the ¼ kilo. Nathan failed, but it was a good try! I had dinner with my host parents and then we went out to O’Connell’s to say goodbye to some of our other friends from the US because it was their last night in Rosario.

Day 121- Friday June 29th

Looking back on my Twitter account I wrote: “Woke up with a sick, sinking feeling in my stomach and I don’t think it’s going to go away today.” Eventually that feeling went away, but I was all too aware all day that it was the last full day in Rosario. I met Nathan at the UCEL café for coffee and factures one last time and we ended up sitting with Hannah and Melissa who were doing the same. I packed the rest of the morning and had things pretty good for a while, but somehow ended up with a giant mess of the things I was waiting to pack later on. After a light lunch with my host parents I met up with Nathan to have a couple beers and enjoy the nice weather and Susan joined us before class too. We were meeting for one last time for our reflection class and we were talking about going home and it was a big ‘ol cry fest. Absolutely terrible (and I am NOT one to cry very often).  After that we went across the street for one last Yomo and we had invited our professors and the UCEL ambassadors as a thank you for all their help during our time in Rosario and then Hannah helped me finish my scarf real quick so I could actually give it to my host mom. After that little fiesta broke up I stopped off to get cards for my host parents and Eleonora and a gift for Eleo and then walked home. Eleo and Rodrigo were coming over for dinner that night so I had to write her card really fast and get myself ready for dinner and everything. I thought I was going to be quite a mess saying goodbye to her, but I think I got all that out in class earlier. When Eleonora got to the apartment she said I looked very melancholic and I suppose there probably wasn’t a better word for it. I was not ready to leave yet. We had a meat and potato pie (basically shepherd’s pie) which was actually the first dinner I had in Rosario as well and we sat around talking until really late. Mariela called to say goodbye from Ricky’s family so I had a brief phone conversation (that is one thing I’m still not very comfortable with in Spanish). I gave Eleo her card and gift and she gave me two little chocolate bar things with dulce de leche inside each piece and told me to eat one every time I was about to cry the next day when we were leaving. She and Rodrigo dropped me off at O’Connell’s to meet up with the rest of the group at about 1am and I we said our last “see you later’s” J We got to see most of our friends one last time and had fun talking and we went to a boliche as well since it was the last night. We said see you later to Pau and Belu when we left there and that was a mini-cry fest too, except for Belu- girl is a ROCK! I headed home and got a couple hours of sleep.

The Final Day-Day 122- Friday June 30th

I woke up, showered, and finished packing my things. I had a really light breakfast, but didn’t feel like eating much at all. I ran to the grocery store to buy more alfajores to bring home and share and then I came home and it just sort of felt like a waiting game until the bus company was supposed to pick me up at 12:30. Maricel called to say goodbye from Cesar’s family and then Eleonora called to say bye again too and I was doing really good until then, but that one started the waterworks that would pretty much last the rest of the day. I set out my last gifts and card for my host parents and my host dad saw them first and he read the card and teared up which I was not expecting at all… so of course I teared up again too. My host mom was so surprised that I’d been making the scarf for her and she had no idea that it was a gift! She wore it downstairs later when we went down to meet the bus and I left them with a bottle of wine from Cafayate to enjoy. At that point it was about time to go and we went downstairs to wait for the bus to pick me up. Saying goodbye was really sad, and hard when there were other people already on the bus, but we made it, and then we drove away from Av Mendoza 123 for the last time (at least on this trip). We had to pick up a few more people so pretty much the whole van would tear up every time we watched another one say goodbye (did I mention our group is 14 girls and one boy haha?) We stopped at a corner to pick up the last person on our half of the list and all of a sudden I started yelling at Addi to let me out of the van, because I got one last Argentinean coincidence on that van ride. We were parked near Cesar’s apartment, and I saw Cesar and Valentina walk down the stairs onto the sidewalk, so I got out and had a chance to say goodbye to them in person. Some stuff, you just can make up! We met up with the other half of the group on the actual bus we were taking to the airport in Buenos Aires and switched over and then we left Rosario. We made it to the airport and got through all the check in/customs type things for international flights and made our way to the gate. We didn’t have too long of a wait and our plane left on time at 9:30pm Argentina time. Getting on the plane was sort of reality hitting, and between the bus ride and getting on the plane, I ate one of the chocolate bars Eleo gave me the day before. As the plane was taking off down the runway I think about half of us just burst into tears and the rest of the plane probably thought we were nuts, but we just knew that the next time we were on the ground, we’d be in the US and not in Argentina.

Sunday July 1st
We touched down in Houston a little early around 5:45am Iowa time and collected our bags, said goodbye to Kim who was leaving us there to go stay with her boyfriend in Houston, got through customs, and found our terminal without any major issues. A few of us got breakfast and then shared some mate in the cafeteria area before we went to go find our specific gate to use up some time, because it was maybe 8am and our flight wasn’t boarding until 2:30pm. Eventually we made our way towards our gate and started the waiting game. I used my time texting and used the 45 minutes of free wifi on my iPod and then my laptop to make the most of it. Susan, Nicole, Kelsey, Caitlyn, and I visited one of the airport bars so Susan and I could buy our first legal drinks in the US and wasted some more time up there and then we found out our flight was delayed. We ended up leaving around 4:15pm I think and got into Des Moines about 6:45pm where my parents and Lottie were waiting to welcome me home. I suppose this journey ended there, but I know I will go back someday, hopefully soon. Writing this over a week later, I still feel like a little part of me is missing not speaking Spanish and running around the city every day, but I’ll eventually find my new sense of normal here, though it won’t be the same as it was before