Hello hello!
Well it´s been two weeks in the extreme north of Argentina and a rich two weeks indeed. THe farm is gorgeous, moreso even than the photos (Aldealuna.com.ar) make it seem. It´s a long bumpy bus ride up into the yunga (semi-tropical mountains) and the farm has gardens on huge terraces where we cultivate everything from chard to corn to squash to peas. It´s pretty chilly, especially when there´s no sun because even though the rainy season is over, it´s always misty moisty. Imagine the climate around Macchu Picchu. That´s the idea. Overall I´m pretty satisfied with the people, though not as wonderful as my previous sites in Chile. A family from Buenos Aires that are a little cold and critical, but we still chat about things and joke and they´ve lent me books from great Argentine short story authors. Most English speaking than I´d like becuase of the German and French volunteers, but I also get to practice my Portuguese with the Brazilian brothers, so it´s all good.
Still, two weeks of hard work, getting up at dawn, eating huge meals of rice and polenta and huge salads and homemade soy burgers, had me a little worn down and really feeling ready to be back in Missouri already, especially after reading a bunch of National Geographic articles about the Midwest.
Then came today. A golden day by all means. Yesterday I came back to the city for the first time in 2 weeks. Jujuy itself is a pretty dirty city with lots of traffic, loud cumbia, and usually damp, cloudy weather. But today I decided to take my Sunday off to venture north and get to know the province a little better. I took the hour and a half bus ride to Tilcara, a little hippy town and site of a reconstructed indigenous fortress. First off, the change of climate is amazing. 20 minutes out of Jujuy city and suddenly the clouds and thick vegetation give way to a ride open plateau of desert, brilliant blue sky, and amazing mountains with sparse vegetation but rock formations like you wouldn´t believe and minerals of a bunch of shades of purple, orange, etc. (most famous is the Cerro de los Siete Colores). Then I arrive in Tilcara and begin a golden day. First, I go through the huge sunday market looking for a charango for Zora. I finally reach the stand at the end, then one place where they´re sold and it´s closed!! I was about to pull my hair out, but I talked to a yound woman at a nearby stand who knew the woman who sold charangos. She called her and she came and opened the stand and there I found a perfect one for just 500 pesos witha case included. Then I got to talking to the woman from the other stand, a super cool hippie type from Bolivia, and told her I´d come back to hang out after seeing the ruins.
I climbed up to the ruins, which were beautiful, even if reconstructed with a bit of conjecture. Walls and houses of pure piled stones, with roofs make of cactus beams covered with dried mud. Wandering around, I ran into a pair of anthropology professors from Buenos Aires, with whom I chatted about US imperialism, and how these ruins were bs because they copied Macchu Picchu and that really the pre-Incan peoples who lived here were much more advanced and built with more adobe.
On the way down, beside a corral full of adorable llamas, I found a huge stand of untended grapes and harvested tons to take back to the Bolivian lady at the stand. We lounged and gorged ourselves on grapes and chatted until I decided to wander back toward the bus terminal, write this blog post, and now I´m headed back to Jujuy and my last week on the farm before a marathon week of travel back to the US of A. But what a golden day in the valley surrounded by sun and gorgeous carved peaks. Plus, I´ve been chewing coca leaves from the market and that adds to a sense of jittery excitement to be alive. And now I have a charango to play with for the next couple weeks.
So life is good, and hopefully the next two weeks will go smoothly as I rap up my wanderings around Sudamérica.
Hugs and looking forward to seeing everyone soon!!
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NOAAAAAHHHH,
ReplyDeletecomo va irmão? leí unas entradas deste blog, y me alegre que tuviste una experiencia tan linda. Recorriste bastante... que suerte! Yo ando acá en Philly trabajando harto en mi internship de salud público en el barrio puertorriqueño. Estoy con ganas de terminar la escuela ya, y volver a sudamérica visitar una mina de Rosario. Creo que me toca viajar la primavera que viene. Donde estarás vos quando regreses?
un abração, (sim, eu também estou aprendendo português!)
Evan