~ The Talk: Archive ~

Busy Times!
One thing Charlie and I have not been is idle. Expat Records is in full forward mode,Charlie ran a marathon, and started a luthiery class.I've been busy with a new and exciting job, an art show, and a number of other projects. Now, it's November, we're writing novels, looking forward to a visit home, spending time with interesting people, and enjoying the marvelous weather.

Oklahoma | Arizona
We're so excited to be going to Oklahoma & Arizona to be with family and friends. We'll get to see Charlie's sister, Mary Lucking's, public art installation centered around Finnegan's Wake. We'll get to have Thanksgiving with both families. We'll get to meet Charlie's parents new puppies! Goldendoodles! It's two of the girls. Pink and Pink Stripe collar. I'm so excited for all of it!

Marathon - a month ago yesterday
It was a month ago yesterday that Charlie was running marathons and making strawberry jam. The jam was spectacular! Also, Charlie ran the marathon just 2 minutes slower than his 2nd fastest time ~ 4.5 hours. Yay, Charlie!


National Novel Writing Month
We are participating in NaNoWriMo this year! That's 50,000 words by November 30th. What do you get if "win"? 50,000 words of draft!



Luthier Expo!
Charlie went to an instrument exposition.Why didn't I!? These instruments look amazing!



Luthier Class

Charlie just glued the back of his guitar!

Organic Box
IMG_5288
I found out about Tallo Verde when our wonderful neighbor shared some of her organic akusay with us. We were so excited to get our first box of organic produce delivered! Mandarinas, lechugas, nabo, tomillo, Echalote, zanhoria, remolacha, y pomelo Rosado.

Collective Art Show - Radio Palermo!
I would like to thank everyone again for coming out to the show. It was so much fun!


Democracy Now
When I'm having breakfast I like to listen to the headlines section of Democracy Now. I'm a huge fan of Amy Goodman. This morning her co-host said she wasn't going to be on because she was speaking - in Buenos Aires, Argentina. I was so excited! We're going there tomorrow!


After that, we'll head to our neighbor's concert as Espacio Dada.. She's a jazz singer and I've heard her practicing for this show. Here lovely jazz songs float through my window during the day. Here name is Veronica Glass.

Posted by: Skye B on 11/11/2010 8:06:35 PM

It's Springtime in the Southern Hemisphere!
That's right the beginning of spring!

Jam Session
It's Friday night before Charlie's Buenos Aires marathon on Sunday. It'll be his 6th I'm blogging. He's jamming. No. Really. A batch of strawberry, lemon, apple jam is burbling away on the stove. The smell is a bit intoxicating, like I'm inhaling a dessert from where I sit. A lot has happened in the three months since the last post. For the sake of brevity, I'll be leaving a lot of wonderful out to make room for the wonderful I'll be putting in.

Homeful
Living a traveling life gives one a funny perception of what home is. When Charlie and I were anticipating our visit back to Phoenix and Oklahoma, we kept saying our 'trip home.' Yet, when we were in Phoenix and Oklahoma, making plans for Buenos Aires was always phrased by 'when we get home.' I told Charlie it was like we were homeless. He said, "No, we're not homeless. We're homeful!"

How true. We got to see our friends just after, during, or just shy of momentous events in their lives. It was so much fun. Then, upon our return, we connected with those new faces that are starting to become welcome recurrences in our lives here. We've even run into people we know while walking around Palermo. It's starting to feel like our neighborhood!

Buenos Aires Graffiti Tour (Oct. 2nd, 2010)
One of my favorite things about Buenos Aires is the sense here that walls are just murals someone hasn't yet gotten round to. Graffiti is everywhere! Some friends had the idea to go on a graffiti tour, a special one which included a noted artist that goes by the name Blu. Check out some of his amazing videos! Here is a slideshow of our tour!


New Job
The universe can be quite tricky sometimes. Bad things turn good all of the sudden. I left my previous job for one that is more fun for more, quite a bit more, money! My official title is Junior Recruiter, but I'm also helping build something down here in Buenos Aires. More on that when the time is right. I usually get to work from home, but most importantly it is interesting, exciting, and fun in a not-have-to-talk-yourself-into-it way. It is genuinely great! I get to interact with lovely people: Chicagoans and portenos alike!

Expat Records
Great things have been happening with Expat Records since our last post. The website is up, artists are signing, AR reps are getting on board, and a few other major announcements are in the pipeline! You can "Like" Expat Records on Facebook.

New Digs
A few months ago we moved into a new apartment a few blocks away from our old one. It's cute, small, sunny and has two levels. The levels are nice, since both Charlie and I work from home. I'm on top. Charlie's set up on the dining room table below. I've also got a little "studio corner' tucked away down there as well. I wanted to jazz it up, so I made this (not yet finished) wall de(cal)oration.


32 & 34
Charlie and I had our birthdays in September. I've continued the tradition of tee-totaling every other year, so no Argentine wine for me until quarter 'til 2012. As per usual, I've a long list of birthday resolutions. Since we didn't throw a party for ourselves (a mistake that will NOT be made again)I threw a virtual surprise party for Charlie! I want to thank everyone again for submitting or trying to submit a video/picture. The actual virtual surprise party lasted ~16 minutes. Here is a preview though!

Virtual Surprise Party Preview! from Skye Brannon on Vimeo.


On the horizon Busy bodies, busy hands, busy heads...
Bodies
I was supposed to do the marathon with Charlie this Sunday, but suffered an injury after a 16 mile training run. It still smarts a bit, so, I've resolved to sign up for a marathon next year and will cheer my Charlie on for this one! We've signed up for the yoga place a few blocks away and Charlie has sold me on the Body Pump class at our gym! We'll be the better for it all come summer time on Mar del Plata beaches!

Hands
Charlie just registered today for a luthier school! He's built a charango, mandolin, and ukulele. Now - a guitar! Here is a picture of Charlie with his wood and tools.
New wood!
(The painting he got me for my birthday is in the background. I love it!)

I've signed up to be part of the Sketchbook Project 2011.
The Sketchbook Project: 2011
The idea is that you get a Moleskien, fill it up with sketches, and send it back. The collection of sketchbooks will tour through a few select US cities, and then remain in the Brooklyn Art Library. Fun! There were themes you could select from. Mine: "If you lived here..." Here are my first 4 pages of my submission.
Page 1 & 2Pages 3 & 4
I have to have it postmarked by January 15th, 2011. So, my hands will be busy!

There are also some other exciting arty-related things going on, but I'll wait on that, too! I see a lot of this kind of thing in my future though...
My afternoon agenda...

Heads

Charlie and I (and I hope a few friends) will be doing the National Novel Writing Month challenge in November. It will be Charlie's first go! I've done this 3 times - 2 unpolished novel manuscripts and a mish-mash of writing as a result. I'm excited to do it again!

Well, I think that's it for now. Time to taste the jam!
Charlie's Hombremade Jam!
Posted by: Skye Brannon on 10/8/2010 9:51:37 PM

A Great Time to Be Living In Argentina
Today, July 9th, the day that Argentina declared its independence 200 years ago seems a perfect day to describe why it's great to be in Argentina at the moment. I'm sick today besides, so hazey blog posting, alternating drinks of mate and oj, and finishing "Franny and Zooey" by Salinger seem like good activities as any.

World Cup - Mundial
I have never been in a country that cared much about the World Cup. While Argentina was still in it to win it, it was so nice to walk through the atmosphere of held breath and exclamations when their team was playing. I recall walking to work at 8:45, fifteen minutes into an Argentine game, and hearing the city erupt with the zilly zound of vuvuzuellas, car honks, and cheers escaping from the many bars that surround my commute.

It was a Mudville kind of Sunday, the day Germany beat Argentina 4 to goose egg (ouch). However, I had been invited by a friend to watch the game at an Irish pub that day. I donned my Argentina jersey shirt (thanks Charlie!) and when I made my way to the second floor, I was met with a crowd of lily-skinned, red, yellow, and black clad fans. Germans all. I zipped up my coat and made my way through the crowd. I made a video of the German revelry after the 3rd goal:

German Revelry from Skye Brannon on Vimeo.


It was so hot from all that blissful German chanting and singing, I had to take off my coat. The girl with the flag turned to me and couldn't help but wave her flag at me tauntingly for ten or so seconds. I could only laugh and enjoy it all (p.s. Thanks, Spain). If I had to be anywhere for that game, I was glad to be there.

Now, I cheer for Holland. I work at a company started by a fellow from Holland, sit at a desk across from a Dutchman (one of 11 in the company I think), and felt (and still feel) the general glee for these games. It is nice to have a connection to them still.

Bicentenario Parade
Bicentenario celebrations have been going for the past few months. In May there was an epic parade with things I hesitate to call floats. Art installations, acrobatic shows, and metalwork afire all ebbed at a glacial pace along the streets next to Argentina's own obelisque. Pictures and Video Below.

Video

Bicentenario Float from Skye Brannon on Vimeo.


Pictures


A Great Time to be Living...
General good times had by us...

July 4th - Horseback Riding
A consolation for not getting to see any fireworks: Charlie and I went to the country side (actually just 30 minutes outside the city proper) and galloped around a park with the company Caballos Alapar (which translates to horses side by side). Here is a video of Adrian, the instructor, talking us through riding with-out holding the reins. Yes, that's right - "Look mom! No hands!"

Charlie's Ride

Charlie - Look Mom, no hands! from Skye Brannon on Vimeo.



Skye's Ride

Skye - Look Mom, No hands! from Skye Brannon on Vimeo.



We even got to have a July 4th barbeque, Argentina asado style! Followed by mate and facturas (pastries).


Arte Ba
This city loves its art. I love this city because it loves its art.

Untitled from Skye Brannon on Vimeo.



So, do you guys work or what?
After all of the above, I imagine this question might arise. As a matter of fact, yes. We do and it's exciting.

Charlie's Job
Charlie is an A&R (Artist & Repertoire) guy for Expat-Records (official website is still in its perfecting stages). He's the guy who emails/calls musicians and tells them what they have been waiting for for a long time: "We heard your music. We like it. We want you to sign with our label."
The label is a new venture began by an expat here in Buenos Aires, the illustrious Jeff Libby, who interviewed Charlie a few months ago and since then they have been constructing a mean-music-marketing machine. Here is the Expat-Team as it stands today:
AIMG_4322

Skye's Job
I've found myself a job that has been the most challenging of my life. I call web design/development companies in the US to see if they want to use our company's services: Creative Design, Web Development, Internet Marketing, and Support. Here is our company, Connaxis', website: http://www.connaxis.com . I get responses in the form of everything from new project work, to keen interest, to people yelling at me, to being hung-up on. Luckily, the latter two are very rare, unluckily the first two are not as common as I'd like, not yet anyway.

I work amongst an international group of people that are driven, creative, and, best of all, fun to be around on a daily basis. We have a large Dutch contingent, as the company was started by a chap from Holland, a fellow from England, another Yankee, and, of course, many Argentines. My Spanish is improving by leaps and bounds, as I have to speak directly with Spanish speaking designers and programmers. However, I'm also burning up the Google Translator. Also, as I found that my prior web development skills are as useful as a dodo's wings in this day and age, I'm training myself on things like Magento, Drupal, CSS, and Internet Marketing, taking advantage of the surrounds and experts in close proximity.

Also, I have not let go of my intentions to trade my artwork and stories for the cash of appreciative readers and the empty-walled. However, those intentions won't suffice for rent at the moment. Here is the latest of my work in progress:
Splits

Oh, yeah!
I forgot to mention it...Charlie and I are training for the Buenos Aires Marathon! It will be October 10th, 2010. I'm replacing our empanada count to a marathon countdown. Empandada count? Who was I kidding. There is no way to keep track!

Posted by: Skye on 7/9/2010 7:17:52 PM

About the Amazon
There is hardly a way to make several days in the Amazon a concise post, but I'm trying my best. I'm going to lift what I wrote from a yet-to-be-mailed letter to friends while on the plane, high above the lush rainforest we'd just left. I'm also including select images and some very rough sketches I drew while on the trip. There is a slide show of all the pictures at the bottom.

My co-horts were Charlie, of course, and our friends from the Peace Corps Preston and Pele (who others call Brandy) and Pele's boyfriend, yogi extraordinaire, Danny.
Our guides were Tarzan (yes his real name) Tarzan
and his apprentice, Montanchi, a boy of 24 who had a most enthusiastic laugh.
Montanchi

On a big boat that was taking us to our smaller canoe, we stopped to admire the distinct line between the Rivers Negro and Solimoes, made up of the black waters of the former and muddy brown waters of the latter, mixing 6 km downstream to form the Amazon.
line

As if in a grand gesture of welcome, a dolphin in the distance flipped out of the water, making all of our little tourist hearts giddy.

Years of a steady diet from movies and television showing Amazon jungle scenes with multiple exotic species crowded together amongst the branches, it is no shock that I expected more animal sightings. However, those moments when feathered, finned, and fanged showed themselves afforded enough exhilaration to last until the next one came. During our time in the boat we saw several species of bird – toucan, parrot, eagle, vulture, and other beauties I didn't know the name of. We saw the rustling leaves and silhouettes created by little monkeys and a full showing of machismo and growling from bigger grey faced and bushy tailed monkeys. Hard to photo, those guys. Here is one jumping away from us
Jumpin Monkey


I was the first to catch a piranha (which only just now have I realized the correct spelling thanks to Word). We enticed them with chicken skin bait and I yanked mine out of the water with so much enthusiasm it fell off its hood and floundered in the boat between my feet. Tarzan passed a rusty knife back to me with the instructions “stab in head which I dutifully followed.
FishinCatchin'
Preston followed up by catching not one, but TWO more, letting one off the hook, and subjecting the second to the same fate as my fish a stab in the head.
Preston's PiranhaIMG_3743


One evening we ventured through the marshes, getting buzzed by bats overhead, beneath a swath of stars unadulterated by light, and hunted alligators (caiman). Montanchi would shine his flashlight beam into the grasses until he saw a glowing circle of orange – an outted alligator. After watching Tarzan do it with ease, a few of us plucked our own alligators out of the water. I grabbed mine by the back of the neck, per Tarzan's instructions, and pulled its swingy little body from the swamp. It was too small for eating, perhaps 2 feet tip-to-tip, so the lucky guy got plotted back into the waters and swam off in a flash.
IMG_4122Skye Gator

Less quick was the sloth that Tarzan got out of the tree the next day. He was passed around and pictured like a favored stuffed toy on Christmas morning.
Skye SlothCharlie Sloth

We spent two nights at the lodge, which was plain but clean and had a gauzy mosquito nets to drape over the beds (a necessity to be sure!) and a fan to push around the oppressive heat. One night we slept in hammocks in a building at a village family's place.
IMG_4085
One night we camped in the Amazon jungle with the sound of fighting jaguars (or howler monkeys, there's debate) raging in the distance.
IMG_4096

Our last night (at the lodge) was one that I'll never, ever forget, one which people will just have to ask me about.
Cheers?

Preston had to leave first, so once we returned from the Amazon and got settled in a hotel, he spent some time in Manaus hunting down these wonderful sweets – chocolate balls filled with Brazil nuts and other goodies – called….I forget. Then we tried, with out success, to find a night club to dance the night away – but it was Wednesday and we had no luck. So, we just relaxed until our good-byes and final goofy pictures.


SLIDESHOW!
The first few pictures are of our Fiesta de Miercoles when Pele and Danny were in town as well as a few other things. In the Amazon, Charlie took some amazing picures. Watch the slideshow full screen if you can!


Here is a link to Pele and Danny's Photos!
http://picasaweb.google.com/105743858506090413273/Amazonas?authkey=Gv1sRgCKCqjtrFvZmIZA&feat=email#
Posted by: Skye on 6/6/2010 10:39:19 AM

90 days
We have been in Argentina for 90 days tomorrow. Its a pertinent statistic, given we had to either take a trip out of the country (to Uruguay for the day) or get an extension for 90 more days. We chose the latter, but it took us four trips to migraciones, extremely early in the morning, to seal the deal. Long, not interesting story. However, we got it and were here for another three months!

So, whatve the first three months in this country been like? Amazing, to be concise. We meet interesting people just about every day, marvel at the perks of our location, and are really starting to pursue some exciting paths.

Music and Good Deeds ~
Charlie is working on a grant-writing workshop for a wonderful organization called Voluntario Global, which works to help the underserved segments of community . He is also working with the folk at Expat-Records. Expat is at its beginning, a very exciting time, and Charlie is working on a musician management/promotion plan. More about this later!

A moving pen and typing hands ~
Ive a new title: Freelance Writer! There is no doubt that I will need to get a real job in the very near future. Im excited about the prospect, but waiting to apply for positions until after we float down the Amazon River in Brazil, coming back at the end of May. So, until thenarticles abound! Ive written several for eHow.com and a few for Argentinas Travel Guide. I love not only getting paid to write, but learning and thinking of new things to boot. Here are the most recently published articles Ive written.

eHow
The Best Ways to Build Bat Houses
Plants That Keep Wasps Away
Unusual Tennessee Roadside Attractions
Things You Can See Only in Nevada

Argentinas Travel Guide:
WWOOF Farms in Argentina
Authentic Japanese Sushi and More in Buenos Aires
Hash House Harriers in Buenos Aires

Ive written two short stories, having been inspired by a prompt on the forum called the Flash Factory on Zoetropes writing website and the research done for the articles Ive written. They are called:
- Topsy the Clown and the Mayors Wife
- Hot-dogs at Sun-down

Ive also, and of course, been doodling and drawing. Ive been able to do two pieces since we moved in to our apartment a few weeks ago

Party_Outside
Shroud_of_Turin

Settling In ~
So, were settling in sort-of. I spent a Sunday putting up some accoutrements to our big, white wall while a very keen programming director fed me Rushmore, Austin Powers Goldmember, and The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy all in a row on the teevee.
The wall Before...Wall after!

Were having our Wednesday Parties, which are proving to be so very much fun.


Were drinking lots of coffee 'n things. We gleening Spanish with overt and subtle zeal. We're working on our respective projects...

Next Adventures
Excitingly, our friend from the Peace Corps Pele (Brandy) and her boyfriend Danny will be here in less than a week! Theyll be a week here and then we all go to meet up with another Peace Corps friend, Preston in Manaus, Brazil. Then..down the Amazon we go! More on that later!
Posted by: Skye on 5/1/2010 10:42:36 PM

Hash House Harriers / My First Published Article!
There are Hash House Harrier groups all over the world. If you like running or drinking, or running while drinking, or drinking while running, or none of those but would like to meet some fun loving people ~ Hash House Harriers. Actually, you'll have to like running or drinking a little bit or lot, because they do both.

My first published (and, very importantly, paid for) article is on this very topic. The Hash House Harriers wooed me from the get go. You can see the article here:
Hash House Harriers in Buenos Aires

Also, a testament to their general love of wackiness is this past Saturday's Red Dress Run, which seems pretty self-explanatory, no? I've added pictures, but excluded those with a certain tall boyfriend of mine (something about applying for jobs and pictures of him in a red dress not living in harmony or some such).
Posted by: Skye on 4/13/2010 11:56:55 AM

Famosa Fiesta de Miercoles de Skye y Charlie!
The weekend... well it's the weekend. Weekends are too busy. Mondays are too, well, Mondayish. Tuesdays are so close to Monday and I think I had a thing on Tuesday or will have a thing or will be looking for one anyhow. Thursdays are so close to Fridays and Fridays are the weekend, which we've covered already. So...Wednesday! Party every Wednesday at our place unless otherwise noted!

Primera Fiesta de Miercoles!
Posted by: Skye on 4/9/2010 5:18:50 AM

Home again, home again! Jiggity-jig!
The last time we had a home, one that was ours and ours alone, was almost ten months ago in Dallas. Since then I have loved staying with family and friends, the long journey on the Camino de Santiago in a different albergue every night, as well as the host family, hostel, and farm hopping we've done in the past month. However, it's nice to have a home of your own. Last night Charlie cooked a superb vegetarian chili and I made a first go at making home-made bread (which was so-so).

First meal in our apartment!

What now? Setting up house, getting those little gewgaws one needs. The search for jobs (web design for me and non-profit work for Charlie) and/or the commencement of odd-jobs gotten (some blog/article writing positions I'll be experimenting with). Making arrangements for our float down the Amazon in Brazil next month. Had I mentioned we're floating down the Amazon yet?!

Also, we're having the first of our standing Wednesday night parties tomorrow! Already it looks like we'll have a good turn out of great people. On Friday night, we hope to have our first official Tango lesson! Lots of official firsts ‘round here. I love official firsts.

On Saturday we'll have our official second go 'round with the Hash House Harriers. It should prove interesting as it will be their annual 'Red Dress Run' - in which all the blokes and dames will be wearing red dresses as they run through the neighborhood of San Telmo.

I've just put my second attempt at bread in the oven, I've got 'Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros' playing on iTunes, and I'm writing. It's cozy. It's nice. It's home.
Posted by: Skye on 4/6/2010 8:10:23 PM

Novel Blogs
Another volunteer on the farm where we worked called Aldea Luna (the farm not the girl) said a term I'd never heard before: "novel blog". The usage was "Oh, I can't stand novel blogs, there is no way I'll be able to read it all, so I just forget the whole thing." A lot of the experiences we have had merit posts that are novel blog-esqe. Our 17 hour train ride from Cordoba to Buenos Aires might be of the Russian novel kind, cold and spare, but oh so interesting. Our time at the farms, as if I could ever pull it off, would be closer to "On the Road". However, a blessing and a curse, neither of us have time for those things. So, I'll try to keep my posts short as I can with out leaving out too much and post lots of pictures and videos.
Posted by: Skye on 4/6/2010 7:29:39 PM

Charava ~ Our Second WWOOF Farm
After our wonderful time at Aldea Luna, we spent a week in travel, taking a long bus ride, going to a hotel/spa to enjoy hot springs, and then spending some time in Cordoba. We met two Australian girls, Natalie and Tina, who also happened to be going to Charava the same day. How wonderfully random!

We took the four hour bus ride through sloping/dry mountains to the small town where Charava, the second farm, is located, then figured out the rather curious way to get the seven kilometers from the store where the bus dropped us off to Charava. Luckily, there was a man with a blue truck. The folks who run Charava, Alejandra and Amadeo, are delightful and hard working people, and seemed a little shocked that wwoofers were showing up. Upon seeing Charlie, Amadeo beamed. “I prayed to God for a big, strong man, and here you are!”

The land was beautiful, chock full of walnut trees, and gigantic volcanic boulders. The work was as strenuous as the land was beautiful, and included clearing paths with hand-saws and shovels, digging holes, and carrying very heavy logs on our shoulders that would end up as fence posts. There was also the less strenuous task of picking and cracking walnuts. I met people I hope to know for a long time at this farm. There were those two Australian girls, as well as a trio of ladies from England. We had a grand time talking home-country slang, squealing our disgust at the worms that sometimes find their way into walnut shells, discussing the state of the farm, and related stories of everyone's travels.

They served bread, porridge, and wonderful marmalades/jams for breakfast, a delicious vegetarian lunch, and then bread and jam again for 'tea'. Our host couple seemed a bit overwhelmed at the number of wwoofers who showed up while we were there (at one point there were ten of us, double the number of volunteers Charava had ever had combined), and the water systems (potable and otherwise) began to malfunction on the fourth day we were there. So, we abbreviated our stay, leaving after five days.

Pictures!



Video of us waiting for the sunset and being silly:
Posted by: Skye on 4/6/2010 7:27:33 PM

Aldea Luna ~ Our first WWOOF Farm
Martin, Elisabeth could have bought a few rental houses in Buenos Aires after selling a successful hostel in Ecuador. That would have been easy and lucrative, but it wasn't better for the world and certainly not their style. Instead the couple, their son Matias, and a long time friend Gerardo are the permanent keepers of Aldea Luna, a 900 hectare nature preserve set up to protect a small section of the southern most tip of the Amazon from logging and the trampling feet of bovine. Their amazing organic garden is solely to feed the family, volunteers, guests, and wwoofers.

As WWOOFers, Charlie and I had a real sense of satisfaction helping the family. The girls and boys are separated for separate jobs. The story can be told by our hands. After several days of work my hands a single blister at the spot where I used force to pull weeds, dirt under my fingernails, splats of yellow from sign painting, and the distinct smell of garlic and onions. Charlie's mammoth manos had numerous blisters from holding the machete, thorn pokes, and bug bites from clearing nature trails.

The breathtaking beauty of the land, exemplary family, interesting travelers, gigantic vegetarian meals, and personality rich animals are all stories in themselves..

I've added comments to the video and captions on the pictures that tell more of the story....

Click here for our Facebook Album.
Also, here is a Flickr Slideshow:



A tour of the Aldea Luna bar/cocina:
A long video that I may never succeed in uploading..bummer.

A tour of our sleeping cabin:


Posted by: Skye on 4/6/2010 7:25:51 PM

Cordoba
Charlie and I have spent a few relaxed days in Cordoba, cooking a nice dinner in the hectic hostel kitchen tonight, going for sushi yesterday, watching "Couples Retreat" because the movie times for "Alice in Wonderland" didn't work out, and going to two fantabulous art museums. We plan to head out to the next farm tomorrow morning. I love the serendipty and randomness that occurs when you're traveling. For example the Australian girls we sat down with for the roof-top barbeque at our hostel, one of many in Cordoba, happen to be going to the same exact farm, the same exact day, for the same amount of time! Bizarre.

I'm excited about heading to the Chavara farm tomorrow! If it is a fraction as wonderful as the last place, we're in for a treat.

The last farm was so wonderful. I also got a lot of artwork done for my budding portfolio. Check it out...



On the next farm, I'll finish up the remaining 6 pages in my sketchbook and work on a children's book idea I've been thinking about ever since the day I was babysitting my nephew, Brannon, and trying to get him to eat oatmeal instead of his Fruit Loops (lost cause, I know!).
Posted by: Skye on 3/26/2010 8:38:09 PM

Aldea Luna, Hot Springs Spa, and onward to Cordoba
Weve been staying the last two days at 'Termas de Reyas' - a hot springs hotel/spa, eating rich food, playing Jenga, and soaking in steamy waters. We head off tonight to Cordoba (on a long overnight bus ride) to spend a couple days exploring before going to the next farm for another 2 weeks of WWOOFing.

The experience at Aldea Luna (Moon Village) was so wonderful, difficult, healthy, interesting, relaxing, inspiring, and productive...Ill have write a post devoted to it.

However, the computers/connection here are incredibly slow...so Im taking advantage of the blog posted by a fellow we liked to call 'Bicycle Phil', one of the many fantastically cool people we got to hang out with on the farm and the first guy who actually biked to Aldea Luna as part of his biking adventure around South America! Hes got a great description, sentiments, and pictures (even a few with us in them!)
Posted by: Skye on 3/24/2010 1:18:45 PM

Vamos al Norte!
Tomorrow we head off to the north, first taking a long bus ride (around 15 hours - Yikes!) to Tucuman to have some fun. For March 4th, we've got plans for an 8 hour day hike that has:

"Caracteristics: Mountain footpaths / Forest of Subtropical Yunga / Avistaje de Loro the Alisal (species in protection) / Protected Area Natural Resources."
with a company called Montañas Tucumanas.

We'll stay in this funky looking hostel that night. Then, the next day...paragliding! (For me anyway, Charlie's not sold on it *yet*.)


Then up to Jujuy just before we go to the first farm - Aldea Luna which I mention below.

The second farm, called Charava ,outside of Cordoba, we just recently got a confirmation for. It will just be Charlie and I, we think. The pictures on their newly minted blog look wonderful! Here is a link to the google translated blog:
http://translate.google.com/translate?js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=1&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fcharava.blogspot.com%2F&sl=es&tl=en
We are very excited about it!

You probably won't hear from us until we've done the farm thing and going in to the next phase: moving into an apartment and finding (tengo esperanza) jobs.

Hasta luego!
Posted by: Skye on 3/1/2010 11:35:49 PM

Tigre delta float with a Swiss Chef at the Helm...


Tomorrow we'll be having a lazy float down the Tigre delta with a Swiss chef at the helm :) It is the Delta UnPlugged tour:
http://www.delta-unplugged.com.ar/index-en.html


This fellow, Ralph, will be making us breakfast, lunch, and snacks!


I should be in bed by now...
Posted by: Skye on 2/26/2010 9:54:52 PM

4975 Rusel & Borges

We've found an apartment! We'll be moving in around April 10th, after we return from the Wwoof farm gigs. We paid a little more than we wanted, but the extra is by far worth it for the A-MAZ-ING location! It's in the heart of the design district, next to Plaza Serrano - a wonderful hub of restaraunts, cafes, bars, and boutiques. It's been called "the bohemian heart of Palermo Viejo"!

Charlie was also sold when he saw the big terrace. It looks like we'll be able to cultivate a decent little roof-top garden after all.


I'm excited about the libro/cafe one block over, too. I think I'll be spending some time there!


Pleased, pleased, pleased. Una menos problema! Mas suerte!
Posted by: Skye on 2/23/2010 9:04:14 PM

Wwoof Farms
"Green acres is the place for me.
Farm livin' is the life for me.
Land spreadin' out so far and wide
Keep Buenos Aires, just give me that countryside."

People have asked if we've picked the WWOOF farms we'll be going to work at, and honestly, they've picked us. The two of them that responded. We're figuring out our travel plans, as we want to meander up north to JuJuy in the week we've got between the end of our language school and the beginning of our farm life. However, we are confirmed to arrive HERE, at Aldea Luna, on March 8th. They even have a blog!

After our two weeks there, we're trying to work out plans for another two weeks with the host-farm described below, but details have yet to be worked out.

ARG066
City: Pocho
Province : Cordoba
Type of property: Rural en zona de montana, naciente de aguas.
Size (ha): 60
Cultivos: Walnuts, grapes, apples, peaches, vegetables and others.
We speak: Spanish, English, German and French
Description: We are a ecouniversidad life. The place is very special because of its natural surrounding, located in a very lightly contaminated area. Located west of the city of Cordoba, about 100km. We aim to become self-sustainable.
Our work will be very beneficial for someone who is in learning stage in many aspects of their awareness and technical knowledge of agriculture and others.
Accomodation: Rooms with beds, dormitories, camp. We can receive up to two simultaneous volunteers throughout the year.
Food: vegetarian diet, collective kitchen
We are: a community with a core group of five people.
When to come: all year
Additional comments: We offer food and accommodation and of course we welcome registered wwoofers only. It's simple to register, anyone can. We would not want to leave anyone without the possibility of visiting! We look forward to meet you!
Children: Yes, let us know a month in advance at least.
__________________
It'll be an interesting/peacful month!
Posted by: Skye on 2/20/2010 3:16:35 PM

Big Floods and Little Beers
Charlie and I were supposed to meet up with Carlo at the artesenal brewery,Antares, but when it was time to make our way there, there was no street to walk down. It was more like a stream.

This is actually the second time the street in from of our host house has filled up. Charlie had a discussion with his teacher about it, and she said that Palermo is the lowest point in the city and that the drainage pipes built to empty in to the river back up right into the barrio.

We had no electricity and therefore no internet to find Carlo's number to let him know we would be late coming, if at all. Once the gushing waters waned, we were on our way to Antares! There was no Carlo there (turns out he couldn't get there because of the storm either) but there was plenty of rocking music, 'Never Ending Story' projected on a high-wall, and a plank-ful of the cutest little beer glasses. Here they are:
The samplah
Here we are in the pre-tasting pose:
Having waited out the flood..we got our beers...

Posted by: Skye on 2/20/2010 2:49:50 PM

Ready, set, tanGO.
Last night, Anika and her boyfriend, the patient and friendly Antonio, gave us our first Tango lesson at the school!



Afterwards, we went to a milonga, where Charlie and I tried our first (and yes a little awkward) steps of Tango. Mostly, we sat and watched, mesmerized by the sliding stilettos and whipping legs, entranced by the rhythmic music.


Posted by: Skye on 2/11/2010 9:26:40 PM

If only a picture was worth 1000 vocabuly words...
Every day I'm happier and happier with my class, the language school, and my comfort with Spanish. Perhaps even, I'm getting too comfortable. I scrawled my first whiteboard doodle when I should have been studying Primadoodle

and I snuck a doodle (or two)into my notes.

This guy needed to come out..and his big handed friend...

Hey, I lasted a week and a half with no doodle in the margins. That's good for me!
Posted by: Skye on 2/11/2010 9:22:56 PM

Highrise Hops Talk
Anika, a wonderful Swiss expat who started the language school, has been taking us students (also mostly Swiss, well, all Swiss) out for tours of places about town including the Belle de Artes Art museum, the cinema (we saw Nine), many a café visits, and a schmancy high-rise hotel that looks over the entire city with a nice view of Argentina's famous obelisk.

On one of these excursions I met Carlo, an intriguing fellow to be sure. He's taking personal classes when not on business consulting for a vaccine firm. Mostly, though, we talked about beer. A hobby home-brewer, with a back-ground in pharmacy and chemistry. I asked if he followed the 'German Rule' for beer (only four ingredients: water, yeast, hops, and malt). He scoffed and waved it away, saying that, for example, a good Belgian beer is made all the better with a little bit of coriander and orange peel to give it that crispness that goes down so well in the summer. He also spoke about how he 'vaccinated' a friend's beer to kill the lactobacillus, a nasty bacteria that will turn a beer sour, during the fermentation process. The Brewmaster - Carlo

He told me about a beer festival that was going on during the weekend, and I hatched a plan to surprise Charlie and take him to it. However, the festival was canceled at the last moment. Boo! Well, at least we'll be going to an artisinal cerveza bar, Antares, with Carlo next week. He's going to introduce us to the brewmaster who also runs a 'maltery'!
Posted by: Skye on 2/11/2010 9:01:35 PM

Charmed I'm Assured...
I knew it would happen. Charlie and I are experiencing things too quickly to blog about them in an orderly or timely fashion. This city has been charming me from the get go, from the stencil graffiti to the tube station tile murals, the empanadas (check our count, by the way) to the stolen spoonfuls of Charlie's gelado (dulce de leche = dulce delicious). Earlier this week we took our own impromptu art tour in the barrio of Retiro, which is quite littered with galleries.
retiro

Much of the artwork we saw was funky and modern, but there were also classic styled artwork that garnered much appreciation. Our last stop was in the whimsical shop of '30 Quarenta', run by the most charming and friendly fellow by the name of: Miguel Bornstein. He was showing of these lamps he'd just created from early/mid 19th century sand buckets that were in pristine condition. Lovely, lovely.
Posted by: Skye on 2/11/2010 8:37:17 PM

Max ~ How I Smell Thee
Cookie, the Lucking's golden retriever, is such a sweet pooch. I miss her! A consolation, though, is that we do have a dog here at our host's house. The lab has a really strong and unwieldy tail, with an even stronger and ever more unwieldy odor. A kind of reek that invades rooms through out the house, whether the happy lab occupies them or not.


Now, I laid hands on many a mangy beast while we walked on the Camino de Santiago, but I can't bring myself to give poor Max a good petting. I can only scratch the top of his snout, a place I've ascertained has got to be the cleanest part of the pooches writhing furry body. Still, I'm moved to wash my hands *thoroughly* the moment my fingertips slide off his fur. It's all I can do for this lovely animal with a beastly stink.
Posted by: Skye on 2/11/2010 7:52:18 PM

Nice Airs
Poquito pastele con grande Labias y raton dulce

Blog titles abound when you're looking around in new places (and even old ones). Charlie and I were traveling with a flock of estudiantes from our school, on our way to 'Belle de Artes', and as we crossed the street I saw a muscle-bound fellow with the words 'Nice Airs' written in a plain pink font across his chest. Fair winds, Buenos Aires, nice airs, aha, I got it!

It's been cinco days here in Buenos Aires and we're finally getting into a groove. Charlie and I are in different bright yellow classes at our sun tinted school. He's in a more advanced class, as he should be. I'm in a really fun class, so fun that the other classes have commented about the eruptions of laughter that seep through our walls and into their own lessons. Seep or gush, who knows? At any rate, I'm feeling much more confident in my Spanish speaking after only four days. Immersion really is the best way to learn.

The classes are great and the school has activities through out the week. We were not yet in Buenos Aires 48 hours before we saw Evita Peron's tomb. With in 78, we had seen, for a teasingly brief hour or so, the 'Museo Nacional Bella de Artes', a wonderful art museum.

We've had a few days with out after-class activities to relax and run errands before our dinner is served by our host - Maria Ines - around 8:30 or 9 p.m. Our room is small, but comfortable, and the meals are great. Maria also has a golden lab that is the sweetest and happiest dog, just begging for a good petting, but smells to high heaven. There is other student that is staying at with this host family; Mariza is a wonderful twenty-year old Brazilian that has a wide smile and gentle nature. She reminds me alot of a pal from Peace Corps, Lala.

Que mas? Today we got a casilla correo! A post-office box! The address is to the right and in the post below. Also, I've been applying for some really interesting sounding work, and I actually have a small writing assignment for a web article on phantom limbs. Charlie's been putting feelers out as well. We'll see what happens!
Posted by: Skye on 2/4/2010 8:09:58 PM

*Our Post-Office Box Address
Senorita Skye Brannon
Casilla Correo 50
Capital Federal/CABA
SUC 2 Congreso (1402)
Argentina

*The post-office only allows
one name per box. So, if you want to post to Charlie add "Attention:
Charles Lucking" beneath Senorita Skye Brannon


Posted by: Skye on 2/4/2010 8:07:40 PM

Insomniacs and Numismatics
It's 5:01 a.m and my circadian rhythms are as discordant as a baby's kitchen pot orchestra. My plane seat contortions for a sleeping position were only partially successful, so once we met our host - Maria Ines - both Charlie and I tested out each of our little twin beds for an extended nap. The humid warmth and hum of a standing fan brought memories of those mid-afternoon naps in Samoa, which seem ages ago.

Our taxi ride was quite pleasant. The driver began pointing out the various soccer and sports stadiums just outside the airport, giving a report about who can and cannot practice there, then cathedrals and temples, and commentary on poor neighborhoods and rich. Before long he reached his short arm down into a bag in the next seat and pulled out plastic coin holder pages. It turns out the fellow was quite a numismatic - coin collector! His collection of monedas and pencil rubbings pulled my attention away from the first glimpses of this new country of ours. If I'd have bet, I'd have bet against anything distracting me from the neighborhoods and shops, the street names and plazas, the people and graffiti of our new town, but it did.
IMG_0300IMG_0305


We will walk five blocks to catch a bus tomorrow morning and ride about a half an hour to arrive at our school at 8:15 a.m. Our classes are from 9 to 1 p.m. and then we'll work out those new-to-country things like post office boxes, cell phones, grocery shopping, and incidentals.
Posted by: Skye on 2/1/2010 2:15:30 AM

Neither Here nor There
departing
We're off for a day of travel! Long long anticipation of today's travel to southern climes and the ensuing adventure. The past 24 hours have been a whirlwind of meals with family and friends, hectic packing (Skye got a jump on it, I didn't), a big cleaning of the bedroom at mom&dad's house, and farewells to mom, dad, sisters, nephews, and friends. We sit in Terminal C, gate 8, 15 minutes from boarding with two laptops, a backpack, a guitar, and lots of reading material. My thoughts are torn between the sadness of slightly chaotic goodbyes and the excitement of a fully chaotic 2010 ahead of us. To reiterate a point that we've made once or twice, we want YOU to come visit us!
Posted by: Charlie on 1/30/2010 9:27:32 AM

La Posta Prima!
I recently saw the movie 'Up in the Air' with a main character (George Clooney) who uses the metaphor of a backpack to promote eschewing the collection of material belongings as well as personal relationships. I've grown an acute appreciation for that first part of the character's take on things, as I have a very literal backpack (and suitcase) that are empty and need to be filled. Still I consider the latter bit a very lonely-hearted and sad-spirited way to go about life. I have a globeful of friends I wish I could sneak on my back past the TSA. Since I haven't figured out how to do that...here's the blog.

I've archived the Camino de Santiago de Compostela blog/pictures on its very own page.



Posted by: Skye on 1/27/2010 10:45:32 PM