I can't not believe that I have arrived in Buenos Aires!
The trip down here was relatively easy (although I almost missed my connecting flight in Houston!)...in an amazing stroke of luck, there was no one in the seat next to me for the flight from Houston to Buenos Aires...so I had two seats to myself, which made sleeping much easier! 9 hours and 47 minutes later (quite a bit early, in fact) we arrived in Buenos Aires. After making my way through immigration (and paying the $131 for a US entry visa, strangely higher than that for both British and Australian citizens), I was pleasantly surprised to discover my luggage had arrived also (I didn't think that there was much of a chance, given that I landed in Houston and took off again in only a half hour)! After I found Melissa, we located our car service and were on our way.
We went straight to the apartment where we will be staying for the summer, which is located in the Barrio Norte neighborhood of Buenos Aires. Barrio Norte is sandwiched between the barrios of Recoleta (sometimes it is considered part of Recoleta, I think) and Palermo. The area around the apartment is lovely; there are so many trees on the street here, even in the middle of the city! And the apartment itself it really nice...We are living here with an older woman, named Carolina, who is a retired art and cinema professor with several grown up children. There is another girl named Daniela living here right now, too; she is from Venezuela and working here at the moment.
The apartment is very lovely, compact but very nice and airy. Carolina has some beautiful and interesting art because she used to run a gallery. We are on the ninth floor with two balconies (we mostly look out over other apartment buildings, but it is nice to step out for fresh (city) air). The elevator to get up here is really old school -- very small, and you have to open two gates, step inside, close them, and up you go!
We spent most of the day running some necessary errands - paying the rent for the apartment, buying some groceries and other essentials, etc. It's really cool to actually be living in an apartment right in the midst of such a lively city. When Melissa went to her orientation, I took a walk around the area nearby to go in search of some shampoo and a Movistar store - I'm still hoping that a leftover cell phone from Spain may work here - and though I got sent from shop to shop and got a bit turned around, it was lovely to explore the city.
Later that night, we went out to dinner at a restaurant near the Recoleta Cementary. Los PorteƱos - the term used to refer to citizens of Buenos Aires - appear to operate on a very Spanish schedule; we only arrived at the resturant at what we thought would be the later side of the dinner rush (8:30), but none of the resturants around us even began to fill up until we were leaving around 10:00.
We slept in today, both of us being much more tired from the trip than expected, and then my friend Abby came to visit! Abby, a fellow Miltonite (Miltonian? Miltonite? hmm), has been living and working in Buenos Aires since March, and truly serendipitously, she was leaving today, just over 24 hours after we arrived (though I of course wish she was staying longer!) We went to a lovely lunch together - the food here is surprisingly cheap so far - and she gave us her 'inside scoop'. I cannot wait to continue exploring the city!
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What happened to you at the restaurant is funny since everybody could tell you were new in the city. All tourists should know that dinner time in Argentina starts at 10 and can go on till passed midnight. I usually used to eat in my buenos aires apartment since I didn´t like to have the schedule they did, that way I had more time to know the city and the bars around my building.
ReplyDeleteI hope I will go back soon, I can´t imagine another year away from this amazing country!
Brooke