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Archive for February, 2007

Buenos

Dear fellow travellers,

I’ve been a bit slack and not doing much blogging of late.

Hope you enjoy this article about Buenos Aires the capital of Argentina.
When Buenos Aires was still just a small cluster of buildings on the Rio de la Plata, a group of Franciscan monks, known as the Padres Recoletos, established a chapel and retreat in an area of the countryside north of the city. The Recoleta sanctuary marked the high ground of the Río de la Plata valley, which was why, in the second part of the 19th century – with crowded living conditions and stagnant water in San Telmo giving rise to a series of plagues – Buenos Aires’ richer citizens decided to flee their former barrio and move there instead.
Recoleta, to this day, is Buenos Aires’ most elite neighbourhood, and, thanks in large parts to the efforts of the 19th century French landscaping artist Charles Thay, it has also remained green – a series of parks and plazas parallel Recoleta’s wide avenues and grace its belle-époque buildings with shady tree limbs. The neighbourhood is arranged according to a gradient, with the most expensive real estate in the area immediately bordering Avenida del Libertador. The residential blocks surrounding Avenida Santa Fe, meanwhile, while still firmly upper-middle class, lack the former area’s ostentatiousness and forebodingness.
For a quick glimpse of the most ornate luxury environs in Argentina – typical of Avenida del Libertador posh – take a walk down Avenida Alvear. The Alvear Palace Hotel, with its chandeliered lobbies, is an example of Recoleta’s palacio architecture and is the city’s most exclusive five-star hotel.
Plaza Francia, at the end of the avenue, is more relaxed. It’s home to a weekend handcrafted goods fair and on the weekdays is a great place to sprawl out on the grass. The Centro Cultural Recoleta, on the Plaza, houses temporary art exhibitions which are normally of minimal cost or even free, and the Recoleta Cemetery is a must-see for visitors. You can find Evita’s tomb by looking at the map by the Cemetery’s entrance gate.
Avenida Santa Fe, meanwhile, is the place in Buenos Aires to go shopping. Shoes and clothing, by Argentine and international designers, are in plentiful supply – and at a fraction of the price they would cost in your home country.
Thank you Scott for your great contribution.
Till next time.
Cheers
Barbara
About the Author:
Scott Ferree is a translator and English instructor, as well as the study abroad coordinator for the Interhispanica Language School in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The school is located in the Recoleta neighborhood, near Avenida Santa Fe: http://www.interhispanica.com.ar

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Sydney

Sydney Wine Tour: A Traveler’s Guide by James Lush Dear fellow Travellers, Here’s more about Sydney and what it has to offer! Why not a couple of good bottles of wine from the Hunter Valley, thank you James for your contribution. I’ve been a regular Sydney visitor for years now and I’m pleased when I hear my friends and acquaintances speak well of Sydney because I consider it my second home. However, I feel that not enough people are aware of Sydney’s great wine tradition, so I have prepared this proposed itinerary for those people who have a taste for fine wines and plan to visit Sydney soon.

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Moving

Moving to France by Helen Van Hotson Dear fellow travellers, I’m always interested in articles that talk about people living abroad and what their experiences are, since I’ve taken the same step a few years ago. Enjoy Helen’s contribution and I hope you’ll find it useful. The attraction of cheaper housing and a quieter more relaxed way life draws many people to France without fully considering the consequences and it has been estimated that as many as two thirds of Britons who move to France return to the UK during the first 2 years, if you want to avoid being one of them then plenty of research and preparation is needed before

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