Saturday, April 7, 2018

In Bolivia – Villazón to Potosí


As could be suspected, the southern part of Bolivia is similar to northern Argentina. Green mountains and plenty of life, with small villages bordering the full length of the road. People use every drop of water to grow traditional plants or maintain their flocks of goats and llamas.





















In 1545 the Spanish conquerors realized that Cerro Potosí was packed full of silver and other metals. Then started an exploitation as brutal as the rest of Spanish colonization. The city grew at the base of Cerro Potosí, and the mount serves as the frame for all images of this city.



In this picture we can see the monument to Alonso de Ibañez, a native of Spanish ancestors, who fought for Potosí’s independence. In 1617 he was captured and killed by the spaniards, and is considered and honored as the first rebel of the Spanish colonies. In the background we see Cerro Potosí and, at mid altitude, we can see another of the many cathedrals presiding over the pillaging and crimes of the Spanish invaders.



Potosí is a beautiful city, with a colonial layout, narrow streets and walkways, balconies with flowers, colorful buildings plus the dresses of the people.





















On April 1 they celebrate the foundation of their city and through the city marched hundreds of students with their music bands. The private school guys all dressed on their school uniform, while the public school use the standard white coverall similar to those used in Argentina. The uniforms are very formal and seem to be very expensive.





















It seems that people is proud of their city and its customs. They are kind wth the tourists and they make you feel comfortable walking the streets.













































We visited the mint house used since early colonial times. At the entrance there is a big patio showing a big mask made by a french man but the museum guides could not explain its true meaning and the twisted smile in its face. 



The first coining machines were brought from Spain. They were humongous wooden devices activated by muscle power: mules, indian slaves and African slaves. To extract the silver from the mineral they used mercury brought from Huancavélica, Perú, and it was handled without any caution or protection. The workers in charge of this process were constantly exposed to mercury fumes and they died, blind and poisoned, after some three months on the job. The entire mining and processing procedure was bestial and inhumane.
The museum only admit guided visits, and it called my attention the lack of critical analysis on the part of the museum guides, considering the mayor drama carried away in the area. The extraction of silver from the mine took some 8,5 million lives, and I think that it should deserve more than passing comments from the guides in order for the tourists to understand the real magnitude of the tragedy.

Inside the museum there is a display,not very large, of objects made with silver mined in Potosí. Personally I saw I real life size carriage entirely made of silver in one of the churches in Burgos, Spain. The immediate questions would be ‘Were Spanish people aware of the real costs of that silver? ‘Would they care?’

Finally, it called our attention the number of civilian music bands, marching with military steps and blasting their music through the city center. One of them carried banners reminiscent of the infamous ultra-right Argentinian organization “Tradición, Familia y Propiedad”, with calls to the honor and discipline of their members, something that resembled the marching of European fascists youth in times not long gone. One cannot less than question the value of these organizations and think whether their ideology is a consequence of the country’s poverty or, on the contrary, their poverty is a consequence of such ideologies.

SUCRE

We were not planning to visit Sucre but we made a quick decision and only assigned one afternoon to visit this wonderful place. It is a typical colonial Spanish city, with a central plaza surrounded by churches and government offices. Contrary to the organic growth shown by Potosí’s streets, Sucre shows a well planned development following the Spanish colonial tradition, a well aligned square grid of streets.




















Freedom House is a museum located in the same place where they signed the independence of Bolivia. It is well preserved and with an abundance of historic documents. It shows how the Alto Peru played a mayor role in the process of liberation from the Spanish rule. It is sad that the history taught in Argentinian schools doesn’t show more clearly how much we owe to the Bolivian and Peruvian patriots’ for their support and efforts during the liberation campaign.


Sunday, April 1, 2018

Chile, from Osorno to Atacama


 We entered Chile through Paso Samoré, the border crossing just across from Villa La Angostura, and our first stop was Osorno. We went from rainy Osorno to the Atacama desert and, as we moved northward, the landscape changed constantly. Southern Chile is flushed with water from rain, river and lakes, while the northern part of the country becomes one of the driest places in the planet.




  

















Water scarcity also means less population and production means. In the South they have cattle farming, agriculture, and forestry, while at the North they resort to big scale mining.
To support the many mining projects they built enormous photovoltaic and windmills complexes and distribution lines. At the same time, those projects consume most of the little water available in the region. Except for people working in the mines, one can drive hours and hundreds of miles without seeing a single person or an animal. The same hundreds of miles show the scars left by decades of mining projects in the Atacama region, not to mention the trail of pollution which nobody takes care of cleaning.




















Some questions remains: ¿what would happen if, instead of providing energy and water to mining projects, the government provides energy and water to promote and sustain traditional activities such as agriculture? ¿Is it conceivable such type of development?

Transportation is very expensive, with a toll booth located every few miles (average one every 84 miles along 1932 miles. Average 4,50 U$S each). At the same time, in such a long country, public transportation is also very expensive. Chile is still a poor country, but to live and move in Chile is out of reach for the common person.

We drove from Osorno to Concepción, Santiago, Copiapó, Coquimbo, La Serena, and Antofagasta. Instead of keep going north on route 5 we turned NE to the border with Argentina at Paso Jama. The driving was exciting but difficult as our car couldn’t afford the high altitudes (around 15,000 feet), lost power and forced us to move much slowly.

 Volcano Licancabur, in the border between Chile and Bolivia
 The landscape changes significantly on the Argentina side. There is more humidity in the air and in the high mountains we started seeing some small bushes and vicuñas.



 Our objective was to stay overnight in Purmamarca, Jujuy, and then travel north to Bolivia. However we got there during Easter and the hotels were crowded. Confronted with the problem we kept driving north to the border city of La Quiaca, and tomorrow we will cross to Villazón, on the Bolivian side.    


Friday, March 23, 2018

A long trip back to the USA

Cheers to all our followers:
We decided to return to the USA after six years of adventures in South America.



We did many things never imagined at the time when we decided to return to Argentina, mainly our involvement with problems related to health and the environment. It has been a constant training session during which we dug head first in problems related to oil and gas well fracking, underground coal gasification, and the procedures for uranium mining, processing and use.

We think that we can sustain the same activity working from the USA while being closer to our family, therefore we decided to pack and start our return trip. Just to make this trip more interesting we also decided to return driving the same car that took us to Argentina, a 2003 Toyota Corolla with 233,000 miles.

We are not in a hurry, therefore we will take our time to learn a little more of the countries between Argentina and the USA.

We will attempt to document our experiences and, when possible, we will try to reply to any message you want to send us.
All the best,

Roberto and Alicia.
22 March, 2018


Sunday, February 17, 2013

Puerto Deseado

Our latest trip: Puerto Deseado (S47.45 W65.55)

At the end of January we went back to the USA to visit our family, refresh our family ties, and see our friends. We flew to Buenos Aires, Argentina and from there to Trelew to pick up our car parked at my uncle's house. After resting one day we continued South to Puerto Deseado, a small city located South of Golfo San Jorge. Before leaving Argentina we had arranged to meet in Puerto Deseado with members of birdwatchers clubs from other parts of the country, so we found people from Puerto Deseado, Comodoro Rivadavia, Sarmiento, and Esquel.

We knew that this area was a good spot for watching birds of all sorts, but the place exceeded our expectations. The city is located at the mouth of the 'ria'. The river running from the mountains
dried out some 12000 years ago and the coastal area subsided giving way to an invasion of the sea over the former river bed. Consequences: the sea inlet now spread for some 30 miles into the continent bringing with it all sorts of marine life, including penguins, cormorans, seagulls, petrels, dolphins, and seals.

We first day we took a boat to Penguin Island, some 15 nm Southeast from Puerto Deseado. Apart from adventurers from Spain, England, and Holland, the island was first occupied by a seal oil factory. The Spaniards started the operation around 1790 and killed some 30,000 seals per season. A few years later they stopped it probably because the seal population was exhausted.

The first thing we saw approaching the island was the old lighthouse. Built in 1903 by local prison inmates it is now out of service. Most of the island is populated by Maguellan penguins, but there is also a significant colony of Rockhopper penguins. On the other side of the island there is a male seal colony, those that are either too old or too young to mate, including an elephant seal. Among the flying population we saw a variety of gulls, terns, skuas, petrels, swallows, and cormorants. The round trip to the island takes about one hour. It was quite cold, but the weak sun and the strong wing gave us a splendid bright red suntan of which I am still recovering.

The second day the boat took us westward through the ria. Now we got closer to the cormorant's nests, built on the cliffs facing the ria. There we saw the imperial, real, gray, and black cormorants, each one nicer than the other. There is an important population of Commerson's dolphins and one of them came to play around the boat. Unfortunately I could not take any good picture of them. Along the ria we also saw plenty of Maguellan penguins, seagulls, and seals.

In the canyons along the ria there is a colony of owls (Great Horned Owl). This is the largets of all owls and we had several nearby possing for us.

I found a good video of Penguin Island on the web. You might enjoy spending some time with it.

The trip back to Esquel was long (some 12 hours) and tiresome. We are still trying to recover from so much boat and car punishment but happy for the adventure.




A view of the ria.











A couple of Rockhopper penguins



















A young Rockhopper ready to go fishing















Another Rockhopper in the process of changing feathers
















Red-legged cormorant



A Black Oystercatcher


A falcon nesting on top of a bush



The Great Horned Owl is the largest of the family, some 50 cm tall.


A Black Widow waiting for us in the bushes.















This is part of the colony of male seals




Kelp gulls and a youngster



South american terns














Magellan penguins with the Penguin Island lighthouse in the background.
















A Black Cormorant

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Catching up


Well, it took me some time to continue posting on this blog.
It is not that I am lazy. Quite the contrary, I am a very active person but there is a time for everything, and I hope this is a good time to narrate my adventures.

As you know, we moved to Esquel, in the Northwest corner of Chubut province, Argentina. This is not a very big place, some 35000 people, but it is full of attractions. The city has many activities and shows that  keep us busy the entire week. In addition, Esquel is in the foothills of the Andean Mountains, so we are surrounded by mountains, lakes, rivers, trees, and vegetation of all sorts. 

We are also engaged in two other activities that take much of our time: birdwatching, and the popular protest against mining activities.

Birdwatching is fantastic because of the big variety of birds in our province, but it also allow us to meet interesting people and know the area.

Regarding the popular protest against mining activities, you might be aware that the world is currently being destroyed by big mining companies eager to grab minerals regardless of the environmental and social impact. In Argentina, both the central government and provincial governments are in the forefront of the sellout to mining interests. Accordingly, they gave the authorization for mining exploration and exploitation in many provinces of our country. Of course, it is easy to make such decisions when you live hundreds or thousands of miles from the mine sites and it is not your kids but someone else's that get the contamination. We are currently trying to stop the contamination and the depletion of water resources in our province. Our city is apparently saved from the destruction but now they targeted the central plateau, so there is always a reason to be on guard against the mining companies and its allies in the government.

Here you have some pictures of our province, and hopefully this will convince you to come visit some time.


A view of the petrified forest, near Sarmiento in South Central Chubut.
This place was covered by dense forests some 65 million years ago, then it sunk under the sea for some million years where it suffered the petrification process. Later on, a few million years later, it emerged again.

Another view of the forest place


An example of a petrified tree.














Near Lake Rosario, about 45 minutes South of Esquel


A view of Lake Rosario


The Central Plateau, about 60 miles East of Esquel. River Chubut on the forefront.












A pond near Trevelin. We visit the place to watch the many aquatic birds.










      




A Loica


Pato Barcino


Patos maiceros


Pato overo - female


Royal woodpecker - female


Royal woodpecker - male













Aguila mora after breakfast. Notice the detail on the beak and fingers.


Bandurrias

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Just a test

This is just a test. If this work then I will try to give new life to my blog.

A view of Northern Chubut province, on the road to Piedra Parada.