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Ahhh Salt Spring Island Tango Retreat

The ferry ride

If you love Tango and enjoy the beauty of nature, then this retreat which hasn’t happened for 5 years just started again.

I read about the retreat years ago but never had the opportunity to go. Many friends have gone and thoroughly enjoyed themselves. So when I knew we would have the time in the Northwest I registered us, even checked out what visas were needed to enter Canada.

This retreat happens in early May and is a vetted encuentro because of space limitations. Early registration is necessary.

This encuentro is limited to about 100 people, gender balanced for dancability. Mostly peeps from Seattle, Victoria, Vancouver, and the local environs, too.

We were very lucky as the weather had just started to warm up. It actually reached 65 degrees F one day with sun shinning all day long.

The milonga was held at Mahon Hall. It is an older building that has been re-purposed as a community hall with a beautiful wooden floor and a kitchen area and centrally located in downtown Ganges opposite the boat harbor.

Daytime milonga

The tango community here  is very friendly and welcoming, but of course,  had a bit of the tango camaraderie thing going for it too.

Happy place

There was a different dj every night starting Dj Bobby from Montreal, and on Saturday afternoon Mixhael Daniels, the DJ on Saturday night was TDJ Tom Lee from Seattle and on Sunday for alternative and traditional Milonga there was Cliff and Becky from Pt Townsend.

TDJ Tommy Lee

The delicious snacks were prepared thoughtfully and had many healthy choices with fruits, protein bars, and sweets included gluten-free and vegan goodies too. Wahoo for the gluten-free.

The smiles and the laughter

Dancing was delicious as I had a many tandas with my partner, then danced a few other tandas with some old and new tangeros. Ahh, tango. There’s nothing like dancing to Pugliese.

We met a lot of new wonderful dancers, and I was able to reconnect with a few folks from the past. Maximo was his limited English, found himself chatting to many folks in Spanglish, and did a great job communicating.

In the evenings, we found some outstanding food at a restaurant called Auntie Pestos. It was so good, we ate there two nights in a row, crab cakes and pasta boloñesa and the following night a rack of lamb with tomato and capreses salad. Was very tasty !!!

At the milonga, some folks were curious about our lifestyle as we dance tango all over the world, but especially in places where Pl the weather is sunny and the temperature over 75 F. We enjoyed chatting about the experience of traveling, the ups and downs, and delightful things you discover while traveling.

Ohh the embraces!!!

The crew of people who were responsible for putting the event on were pretty impressive assemblying the sound, the decor, the flowers and the food before the event then having to completely disasemble everything after the event was over. It’s a heroic undertaking!!

Happy place

If we’re in the northwest again, we would happily attend the Salt Spring Tango Retreat, especially as the weather cooperated. It was a wonderful and delightful experience.

Mahon Hall, Ganges, Salt Spring Island

Thanks and a shout out to Laura Klein and all her fabulous helpers for creating and presenting us with such a beautiful space and place.

Post event relaxation.

We stayed at a place that was the perfect antidote to 2 weeks of shuffling and moving stuff from one place to another. We would definitely stay there again, The Cottages on Salt Spring Island. It was a 5 minute drive from the milonga location in downtown Ganges. It was on a big lake and at night lots of frogs croaking as they do in the spring!!!

Dawn at The Cottages on Salt Spring Island

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Published by Ruth Offen

I chose tango as my dance because I love the lifestyle, embrace, and, yes, dressing up. In my tango series, I share images shot worldwide, in the places where I have danced: Spain, France, Germany Turkey,Canada,Italy Greece, and the USA, but mostly in Buenos Aires, Argentina. With my written stories, I try to share some of the experiences that have stayed with me... An amazing embrace, a beautiful meal, a slightly uncomfortable life moment at a stay a train station or airport. These are the moments we remember. As to my personal info, I was born in New Jersey eventually, after living in New York, Boston, and San Francisco, most recently on San Juan Island in Washington state, I moved to Buenos Aires in January 2020. For 38 years, years I curated a contemporary art gallery, where I refined my skills and became a visual editor. Always with a camera or some picture-capturing device in tow [including much heavy equipment], I started my travel at approximately the same time, was introduced to tango about 12 years ago. VIsual storytelling begins with a moment. Some internal mechanism is triggered by a scene or event or movement and ...there's your photo. Other times, it’s about a sliver of color or something else odd or ordinary that captures the eye. As I am now fluent in Spanish, it is my desire that my stories and photos reach the broader tango community and other travelers. Travelingtango offers translations into Spanish, Italian, and German. Abrazo!!!

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