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Amici in visita a BsAs

After the rainstorm on Avenida Callao

It’s been so great to have friends visiting…BsAs is such a lovely city to share.

Not as old as Istanbul or car centric as Miami or Seattle, BsAs manages to be an easy and small city to navigate in, whether walking or taking a bus or taxi.

BsAs has 48 different barrios, [neighborhoods].
Some that have gotten to know as Palermo, Boeda Recoleta, Puerto Madero, Belgrano, Flores, San Telmo, La Boca, Caballito Monserrat, Vella Crespo, Almargo and Balvanera. But a lot are unknown to me. All barrios are connected with the transportation system called the Sube. There are trains, buses and a subway.

I live in Recoleta and love it. This barrio is centrally located with wide boulevards, lots of trees and beautiful old buildings and very safe to walk around at night. As we usually get home from a Milonga at 2AM.

Buses on Avenida Purreydon

I take either the 102 or 17 colectivo (bus) anywhere I need to go in the city.

Yes, it took time to figure out where to get a card (any Şube train station)
how to reload (any store with a Şube sign in window, providing the system or machine is working)
and then figuring out how to use Google maps transit to identify your route as where you board the bus, and you must tell driver your exit stop.
Then he figures out the fare, you place your card on the little blue machine located either by the side of driver or behind the driver. The machine creaks out a beep as an acknowledgement that you have paid the fare.

Whew!!! The process is exhausting to learn and then understand and use.

Bus interior, notice the red cloths with stars coverings !

Once you do the work and understand the system you can ride anywhere in the city for 38 pesos (approximately .11 cents US). It’s a marvelous working system.

We went on a train trip to Tigre, another city about an hour north of BsAs. The cost of the roundtrip was 76 pesos (. 24 cents US).

Sube train interior

It’s very safe and usually pretty clean. Some lines have different vendors selling food, drink or wearables. These vendors have voices that are unique and harmonious or loud and bellicose adding another layer of sound to the train. But no vendors are on the bus! Usually.

Bus interior

So imagine my surprise, when my visiting Kiwi friends mentioned casually they used taxis to get around everywhere in the city.

I thought hmmm. Why?

One of the important things about living in a city is to be local. That is my quirk.

What is more local than using a bus or train?

Sube train to Caballito

With my help, my friends learned to use the bus and I think they enjoyed the experience. In their homeland, bus service has shrunk after covid, as there are not enough drivers.

In BsAs, I noticed this odd phenomenon…not only does one bus arrives, but usually it’s 3 in a row. Why? Who knows!

So the chance to get a bus is pretty much guaranteed. If you miss one, just wait a few minutes and one will arrive.

We take buses to shop, we take buses to meet other friends for dinner and we take buses to Milongas.

Train to Lomas de Zamora

But late at night, service is not very frequent. We are usually unwilling to wait 20 or 30 minutes at the bus stop, so we then take a taxi.

Getting back to living in the city, I like my experiences to be as a local. Finding my neighborhood coffee place, my small fruit and vegetable vendor. A charcuterie. A couple of local restaurants, maybe even a book store.

Street café in Palermo

Getting to know the vendors, and being able to greet them and engage in a bit of chatter is important as it creates a sense of belonging in a place.

Maximo and I on the bus going shopping

And we all need to feel as if we belong in a place, as it breaks down the barriers of isolation.

So when I travel to new, different places that I will live in, the initial places I discover are a place for coffee. Then the small market, a gluten free bakery, the butcher, the fruit stand etc. Once done, I feel home in whatever city I am in. Then I am local.

Dinner at the Parrilla with good friends from New Zealand

And when I am local, I feel as I am living my best life.

Abbraccio

 


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Pubblicato da Ruth Offen

Ho scelto il tango come ballo perché amo lo stile di vita, l'abbraccio e, sì, il travestimento. Nella mia serie sul tango, condivido immagini scattate in tutto il mondo, nei luoghi in cui ho ballato: Spagna, Francia, Germania, Turchia, Canada, Italia, Grecia e Stati Uniti, ma soprattutto a Buenos Aires, Argentina. Con i miei racconti scritti, cerco di condividere alcune delle esperienze che mi sono rimaste impresse... Un abbraccio straordinario, un bel pasto, un momento di vita un po' scomodo in un soggiorno in una stazione ferroviaria o in un aeroporto. Sono questi i momenti che ricordiamo. Per quanto riguarda le mie informazioni personali, sono nata nel New Jersey e, dopo aver vissuto a New York, Boston e San Francisco, e più recentemente a San Juan Island nello stato di Washington, mi sono trasferita a Buenos Aires nel gennaio 2020. Per 38 anni ho curato una galleria d'arte contemporanea, dove ho affinato le mie capacità e sono diventata visual editor. Sempre con una macchina fotografica o un dispositivo per catturare immagini al seguito (comprese attrezzature molto pesanti), ho iniziato a viaggiare più o meno nello stesso periodo e sono stata introdotta al tango circa 12 anni fa. La narrazione VIsuale inizia con un momento. Un meccanismo interno viene innescato da una scena, un evento o un movimento e... ecco la foto. Altre volte, si tratta di una scheggia di colore o di qualcosa di strano o ordinario che cattura l'occhio. Poiché ora parlo correntemente lo spagnolo, desidero che le mie storie e le mie foto raggiungano la comunità del tango e altri viaggiatori. Travelingtango offre traduzioni in spagnolo, italiano e tedesco. Abrazo!!!

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