So about my time in Uruguay…I spent my first day wandering
around the capital, Montevideo. There’s
really not many specific things to see or do there, but I met some people at
the hostel and we walked through the historic area, along the beach, and through
a nice park. I really like Montevideo because
it doesn’t feel like a big city. It’s
really safe, the bus routes are easy to understand, and everyone walks around
drinking mate. It was quite common to
see people of all ages carrying their thermoses of hot water, bags of tea leaves,
and special mate pots with the traditional stirring straw with them through the
streets. And these tea-drinking habits
are not just for women. Even the young,
hip men carried their matching mate thermoses and pots with them as they went
to meet up with their friends, and groups of guys sat together on benches
passing around this traditional beverage.
Someone staying at my hostel offered me some, and it was a very, very,
strong flavor; a little overwhelming but not bad at all. It would be like making black tea and putting
three teabags in a tiny teacup and letting it steep for 20 minutes maybe.
The next day I went to a beach town east of Montevideo
called La Paloma. Since it’s just the
beginning of spring here now there were very few tourists there, and everything
was pretty dead. I did my first help
exchange there with a really nice couple who ran a hostel. They really didn’t have much work for me to
do, but they let me come and stay for free anyway just out of the kindness of
their hearts, and because they had done a lot of these exchanges when they were
in New Zealand and I guess they wanted to help me out and practice their
English. I had a lot of fun there. They lent me a bike to ride along the coast,
and over the weekend some Brazilian tourists came to stay there, so we all had
a fun time walking along the beach, playing cards, and hanging out. The ocean was absolutely freezing! So cold that if you stick your foot in the
water it actually hurts, and if you keep your foot in the water for a few seconds
(why did I do that?) your whole leg hurts.
After my stay in La Paloma I wanted to go to the interior to
Uruguay, something that I regret not having done more in Brazil. First I went to a town of about 3,000 people
called San Gregorio de Polanco, which is right on the shore of a lake, and is a
very nice, typical, small Uruguayan town.
From there I did a day trip to Tacuarambo, a larger city in the center
of the country, just to see what it was like.
It was cool to see just a regular city that doesn’t have much tourism,
but there really wasn’t much to do there.
Finally I went to Colonia del Sacramento, which is just
across the river from Buenos Aires. In
the summer it’s full of tourists, but at this time of year it was dead as
well. During the first two days I
wandered around the historic downtown (which is a UNESCO World Heritage Site),
went to some museums, and went for a walk along the coast. I’ve been to several museums here, and the
thing that I love about Uruguayan museums is that they are tiny. Usually when I go to museums I get bored after
half an hour, at the most (unless it’s a map museum), but the museums here are
so small that I can see everything before I get lose interest. Even though the weather forecast predicted
rain for the entire time I would be here, the first two days had several
rain-free hours, and only today has been so bad that I haven’t left the
hostel. I wasn’t sure how I would pass
the day until I discovered that they show American football on TV here! Problem solved. There was only one option, so I didn’t get to
watch the Eagles, but the Packers/Redskins game was on. I like the Packers well enough to enjoy
watching them win, but even more satisfying than that was watching the Redskins
get destroyed in the first half!
Yes, go Packers!!
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