Sunday, August 16, 2009
Ring The Alarm
It's taken from his debut album "Party Hard" and is going to rock Notting Hill Carnival this month for sure.
In fact Donaeo is onto a good thing with that song title. How many good tunes have the word 'riot' in them? Well, at least one anyway........
Thursday, August 13, 2009
Creepy Clowns
And then, after a hard days work scaring the townsfolk, back at the ranch when the clowns are chilling out and getting down with the lady clowns i think they might wanna check this one out
Paz, amor y payasos
Peace, love and clowns
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Future Minimal
And to hear what I am wittering on about hit play here
Friday, July 31, 2009
And in my fantasy 'new music from old hip hop legends with a slightly younger hip hop legend' scenario? Clearly it would have to be the Beasties, who are kicking it all over again, because "grandpa been rappin' since '83" and Nas is helping out. Can't wait for the album "Hot Sauce Comittee" to come out but more importantly, MCA get well soon, good health is the most precious thing we have isn't it?
In the meantime, check out "Too Many Rappers"
So there we have it, enjoy your life. And good health. And dance. It's that easy. Paz y amor a todos.
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Know Your Rights
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We were treated to "Pretty Vacant" and "Train In Vain". I did take some photos but because we were behind glass (or were they?) they didn't come out great, click here to check them and some of the library
Keep an eye out also for the very friendly old dude with bleached blonde hair who goes by the name of Desmond. He is the older brother of punk documentor (is that a word) Don Letts and will personally welcome you to the library and entertain with stories of his past ("John Lennon, Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, I sold them all ganja"). Top bloke, as was Mick who came out of the rehearsal room and thanked the gob smacked fans for coming along to his little show.
Full details here
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Thursday, July 23, 2009
Swine Time
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I was reminded, by the power of Facebook and an old friend, of this wicked little number as a result of uploading The Younger Generation to my Facebook profile
Now, I heard this ladies voice on a Mos Def track this week, which is called "The Ecstatic" and is out around now. She features on the track "Roses" and goes by the name of Georgia Anne Muldrow. In my opinion she steals the track, I don't know if it was her track originally, but have a listen and see what I mean.
To liken her to the Erykah Badu would be easy and unfair but she does have the nu soul vibe going on. Signed to Stones Throw she has been releasing albums for a few years now so worth checking out. http://www.myspace.com/georgiaannemuldrow
Just gotta mention this one, cos its Mos Def rapping in Spanish. Really looking forward to getting hold of the album now.
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Ending on a high, this one kind of smashes it........
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No, we're not ending it there because you have to listen to this wonderful African Funk sound from the 70s.......make you clap your hands.........
Paz, salud y amor a todos, because that's all it's about.......
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
New Old Soul
His album is going to drop this Autumn on Stones Throw, a highly recommended label
and check this sound out
Can't wait for the album to hit the streets, plus would love to hear him spin, guesting on a Gilles Peterson podcast he played some of the most divine soul sounds I have heard, which you should be able to hear right about here
On a darker note, I have recently been receiving some racist emails into my junk folder in my hotmail account. Some guy called RJames, a right wing Christian scary type somehow started spamming me through Google Groups. I certainly don't recall subscribing to his particular line of hatred and have notified Google of his groups offensive postings. I know of at least one other person who was receiving unsolicited messages from this guy. At least it is a reminder that although the web can be used for good purposes, there is also some bad folk out there using it to spread their messages of hate and we need to remain vigilant of them.
Paz y amor a todos
Sunday, June 28, 2009
RIP
Sunday, June 21, 2009
By The Power Of Greyskull
Anyways, on with the music. Starting with this guy Jose James, an Irish/Panamanian jazz singer from Brooklyn. A real interesting voice, sounds a little like Antony Hegarty singing jazz.
This week I have had alot of love for J DIlla, mainly due to listening to some great sets from J Rocc and Madlib on Radio 1 and 1 Extra. Respect.
OK so this one is massive, its not out yet so quality not great here, but good enought to check out and enjoy
Diplo doing some favela funk sounds
It doesn't look like the crowd are really getting it!
This was rocking the gym yesterday, where I did some good chi sao with my mate Gyan. Well, he kind of kicked my ass actually, although I got a couple of sweet punches in.
Everyone seems to be putting balaeric piano in their tunes right now, well alot of the indie sounds anyway
Jay Z may be dissing Autotune but Kanye is still using it in this mix of Mr Hudson
Not balaeric but enjoyable.
What a trip this has been, from jazz to The Horrors. Thats all for now. I had a nice time, hope you did too.
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Sunday Night Selection
Anyway, enough of that. Some music from the past 25 years, no particular theme, just good stuff.
Thursday, June 4, 2009
La Murga De Panama
This was the dopest salsa track I heard on my travels. Check out the brass section, bad ass sounds.
Sunday, May 31, 2009
Sunday Selection
Please sit back and enjoy.
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
A nice new conspiracy theory to worry about
Make up your own mind. Further reading below.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bildeberg
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/series/charlie-skeltons-bilderberg-files
Monday, May 18, 2009
Dancing On The Ceiling, Saving The World One Lentil At A Time and George Bush
So friends I would like to share some links that come highly recomended, if you like good music that is.
http://www.parisdjs.com/index.php/post/Paris-DJs-Soundsystem-Morning-Sunshine
http://sunnybrooklyn.blogspot.com/">http://sunnybrooklyn.blogspot.com/
http://africolombia.blogspot.com/
http://www.myspace.com/dirtydiggers
Hope you enjoy.
Currently feeling very full from eating too many chocolate biscuits, Mr Kipling cakes and popcorn. Plus had fish and chips for lunch, beans on toast for brunch and porridge and boiled egg (with pitta bread) for breakfast.
However, I will be going part time (3 days a week) vegetarian this week and may even flirt with one day of hardcore veganism per week. Main reason for this is the environmental impact, not to mention social injustice of rearing animals for human consumption. For more read about a small town in Belgium that is going veggy one day a week (its called Ghent and I went to a trance party there in 1997, complete coincedence) http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/may/16/ghent-belgium-vegetarian-town-environment
Oh, and this put a smile on my face too
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/gallery/2008/aug/12/bushlol?picture=336501045
Friday, May 1, 2009
808 Police State
Friday, April 24, 2009
Lazy and Home
Yes I am bad. I am lazy. Slovenly. Loafish. I haven't updated my blog in ages. I have been "busy" doing other things. Reading. Spanish classes. Travelling. Training. Not much else.
Back home now. In Kenilworth, Warks., England. Looking vaguely for employment of a short term variety. Life back in the economic crisis is actually worse than i thought. Work wise anyway. Im sure there are a tonne of jobs if you want one. And also that you need to work alot harder than before to not even get the same results.
But its nice to be back, with family and friends. Not much changed, although I think I have.
Ok so brief summary of the last few weeks. Popayan (colombia) a very pretty city best known for its Easter Holy Week processions, great if you are a Catholic. San Agustin (Colombia) accesible only via The Road To Hell, a 100km ride from Popayan, that takes 6 hours, the road doesnt deserve to be called a road. You literally crawl along at 15km the whole way because it is basically a collection of holes, held together by some concrete. Anyway, once you get there, its a lovely village next to a very important archeological site, lots of stone carvings of animals, man, manimals etc from pre Christ, ie well old.
A sad farewell to Colombia, I had a great time in a great country, surrounded by great people. The trip home was softened somewhat by a 4 day stay in Rio de Janeiro, one of my favourite cities on the planet Earth. I stayed with Antonio and Patricia, a wonderful couple who like to party and know everyone you need to know in Rio it would seem, anyway, they always seem to show one a good time. Partied pretty hard, in stark contrast to my Puritan behaviour of the last 6 weeks in Colombia (well almost Puritan).
And then the journey home. 10.5 hours flew by, crap food, 5 hours sleep, some TV and a bit of banter past the time away. Luckily arrived back to blue sky and 21 degrees otherwise I may have turned round at T5 and gone home.
Next step is to work out my next step. Most likely, 3 months working in London, save some dosh and then head off again.
Saturday, March 28, 2009
Super Cali Fragalistic Espi-alidocious
Rainbows over Cali. I am doing Spanish lessons every other day with a geezer called Leandro. Have been training Shaolin Kung Fu in a Martial Arts school, very cool, they train hard too, which I like. Also do alot of Tai Chi there, and they do more of that with the kung fu which is anice touch. The Master of the school is nails without particuarly looking it, always a good sign in Kung Fu. Also training at the hostel with a couple of American guys. One of them, John from NY met a Colombian girl last month and they are now engaged! He moves fast that boy.
Not much else, just enjoying the vibe of the city. There isnt that much to Cali, but it is a nice place to be, nice climate, great people. Went to a tiny little salsa club last night and danced a bit. The Calenos are mad for salsa, the club was full so the crowd spilled over onto the pavement, it was cats and dogs ouside but it didnt stop them from dancing in the rain, salsa crazy these folk.
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Viva Californication
Cali, Colombia, not Cali, California. Dont think I have written anything about Medellin though. I stayed in a super cool hostel called Casa del Sol, a very chilled place, a bit like a chill out party house really, right up my street. Some cool dudes hang out there, had a nice couple of smokes, an Argentinan BBQ or asado as they like to call it, which was delicious and I watched the latest Bond movie on a pirated DVD. I think I must have been slightly under the influence as it was until about half way through that I realised that the language was alternating between English and German, very odd!
Another random thing that happened was this old lady who claimed to be 83 who strode into the hostel, and bear hugged everyone,she claimed that she could squeeze energy out of young people and this was what kept heer so strong, her hand shake would have made Arnie Schwarzanegger wince.
The main reason I was in Medellin was to do the awesome Pablo Escobar tour of Medellin. A 3 and a half hour information packed tour of Pablos Medellin, run by a very cool guy called Nicolas, who basically just comes and picks you up in his little van and drives you round some of the famous Pablo sites of Medellin, like his house, offices, the place where they eventtually tracked him down and killed him and his tomb, all the time talking about what life was actually like in Medellin and Colombia duringg the 90s when Pablo was at war with the Colombian governement. I was really fascinated by it, he was according to Forbes magazine at the time, the 7th richest man on the planet, all of his money totally illegal and a very intelligent businessman, albeit slightly unorthodox in the way he went about doing business. He had a very simple rule, "plata o plomo" , "silver or lead", meaning if you worked for him you got paid, if you didn't you would get a bullet through your skull. Nicolas had first hand experience of Pablos ways, his friend and friends Mum were killed by one of Pablos bombs, planted outside a police station in Medellin.
It is worth noting here, for those of you who havent been to Colombia or Medellin that it is now a beautiful city, very modern with some wonderful architecture and the people went through some very hard times in the 90s which they have put behind them. It seems those times inspired them to rebuild their city and culture, it is a very cool and progressive place, not to mention full of beautiful women.
I have since been in Cali for the last 5 days. Chilling out really, again, found a nice hostel called Iguanas with some good people there, it will be my home until next Saturday when I'm heading to Popayan for the Easter festivities and then San Agustin, an archealogical site of great importance in South America, home to some statues that are pre Colombine. It is in some beautiful countryside and I am going to be camping.
Buena vida indeed but I have just under 4 weeeks to go before I will be home.....so I am starting to think about the future. Will it be London, Ibiza, Barcelona or China?
I've Got A Lovely Bunch Of Coconuts
Token "Carry On" style photo opportunity, I attempted the Sid James laugh as well.
Friday, March 20, 2009
Bogota
OK I can't remember when I last updated this, but I am now in Cali, Colombia, not California. This pic was in Bogota, looking over the city and the mountains up in Montserrat. Dont know why I was looking so smug, must have been the hangover from the night before wearing off.
Anyway, just a quick update, have been in Medellin as well, where I did the AWESOME Pablo Escobar tour. Will be here in Cali for a week and then off to San Agustin.
Having some issues trying to work out what to do with my life, I will be back in England on 21st April, any suggestions please email.
Friday, March 13, 2009
Back In Bogota
No photos as of yet, camera is broken, so all though I have for the first time here done something cultural (Botero Museum, Plaza Bolivar, Museo de la Policia for the Pablo Escobar exhibition) I have no pictures to show.
Off to a techno night tonight, could be interesting.......
Monday, March 9, 2009
Capoeira
So. I´ve got into capoeira. It´s fun. And humiliating. I thought I´d be half OK at it. I was wrong. Those guys have incredible strength and flexibility. I did a couple of informal classes with my new friend Arri, a guy from Itacare and then today in Salvador with a 20 year old girl, who has been doing capoeira for 15 years. I really, really sweated, and failed miserably at walking backwards in the crab position, doing a sweep, that looked more like breakdancing, and was moderatley succesful at the cartwheel based moves and more familiar spinning kicks.
Still, it´s good to try new things and test ones self. Even if it leaves you dripping wet and feeling useless, as well as knackered. Todays class also involved a music lesson, for those of you that dont know capoeira is a Brasilian martial art, brought from Angola originally by slaves, it was disguised as a dance, hence the music and rhythm of the moves.
Another class to look forward to tomorrow, befoer flying back to Colombia, last stop on the tour.............
Friday, March 6, 2009
Today Was A Good Day
Went to the beach this afternoon, sun bathed a bit and then wandered up to the Capoeira circle that overlooks beach 2 in Itacare. Started chatting with Arri, a fella selling capoeira clothes and his friends and hung out with them until sunset, Arri teaching me some basic capoeira moves, the jonga ( it think its called), some basic blocks and kicks, plus he explained the music. All in Portugese. I understood some of it, actually most, when he spoke slow and clearly. It was really good fun and he invited me back tomorrow for more of the same.
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Here I Go Again On My Own
In the words of Whitesnake, "I dont know where I´m going, but I sure know where I´ve been" . This is not strictly true but it does allow me the pleasure of a link to this soft rock classic, a video featuring some of the girliest haircuts from the 1980´s.
So basically, I am now travelling on my own, again. Mike and I said our goodbyes at Salvador bus station after 3 months of being on the road. I then hooked up again with Benja from Ibiza for 5 days, who has now flown back to the white island, leaving me, well, on my own. As such, I am in an internet cafe at 11pm on a Friday night. Mainly because I have been partying a little recently, so fancy a night off. I´m back in Itacare, I went to Morro de Sao Paolo for 2 days but came back. Morro has changed since i was last there in 2002, it has been developed alot and is a bit lumpy on the pocket so I took the boat and bus back to Itacare, its cheaper, more chilled, and I just like it more. I´ll stay here until the 9th or 10th, there are some amazing beaches that I have yet to visit nearby so it makes sense. Plus the best bar I have been to in Brasil is here, Favela Cafe. A very relaxed place with some great music, good crowd, good vibes in general, hip hop, reggae, Brasilian funk and some good Cairpirinhas. Life here is basically as follows
-get up
-have breakfast
-go to the beach, read, train, sunbathe, run along the waters edge, look at girls, have a coconut milk and some lunch
-go back to the pousada
-sleep
-have dinner
-walk the street (it´s a small town)
-drink a couple of cans of beer
-see whats happening at Favela cafe and maybe even talk to people. Have met some cool people recently actually.
Have been doing some great training recently, every day in fact. Either in my pousada or down at the beach. I´m really pleased that I haven´t let my kung fu slip, as could easily have happened. I guess thats a sign, it is something I love doing , but I think i knew that anyway. So, planning a trip to China after I´ve been home for a bit. The recession seems to be biting bad, and I think I can live cheap in China, especially if I am spending most of the time getting voluntarily tortured by Shaolin monks, or at least the sell out ones that will train you for Western money. Apparently the hard core ones wont even talk to you if you are Western, I heard one Swedish guy approached a temple and was made to stare at the sun every day for a week, before they would talk to him. Must remember to pack my shades.
Anyway, I am gibbering. I´m off to Colombia (again) next week in case you didnt know and then fly back to London from Rio on the 20th April. Get the bunting ready, bake a cake etc.
Ciao
Saturday, February 28, 2009
Another Random Salvador carnaval Memory
Cheesed off
Salvador Carnaval-A Retrospective
good music-once you had had enough to drink and lost your dancing inhibitions, carnavalmusic is totally different to what i know, the beats just didnt make sense
weird music- its like they have their own little world down here in brasil, most of the music is so different to everywhere else, a unique mix of influences, the people here go wild to it and sometimes i was stood watching rather than taking part, thinking to myself "what the f@#$ are you lot doing?"
weird dancing- they have so many dances for the different music, varying from jumping up and down, to remarkably intricate pagode funk dancing
the rock- we adopted a rock one night, it was quite large and became part of our group (myself, Daniel San, Mike, Jesse, Trevor, random Australian girls, random Brasilians). we even bought the rock a beer
the lighthouse (el farol)- our meeting point and a reprieve from the madness of being in the crowd
street food- warm cheese on a stick, meat (cat) on a stick, chicken (piegeon) on a stick, pastels (deep fried cornish pasties filled with chicken and cheese) each roughly 2 reals
street beer- served as cold as possible, preferably skol (2 reals for a large can-bargain)
antarctica guarana- a delicious canned beverage and an excellent mixer with a very cheap random spirit mike and i chose to drink most nights
never ending crowds- its the biggest in the world according to Guiness Book Of Records (RIP Norris McWhirter and Roy Castle) (you can see the lighthouse in the foto at the link as well)
singers who look like pirates- this guy is in a band called chicle do banana or something and they are incredibly popular for some reason
men in drag- alot of them, brasil is quite a gay country
filhos do gandhi- they dress up like this, no idea why
people snogging- the men who arent gay are really aggessive with the girls, its some kind of macho competition to snog as many as possible. yuk, the germs.
the smell of wee- was definitely the smell of carnaval, you just cant provide enough portaloos for that many people
psirico- a band, i actually liked thes guys they were pretty cool
bloco- a roped off area that follows the floats, ropes carried by people and you kind of become part of the procession, dancing your way along. no less manic than on the streets, but alot more expensive. you get a t shirt that is your ticket. expensive
camarote- kind of VIP booths that line the streets where you can watch carnaval without having to worry about the crowds, pickpockets, fights etc. very expensive and looked to be totally boring, no atmosphere
pipoca- "pop corn" what they call the crowds, best place to be, watch your pockets, try not to get punched by coked up favela hoods, have a great time
eric morillo- followed his bloco, occasionally sneaking into it, and then gettting thrown out, cheesy house anthems but enjoyable. the skol float features western house djs each night, fat boy slim had played the last few year but unfortunately not his year
well that´ll do for now. going to the beach now, weather permitting. oh yeh, iticare is cool, nice and quiet with gorgeous beaches. waiting for my mate from ibiza, benja, to get here.
ciao
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Keep On Moving
Time to leave town again, leaving Salvador for Iticare, a small town 9 hours south that should be a nice relaxing contrast to the carnage of the worlds biggest Carnaval.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Brasil and the Biggest, Baddest, Hottest Party On the Planet
Salvador Carnaval. AKA Madness. AKA millions of people going bonkers on the street, dancing to music until 6am, drinking, groping each other, picking pockets, fighting, pissing wherever they can, wearing mad outfits, losing your friends, finding new friends, the list goes on.
No fotos unfortunately, taking a nice expensive digital camera to carnaval is not a good idea, you have hands all over you, your pockets will get picked so dont take anything you dont want to lose. All money you keep in your shoes and take out when you need it, ie to buy beer or street food. Last night we followed the Eric Morillo float for a few hours, not neccesarily my favourite DJ (bit cheesy) but he played a great crowd pleasing set with a bunch of classics thrown in, it was awesome fun, dancing your way along the street, bumping into people, drinking and generally being rather jolly.
I hope to have some photos of the madness soon, boutght a disposable camera and took about 12 pics last night, will take it again tonight and hope it doesnt get taxed, although it draws attention, last night when taking a photo of my friends one of them had a bottle of booze taken from his pocket! You have to really keep an eye for the thiefs who are looking for gringos to rob,theres alot of cops around but they are there more to break up fights, which do happen, some of the favela youths go there specifically to get loaded, rob and fight.
So. its a case of P-A-R-T-Y. And only 4 more nights to go (if i can keep it up that long!)
Friday, February 20, 2009
I Heart Brasil
Having a grrrreeeeeaaaatttt time in Brasil basically! Its my favourite country since Colombia, people are great, beaches gorgeous, food great and the parties are unreal! Had a great 4 days in Rio, stayed in a really cool hostel with some great people there, made alot of friends and had some great times. We had a cool night out in Lapa, a delapidated old district with colonial houses falling to pieces, cobbled streets and a wicked atmosphere (and smell) where Cariocas come to party and dance samba until the early hours and beyond. Went to see a great game at the Maracana with some die hard fans, banging the drums and waving flags for Botafogo, the game ended 1-1.
Spent a couple of nights hanging out with an old Brasilian friend Antonio, undoubtedly the craziest guy I have ever known, and we had a great time catching up on some of our nights out from my last time in Rio in 2002.
Anyway, asm in Salvador now with another old friend, Daniel, a mate from school who has lived here for 8 years. Staying with him during Carnaval, which started last night. ALOT of Brasilians dancing, singing and generally going crackers in the street. Gotta rush now, more soon.....
Monday, February 16, 2009
Rock In Rio
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Floripa
The other day we hired a car between 6 of us and squeezed in for a trip round the island, stopping off for a huge lunch of oysters and squid in a little quiet fishing village, and then slept it off on a quiet beach.
We are heading to Rio on Friday, will be going to see Botafogo play Flamengo at the Maracana on Sunday, very excited about that. Leave Rio on the 18th to arrive in Salvador on the 19th in time for Carnaval where I will be staying with an old school friend who has lived there for years, really looking forward to that too.
Language here is a funny one. People can understand me fine because I can speak Spanish to them, but when they reply i understand at most half of what they say, if they speak S-L-O-W! Very odd but better than nothing i guess.
Anyways, check out time, fight the power.
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Foz do Iguazu
It would be pretty unfair to not write anything about the falls at Iguazu. They are thebiggest collection of waterfalls in the world, its hard to describe the sheer powe and impressiveness of them, you kind of have to be there to get just how huge these things are. What is even cooler is how close you can get to them, they have built these very cool walkways that allow you to get up close, safely, although you do get wet! These falls in the background are the mos impressive, you can get right up close and you have in front of you a 180 degee panorama of water cascading very very fast, the sound, sight and mist created by the falls is great, and in the heat also very refreshing.
House of the Rising Sun
View from our appartment on the lake in Florianoplis. I got up at 530AM to get this set of photos.
Can´t describe how wonderful it is to be here for the next 10 days, no packing rucksack, carryin rucksack, getting to bus station, sleeping on bus, moving hostel, sleeping in a dorm full of sweaty people farting, sharing skanky kitchen with people.
None of that for me for the next 10 days. We really landed on our feet and have rented out a furnished appartment with an awesome view, massive terrace, 2 double bedrooms and most importantly BBQ! All that for a tenner a night each. I actually feel like I am on holiday!
Thursday, February 5, 2009
I Woke Up Bloody Early To Get This Shot
5.30 AM to be precise. Its a shot of the sun rising as seen from the terrace of our appartment in Florianopolis that we are renting. We hit the jackpot to be honest. The appartment is on the 1st floor of a house, we basically have half the house, including a huge terrace and an amazing view of the lake, which the house is on. We´ve had a BBQ every night since we got here!
Cat DJing
Saw some pretty cool street art in BA, I liked this one particuarly. Its a cat, DJing. Of course.
Wheels Of Steel
Theres a really good antiques market in San Telmo. I bought an amzing pair of retro sunglasses for 30 pesos (about 6 quid), I look REALLY cool wearing them, hope I dont lose them anytime soon..........
Buenos Aires
A rather delayed look back at the ´Paris of South America´. Spent my first few days there miserable and suffering from a very upset gut. This no doubt equally disturbed the fellow travellers in my hostel, which to be honest wass a little bit too noisy and PARTY focussed for my liking anyway. Maybe I´m finally getting old.
Anyway, BA, seemed more like a cross between Barcelona, and I iamagine, somewhere like Rome, than Paris, although it is definitely more like being in Europe than South America. The food is amazing, very much influenced by the Italian immigrants, the ice cream is incrediblee! The women are beautiful although the city itself not as pretty aas its European counterparts.
We were there for a week, about half of this I was ill. The other half was spent enjoying a bike ride through the South of the city, including the port area, San Telmo and Boca (home of Boca Juniors FC). There is a great vibe/pace of life in BA, very relaxed with a focus on good living and good food. We checked out a drum and bass club one night too, my one bit of partying there.
I enjoyed it, although not as much aas people had raved on about it, maybe because I didnt have enough time or maybe because it seemed like a pale version of a great European city.
So, ater all that, we hit the road again to Puerto de Iguazu, the Argentinian side of the most impressive collection of water falls in the world. A not too shabby 24 hour coach journey......
Friday, January 30, 2009
Update
Anyway, just a short entry, to confim I am alive and well and currently in Puerto Iguazu, going to see the falls on the Argentinian side tomorrow and the Brasilian side the following day. really looking forward to it, I have wanted tovisit here for a long time, this is what I have to look forward to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iguazu_Falls
Saturday, January 24, 2009
For 22 hours I called This Bus ´Home´
Lima to Cuzco, overnight 22 hours. You aren´t allowed to poo on the bus, only urinate, as the stewardesses reminded everyone every couple of hours.
On that subject, I am still suffering from my stomach infection/food poisoning whatever it is I have. Its been about 9 or 10 days now and a real pain in the ass, literally. I saw a doctor yesterday who prescribed me some pills and a special diet, which involved consuming nothing but apple juice for 12 hours. This is tantamount to torture in Argentina, land of GIANT steaks and all food portions in general. Just about to have my first meal, plain rice. Can´t wait.
Some cool rocks at the top of Waynapicchu
Waynapicchu being the bigger mountain (hence the name) that overlooks Macchu Picchu. Only 400 people per day are allowed entry to it, we had to get up at 5am to get into the first 400 that day
Hey, You, Get Off Of My Cloud
Now I know how Mick Jagger felt when he wrote this song, I wish that bloke in the beanie hat wasn´t there, spoiling my photo!
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Photos
http://blog.peakness.com/?p=1134
Monday, January 19, 2009
Macchu Picchu
We made it! The worst ever organised trip to MP was a success. Almost. Mike didnt make it to the top of Wayna Picchu as he needed a poo whilst we were queing for entry to the exclusive peak overlooking the ruins (only 400 people allowed in per day) so he missed out on the 1 hour climb. I went up on my own, it was quite tiring but worth it for the view and tranquility. Another hour to get down as it is so steep. Anyway, got MP out of the way, really looking forward to getting out of Peru and into Buenos Aires.......
Sunday, January 18, 2009
Peru....Poo
This photo was taken in Quito in Lima. It´s Mike, carrying his skateboard in a pretty cool little street. So, what was Lima all about I hear you say. I don´t know is the answer. We stayed 3 days, it seemed pretty cool but I saw very little, disabled by diarrahea brought on by foolishly drinking a juice that must have been made with tap water, which my delicate English stomach didn´t agree with.
As such, I spent the next 3 days in close proximity of the hostel we were staying in. Lima did seem pretty nice, it´s cheap, got fairly good weather, a beach, although to be fair Peru doesn´t do it for me like Colombia did, or I expect Argentina and Brasil to.......anyway, we left Lima for the 22 hour coach drive to........
.....Aguas Calientes AKA Machu Picchu Pueblo. We will be going up to Machu Picchu tomorrow morning, hopefully to see the sun rising. It´s a bit of smash and grab job, we are doing this in a very shoddy and ill prepared manner.
Fact-Machu Picchu is South Americas most important archeological site.
Fact-It has been around for a very long time.
Fact-It was discovered in the 20th Century.
Fact-Some people spend years planning their pilgrimage here, even Aguas Calientes is unreachable by car, let alone the site itself, which lay buried for centuries for the good reason that it is bloody hard to get to.
Fact-Mike and I made no preperation whatsover and arrived in Cuzco, the nearest city, with no idea of what we were doing, other than we wanted to see Machu Picchu.
Fact-We should just make it in time back to Lima for our flight to Buenos Aires. Just.
Anyway, enopugh facts for now. Machu Picchu should provide for some awesome photos which I look forward to posting here soon.
I have been quite unlucky in Peru. I have been ripped off at the border by money changing blaggers, had my mobile half inched and got the runs. Surely nothing else can go wrong?
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Lima
Viva Pasto
And its crzy carnival. As previously, I am a little bit behind schedule with the blog. Now i think about it, i dont think i even wrote about Cali. Crap. Or maybe I did. Anyway, spent almost a week in Cali for the Feria de Cali, a week long salsa festival, with parties and concerts everynight between Boxing Day and New Years day. I can now dance salsa, albeit not incredibly well, and also much better when drunk!
Friday, January 9, 2009
I Love This Photo
So I am putting it on my blog. In Ecuador, its cold and a comedown from the fun in Colombia. On way to Peru, where it willalso be cold, although we´ll probably stop off at a beach resort on the way to warm our bones.
This photo was taken outside a club called "Lado B" in Pasto during the Carnaval de Blancos y Negros, a wild 3 day annual carnival where the locals paint each other, spray each other with foam and talc and generally make a huge mess of their otherwise bland town.
On one day of the carnival everyone paints their face white, the next day black. This provided me with the opportunity to be totally un PC and do something you couldn´t do in the UK, I had a black face for a day. Its a really old tradition here and no one could understand why it wouldn´t be posible at home when I tried to explain. God bless Colombia.
Friday, January 2, 2009
Cali
Been here since the 27th for the Feria de Cali, traditionally a Salsa festival although now it hosts all sorts of music (well Salsa, Merengue, Reggae and Reggaeton). Basically the city parties every night for a week with concerts in various locations and a carnival atmosphere everywhere.
Have been hanging out with some great CSers, dancing salsa, drinking Aguardiente http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aguardiente , eating great food and sleeping in late. We´ve been to salsa concerts, beerfests, reggae concerts and house parties. I´m kind of partied out to be honest right now, looking forward to some form of normality in the next few days, although the fact that we will be moving on soon doesn´t really bode too well for that wish to come true.........