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Argentina, Travel

Mendoza Proposal | Argentina

Mendoza Proposal: It All Happened So Quickly…

I won’t divulge too many of the intimate details that led to my hysterical breakdown as a response to being proposed to (it was a ‘yes’ btw) but I will leak the following:

1.  Kip surprised me on our second-to-last day in Mendoza by telling me to pack my things at the hostel.  He had someone pick us up to take us to a wonderful little estancia called Club Tapiz for a day of indulgence, vineyard-side.  I’m a simple girl, with simple needs i.e. a massage, manicure, pedicure, poolside lunch service and AC.  Thankfully, Kip delivered.

2.  Presumably, any normal girl would assume a proposal if her boyfriend requests a candle-lit dinner outside, next to the vineyard.  Welp, cross me off the ‘normal girl’ list because that truly was not my assumption.  I waited 7 years, I just figured I’d have to wait and wait and wait some more-  after grad school, after starting some business, after kids, a dog, a house – yeah I was thinking that far ahead.

3.  No matter how you foresee your reaction to a situation like this, when that moment comes, you never really have a grasp and in my case, you totally lose it. Yet, through the uncontrollable sobs and Kip’s horrified stare, I managed to muster up a “YES, OF COURSE!”.

And in true psychotic girlfriend fashion (now fiancé), I waste no time sharing every detail of the wedding I had already planned a year in the making. In my defense, it’s been 7 years. SEVEN YEARS!  I’m pretty sure he wanted to run right then and there but we just laughed and decided to slow it down a sec, considering we just got engaged 5 minutes ago.

The rest of the night was spent celebrating and skyping the good news to family and friends!

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Argentina, Travel

Mendoza Wine Country | Argentina

Mendoza Wine Country

 

A week in Mendoza offered a week of relaxation, adventure and surprises.  Kip and I decided to splurge on our 12-hour bus ride with Chevallier and get seats labeled “Cama Ejecutivo”, which included leather seats that reclined 180 degrees,  a small individual television and headset, blanket, eye covers, wine service, wi-fi, chocolate and a pastry –  a dinner that was surprisingly too much to finish – and finally, coffee and juices for the morning. The U.S. could learn a little from Argentina about quality bus service.  Greyhound is a joke. We arrived to a sunny and humid Mendoza around 11am the following morning after an all-too comfortable bus ride through the night.  We stayed at Hostel Empedrado for the first night only (which was recommended to me by someone in my first hostel I stayed at in BsAs) since the first hostel we had booked didn’t have the first night available and found it very quaint and perfect for socializing.  While it is quite a few blocks away from the main plaza, it was still less than a 15 minute walk.  We met a few Brits here who we later randomly encountered again on the bus to go wine tasting and ended up forming a fun little group for the bike wine tour. All the more emphasizing why hostels serve such a great purpose! The next day we moved our things to the sister hostel, Hostel Mora, which is a bit more tranquil but just as beautiful and new.

Adventure:

Wine Tasting Bike Tour-  Ask any young person who’s been to Mendoza where and how to go wine tasting and they’ll all tell you one name:  MR. HUGO’S.  This little, yet wildly popular, bike company run by none other than Mr. Hugo himself has made a name for his himself in the traveling community.  Firstly, you need to take a 30-minute local bus ride out to Maipu but fear not, there’s only one bus number  and every bus driver knows where you’re going if you say Mr. Hugo’s.  It was the day after Halloween so our bus was filled with spirited foreigners dressed in wigs, capes and spandex tights which made me sweat just looking at them because it had to have been at least 85 degrees or hotter outside.  Once you arrive at Mr. Hugo’s, you’re somehow no longer in the quiet town of Maipu but in backyard tropical oasis, complete with free pitchers of wine, a bottle of water and party music to set the mood for an entire day of peddling. Starting before 12pm is key because not only are there lots of wineries to see but they’re fairly spaced apart even for biking.  It was suggested to us to go to Familia Di Tomasso first, which is the furthest and the nicest of the wineries and work our way back inwards.  We made it to two wineries and a tiny bohemian beer garden tucked far from the main road before surrendering to the heat  and drunken stupor, thus calling it quits.  Afterwards, more wine awaited us and at the end of the night, Mr. Hugo makes it a point to walk you to the bus stop and wait until the bus arrives. Great business etiquette!

The rest of the week was followed by river rafting and horseback riding in the Andes and venturing out to a club full of locals where a cover band played classic latin rock songs which we pretended to know.  The next post will contain pertinent information about what happens when a 7-year anniversary trip turns into an all-out proposal….

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Argentina, Travel

Argentine Sushi | A night of wine and Winehouse

Argentine Sushi – a questionable cuisine

After viewing two apartments today, snagging an interview on Monday for a camp counselor position in an English Immersion program and booking two more apartment viewings for tomorrow, I joined some of my hostel mates in splurging for some “sushi” (if you call cream-cheese filled rolls even that) tonight for dinner. Between 6 of us, we ordered 3 trays of 30-piece sushi and went to the corner store to buy 4 bottles of wine, Malbec being two of them, of course and went to town. I can’t even begin to explain how interesting this dinner was. For starters, there were at least 4 different languages being thrown around at once. There was a couple from Brazil, the guy was Japanese but spoke Portuguese, Spanish and English and his Brazilian girlfriend spoke Portuguese and Spanish but no English. There was the German girl, Carine, who spoke German with the girl from Holland, Wanda, but also interchanged between Spanish and English, which they were fluent in both. Then there was me and Leelah, from Missouri. We both spoke Spanish and English (although my Spanish was questionable), so you can only imagine the hodge podge of tongues being spoken at that dinner table. The funniest part was having to find out about Amy Winehouse’s death today in Spanish. I thought, at first, I was mistaken in what I had heard, perhaps they had wished she was dead? But it was confirmed with both enthusiasm and sympathy that the news was, in fact, true. The rest of the night was reserved for hustling in pool! I found it very useful that the Brazilian girl didn’t speak English because I was forced out of my comfort zone in order to make any attempts to converse with her.

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