Wow. These past two weeks have gone by so fast, and yet seem
to have lasted forever. The last week of school was kind of hectic. I had a
literature essay due on Monday, which I finished on Saturday because I had
another essay due Wednesday for Descubriendo Buenos Aires, for which I wrote
about el Teatro Nacional Cervantes. I finished that on Saturday as well. I had
to finish La Pregunta de sus ojos by Tuesday
rather than Wednesday because Josh’s parents arrived on Wednesday and he had
wanted to have class on Tuesday so he could meet them.
I did my presentation for Soledad and turned in that essay,
had our last lit class with Leo, took our history test (on which barely anyone
did very well, history has never been my strong suite) and Addie and I gave our
presentation for idioma, which we did about el Transporte de Buenos Aires. At the
end of that class, Gabriela ripped apart everyone for making certain mistakes,
for which everyone felt all sad and hurt, but I was pretty sure almost none of
the criticisms applied to me so I wasn’t too bothered. It was a sour way to end
the class though.
That night, Thursday, we all went to dinner with Maria at a
tenedor libre. Pretty much everyone has gotten some kind of stomach problem
since, but I’ll get to that later. It was a really emotional dinner. Half the
girls cried because Maria made us all tell an anecdote that was our favorite
moment of the trip or something funny. We got to tell it in English because
Josh’s parents were there with us too. It was so funny hearing Maria speak English
after all that time speaking her native tongue again; she sounded so
differently from when we were back in Missoula. Lots of people told funny
stories, but some told more touching ones.
Addie and I were sitting next to eachother
so she went right before me and she made me cry. She told us how, as an only
child, she had always wanted siblings, and with this trip, with all of us, she
felt like she finally had that. She almost couldn’t continue because she was
crying, then she finally said to me, “Matisse, I feel like you’re my sister”
and I started crying. I feel the same way, and I’ve said it to her and to other
people. It was the nicest thing anyone has ever said to me and I’m so happy and
moved that she did. That means so much. I love the closeness that we have now
and I’m going to really miss living with her. I really do feel like we’re
sisters now.
After the dinner, Addie and I went home to change and then
we headed to the party at Casa Bar. Zac arranged it with the bartender for us
to have the top floor all to ourselves to play music and beer pong. There weren’t
very many people up there at first but more came that we had met through our
roommates in other programs and such and it turned out to be a lot of fun. I was
worried about Zac though, he got fairly drunk and I hoped he would wake up on
time the next morning for us to leave and go to Posadas. I woke up early the
next morning at 750 and walked to Zac’s house where I waited outside for half
an hour before he finally came down because his mom woke him up five minutes
before the car rental people were supposed to get there. They were almost an
hour late. We finally got out of the city and on the road.
On the way to Posadas we got a ticket for not having our
lights on in the middle of the day because apparently that’s the law here. It
was kind of sketch because we had to pay right there and we didn’t have enough pesos
so we had to use some US dollars that Zac had. After we got on our way, we later
took a detour into a town 15km off the highway to get money at an ATM and
discovered that it was really cute and thought we might stay here on our way
back. It was called Federacion.
On our way to Posadas we saw a beautiful sunset and finally,
stars! When we finally got to Posadas it was 2AM and the reception of the hostel
we had planned to stay in was locked and empty so we had to go looking all over
the city for somewhere to stay. We finally found a hotel that was open and
stayed there for 300 pesos. Zac threw up the whole night. It was horrible. The next
morning we headed off looking for the Jesuit Ruins and found instead an
ecological reserve. We went to the next one, las Ruinas de Santa Ana, which
were in the process of being excavated archeologically and was pretty
interesting. Their policy was not to rebuild anything, but rather to preserve
what is there currently and work on discovering exactly how it was before.
We headed back to Posadas and stayed where we had originally
planned, which turned out to be a hotel, cabin and “dormis” place. We were
given a little room in a bungalow with 3 bunk beds and a bathroom across the
way, which was full of spiders. The next morning we headed off to Iguazu and on
the way stopped in San Ignacio, another ruin, but one in which they have mostly
rebuilt. It was beautiful, but full of people. From there we went to Iguazu,
which seemed like a really pretty, green town. The way there was gorgeous. The red
earth against the lush greenery under the huge blue sky is something I’ll never
forget.
When we got to Iguazu the hostel at which we had made a
reservation didn’t have room for us; either they had given away our room or
never even taken our reservation. We didn’t even get our deposit back (at least
it was only 9 USD). We drove all over town, using our GPS again to find “alojamientos”
without much success: every place we went to was full. We were turning back
towards the main street when Zac spotted a sign that read “Aquilo cuartos” and
we stopped. It turned out to be a hotel type thing owned by a family and they
lived in the attached house. It was actually really nice and well kept, two
blocks from the main street and we were able to park our car in the omnibus garage
the man owned. It was 200 pesos so not so bad, not as cheap as the hostel would
have been but not bad. The next day we went searching for somewhere to stay and
found a hostel called “Residencial Uno” that was really ghetto but really
cheap, 60 pesos per person per night, and we stayed there for 2 nights.
It had a pool, but unfortunately we weren’t able to use it. Our
first day there we didn’t really do anything but get caught up, buy groceries
and a device to play the iPod in the car. We made dinner and Sophie and Jodi
came over because they were also staying in the city. We talked and had a fun
time. I made Mexican rice and heated up corn and black lentils and made some
scrambled eggs. It was the closest I could get to Mexican food in this country.
The next day I woke up feeling fine, but once we got to the park I started
having stomach cramps that lasted all day. Zac and I waited for Sophie and Jodi
for an hour (they had taken the bus) and finally they showed up and we planned
to go see the main event, La Garganta del Diablo, and meet them at 2. They were
late again, but finally they showed up and we all went on a “hike” together
where we got to stand next to a huge waterfall. La Garganta del Diablo was
incredible. It almost made you sick just to look at all the water flowing at
once. We got soaked but it was amazing.
When we finally got back to the hostel, I threw up on the
street outside and later got a fever. Zac bought me a thermometer and medicine
to bring it down, and I tried to sleep all afternoon. The fever went down but
the cramps continued to last. I didn’t throw up again but I thought I might. The
next morning I felt much better, but weak and not well enough to eat anything. We
headed off to the park again and did a little hike that ended in a natural pool
under a mini waterfall. We climbed around the pool and stood under the fall and
it was the most amazing feeling. So refreshing and I felt so alive. If you waited
long enough, a huge gust of wind would come and the water would just dump on
you. I was almost afraid it would get so strong I wouldn’t be able to stay
standing. We dried off in the sun and
walked back to the car. We got back on the road after getting some fruit, a
Sprite for me and money from the ATM. I wasn’t feeling too good on the way back
to Posadas. We got there at 8 and stayed in the same place we had before, but
this time the manager gave us an even crappier room, but no matter. We sat in
the bar and messed around on our computers for a while. I still didn’t eat. The
next morning we got breakfast there and I managed to eat 2 medialunas and a
little of my coffee.
We got on the road to Federacion and got there at 8PM. We went
around the city searching for somewhere to stay and finally settled on an “apart
hotel” that was really nice, with a mini stove and everything. We got the last room
available and it turns out, literally around the corner (backed up against the
hotel) was a thermal outdoor water park that was open till 10. We went there
and got to soak in the 37C pools under the stars and the moon. I even saw an
owl perched right next to one of the pools. The hottest one we went into was
39C and was huge and covered. It was a perfect ending to a crazy, stressful,
but awesome trip.
I wished we had stayed longer in Federacion. This morning,
as we drove out, the lake and la costanera looked so nice. It was warm and not
a cloud in the sky. I still couldn’t really eat anything though and felt even
weaker. I’ve been mainly living off Mylanta and Pepto-Bismol. I ate a yogurt
but couldn’t even finish a cup of coffee without feeling like my stomach was so
full it would explode. It feels a litter better now. But we arrived in Buenos
Aires at about 5 and drove around for an hour trying to find somewhere to stay
because last night I was so tired I had Zac find somewhere to stay and he found
a ghetto place and emailed them but didn’t see if they emailed him back and it
was a whole mess.
Finally we found a hostel called Milonga Hostel that was
reasonably priced and fairly ghetto but fine. I’m here now, waiting for him to
come back. He dropped off me and most of the stuff here and had to go get his
suitcase from his host family’s house and give the car back to the people. They
better not complain about it being dirty and not having a full tank, because
they didn’t give us a damn matafuego as they are required to do by law and
almost cost us 5000 pesos. I managed to eat a banana and an apple, so hopefully
that means I’m getting better.