Zig is sitting here, so I could get him to tell me how to make the computer do Spanish punctuation. ¡¡¡¡Muy bien!!!!
I am currently in a cerveceria. With wifi. Apparently, cervecerias, where they make cerveza artesanal, are very common in Patagonia. Lucky me. I am having the Kolsch, which is quite tasty. I will come back here often. For wifi of course.
Also, this place is my new favorite place because their paper place settings have a picture of my favorite beer. Shiner Bock. They don't actually serve Shiner here, but use it as an example of excellent Bock beer, comparing it to their own Doppelbock. I will have to try it. I'm sure it will come up lacking.
News in the triste column: Last night Zig left his computer sitting on top of our dinky orange television. Helga likes to jump on said television, and this morning knocked his computer to the floor. Its pretty much fine, but the cd drive now makes weird grinding noises and doesn't read cds. Muy triste.
Music update: Beast of Burden, Emotional Rescue, and Jumpin Jack Flash. Maybe its a greatest hits cd. Except songs by other bands play in between.
Repaso de la semana:
I have been taking Spanish classes. My teacher se llama Nicholas, y él es porteño. That means he is from Buenos Aires. My spanish is muy mejorada. My grammer is still really terrible. It makes Nicholas laugh.
The problem with making friends at a Spanish school for tourists is that they are only here for a couple of weeks. I guess that could also be positive, because then you get new friends every week. Whatever.
Steve left this weekend after being at the school 4 weeks, and Serena leaves next week after being at the school 10 weeks. Steve is from a town with 400 people in Indiana, and has been in South American for 7 months. He was in Brazil for a while on a peanut farm, then his work visa got messed up and he went to Chile. Then a farm in Argentina, and then Bariloche. He said he was ready to go home and eat his mom's spaghetti. Serena is from Zurich, Switzerland. I don't know how long she has been here, but she spent a month in Cuernavaca, Mexico and then came to Bariloche. She is also ready to go home.
We played Taboo in Español on Friday, and I definitely won. My grammer may be bad, but my vocabulario is excellent. Do you know how to say peacock in Español? Pavo real. Literally, royal turkey.
Apparently, this very last Friday, there was a summit of 12 South American presidents at the Hotel Llao Llao! They were discussing U.S. interference in South America, specifically a military base in Colombia. President Obama was supposed to come, but had to send a representative because of Edward Kennedy's funeral. Triste.
Zig said it was very interesting watching the news from a South American perspective. He said they said they did not want a military base in Colombia (shocking? I think not.). Also, they were discussing how some drug trafficking is done by U.S. military personnel through the military base. I had no idea, but I guess I'm not surprised. There's a lot of money in drug trafficking.
Anyway, because of the conference, we could not see the Hotel Llao Llao up close, and couldn't take pictures from the highway either because the police wouldn't let us. I did get a picture of the police though. Also, we saw a presidential motorcade, but didn't get a good enough look at the flags on the limo to figure out what country.
We ate lunch at the Colonia Suiza. Big hype, big let down. It was pretty boring and the food was not good. I took a picture, but I'm not even going to post it because it was so bad.
Apparently, on Wednesday's and Saturday's there is a Feria Artensanal, which makes the whole trip worth while. We'll see.
Serena, being Swiss, kept making comments like, "Oh wow this is exactly like home." "Oh look at these authentic Swiss Patagonian wool handicrafts." "Oh look, authentic Swiss empanadas." I think she may have been being sarcastic. Perhaps.
The one cool thing in the Colonia Suiza was this building. I liked it alot.
Friday night, our friend Angel had a birthday party. There was lots of food. We got there at 10pm (very early) and left at 3am (also, early). "What, you're leaving??? We're just about to start another game!" Zig and I made guacamole. We made two batches, one with one jalapeño, no seeds, for the Argentineans, and one with two jalapeños plus seeds, for us. Apparently, Argentineans do not eat spicy food. One of them ate part of a jalapeño and cried. We played pictionary, which was fun. I kept knowing what the answers were, but in English, not Spanish, which doesn't count. Then I had to describe in broken Spanish what the answer was until someone guessed the real word. "Sleeping bag!!! Bolsa. Para camping. Para dormir." It worked out. Also, Zig and I were on opposite teams, and were pitted against each other for the winning point. We had to be blindfolded. The word: borracho. I won.
Saturday night, our previously mentioned friend Juan, who is from Colombia, came over for dinner. He wants to learn how to cook, because, according to him, girls like guys who can cook. I taught him how to make spaghetti sauce. Onions, canned tomatoes, garlic, ground meat, basil. It was quite excellent.
Then, I tried to make chocolate cookies from scratch. Ok, so, items the grocery store does NOT have: vegetable shortening, chocolate chips, brown sugar. Substitutes: margarine (because its made out of vegetables and is sort of the same consistency, right?), chocolate bar broken into tiny pieces, and what I thought was brown sugar, but tasted a lot like molasses. Items kitchen does NOT have: temperature gauge on the oven. Substitute: Mucho guessing.
Result:
Pretty close huh? Kind of what cookies from scratch look like when I make them at home.
Pictures from walking around town:
Every town has to have one...
More churches: Two kinds of evangelical, and.... Methodist!! It's a 70's horror.
Well thats about all. I think we will go skiing again next week. There was a lady signing up for Spanish lessons on Friday. She seemed nice. New friend!!
Hasta luego!!
Besitos, Austin
Update: The cerveceria is now playing Manu Chao. Muy bien!!
Update Dos: It has come to my attention that not only is my Spanish grammAR bad, but I also can't spell in English.