Argentina Tango

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What it Takes to Tango

The Argentina Tango is intense, both in its style and in what it requires physically from the dancer. Although you won’t develop a dancer’s body in a few months, you probably will notice increased strength in your legs, and perhaps better alignment, as you practice better posture while dancing. You might notice that at first your muscles are sore after your first few lessons. Your body might feel stiff, and you will notice that you feel a little uncoordinated at first as your brain and body get used to working together to form the tango postures and movements. The more you practice, the better your body and brain will become at knowing what the other is doing, and will begin to coordinate together. You’ll feel clumsy even walking backwards, but this will improve with practice.

In Buenos Aires, the top tangueros spend the first six months of lessons just learning to walk the right way. If you visit a milonga, a tango dance club  you will probably see some good tango walks, especially if some of the dancers are pros from Argentina. If you live in a major urban area, chances are you’ll have lots of places to try your new Tango skills, and to satisfy your obsession. Look for clubs, more dance studios where you can take extra classes, advanced workshops, private classes, and group classes.

Patagonia Argentina

patagonia-horseSpanish explorers who arrived in southern Argentina to find the wide expanses of Patagonia thought the land was too wild and rough to be useful. A closer look and centuries later, we know this beautiful corner of the earth to be as varied and precious as any remote natural resource, and lots of fun, too!

Patagonia, Argentina can mean windswept plains to moist green mountainous areas, to cool lakes and rocky dramatic beaches facing the Pacific Ocean. Patagonia is also glaciers, streams, rivers, and one UNESCO World Heritage site that’s home to dozens and dozens of species of wild birds.

The best way to make your visit to Patagonia special is to stay at an unique inn or estancia, which is a ranch-like property that acts as a bed-and-breakfast. Both types of lodging come in an assortment of flavors and prices, from affordable to top luxury. These smaller establishments offer an intimacy with nature you won’t find at larger hotels. If you visit Patagonia, it’s almost essential that you stay at an estancia or at least a smaller inn, to get the full experience. Read more about these charming and individually run accommodations here.

Estancias in Cordoba and Salta

What exactly is an estancia? It’s Spanish for something like a small country estate, or a country retreat with perhaps a farm or ranch. There are several lavish twenty-first century estancias in Cordoba and in other country provinces of Argentina which open their doors to guests. If you stay at one of these havens in Cordoba or elsewhere, you will be pampered with lavish, uniquely Argentine specialties such as dining on the freshest food possible, grown on site on a biodymanic farms, or sleeping in an antique four-poster bed in a room decorated with Argentine antiques.

Argentina Estancia living is the best way to experience the Argentine countryside.  The province of Cordoba is just a little bit northwest of Aargentina’s capitol city, Buenos Aires. This province is known for it countryside panoramic beauty and natural settings, and has some of the finest Argentina estancias in the country. 

 El Colibri

House of Jasmines

Estancia Colome

Posada La Caldera

Buenos Aires

Posted in Argentina Travel

Tango, Polo, Style, and Soccer

The city of Buenos Aires Argentina is experiencing a renaissance these days, and if you’re looking for a vibrant city with an exciting mix of old Europe and the new South America, you can’t miss Buenos Aires. Argentina as a whole is buzzing with energy these days, not only with an awakened worldwide sensibility and appreciation of the Tango, but also as a hip place where excitement awaits you at every corner.

 Ralph Lauren knows this, and the new face of his fragrance Polo Black is hot young Argentinian export Nacho Figueras. Nacho symbolizes just what the New South America is all about, where you can find the best polo clubs, the most stylish hotels, chic shopping, and top-notch restaurants. Buenos Aires Argentina is the hub of the new, revived Argentina, as well as a cultural, historical, and political center, producing a vibrant, enticing buzz that will make you come alive the minute you arrive in town. 

Soccer is the energy that makes Argentina hum, as well as the rest of South America. Locals love to watch the games on tv in public places, like cafes, bars, and even appliance stores. Join the fever and dive into local energy to witness one of the classic national pastimes.

To sample Buenos Aires Argentina chic, stay at the Faena Hotel for hotel interious design that will knock your socks off. Also, eat at Casa Cruz for a sexy trendy crowd any time of the week. In fact, the food in Buenos Aires Argentina will make you want to come back years after your trip. Argentina was one of the first countries to develop organic farming, which of course means high quality and high standards in food quality.

Hilights of Buenos Aires Argentina:

  • National Congress and the Civic Center
  • Palaza de Mayo & House of Government
  • the Metropolitan Cathedral and the Cabildo
  • the Colon Theatre
  • San Telm traditional neighborhood
  • Palermo, & Puerto Madero
  • Recoleta & its famous cemetary
  • Hunting for Bargains along Corrientes
  • Palermo Polo Club for the Argentine Open, the most prestigious polo tournament in the world

Don’t deny yourself a day trip to a classic Argentine Estancia, where you can sample the empanadas and savor a Criolla parrillada complemented by some internationally fabulous Argentine wine. Get ready for live folk music, some traditional dancing and some gauchesca skills such as carrera de sortija, or horseback riding.

The People of Argentina

Posted in Argentina Travel

History
Argentina people have a diverse cultural heritage historically, mixing European and the newer Syrian and Armenian arrivals, with around 100,000 to 600,000 pure Indians surviving. There were once African slaves here, but after slavery was abolished, blacks faded out of the population. What remains today is a largely European mix of Argentina people, although that in itself brings numerous juxtapositions and identity crises for the diverse population. Argentina people experienced an influx of immigrants similar to the USA, but in a much shorter period of time, so there was less time to meld together and form a national identity.

When you visit Argentina, you might think you’re hearing Argentina people speak Italian, and you may be right. In the latter half of the ninetieenth century and up until World War II, Argentina was deeply committed to encouraging immigration, with government policy doing everything it could to attract laborers from Europe. Just a few years before World War I, Argentina people were almost one-third foreign-born, with 45 percent of this group originating in Italy and thirty percent from Spain. In urban areas, there were sometimes more newcomers than there were native-born Argentina people. There were jobs for everyone, with a booming agricultural sector and with anything involving cattle. The rush finally slowed down after WWII, with most immigrants coming from nearby South American countries, where work was hard to find. Since the 1990′s the economy has slowed down, and workers from surrounding countries have actually started to leave, for lack of work, or have headed to the urban areas where their prospects are higher. The urban areas have not had an easy time of absorbing all these displaced workers, and there are some pretty serious shantytown situations for those Argentina people.

Ethnicities
There are approximately 33 million people living in Argentina, with about one-third living in Buenos Aires, the capital. Eighty-five percent of Argentinian people are of European descent. There are some groups who have tried to remain ethnically pure, such as a small group of Welsh in Patagonia and some German villages in the north. There’s also a strong Anglo influence in Argentina, because British money was used to build much of Argentina’s infrastructure in the late 1800′s. English farmers also bought lots of land in Patagonia for raising sheep. The tight connetion between Anglo-Argentinians and England was strained, however, when loyalties clearly lay with Argentina during the Falklands war. More and more, Argentinian business is geared toward the US market rather than British.

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