World Rider WorldRider
   
 Logistics
 PodCasts
 Sponsors
 
Recent Posts
Making My Way Back To California
September 13, 2008 10:54 PM
Washington, DC - My Homecoming
September 11, 2008 12:34 AM
Putting The Pieces Back Together
September 6, 2008 09:27 PM
Back In The U.S.A.
August 13, 2008 09:38 PM
Welcome Back to USA: Disaster & Ripped Off.
August 8, 2008 07:30 PM
Hassles at the Port of Derince
July 4, 2008 04:16 PM
Istanbul (not Constantinople!)
July 2, 2008 07:35 PM
The Price of Gas? Come on!
July 1, 2008 10:02 AM
The Arduous Process of Getting Home
June 18, 2008 03:46 PM
Longing for better roads?
June 15, 2008 10:07 AM
 
 

 Previous | Next 

May 16, 2007

Argentina | South America   11:15 AM
Bidding Farewell to Buenos Aires.

I've dragged out my stay in Argentina and Buenos Aires for a long time. I am sure Javier and Sandra at Dakar Motos think I'll never leave. But even this good time must pass.

More bikes rolled into Buenos Aires and Dakar Motos over the last week. There's Helge from Norway riding a heavily modified R100 with a sidecar. (thanks to Guido for the photo). He's been riding with Mark, a Brit on an F650. And another pair of English-folk, Mark and Daisy, riding two up as Bell's Angels throughout South America. And an older German guy, Hartmout, who's riding a Yamaha XT of some type. And my new friend Guido, who I've been monitoring and e-mailing for many months. An Argentinean National, he's been living in the states for some time. He rode his spanking new GS1200 from Florida to Alaska and back down to Ushuaia and onward to Dakar Motos.

Puente Mujeres
Puente de la Mujer, Puerto Madero, Buenos Aires

I'm sure there are others I've missed. To be sure, there has been a lot of activity here in May as the weather in Buenos Aires continues to cool. Yann, the French owner of my hotel, Hotel Costa Rica, has been feverishly trying to fix his propane gas heater and devising methods to keep his courtyard dry from the increasingly frequent rains. The hotel features a typical open air design employed by many turn of the century buildings in Buenos Aires. The lobby opens to an open air courtyard. The two stories above the ground floor features an open air walkway for access to the rooms.

There's not doubt about it. It's time to move to warmer weather.

A group of about a dozen of us travelers met in Recoleta, a tony section of Buenos Aires with kinetic bars, clubs and restaurants and some of the best shopping in Buenos Aires. But it was the following night that I urged these travelers, all of whom were preparing to ship their bikes back home (England, Norway, Germany etc.) to bow out of their journey in style. With the memory of excellent service and sweet juicy taste of steak still on my tongue from one of my most memorable meals on my journey, Cabaña Las Lilas with Tim Amos in February, I rallied the troops including Sandra and Javier of Dakar motos to meet for a glorious and surely to be memorable last supper.

Most people will say Cabaña Las Lilas is expensive. True. In Argentine standards it is. I'm sure Sandra and Javier would never normally go to this "tourist" restaurant. But frankly, the cost of a prime steak at what might be the best steak house in Buenos Aires is $15-20. The same steak at a Morton's or Ruth's Chris in the United States would cost $50 or more. Even then, the steaks served at those "expensive" places are marginal compared to Las Lilas.

So we planned to meet in the Puerto Madero neighborhood in Buenos Aires at 7pm. We had a large table with views of the canal and the amazing Puente De La Mujer.

Las Lilas Night2 - Version 2
Yummy. Argentinean Steak. Can't beat it.

Las Lilas Night1 - Version 2 Las Lilas Night9 - Version 2

Las Lilas Table

Helge Laslilas (1)
Helge the Norwegian shipman contemplates his world travels before returning home in a few days.

Helge Sidecar Guidophoto
Helge's sidecar rigged R100. (photo by Guido)

Javier Mark Bell
Javier and Mark Bell.

Guido
Guido rode from Florida to Alaska to Ushuaia on his 1200GS

Daisy Sandra Mark R Mark Hartcourt Javier

(l) Daisy Bell, Sandra and Mark Robinson; (r) Mark, Hartmout and Javier. All during our post dinner tell us about your ride experiences discussion.

Everyone agreed that the meal, service and wine was stellar. For a Sunday night the place closed early by Argentinean standards. And the town and usual hot spots were quiet to. So Guido motored all of us to an ex-pat bar, Shoeless Joes/El Alamo which purported to be open 24 hours. It was the latest I'd stayed up in years, and the security guard at my hotel was a bit surprised to see me ringing in at 5:30am.

I leave for Uruguay in two days.

Posted by allan

 Previous | Next  |  Comments

Comments

 

Allen, did you quit posting in favor of exlusively podcasting? I'm a visual person, not audio.... how about at least a monthly written update?

When are you getting out of South America?

 
 
Commented by  Airhawk1[TypeKey Profile Page]  On  August 20, 2007
 
 

Make a comment

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)


Remember me?


Where WorldRider Is Now
Where WorldRider Is Now
WorldRider Tracker
Miles Traveled: 62,329
Days Traveled: 847
Fuel Consumed: 1,116.2 gal.
Photos Shot: 32,077
Borders Crossed: 54
Currently In: Carlsbad, CA USA
As of 11/12/08.
Support Worldrider!
Like what you read and see here? Want to help see the journey and adventure continue?
Find out how
Recent Comments
Airhawk1 on Bidding Farewell to Buenos Aires.

Allen, did you quit posting in favor of exlusively podcasting? I'm a vi   (.......)
August 20, 2007 09:52 AM