Jun 17, 2024 • 6 min read
30.05.2024 - 20:43 / cntraveler.com / William Shakespeare
Flying to Argentina for sizzling spit-roast barbecues, tango along the bohemian boulevards of Buenos Aires, and beach days with whale watching to boot? Once you're all buckled up and ready for take-off, turn that phone to airplane mode and prep for the trip in the best ways possible: a podcast, a movie, and a good, old-fashioned book. Here's what to read, watch and listen to if on your flight to Argentina.
Jorge Luis Borges expresses an intense and passionate love for the streets of Buenos Aires in his first poetry collection, Fervor de Buenos Aires.
“My soul is in the streets of Buenos Aires,” are the opening words of legendary Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges’s first poetry collection, Fervor de Buenos Aires, published in 1923. As a prodigious urban rambler—so much so that there are contemporary walking tours inspired by his verses—much of Borges’s poetry was born on the streets of Buenos Aires. There is a legitimate “fervor” in his words, a whirl of imagery and scenes—drawn from loafing around the city’s Art Nouveau avenues to sauntering through the lazy streets of the suburbs, his verses provide an arresting sense of place even a century on, immortalizing its grand gardens and sprawling plazas. If a copy of the collection proves difficult to rustle up, settle for another wonderful entry from Borges's oeuvre—Ficciones, surrealist short stories, might bear the closest resemblance. There's also the crackerjack novel The Invention of Morel by Argentine Adolfo Bioy Casares for anyone seeking something (marginally) narrative.
Conan O'Brien speaks with Argentinian fan Florencia about Mar De Plata, a beach city just south of Buenos Aires with unbelievable whale watching.
In Spatchcocking: Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend, an 18-minute podcast, comedian Conan O’Brien speaks with his fan, Florencia, a native of Mar De Plata, a beach city just south of Buenos Aires. Steering through zany tangents and cheerful bickering, the two chat about Argentina’s unbelievable whale watching, out-of-this-world glaciers in Patagonia, and asados—12-hour spit-roast barbecues with butchering techniques that leave O’Brien a little squeamish. Like listening to friends chat in a bar, listeners learn about Argentina in an easy, breezy manner.
Viola is an art-house romantic comedy set in a Buenos Aires-based theatre troupe.
Director Matías Piñeiro’s Viola is an art-house romantic comedy, one that sets its lens on a young Buenos Aires-based theatre troupe rehearsing a production of William Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night. The movie follows an amorous experiment of sorts with the actors’ friend, Viola, who delivers DVDs as part of her boyfriend’s pirating business. But beyond the Shakespeare-inspired entanglements that push the plot,
Jun 17, 2024 • 6 min read
By age 17, Lucas Rubiño was a professional surfer. He is a five-time champion in the tandem category and a longboard champion. Aside from his surfing achievements, Lucas told SCENES that founding the Escuela Mardel Surf School is arguably his most fulfilling undertaking. It allows him to ride the waves with an exceptional group of people.
Summer travel is already under attack — and it's technically still only spring.
Unlike coffee plantations, wine cultivation isn’t restricted by elevation or latitude, and in South America, you’re sure to stumble across vintages being made in well-known destinations such as Mendoza’s Uco Valley or Chile’s Maipó Valley. But there are a host of unexpected, up-and-coming regions across the continent, where you can sample vintages often paired with epic scenery, away from the crowds, yet surrounded by warm hospitality. Take Argentina’s extremely elevated La Quebrada de Humahuaca canyon, where light red Criolla and herbal, blackcurrant Malbec are produced at 8,200 feet above sea level. Peru’s Ica Valley, meanwhile, is usually known for Pisco production but now is the time to try the eight aromatic grape varieties as wine, rather than a spirit. As for Uruguay's glitzy Punta del Este beach resort town, a cluster of wineries are making crunchy ocean-influenced whites that pair perfectly with local catches of the day. Given the vast size of South America, explore this unsung terroir by car—it'll allow you to move slowly, and get even further off the well-trod path (good news: many of the area's wineries have stylish stays right on site).
The writing was on the wall, but now it's official: Southwest Airlines is making more adjustments to its network, with an emphasis on Atlanta.
Alaska Airlines passengers will now be able to book British Airways flights to London directly on the American carrier’s website in an expanded partnership agreement.
“I have analysis paralysis,” said my friend Maite, an Argentine who lives in Madrid. Maite is a world traveler but has always been stymied when it comes to Greece. “There are too many islands. How do you decide?”
Argentina is a big country. In fact, it’s a vast country with long distances to travel between its major tourist attractions.
It’s the backpacker’s call to India, the sunseeker’s attraction to Mexico, and the digital nomad’s drive to get to Thailand: Go where the dollar buys more.
Argentina’s distinctive reputation looms large in imaginations oceans away from its borders. There’s so much to take in, and such immense distances to travel to do so.
Andrew Cifa joins The Logan Hotel, Philadelphia, as the new Director of Sales and Marketing, bringing over two decades of hospitality expertise.
Halifax is a harbor town. A narrow neck opens up to the protected waters of Bedford Basin, making it ideal as a naval and shipping port. Before Europeans arrived, this body of water was a sanctuary and home to Indigenous Mi’kmaq for millennia.