Belize is an interesting place, with lots of conflicting ideas. It's in the Carribean, but was settled by the British, so everyone speaks English. Arriving by boat, it is picturesque with pastel, weatherboard houses, but as soon as you step outside the port it looks like a typical third-world country and kinda like Guatemala. The people all want to sell you something or take you on a tour, but if you say no and that you are not interested, they politely let you go by and wish you a nice day.
We took a tour of the city with a local guy called Bernard who seemed passionate about education as he pointed out every local school (and there were a LOT) and explained that they each have a different coloured uniform. We went past a parade that some school kids were doing for red ribbon day, which promotes saying no to drugs.
To escape from the insane heat, we went to a Chinese restaurant and ordered a local beer from a Spanish-speaking employee and drank it while listening to a remix of songs that included Gloria Estefan and Reggaton. I quite like Belize...
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Monday, October 11, 2010
Adelaide House






The house of my friend in Adelaide is full of light, art and colour, and the backyard is an oasis of trees. The house itself is a lovely old building with lots of space, quite distinct to the places in Buenos Aires and it's interesting to see how people share a house with a lot of space or just a little. Here there is so much room to move that you could sit on the front porch, in the living room, the kitchen space, or venture into the enormous backyard, which means there is always the opportunity to be alone. For me this is the deal maker.
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Melbourne vs Buenos Aires
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Friday, August 20, 2010
Blue House
Walking back from paying the rent one saturday morning recently, I stumbled upon this lovely blue house in the barrio of Boedo.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
El Cuartito
Another of Buenos Aires´ legendary pizzerias, El Cuartito is a mix of sports bar meets traditional eatery. Typically eating two slices of pizza will be enough, and along with the cerveza that you are drinking, you once again wonder how Argentinians are not mordibly obese. Things that I love about this place include the old-fashioned decor, sports memorabilia posters, the interesting mix of clientele, the greasy and delicious pizza, the strange, sometimes cheerful, often moody waiters and the neon sign outside...
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