Bienvenidos a Cordoba, the 2nd largest city in
Argentina! Famous for…
- Tons
of universities
- Jesuit
Missions/Churches
- Ferris
Wheel designed by same guy as Eiffel Tower
After 2 weeks of traveling non-stop, never in the same city
or hostel for more than 2 days, it was time for a nice little break. Brian and
I arrived in Cordoba after a quick 12 hour bus from Mendoza. At the huge bus
terminal, it felt strange being in such a modern city, spending weeks in Patagonia and Mendoza, I wasn’t used to be in
a place with working wi-fi and big buildings.
After checking into Link Hostel, we went for a major food
move: 2 chicken sandwiches and 2 orders of fries. Each.
Although the name of
the place was “2x1 Lomitos”, somehow I wasn’t convinced that we would be
getting 2 sandwiches each, until they brought them out and put 2 in front of
me. AWOO!
After dinner, we headed back to the hostel where the worker
told us (super casually) that MARK B. was in the building! TRINAMIC complete.
CRAZY TIME.
During the 6 days we spent in Cordoba, the name of the game
was PRODUCTION. Here’s a few projects that the 3 of us set out to complete:
- Buy
ping pong balls
- Grocery
trip with hostel workers for asado ingredients
- See
the ferris wheel (WOW! zzzz)
- Move
rooms within the same hostel 3x
- Laundry
service (in hostel)
- Play
ping pong
- Watch
NBA games on the hostel TV
Here's some of the sights from Cordoba (many courtesy of Brian B)
Bicentennial Park - These rings were all the hype (for some). 200 rings in a circular pattern, each celebrating an important event in Argentinian history for that year.
It ain't even fair to look so good.
"Just shoot me now" - Mark B.
So most of our Cordoba stay revolved around lazies the hostel, in
that we rarely even left. Good thing that Link Hostel happened to be one of the
coolest places ever. Like Brian said, this place is up there with Hostel
Portunhol in Floripa as being the most laid-back, cool-staffed, chill places in
the world to spend a few days or years. Thiago, Felipe and Timmy Good Times
keep the hostel running like a machine, but they never appear to be working.
Board meetings took place on the steps while smoking cigarettes and drinking
beers, and occasionally breaking to join in the hacky sack.
The rooftop patio outside our room
"Best ping pong table in Cordoba"
What happens when you accidentally hit the ball through the cracked window into the parking garage.
One of the big highlights of this trip was our roommate
Jacobo (aka JacoboWong - of YouTube Fame) had his 21st birthday party at the
hostel itself. He’s pretty quiet and chill when he’s sober, but give him some
fernet y cola and watch him transform! In fact, the night we arrived he was
studying for an exam even though he was turning 21 at midnight. Every night
after that, he was a wild man. He and his homie, Jose, from Mexico, are studying
in Cordoba for the semester and staying at the hostel full-time. Poor guys.
Anyway, this party was supposed to be about 15 people from
Jacobo’s classes. Then we woke up from our disco naps around 10pm and noticed
the 50-something people chillin in the courtyard (including the hostel staff, who didn't seem to understand the concept of stress) and crewed up for a great
night. Here’s what it looked like:
I hate this life.
who are these people?
Notice my outfit is killin’ it. That laundry service that
promised to be done same day actually took 2 days, and so in the freezing
Cordoba weather, I was stuck with shorts, long socks and a Northface pullover.
It didn’t hurt that I hadn’t had a haircut since Floripa, about 5 weeks ago.
Lookin’ Fly, Boots. Especially at the club. Good thing we were with YouTube
stars who opened all the doors for us to get in free looking like slobs.
Another highlight of the stay was that during the Holiday
Weekend, two different bands had checked in for gigs in town. While I was
taking another nap, a major jam session/acoustic set broke out in the courtyard
and I was lucky to catch the tail end of it with Mark. One of the bands, named
El Zombie, was a Ska band from BsAs. When the bassist, Mauricio, left his bass
(due to his self-proclaimed “rotten memory”), they had to come back and
retrieve it. We met him and Flor, his girlfriend and lead singer of the band,
at dinner and they invited us to come to their rehearsal set and album release
party in BsAs in a few weeks. We have the worst luck.
And finally, here’s some random pics from our last night out
in Cordoba. We look good. And also, we SMELL good. Believe that.
Around the waist - take that, Recoleta
Fake money fake money money money! We had these fake flyers that looked like real pesos and a security camera that showed us the sidewalk from inside. Like all 30 year old men, we ripped and crumpled them to look like real Argentinian bills, then planted them on the sidewalk to see if people would stop and pick them up. One of the best laughs I've ever had in my life. Especially at 5:30am.
Muchos Gracias por todos, chicos! Goodbye to Felipe (FELIPE!) and Tim - Thiago not pictured. The Dream is never over, Timbo.
Bautistas on the prowl, when Im thirty i want to be just like you
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