Tuesday, 10 June 2014

Tango, Vino Tinto y Bife de Lomo


It is 3:55 o clock in the morning and we are waiting for our flight from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil to Lima, Peru. I am half asleep but will do my best to catch up with our diary as we still owe you a travel report from Buenos Aires. 

After Johannesburg with 10 million and Istanbul with around 14 million people we visited yet another mega city, the Ciudad de Buenos Aires in Argentina with 15 million inhabitants. 

A lot of people told us to rather go to Patagonia or elswhere in the countryside because two weeks of only Buenos Aires would be too long and too boring. Well, let us tell you this - we could have easily stayed a third week as we found the city, its vibrant life and everything else that it has to offer more than interesting and entertaining! 

When we arrived in Bs As as the locals like to abbreviate the name of the city, we were greeted by the finest Autum weather possible. Bs As lies in the Southern Hemisphere so we travelled from Spring time in Istanbul straight to Autum in Argentina. Yes, we kind of lost the summer on the way but this turned out to be great timing because it gets very hot and humid during summer in BsAs. Instead, we still had lots of sunshine with lovely clear blue skies and a comfortable temperature of around 20 degrees C. Bright yellow and red leaved trees as we know from our Northern European Autum combined with lush green plantation of palm trees full of small green and red parrots and other colourful birds happily tweeting and chirping into the sunset over the River La Plata. 

We had found a beautiful apartment (with a great big gas fire cooker:-) that we shared with a girl from Columbia who was training to become a professional cook. Right in the vibrant and central part of San Telmo and walking distance to the River, the city center and almost everything else that we wanted to see or do. And walking we did! On our first day, we picked up a city map of BsAs and decided to take a Spaziergang (stroll) down to the old habour of Puerto Madero and along the Ecological Nature and Bird Reserve by the River Plata, a large area of protected marsh land covered with reeds and bush. Bearing in mind that BsAs is twice the size of London and 30 times Bremen:-), the distances are somewhat different and we ended up walking nonstop from 9am to sunset (6pm). By the time we came back home, we were tired but continued talking long into the night about all the great things that we had seen and encountered that day. And it was decided then and there that we would carry on walking and do Buenos Aires by foot. 

What followed was a fantastic journey through various different areas of the city, from the rather poor and rough La Boca with its world famous football club Boca Juniors to the affluent Palermo where streets are lined with trendy shops and bars. Our neighbourhood San Telmo also had a lot to offer and one highlight was the old San Telmo market, a mix of vegetables and fruits, butchers, antique and second hand stalls, and a small bistro selling freshly cooked produce from the market. Another suprise was the San Telmo street market that we discovered one Sunday morning. As we left the house to go for yet another walk, we bumped right into some street vendors and artists, the market had started literally in front of our door and went on for 2 miles down the road. A lot of handcrafted decorational articles, musicians, street artists, artisan food, students and old ladies alike baking cakes and cookies at home and selling them from trays tied to their waist. And of course on every street corner a big wood fired BBQ with the finest beef cuts sizzling away; an Argentinian weekend tradition. 

On our final weekend, we took a train and went an hour north of BsAs to the small harbour city of Tigre. The city itself isnt that interesting, however it is the gateway and ferry port to the Parana Delta. There, the two grand rivers Rio Parana und Rio Uruguay meet and form a vast river delta of over 14000 square kilometres (320km long and up to 60km wide). It has thousands of natural canals, rivers, creeks, and islands where native wildlife and river people live a peaceful life away from the big city. As with most such attractions, the big tourist boats offering day trips through the delta were packed with people and we knew this wasnt what we wanted. Instead, we managed to find a local Argentinian who grew up on the river islands and was more than happy share his family history :-) and his favourite places with us. So, we went to a small boat jetty where little wooden canal barges take river people from their islands to the mainland and back. As our Spanish is a little rusty (if not to say pretty bad:-) we just grabbed the adventurous opportunity by the neck and jumped on one of the canal barges, not knowing where it would go. We clearly were the only foreign Gringos on board, which was a good sign. As we went on a fantastic boat ride through the myriads of waterways, the rivers became smaller and narrower with every turn we made. None of the big tourist boats would have been able to take us there. The further we went, the more people left the boat so we decided to get off as well and explore an island by foot. No cars, no shops, no noise, just forest, green river banks, little wooden houses and people in canoes and rowing boats. What a wonderful day we had and a perfect ending to a perfect stay in Buenos Aires. 

So, here is what we liked best about Buenos Aires:
- Almost everything from markets to graffiti to young people playing football on the street to old people sitting on the corner with a glass of wine in one hand and a cigar in the other
- Open air BBQs, outdoor eating culture and Argentinian Beef, the best we had so far by far! British and US Beef have just been demoted to 2nd and 3rd place, sorry chaps. 
- Nicole loves Argentinian red wine from the Malbeq Region. I'm not a wine person but have to admit the odd drop of vino tinto here and there wasnt too bad ;-) 
- Tango meetings every night. Friends and strangers meet on small piazzas or streets and dance and chat and have a good time.
- The bus drivers. Taking a bus is like a roller coaster ride at 100 miles per hour. Every bus driver thinks his bus is a Ferrari and races other buses, preferably to rock music from ACDC that they play at full volume over the bus loudspeaker system. If you dont hold on tight, you get thrown around from front to back. Great fun if you have a seat and watch bags and laptops flying around, people involuntarily hugging each other as they try and stay on both feet, swearing loudly. Hahaha just the thought of it makes me laugh out loud:-)) 

And what we did not like at all:
- A lot of grumpy faces :-(( We think people from Buenos Aires have lost the ability to smile
- Dumping household rubbish everywhere. How and why the hell do you take a big screen television 3 miles into a protected nature reserve and throw it in a river?
- The bus drivers, when you are not in a bus! Pedestrians have no rights at all, and if you see a bus approaching you better run to get out of its way.

Overall we had a fantastic time and can highly recommend this lively city and its surrounding countryside to anybody traveling to South America.

The link with more photos of Buenos Aires is in our previous post



Wednesday, 14 May 2014

Hello South America

23 April to 6 May in Buenos Aires, Argentina

From Istanbul we flew to Buenos Aires and spent two really interesting and wonderful weeks exploring this very dynamic and active city. It is full of colour, vibes, tastes, music (Tango of course:-), streetmarkets, and European influences from Italy, France, Spain mixed with Latino culture from all over South and Central America.

Last week we safely arrived in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to visit our very good friend Gil and his girlfriend Guna who live and work here. We have another 5 weeks in Brazil and that is good because already after a couple of days here, we like it very much. That's why you have to please be patient and wait a little for our report on Buenos Aires, as we are buzzing around Ipanema and Copacabana Beaches on our bicycle, and travel along the Brazilian coast and rain forest in an old 1970s VW Camper Van. 

Not to keep you waiting for too long, here are our pictures from Buenos Aires










Wednesday, 30 April 2014

Istanbul - still very cool

20 to 23 April 2014

Our first visit of Istanbul in 2013 was a big success and we immediately fell in love with the looks and the vibe of the city. I am very glad to say that on our second visit now, nothing had changed and we were still as excited as the first time. To us it feels a bit like London - you might have lived there many years and visited a 100 times but never grow tired of it. Quite the opposite, we liked it even more!
On our first day we arrived at 5am in the morning straight from Johannesburg, had a short sleep and then decided to make the most of the wonderful spring morning with sunshine and 20C degrees. We walked across the bridge of the Golden Horn that was, as usual, packed with fishermen (and fisherwomen in Prada shoes and Gucci handbag) catching small makerels, which are then grilled, sold and eaten then and there on the street. Lecker! From there we entered the maze of what feels like hundreds of small streets and alleys and hidden passageways of the very old Istanbul on the European side, and particularly enjoyed the colourful streetlife. Everything  takes place outside, there are no big supermarkets or shopping malls in that part of the town, instead you find everything you need in small shops, stalls, street markets or from street vendors trying to sell you everything and anything, but in a polite and smiley kind of way. Electronic goods, fake Lacoste T-shirts , fresh vegetables and fruits, spices, nuts, and some of the best and freshest local fish I have ever seen and tasted. 
The next day, we took a boat to Kadikoy on the Asian side of Istanbul, which we highly recommend to anybody visiting Istanbul, and had another great day schlendering (walking at a slow pace) along the waterfront to Moda with great views of the Bosporus and big boats travelling to and from the black sea. 
With our Bed&Breakfast situated right beneath the Galata Tower, we stayed with a friendly young Turkish barkeeper who had a simple and cozy appartment on the top floor and roof terrace with amazing 360 degree views of Istanbul. All within spitting distance of the city center and the water, we decided to spend the final day in our neighbourhood of Beyoglu and Taksim. Another very old and beautiful part of Istanbul with ancient Mosques, Turkish Baths, Theatres, and houses dating back several hundred years. Again, lots of life with small markets, bistros, tea houses, coffee shops and kebap grills for outdoor street dining and drinking. 
As you might have guessed, a few more days in Istanbul would not have been a probelm for us at all and we surely will be back again for more Turkish Coffee, Makerel sandwiches and listening to the sound of the Mosque at 5:00 in the morning wishing there was a snooze button for that thing :-) 

Four continents in four days. From Africa on Saturday to European Istanbul on Sunday to Asian Istanbul on Monday, and as I am writing this, to South America on Wednesday. What a hectic life it is to be a jetsetter :-) 






Our updates via newsletter / Unsere Neuigkeiten per Emailnachricht

Dear friends
I tried to make the blog as simple as possible, not only for you but also for me because I easily get confused with too many links, buttons and gadgets :-) Some of you keep asking when will we post new stories and pictures, and we are very happy that you guys are following us around the world! On the top right hand side of the page is a little box "follow by email". Write your email in there and click "submit", and you will get an automated email each time we have updated our blog, so you dont have to check everyday. For this to work, you will receive an email from the blogger website that asks you to confirm. Simply click on the link in that email, job done. I promise you will not get any spam. One thing, Blogger will ask you if you want to follow "Big Wide Open" - yes you do, that is us! For some reason, they kept the old title of our blog.

Keep well
Nicole and Markus 


Liebe Familie und Freunde
Ich habe versucht den Blog so einfach wie moglich zu gestalten, nicht nur fur Euch sondern auch fur mich da ich sonst durcheinander komme :-) Einige von Euch fragen uns immer wann wir den nachsten Update schreiben, und es freut uns sehr, das Ihr uns auf unserer Reise so interessiert begleitet! Auf der oberen rechten Bildseite vom Blog ist ein Feld "Follow By Email" dort konnt Ihr Eure Emailaddresse eintragen und "submit" klicken. Dann bekomt Ihr jedesmal wenn wir einen neuen Eintrag schreiben, eine automatische Email, und musst nicht immer selber nachschauen ob oder ob nicht es etwas Neues gibt. Damit das funktioniert, bekommt Ihr von Blogger eine Email in der Ihr bitte auf den Link klickt um zu bestatigen. Ich verspreche Euch ihr bekommt keine Werbemails. Wichtig, in der Email von Blogger steht, ob ihr dem Blog "Big Wide Open" folgen mochtet - das ist richtig, das sind wir! Aus mir unerklarlichen Grunden ist dort noch der alte Titel unseres Blogs gespeichert. 

Liebe Grusse an Euch
Nicole und Markus 

Goodbye Africa

17 to 19 April 2014

Having come back from Mozambique we spent another three warm and sunny autum days in Johannesburg before boarding our flight to Istanbul, where we have another three warm and sunny spring days. 

Johannesburg is a very big city and a little scary and intimidating at first. There are those areas were the rich and the middle class live, where every house is behind big walls, tall iron gates with sharp spikes, barbed wire and so much electric fence with high voltage. And then there are a lot of places where the not so rich and very poor live. Old houses, no windows, no security fence, partially broken down walls, no roof, people on the street, lighting fires and burning rubbish. Once you manage to navigate around or through those rough areas, Johannesburg, or Jozi as the locals call it, actually has quite a lot to offer; much more than we could see in the short time we were there. But what we saw, we liked and enjoyed. 
We visited the Neighbour Goods Market, which takes place every Saturday morning in Bramfontain, the city centre of Johannesburg. Once a high crime area that you better stay away from, it has now started to become a more multicultural block with nicely decorated boutique shops of handcrafted and designed clothes and other things, second hand markets, street art, live music anc dancing, where black and white happily mix together. And a big market with fresh home cooked and self made food and drinks, that takes place in an old car park. We also visited the large and beautiful Delta Park, a green area with a Bird sanctuary and lots of pretty butterflies, and fantastic views over Johannesburg where all kinds of people meet on weekends for ballgames and barbeque. 

Now, we sit in the plane and watch the evening lights of Johannesburg dissappear below us. A little sad we say Goodbye and Farewell Africa. You have treated us well and we had a wonderful time with plenty of lasting memories to take with us. Thank you!





Sunday, 13 April 2014

Windy Mozambique

10 to 17 April 2014

Mozambique - the good, the bad, and the ugly would be a suitable description of the country and our experience.

Let's start with the good, which was not only good but very good if not brilliant. South Africa surprised us with its beauty on land, Mozambique dazzled us with its richness of life on the coastline and particularly under water! Unfortunately, a cyclone with lots of wind and some rain passed across the Eastern coast of Africa and hit Mozambique just that week. Still, we had a lot of of sunshine every day, 28C. degrees above water and about the same in the water. The strong winds kept the aggressive mosquitos away, but as Mozambique is a high risk malaria area, we decided to take our tablets (Malerone) nonetheless and were pleasently surprised about the little side effects. Bad luck for us, that the strong winds also kept the the gigantic and graceful whale sharks and manta rays away; our main reason for coming here. The plan was to hop on a boat and jump in the water and swim with them, but they had other plans. Instead I went surfing, which was great fun because of the fine swell, and we went snorkelling. In Mozambique, you can stick your head underwater practically anywhere, and you are guaranteed to be greeted by an amazing variety of fish and other creatures in hundreds of different colours, shapes, and sizes. As you can imagine, we spent a lot of time at the local reefs just a few meters off the beach. 
We also enjoyed the lush and green countryside that reminded us a little of Vietnam or Thailand. Large rice fields, mangroves, grassland and palm trees thanks to the warm and very humid climate. And yet another step deeper into the real Africa. Mozambique has very little touristic influence, mainly because the infrastructure and the whole lifle is basic and simple. One has to be prepared to live without a lot of things that we would normally count on as part of our daily lifes. Food is very limited in variety, you eat what the farmers grow in small quantities in their back yard and then sell along the street - of course at "special" prices, meaning we paid twice as much as the locals and we had to negotiate hard for every Meticas (Mosambique money). Mainly tomatos, potatos, onions, avocado, garlic, pineapple, lemons, coconut and that is it. But all of it super fresh, organic, no pesticides, really good.  No super markets at all, only little shacks selling a handful of things from toothpaste to sugar. At 8 o clock in the morning the fishermen go out in their small two-man rowing boats, and come back at lunchtime, selling their daily catch fresh off the boat. Lobster, giant prawns, barracuda, squid, lemon fish, rock cod, red snapper, oysters. A fish lovers paradise! Our meals were easy - lots of tomato (my favourite) with lots of avocado (Nicole's favourite) and fish. Life was simple but happy for us, and after a few days we did not miss the daily Starbucks coffee or London Times newspaper anymore at all. 

Now for the bad and ugly. Essentially Mozambique is still a poor country with a history of 30 years of brutal civil war. We spoke to a lot of local youngsts and most children dont have money for the school and cannot find work later in life. That leads to high crime in certain areas, and even the South African travellers, who have problems in their own country, stopped going on holidays to Mozambique because it appears to get more violent. And it is also very expensive, almost European prices. We actually had a lovely time and felt relatively safe, until our last evening, it was 5pm and just at sunset, when a completely distrought and tearful girl came running to us. She had just been the victim of a horrific sexual crime and was crying out for help. Nicole looked after her, I sprinted to the police... and they looked completely uninteressted and did not move, it took them more than 20minutes to finally send someone 50meters down to the beach! Terrible! Unfortunately, we left Mozambique with very mixed feelings. 

But here are photos of our happy days in "Mozzie"bique 





The Eastern Cape and Kwazulu Natal

3 to 10 April 2014

From the Garden Route, we travelled further north via Mhtata, Butterworth, Port Elisabeth and into the province of Kwazulu Natal, the land of the Zulu tribe. As we came into Margate, Ramsgate, Uvongo and Port Shepstone right on the ocean, we were greeted by a sudden tropical feeling. The forest was greener and thicker than before, with palmtrees, coconut trees, banana trees, avocado trees and pinapples on the wayside. The birds were louder and more colourful, monkeys on every other tree along the street and the temperature of the sea a lot more comfortable than the icy waters of Cape Town. Unfortunately, it looked like some investment idiots decided to spoil this lovely stretch of nature by building ugly seafront hotels, bars and amusement establishments where people eat cheap fast food rather than the fresh produce and seafood that surrounds them. Lucky for us, we headed into the hills and stayed a couple of days with Jenny and Adam, two good friends of Nicole who have set up a white water rafting company near the beautiful Mzimkhulu river and Oribi Gorge Nature Reserve. 

From Port Shepstone, we drove up to St Lucia where the final and most exciting chapter of our South African adventure started. The iSimangaliso Wetland Park is situated on the east coast of KwaZulu-Natal and South Africa's third-largest protected area, spanning 280 km of coastline, from the Mozambican border in the north to south of the Lake St. Lucia estuary, and made up of around 3,280 km2 of natural space. It is full of unspoilt African landscape, the natural home of all those animals big and small that many of us will only ever see in the zoo. Elephants, Rhinos, Zebras, Crocodiles, Hippos, Wilderbeest, Lions, Leopards, Waterbuffalos, Giraffes, Antilopes like Kudu, Nyala, Springbok, and so many more. Apart from the big cats, we saw almost everything including close meetings with a Rhino mother and her baby. And the best thing was, for once we humans were on the inside of a fence and the animals free to run wild in their own world. We stayed at the Bushbaby lodge, a hand full of small huts just 100 meters next to a water hole that animals would visit several times a day, seperated by a wire fence with a few volts in it. By day, we drove through forest and bushland and stopped whenever we saw something moving, and that was a lot :-) 

As said before, the nature was absolutely amazing and photos won't do it justice, but we tried to take a few pics for you nonetheless.. 












Wednesday, 9 April 2014

The Garden Route to Tsitsikamma

30 March to 3 April 2014

Having left Cape Town on the 30 March, we spent the next ten days travelling up the South African East coast to St Lucia. And what a wonderful and amazing journey it was! The so called Garden Route is a stretch of road from Cape Town to Tsitsikamma and goes along the coast up and down hills, through thick green forests, green bushland, white sandy beaches and dunes, river estuaries and lagoons - full of exotic wildlife that up to now we had only seen on television.
It is difficult to say what we liked best, but Wilderness was certainly one of our most favourite places. There, the two of us took a canoe and paddled upstream on the river Touws, a very calm and peaceful way to travel. As the river became smaller and shallow, we left the canoe and continued by foot through the forest to a waterfall where we sat the afternoon til sunset and saw colourful birds and butterflies, large spiders, lizards, a green Mamba (snake) swimming through the river, and even a group of about 15 baboons (monkeys). Another beautiful and very different place was Knysna, a big lagoon of about 5 kilometres in length with crystal clear water, white beaches and an amazing variety of fish and sea birds. Natures Valley, Mayoli Eastuary, the Tsitsikamma Park, Storms River and Plettenburg Bay (South Africa's surfer paradise) were equally nice and one could easily spent a whole month exploring and that part of Africa. 
We tried to take some photos but it is almost impossible to capture the whole experience as it was. For that we would need a camera with a 360 degree view with sounds and smells of the forest or rolling waves of the ocean, or the feeling of warm sand between your toes. On many occasions we just sat in silence and enjoyed the moment. 

Here are some pictures for you...









Our final days in Cape Town

On Sunday 30 March, it was good bye Cape Town
Even in Cape Town the sun doesnt always shine and a cool breeze with a few rain drops moved across the city, heralding the beginning of autum at the Cape. Still, we were blessed with lovely warm sunny hours, and made the most of our final days in town by visiting the weekly fisherman's harbour festival at Hout Bay that you could already smell miles away. The next day, we drove to a Sunday street party at the colourful and lively black township of Gugulethu - a fantastic experience but not for the faint hearted. Big pieces of unrecognizable meat were sold at market stalls, then taken a few meters across the road to a guy with a big grill, and finally eaten with bare hands whilst standing on the road, dancing to music into the Sunday sunset. We also drove to the lush and lavish wine lands of Paarl and Stellenbosch, with beautifully landscaped wine estates and their gardens, where people relax with a glass of local wine and have an all-day-picknick with friends and family, whilst enjoying the fantastic views of rolling hills and wine yards for miles.  Still, a very white dominated business with big sometimes excessive architecture in my view bordering on decadence in many cases. 
We finished off our stay in Cape Town with a bright sunny day at Camps Bay, playing beach volleyball with the local crowd who we befriended over the weeks. Thanks Dennis, Sarah, Sean, Willy, Andrea and Nico. 


The next stage of our African adventure were 2000 kilometres of exotic coast line, forest, rivers and bushland up the garden route and all the way to St Lucia, just south of the boarder to Mozambique. We started on Sunday 30 March and arrived 2600 kilometres later in Johannesburg on Wednesday 9 April. A detailed summery will follow soon. 











Monday, 24 March 2014

The journey has started...in Kaapstad, South Africa

12 to 30 March 2014 


After a loving goodbye from our families Meyer and Danoehl at Hamburg Airport, we started our big journey on Tuesday 11th March. Boarding an Emirates flight, we arrived Wednesday 12th in The Mother City of sunny Cape Town.  

Hardly two weeks later, we already have fully embraced the laid back lifestyle and best of all, managed to experience the real Africa by visiting a street market and party at Mzoli's in the township of Ghugulethu, where we clearly were the only white faces around :-)

Here are a few pictures of our adventures so far...


https://picasaweb.google.com/110475049385279629687/CapeTown2014?authkey=Gv1sRgCNbxj9yl1ZWJQQ&noredirect=1


Thursday, 6 February 2014

Around the world in 365 days ...

and this is how you can follow us

https://mapsengine.google.com/map/edit?mid=zhk2DGpfdNIw.k-whcCOV6oQs

come and visit us, we would love to see you anywhere along the way !

Nicole & Markus