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Bitter reality

backtothefuture | 24. November 2011

First many thanks to all the friends who read my posts in this blog and also those who enjoyed watching the photos. It was always fun for me to put this together and a great joy for me when I received your comments. Many thanks for this!

Unfortunately it will be much more difficult to continue this blog as I was robbed in my last seven hours in Buenos Aires before I wanted to go to the airport. I lost my camera, my laptop, my credit cards, all my money (however, it was not that much, but when you literally have not even a penny money gets a new dimension), my passport and my drivers license as well as several personal items. Fortunately I haven’t lost my health as when it happened (the classic – squeezing some liquid on me which looks like bird poo, handing tissues, creating hectic, bla, bla, bla, then another person grabbing the backpack, then the “helpful” women running away) I was more into trying to relocate my backpack instead of grabbing one of the “helpful” women. And if I would have grabbed one, who knows, they might have had a knife or somebody else would be around to protect them. Whatever…

After seven hours with the police and numerous phone calls with the German Embassy (German tourists on the street gave me some money so that I could call the Embassy, the police did not let me) I found a hostel which let me stay without paying in advance and without showing any proof of identity. The next day (Monday) I went to the German Consulate and within 70 minutes I got hold of a new passport which enables me to continue my trip. The next plane to Johannesburg, South Africa, went two days later so beside my possessions I “only” lost three days and actually a lot of trust and self esteem.

Since my friend Claire and I wanted to travel the South of Africa together in a rental car we changed the arrangements with the rental car company so that Claire is now the only driver. We picked up the car in Johannesburg, South Africa, at the airport and are meanwhile in Botswana and want to enter Chobe Nationalpark later today. I could also meet my friends Petra and Thomas at the airport (we wanted to meet in Kruger Nationalpak three days earlier if the theft wouldn’t have happened) and they kindly lent me their Canon dslr (I might not look as the most trustworthy person at this point in time but I always carry it around with me, promised!).

Though more difficult now and less colorful I try to keep you updated.

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Three days on Peninsula Valdes

backtothefuture | 8. November 2011

Peninsula Valdes is in northern Patagonia and known for its excellent wildlife. There are populations of among others sea-elephants, southern right whales and penguins. My friend Ingo recommended to go there and I booked a flight and a rental car to explore the peninsula. When I went there I had my first surprise – Patagonia was flat with no hills, mountains, or trees. Until then I always thought the entire Patagonia would look like Tierra del Fuego with its snow-capped mountains and clear blue lakes, but no, for hundreds of miles only scrubs in the plains.

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When I arrived in Puerto Piramidos, the only village and with 400ish inhabitants rather tiny, I immediately liked the place. It was sleepy and relaxed but I learned that it gets considerably more crowded on weekends. There are several whale-watching operators and I decided to break my “never again a whale-watching-tour-resolution” I made after my previous three, exclusively disappointing whale-watch experiences (if I haven’t repressed successfully the memories of other disappointing trips). To give you an idea: when I went to the beach I could see more whales from the shore than I have ever seen on all those tours together.

The first day I made an in total approx. 130 miles long dirt-road-trip around the island joined by a lovely young couple from Germany hitch-hiking in South America. We had a great day taking our time to watch the wildlife at the various beaches, which are, however, not accessible for human beings. We saw many sea-elephants and sealions, albatrosses, penguins, and on our way to the beaches loads of guanacos (looked to me like vicunas = wild lamas) and even an armadillo crossing the street right in front of us.

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Later in the afternoon our car had a flat tire and after changing it with the help of a park ranger we decided to return on the shortest route given the gravel roads and the lack of an additional spare tire. In the end this incident was the greatest luck as we repeated our stops at the viewpoints we were before. There was a bunch of people standing at the penguin spot entirely ignoring the penguins. When we came closer we saw them as well: some orca whales, also rare to watch on the Peninsula, on their way up the natural canal. And while we were waiting patiently it became even more spectacular when one orca attacked and killed a sealion/sea-elephant resting on the shore of the canal. It was really exciting to watch how the orca was sneaking through the canal to make its deadly attack. After the sealion was towed into deeper water and killed a flock of seagulls indicated where the feast was happening.

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The next day I decided to make the whale watching tour after checking the weather with one of the tour operators. It promised to stay fine for the day but windy for the day thereafter so that I made the tour against my initial plans on that Sunday. Again I was very lucky as an unusual high concentration of plancton in the water at one spot led to an unusual high concentration of whales, dolphins, sealions and penguins. Sometimes the different species were even interacting among each other.

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It was amazing how the whales were breaching, showing their dorsal fin, feeding plancton, curiuosly observing our 12 m boat or diving underneath it. The whale mothers (about 15 m long) were guiding and protecting their babies (about 6 m long) and it was cute how they always held physical contact unless the mother was diving. Sometimes it even would have been possible to touch these huge animals because they were that close to the boat. Right before we left five whales were surrounding us and it was almost stress as I couldn’t decide where I watch first. When we went back to  Puerto Piramides I had a enormous smile on my face and it was time for a new “never again a whale-watching-tour-resolution” – this time, however, because it cannot get any better!

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Before I went to the Peninsula Valdes I was somewhat anxious whether it can compare with the wildlife of the Galapagos Islands I had seen only seven weeks ago (time flies). As the focus this time was more on the sea-mammals, particularly on the southern right whales, it was again amazing and surely an once in a lifetime experience not to be missed. Muchas gracias, Ingo (if you read these lines)!

(see also under photos “Peninsula Valdes”)

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