Savvy Blog

Entries for the 'Argentina' Category

31

Olivier on the far leftSavvy Navigator is very, very proud that one of our favorite destinations for our gay tours, Argentina, recently passed legislation legalizing marriage equality. Our “man on the ground” in Buenos Aires, Olivier Dufeu (who helps us organize our Argentina trips) has given us this account of what it was like to be personally involved in this landmark event:

 
Nobody who was in front of the Argentine congress on the night July 14th, 2010, will forget it. A couple of months ago when the gay marriage law project started to be discussed, nobody would have even dreamed that it would arrive to the Senate for a final vote. Weeks before the voting, the debate was very strong, with many demonstrations against the project, mostly from the churches, whereas most of the straight people I know just didn’t mind. On the final day, the debate started early in the afternoon, everybody was texting friends to ask if they had any news and how it was going. After work many of us went to the Congress square. Hundreds of people had gathered, following the debate from a big screen, listening the arguments of the senators. It was painful to hear the cons but so empowering to hear the pros. I texted my journalist friend again, and nobody knew exactly what the final result would be. We were all doing the math, after each senator spoke, trying guess at the final result, the numbers were so tight.  
 
The night arrived and it started to get very cold, but nobody left. We bought food and drink and waited. We forgot it is 0°C. Around 4 am, the big moment arrived: the final vote. Total silence of the hundreds of people. Countdown. At my side there was a couple of lesbians, they were almost praying “I want to marry her, I want to marry her…” And when the YES finally arrived, we all forgot the freezing weather and the word “igualdad” (equality) was the first scream of happiness from everybody.
 
The atmosphere was so unique. Younger, older, drag queens, bears, lesbians, etc. everybody hugged each other. When the Argentine national anthem started, I could not hold my tears. Hundreds of citizens just happy to finally have a law that recognized their love. All my friends were looking at each other and saying  “no lo puedo creer” (I can’t believe it). Big hugs, texting, more tears and more songs. It was already 5:00 am but there was no way people would go home (even though everybody was working on next day!) and the crowd started naturally to walk in direction of the Obelisco, this strong symbol of Argentine freedom. We had a hot chocolate to celebrate it and forgot the cold! I went back home at 6.00 am and I think I only realized what had happened.
 
The next day, when I woke up, the first thing I thought was “Today I am no longer a 2nd class citizen, I have the same rights as everybody else.”
 
Thank you Olivier! We couldn’t agree more!

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20

Windblown Street Performers, courtesy of Cooltown Studios

I’m sitting here in the fabulous Legado Mitico hotel in the fabulous Buenos Aires Palermo Soho neighborhood, awaiting the arrival of a great groups of guys for the next Savvy Navigator gay tour. We start off here in B.A. and then head up to Iguazu Falls, and then over to the wine country of Mendoza at the foot of the Andes mountains.

On Sunday morning we’ll visit the renowned San Telmo market, where we’ll see wonderful antiques, craft offerings, and amazing street performers. Here are some of the Savvy Spouse’s favorites, the “Windblown Couple.” As the trip progresses, we’ll be updating the blog with more adventures.

 

Photo courtesy of Cooltown Studios

22
Cavas Wine Lodge Vineyards In ArgentinaIn today’s New York Times Practical Traveler section, Michelle Higgins accurately documents the Bargains in Latin America, Where Luxury Costs Less. Long a fan of central and South America, Savvy Navigator thinks it’s only logical to offer these destinations to our discerning, upscale gay-traveler clientele. The bang-for-the-buck affordability is his region is why Savvy Navigator brings his group and individual gay tours to the gay-friendly, luxurious, and affordable destinations of Argentina and Costa Rica.
 
Michelle writes: Meals are often half the cost of their European counterparts, hotels are generally more luxurious than what you’d get for the same money in the States, and spa treatments and other private services are so affordable you feel good about splurging, because, really, you’re saving…
 
And we could not agree more! 
 
In addition to our customized, individual tours that depart throughout the entire year, in 2010, we’re offering a gay tour departure to Argentina in May, and in late June, we’re headed to Costa Rica. Click on the links here for more detailed trip information.
 
As we finalize the details for the 2010 Latin America program, we already have some great guys committed to these trips and expect the tours to sell out (remember, our maximum size is just 12 guests). As with our trips to South Africa, you’ll find that the Savvy Navigator trips offer a luxurious, experiential travel experience that’s never fussy, and is essentially a third of the cost of a similar trip in the Northern Hemisphere (i.e. Europe).
13

 

Savvy Navigator, purveyor of gay tours the world over, was quoted in a recent issue of Smart Money magazine in an article about Luxury Travel for Less to the wine country in Mendoza, Argentina. With the US dollar bouncing back this week, traveling south of the Equator will provide an unsurpassed luxury vacation experience. Here are some highlights from Kristen Bellstrom’s article in the June 23rd issue:

“Jeffrey Ward rarely takes a vacation that doesn’t involve serious consumption, and last winter was no different, with the Washington, D.C., executive coach and his partner jetting away for nine days of wine buzzes and decadent alfresco dinners. But where the couple is used to scrumming with other oenophiles for a prime spot in the tasting rooms, on this trip they were given intimate private tours by vineyard owners, who offered samples straight from the barrel and would happily chat for hours. What changed? This time Ward wasn’t quaffing Bordeaux in France or Chianti in Tuscany. He was in Mendoza, Argentina, famous for its Malbec wine and a newbie on the gourmet travel scene. With one in six U.S. travelers now enrolling in a cooking class, touring a vineyard, or otherwise including food and wine activities in their vacation since 2004, epicurean travel is no longer just for foodies and wine snobs. Clearly, the unabashed gluttony and hedonism of some of these trips doesn’t hurt. Ward’s trip, for example, was at the Cavas Wine Lodge, a tony Relais & Châteaux property where he and his companion ate succulent Argentine steak under the stars and had massages on their private patio in the shadow of the snow-peaked Andes mountains. Indeed, guests there who don’t get their fill of grapes by imbibing can drop $450 on a “wine therapy” spa package, which includes soaking in a giant tub of Malbec and wine-yeast body wrap.

But despite all the indulgence, gourmet travel is feeling the impact of the fading dollar, with culinary hot spots like Italy and France taking the biggest hit. The International Kitchen, a cooking-vacation outfit that does more than 70 percent of its business in Europe, saw bookings drop about 20 percent this year. Some companies have responded by dishing out new deals. Chicago-based travel agency Select Italy, for one, which used to offer tours like its daylong Chocolate, Wine and Cheese of Piemonte ($537) exclusively on a private basis, now allows travelers to join groups of up to eight, reducing prices by about 25 percent. And new destinations are jumping into the market, with companies like Poland Culinary Vacations hoping to turn pork rolls and pierogies into the next gourmet superfoods.”

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