Welcome to our travel blog. We are Tabitha and Nic. In 2011 we 'retired' in our early 40s and set off to travel the world. We spent our first year in South America and have been lucky enough to make two trips to Antarctica.

Our blog is a record of our travels, thoughts and experiences. It is not a guide book, but we do include some tips and information, so we hope that you may find it useful if you are planning to visit somewhere we have been. Or you may just find it interesting as a bit of armchair travel.



Thursday, August 24, 2017

Rosario - home of the Argentine flag


Rosario
When we were in South America back in 2012, we visited Rosario, but unfortunately it didn’t work out too well for us. Firstly, we arrived to discover that a booking error meant that our nice centrally located hostel didn’t have a room for us.

They were very apologetic, and very helpful in finding us a place to stay, but the fact that it was a major bank holiday weekend meant that the best they could do was a room back out by the bus station, a taxi ride away.

Rosario

That was inconvenient, but not nearly as problematic as the fact that I then managed to wake up in the morning with my back out. This actually made the room change a bit more welcome, as I could just about crawl to its en-suite bathroom, whereas the original booking would have seen us in a room where I would have had to make it either up or down a flight of stairs to one of the shared bathrooms. That would not have been good!

Whilst my back recovered quite quickly then, it still meant that we never got to see any of the city, so we decided that we would try again this time. Happily, second time around was rather more successful. Our Airbnb room was ready and waiting, and aside from Nic still having a little bit of a problem with his recovering ankle, there were no unexpected health issues, so we were able to get around and see the place.

Rosario

Rosario is a great little city, albeit in a rather understated and quiet way. There isn’t a great deal to ‘do’ in the way of tourist sights, but that also means that, especially as we drift into autumn, there aren’t that many tourists here either. Like Buenos Aires, it is a city that has lots of fabulous old buildings dotted along the streets, some of them well preserved, others faded and crumbling, but all of them adding to the character and feel of the streets.


Argentine Flag
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It is slightly surprising, but also quite refreshing, that they don’t make more of the fact that Che Guevara was born here, but one thing that you can’t fail to notice here, is the preponderance of the Argentine flag. The people of Rosario are proud of their flag. This isn’t because they are that much more patriotic than their fellow countrymen, but rather because this was where the flag was first flown, by Manuel Belgrano, in 1812 during the Argentine War of Independence.

National Flag Memorial, Rosario
The Monumento National a la Bandera, or the National Flag Memorial, is a huge monolithic structure, which unfortunately was undergoing renovations while we were there, so the mirror pool was empty, and there was scaffolding on some of it. But still, there is no doubting that the people of Rosario wanted to celebrate their connection to the flag. There were a couple of school groups visiting in the time that we were there, so clearly it is still regarded as an important part of their history.


National Flag Memorial, Rosario


As well as the monument itself, there is a wall full of plaques that have been sent by other cities to commemorate various anniversaries of the flag. It is a strange concept to me, that so much time, effort and money should have been put into celebrating a flag. I grant that it is quite a pretty flag, but then I rather like the design of our own Union Flag, but I still wouldn’t want to see this kind of fuss made over it.




National Flag Memorial, Rosario

We visited a couple of museums here, but both were sadly a little disappointing. The Museo de la Memoria, was different to many, in that it used artworks to express some of the stories and emotions of the Dirty War, but it didn’t really add anything in terms of information. As in Cordoba, it is located in a building that was used to hold and torture those arrested, but here, you didn’t really get any sense of being in such a place, or at least we didn’t.



The Museo de la Ciudad, or City Museum was OK, but was a bit light on content. We had read that it looks at the history of the city, and at the people who have lived there, including the indigenous people. What was there was interesting, but it felt to us a bit like they had the nice extra bits, without having some of the more substantial fundamentals.

National Flag Memorial, Rosario





It didn’t help that it was entirely in Spanish, some of it quite complex, so although we understood a reasonable amount, we definitely didn’t get it all, and may have got the wrong end of the stick. On balance, I would say that if you are around the park area, and can speak some Spanish, it is worth dropping in for a while, but otherwise, it may not be the best way to spend your time. If you are there, there was quite a nice place to eat nearby, called Los Potrillos.




Talking of restaurants, we also took a wander along the waterfront, which is quite a popular activity amongst locals, and ended up in a swish place called Don Ferro. It is in an old railway building, and both looks good, and had excellent food.




Rosario


Rosario also had a number of that kind of nice relaxing café that we had found so lacking in Cordoba, though sadly we had to resist the tasty looking cakes in them. There was one café called Esperia, that we would have liked to have sampled more of, including the cocktails that they serve, had we not been back to being good on our diets.



Overall, we liked Rosario, even though there isn’t a huge amount in the way of good tourist attractions.
Waterfront venues, Rosario

Old Railway lines, Rosario


Rosario


Rosario


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