Here are some more Cordoba shots from the Free Tour as well as a few others.
The building in the middle was pointed out as the narrowest building in South America - 3 meters at the widest. It had to do with land issues. It’s got some businesses and apartments.
These folks were standing there, but the tour moved on before I could find out exactly who they were and why they were there. Are these Anonymous supporters? Don’t know.
The cabildo is the government building. It was in a back section of this building wh ere the detention and torture center was located.
This is the Museo de Marques de Sobremonte. It’s an old building you can find out more (with video) here.
This is a much newer apartment (I think) building we passed a few times.
This is Paseo de Buen Pastor and was once, as described by Lonely Planet ‘a combined chapel, monastery, and women’s prison.’ That sounds like a strange and suspicious combination of institutions. Today, though it is a community center with lots of activities for people of all ages.
Below are the leftovers of the tour who had lunch together at the place the tour guide recommended. It turned out to be us two US folks and four French folks. The two on the right were wrapping up a year long bike trip that started in Calgary and took them to LA down the west coast. From there they flew to Ecuador and biked down to Argentina. They were on their last leg - to Buenos Aires. They met the two French women, who are studying civil (I think) engineering in Argentina for five months., on the tour.
That’s enough for now. We’re in the Cordoba airport waiting for our last inside Argentina flight - to Buenos Aires. We were supposed to leave at 5;m, but the flight is delayed to 6:35pm now. We’ll have three more full days in Argentina, then we fly back to LA for a couple of days before finally making it home. I’m ready for an Alaskan vacation. When we left I told people that while I hated to leave Alaska in the summer, I didn’t wish them rain or a bad summer at all. But I certainly wasn’t wishing them the record high temperatures and fire smoke, or the failed veto override.
Though reading the Alaskan complaints about the heat reminded me of how Alaskans scoff at Outsiders who complain about the cold. True Alaskans should be able to handle heat as well as cold without whining. (I know, easy for me to say, I wasn’t there.).
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