After a much needed 10 hours of sleep, we set off to explore the main part of Ushuaia (you-swhy-a). The town slopes from the mountains down to the waterfront, so going into town is an easy downward stroll. Most of the stores are on the main drag of St. Martin which is a several blocks of cute shops, some more touristy than others. The one thing you don't see here is any big US chains (no McDonalds in site!).
We stopped in a cute bakery to partake in churros that were filled with dulce de leche, which was delicious! It also was enough to tide us over to our late lunch. We bought our standard touris items (t-shirts, shot glasses, stone penguins, etc.). We learned about the local tea, mate, that you drink through a metal straw that filters out the leaves. We also purchased a couple of pieces of jewelry with the local stone of rhodochrosite. This lovely pink stone polishes up to an almost translutient gem.
Our lunch was at Moustacchio which serves all the local delicacies. Of particular interest to us was the local crab that is caught in the Beagle Channel. Fresh is best, as we proved here. We also tried some Argentinian wine which was quit nice.
For the afternoon, we visited the former Prison that has been converted to several small museums that occupy the arms of the wings that housed the prisoners. The first, the Maritime Museum, traced the colorful history of the region. Many explorers have tried and more often than not, tried to conquer the South Pole.
They also have an art museum and you can visit the cells as they were during the time this housed the End of the Earth prisoners. Allow a couple of hours to see it all. It was really worth the visit.
Our first official cruise meeting was back at the hotel. This is all about sizing each other up. We're spending the next week with these people, so there's the standard "who will I spend time with, who will I avoid" going on. They all looked like nice, diverse (from China, to Africa, Germany and Japan) group.
We grabbed a quick dinner then back to the room for bed.
It may be several days for my next entry since internet may be scarce on the ship. I'll post as I'm able.
We stopped in a cute bakery to partake in churros that were filled with dulce de leche, which was delicious! It also was enough to tide us over to our late lunch. We bought our standard touris items (t-shirts, shot glasses, stone penguins, etc.). We learned about the local tea, mate, that you drink through a metal straw that filters out the leaves. We also purchased a couple of pieces of jewelry with the local stone of rhodochrosite. This lovely pink stone polishes up to an almost translutient gem.
Our lunch was at Moustacchio which serves all the local delicacies. Of particular interest to us was the local crab that is caught in the Beagle Channel. Fresh is best, as we proved here. We also tried some Argentinian wine which was quit nice.
For the afternoon, we visited the former Prison that has been converted to several small museums that occupy the arms of the wings that housed the prisoners. The first, the Maritime Museum, traced the colorful history of the region. Many explorers have tried and more often than not, tried to conquer the South Pole.
They also have an art museum and you can visit the cells as they were during the time this housed the End of the Earth prisoners. Allow a couple of hours to see it all. It was really worth the visit.
Our first official cruise meeting was back at the hotel. This is all about sizing each other up. We're spending the next week with these people, so there's the standard "who will I spend time with, who will I avoid" going on. They all looked like nice, diverse (from China, to Africa, Germany and Japan) group.
We grabbed a quick dinner then back to the room for bed.
It may be several days for my next entry since internet may be scarce on the ship. I'll post as I'm able.










