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<title>Travel Blog | Buena Onda</title>
<link>http://www.travelblog.org/Bloggers/Buena-Onda/</link>
<description>Travel adventures in journals and photos from Buena Onda</description>
<language>en-us</language>
<pubDate>Sun, 19 May 2013 19:38:45 +0000</pubDate>
<lastBuildDate>Sun, 19 May 2013 19:38:45 +0000</lastBuildDate><item>
                    <title>Mejico and the Tortilla Curtain</title>
                    <description> We Graham and Gordo spent some time in the cowboy town of Coban watching a firebreather before heading into Samuc Champey and Lanquin with hammocks. The security guard at the campground laughed when we told him we wanted to camp without a tent but told us to go through anyway. There we swam in amazing aqua lagoons that waterfalled one from another through a wide gorge all the way to our campsi</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/North-America/Mexico/blog-150099.html</link>
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                    <title>Going Places Meeting People Doing Things</title>
                    <description> We bounced across the border of Nicaragua and Honduras without a glitch nobody even looking at our passports and continued on to the Bay Islands where the snorkelling is great but the scuba diving is better. We landed in Utilia an idyllic island full of young travelers and inhabited by pirates...really pirates with the accent and all We couldnt pass up getting open water certified for a </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Central-America-Caribbean/Honduras/Bay-Islands/Utila/blog-144861.html</link>
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                    <title>...Panama Costa Rica Nicaragua... </title>
                    <description> We have lived the past couple of weeks very Americanized living in Best Westerns Marriotts Four Seasons eating fast food and best of all being visited by Americans. Neil Grahams brother joined us in Panama. Have you ever wondered how the Panama Canal functions Well we know so if you want to know too then ask us. We hiked in a national park outside of Panama City not the one beside De</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Central-America-Caribbean/Nicaragua/Southern-Pacific-Coast/Isla-de-Ometepe/blog-141351.html</link>
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                    <title>Goodbye South America Hello Central</title>
                    <description>Nothing is ever as it seems. We envisioned a tranquil lounge underneath flapping sails lazily taking us to the San Blas Islands of Panama...cocktail in hand. Four days of this we expected but then again what do we know. Four days ended up being pushed to seven but none of us were ready to give up our sea legs at the end of it. We were a day late in leaving Cartegena as the immigration people ke</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Central-America-Caribbean/blog-137661.html</link>
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                    <title>Two Weeks in Colombia</title>
                    <description>We arrived in Leticia Colombia after a 10 hr. speed boat through the Amazon. This area is the triborder of Colombia Peru and Brazil. Looking from the outsidein its a kind of sketchy place to be in the world but we felt safe and had fun. We ventured into Brazil to do some shopping and clubbing and met some interesting people walking back and forth country to country. The following day we did </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Colombia/blog-134982.html</link>
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                    <title>The Amazon Yes The Amazon</title>
                    <description>We left Lima at 1 pm expecting to arrive in Pucalpa at 9 am to learn what we need to do from there in order to do the Amazon. None of that happened. After two landslides the road connecting the cities was washed away so we got our luggage off the bus and walked around the missing piece of highway to a taxi on the other side where we got into a taxi that ran out of gas. So we tried pushing it </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Peru/Loreto/Iquitos/Amazon-Rainforest/blog-129558.html</link>
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                    <title>Cuzco and The Sacred Valley  Inca Trail to Machu Picchu</title>
                    <description>We arrived in Cuzco Peru what some call The Rome of the Americas and hit up the town immediately  going to museums churches of gold parks plazas ruins bars dragcostume parties clubs eating and drinking local delicacies and shopping at the black market where you can buy name brand camping equipment directly out of fellow travellers' stolen backpacks for 5.Then we split off and the </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Peru/Cusco/Machu-Picchu/blog-125627.html</link>
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                    <title>Our Route...</title>
                    <description>httpwww.travelblog.orggmapsmap2Pn.html </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Peru/Cusco/Cusco/blog-122866.html</link>
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                    <title>Peru Side of Lago Titicaca  Colca Canyon</title>
                    <description>We have officially arrived in our 4th country Peru. At first glance Peru is strikingly similar though  a little more expensive than its neighbor Bolivia. Once we arrived in Peru we continued to explore the Peruvian side of Lake Titicaca. The first island visited was a floating island made entirely of reed grass. This socalled floating islandfirst became inhabited due to Incan conquest an</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Peru/Puno/blog-122539.html</link>
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                    <title>Lake Titicaca</title>
                    <description>The adventure began when the bus to Copacabana Boliva on Lake Titicaca boarded a for lack of better words floating dock to cross a small portion of the lake.  Althought the bus almost toppled into the lake we did make it safely to Copacabana and decided to stay in the splurge hotel which cost us a whopping 3.50 US dollars.  The first evening we just relaxed because we had decided to do th</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Bolivia/La-Paz-Department/Lake-Titicaca/blog-122524.html</link>
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                    <title>Bolivian HighLife</title>
                    <description>Bolivia has been good to us.  We took a 9 hr. train that might or might not have derailed for a minute from Uyuni to Oruro to connect with a bus to La Paz at 3600 meters is the highest capital in the world.  La Paz is an incredible city.  It is Jackson Hole Wyoming if Jackson Hole had 10000000 dirty little people and no toilet paper.  The city sprawls itself to fit inside a bowl formed by sn</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Bolivia/Oruro-Department/Cordillera-Real/blog-118855.html</link>
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                    <title>Crossing into Bolivia</title>
                    <description>In Bolivia now. There was a fork in the road one way paved and painted and pointing towards Argentina the other a wide expanse of desert with numerous tire tracks going in one somewhat general direction...Bolivia Here the mountains are tall the people are short and the gap between modern and antiquated is wide. The past three days weve been bouncing over jagged rocks careening across de</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/blog-117109.html</link>
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                    <title>Astronauts in Chile</title>
                    <description>After 28 hours and 3 buses we arrived in the Atacama Desert Northern Chile. Its only rained here like twice in 400 years or something. It really is a vast gourgeous wasteland. A conformity of giant sandy dunes and deep red canyons. No life is here because no life could or would want to live here. Its only beautiful. The area around it is called the Valley of the Moon because they say there i</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Chile/Antofagasta-Region/San-Pedro-de-Atacama/blog-117064.html</link>
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                    <title>New Years in the capital... Santiago</title>
                    <description>After stopping in Valdivia Chile and finding sea lions and then a quiet fishing pier to sip our box wine we continued on to the capital 10 more hours in the bus. We spent 3 days in Santiago... the 30th and 31st of December and then  the 1st of January. The city rests at the foothills of the Andes range which can be seen from the city. Theres something kind of great about being smack in</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Chile/Santiago-Region/Santiago/blog-115542.html</link>
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                    <title>just for your information</title>
                    <description>weve had requests to know who got what for ChristmasEmma got Graham an Argentine military issued fork and knife set for eating meat.Graham got Gordo a camping cup which he had to secretly give to him without the girls knowing because he needed it for Torres del Paine. Gordo feigned surprise upon reaching into his stocking.Gordo got Elise chocolate from Bariloche and a symbol of friendship fo</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Chile/Los-Rios/Valdivia/blog-114336.html</link>
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                    <title>Merry late Christmas </title>
                    <description>It has been a few days since we last found the time to throw some words up here. We took a 32 hour bus ride from Chile to Bariloche Argentina. It sounds bad but we played spades girls 578 boys 77 ate lots of salami bread cheese and apple sandwiches and did loooots of sleeping. The highlight came at a gas station where a baby guanaco llama look alike had wandered into the parking lot a</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Argentina/Rio-Negro/San-Carlos-de-Bariloche/blog-114068.html</link>
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                    <title>The Invisible Torres Del Paine</title>
                    <description>We arrived in Puerto Natales Chile on the 18th realizing a bus leaves to Torres Del Paine another place tied with 2000 others as the 8th Wonder of the World only 30 minutes later. We made the decision to rush and make the bus which was a difficult decision knowing whatever was in our packs at the time we boarded would be all we would have access to for the next 45 days. So we bought nood</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Chile/Magallanes/Torres-del-Paine/blog-112929.html</link>
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                    <title>Te Gusta Hielo</title>
                    <description>El Calafate. Probably the most expensive place we will be the whole trip. And probably the coolest glacier do i mean cold in the whole wide world. We have managed to get a cute little two bedroom house at Los Pinos for 40 usd a night equipped with a wellstocked kitchen too comfortable beds and a laundromat around the corner. Our first day here after a big homemade breakfast we got hooked on </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Argentina/Santa-Cruz/Perito-Moreno-Glacier/blog-111630.html</link>
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                    <title>In the southernmost city on top of the world</title>
                    <description>Its hard to get too excited about Ushuia when you read about it in the guide books. A place to go just so you can say you have been to the southernmost city in the world. or the gateway to Antartica Oh but the contraryThanks to the boys we had a wonderful  campsite out of town El fin del Faro del Playa Larga in the greenest of greens underneath the gnarledest of trees on the side</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Argentina/Tierra-del-Fuego/Ushuaia/blog-112928.html</link>
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                    <title>Inspiration...</title>
                    <description>The secret is to be silent look North toward immense America and decode what the wind tells you.Galloping shouts of the Indian raider cutting throats gunshots brandy festivities.The dew. The inevitable calm.Cries of captive women sounding like orgasms.Later allow yourself to become possessed.Reincarnate in the ferocity of the Indian GuaicaiperuListen to the lemanj to Ochum to Obatal</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/South-America/Argentina/Tierra-del-Fuego/Ushuaia/blog-110905.html</link>
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