Sunday, February 12, 2012

On the water




Today we took a boat ride around two of the "off" islands and the length of the northwest coastline facing Brazil (but 300 miles away). Our captain and mate were Rudolfo, who hailed from Receife (but has been in these waters over 20 years, and Kaia, a native islander who is one of the island's surfing champions. They know these waters! We ran with several hundred dolphins, but it is hard to catch moving dolphins above the water with a camera. Rudolfo prepared a delicious sushi, and a fish stew (onions, potatoes, garlic, ginger, soy sauce, and freshly caught fish all included) for lunch - mmmmm! The frigate birds loved a few morsels of sushi scraps.

More faces




A big part of any vacation is eating, but not at Micky Dees. Here are three faces - Fabio, the head chef at our posada, Maravilha. He trained at the Greenbriar, and next week, he is moving on to the Cateract Hotel in Iguassu, where we stayed at the start of this trip. Adrianna is a Brzilian from Sao Paulo who graduated from Cornell and is married to an American. Adriana's husband writes for Lonely Planet. Adrianna has guided us around the island made our stay here on Naronha memorable. The third pic is Rafaella (where else, also from Sao Paulo) who works at Mergulhao, a wonderful restaurant with sunset views, and cool breezes.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Faces of Brazil




At the risk of overdoing it, we want to start a section on "faces of Brazil." Here are three: Kamila (aka Michele for obvious reasons) who is from Sao Paulo, Carolina who is also from Sao Paulo, and a couple, Sergio and Renata. They now live in Sao Paulo, but Renata is originally from Rio de Janeiro, while Sergio is from Pelotas, a smaller city near theborder with Uraguay.

Baia do Atalaia - tidal pool




As a second dive, we went to a tidal pool that was only 3-4' deep. It is a breeding ground for baby fish. The water was clear, and we enjoyed the sights very much.

Baia do Sueste - guided




First, a confession: Pop Pop can't spell. We're on Naronha, not Naronah (oh, well). Today we went back to the bay for turtles, and saw lots of them (e.g., five big turtles at one time0. The water was murkier, so our pics today are for different fauna - a flying fish (the one I thought yesterday was an octopus), a skate, and a small lemon shark.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Baia do Sueste - a bay for turtles




Turtles! Pop Pop had the underwater camera in the pocket of his swim suit, when we saw a parrot fish and what looked like an octopus. Looking closer, it was a fish that had fins that loooked like wings. Yuuch - I forgot the camera. However, as soon as I remembered the camera, turtles showed up for a show.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Fernando de Naronah




We've arrived (after some glitches) on Naronah, a fabulous island. We toured the island today in a little go cart-type vehicle. Pictures include s rock just off our patio, one of the island's signature formations, and one of the very crowded (not!) beaches. Tomorrow we are off to see dolphins at 5 a.m.(can you believ it?) - then we look for turtles on Saturday.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

More from the botanical gardens




Here are three more pictures.

Rio's botanitcal gardens




Over 200+ years old, and 3.4 million trees, the gardens offer beautiful, shaded walks to fend off nearly 100 degree temperature. Like yesterday, we'll put in two blogs of three pictures each (there's likely a way to go over three, but we haven't figured out how).

It is such a treasure to have the forest and gardens amidst 10 million people. Certainly, a form of environmentalism came early here (although our guide says they continue to have fights between the "energy for progress" people, and the hard core environment types who don't want to build dams, dig for oil, or do anything to create more energy).

Monday, February 6, 2012

Three added pics




I thought I had these pictures also, but Blogger allowed me only three.

Sugarloaf and Tijuca Forest




Everyone has heard of Sugarloaf, the rock that sits at the mouth of Rio's harbor. Today we took a cable car to the top (the cable car will be 100 years old later in 2012). Then we went to part of Rio's inner city park system (covering 20 square miles at the top of the mountains - in between which is the city). The Tijuca Forest has beautifully maintained trails, steeply winding roads, and lots of streams and waterfalls.

Rio and Christ the Redeemer statue




Well, it is actually larger than what it seems in pictures. The views are breathtaking - all over the place, because Rio is an enormous city (10 million people) built around one of the world's largest bays and ports. The mountains come right to the sea, which is not unique, but the beautiful beaches that transition the slopes to the sea are unique, at least to us. Pictures from yesterday include: Christ the Redeemer, boats in the bay, the beach just outside our window.

In the evening we went to a place called Vinicius Bar, down in Ipanema. Lots of locals watching a football (not Super, soccer) match. It turns out this was the hangout of the two guys who collaborated on The Girl from Ipanema, back in 1965. Unfortunatly, PopPop is still looking for a modern Girl from Ipanema, but hasn't seen one yet.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

A day late




We could not "get connected" yesterday, after we arrived in Rio, so hopefully, we can get to two blogs today. Yesterday, we saw the Brazilian side of Iguassu, and then went to a spectacular bird park. Pics are from these two sites.

Friday, February 3, 2012

Iguasssu Falls





Big, very big, and going under one of the falls in a boat was a blast! The falls are in the middle of a national park (both Brazil's and Argentina's) so there is just the falls - and it is really worth seeing ... but you do get soaked.

There are perhaps three relly huge falls and perhaps nearly a mile of close to 100 falls in total. The whole area is spectacular.

Australia must be doing well - we met folk from Adelaide and Perth (Sydney yesterday).

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Iguassu Falls



We're here! We met two super families today - one from Rio coming back from sking in Snowmass, Co., and the other from Sydney, Australia. The hotel was just renovated by Orient Express. The pics are from out front, one of the hotel, and the next 180 degrees facing the falls.

Tour of the Argentinian falls tomorrow.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

A final test




We are off today; it is February, 1, 2012, and almost 60 degrees outside. Our final test is taking pics of the home front, loading them into the mini, and seeing if I can attach them to the blog. So far, so good. The pics are a sleeping garden, the live mini's, and part of the stream as it winds toward Crum Creek at the back of the yard.

Oh, and it is 97 degrees in Iguassu. Yeah!

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Brazil




Tomorrow we leave for Brazil: Rio, Iguassu Falls, and Fernando de Noronah, a group of islands off the coast of Brazil, and a World Heritage coral reef site. It is 60+ egrees outside, a far cry from the two 25" snowstorms we misssed two years ago as we headed to Antarctica. We are expecting 85 - 95 degrees in Brazil. It is summer there, and the islands are near the Equator.

Hopefully, we'll get some good pics for the blog.

DeDe and PopPop