
Visiting Patagonia. 1) El Calafate, Argentina
While they look extraterrestrial, those aren’t flying saucers or wormholes in the sky; rather, they’re some of the most unusual cloud formations I’ve ever seen.

While they look extraterrestrial, those aren’t flying saucers or wormholes in the sky; rather, they’re some of the most unusual cloud formations I’ve ever seen.
I always had the impression that guanacos were not that common an animal in South America. Yes, they were there, but like the Andean Condor you’d have to be lucky to see one. As I learned this past month, that impression was totally wrong.
Walking through this town in desert steppe of Patagonia, in the rain-shadow of the Andes, we came across this beautiful car “showcased” on a hotel’s grounds. It’s obviously a Ford but can someone help me figure out what year and model it is?
Maybe only one day every two weeks is this clear and sunny in the world’s southern most city.

While they look extraterrestrial, those aren’t flying saucers or wormholes in the sky; rather, they’re some of the most unusual cloud formations I’ve ever seen.
I always had the impression that guanacos were not that common an animal in South America. Yes, they were there, but like the Andean Condor you’d have to be lucky to see one. As I learned this past month, that impression was totally wrong.
Walking through this town in desert steppe of Patagonia, in the rain-shadow of the Andes, we came across this beautiful car “showcased” on a hotel’s grounds. It’s obviously a Ford but can someone help me figure out what year and model it is?
Maybe only one day every two weeks is this clear and sunny in the world’s southern most city.