What Could We Not Find?

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Posted on 10th November 2011 by Josué in Differences |Food and Drink

One question that came from my sister that I thought might be interesting to others is, “What could you not find in Argentina that you would want?” Here are a few things that I came up with. Since we have not spent extensive time in Argentina, I’m not sure how accurate this list is. However, here it goes!

  • Peanut Butter – This first comes to my head because my uncle, aunt, and cousins used to be in Chile and they didn’t have any either (just a childhood memory)
  • Marshmallows – I guess that means no smores and Hannah will have to make fondant with something else or make her own marshmallows
  • Inexpensive technology – it’s true. I priced a Motorola Xoom before I left the USA. It was around $347. In Argentina it was around $800. I’ll surely be missing this.
  • Mustard
  • Salty (non-sweet) ketchup
Like technology, there are many things that you can easily find there but are expensive. It’s not like the whole country is a vacant land mass. The big difference is cost.
As bad as it may sound that we might not find the items in this list in Argentina, there are so many things that we find in Argentina that we don’t find elsewhere that outweigh these small number of things.

…aaaand We’re Back

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Posted on 6th November 2011 by Josué in Trips

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So, I was planning on posting more while we were in Argentina, but we were quite busy during the trip. So, I’m thinking that I will spend some time posting about different things about the trip. So, to start the series of posts, I am going to start by answering the question that everyone has been asking – “so, how was it???” I think most would expect us to say something like “it was amazing!” or “it was incredible!” While both of those are very accurate, I think that it was very different than we all expected.

To begin, this trip wasn’t just a little venture trip down to South America for the fun of exploration. To us this was a trip to see the country where we might spend the rest of our lives. David, the missionary who we went with, tried to make sure that we were able to see what it is like to live there. This meant that we shopped for food and supplies ourselves. We cooked our own meals. We did most of things that we would do if we were living there instead of having everything done for us. Besides this, there were many other things that we were trying to absorb like the cost of living, cost of food, cost of gas, culture differences, language differences, and other factors of life that would be very different for us. To say the least it was mostly a very emotional trip than anything. I wouldn’t say that this means that we were ready to come back to the USA though. Although it is good to be back to be able to think about everything we saw. Now we are excited to head to Buenos Aires (BA) in two months from now.

There will be more next time…

Chau,
Josué