Archive for the ‘Tourism in Argentina’ Category

Peru to promote tourist attractions among tour operators of Argentina, Italy Monday, April 26th, 2010

 Lima, Peru’s Export and Tourism Promotion Board (PromPeru) said Sunday that its representatives will travel to Argentina and Italy to participate in events with tour operators of these countries to provide them information on the main tourist attractions in Peru.According to a supreme decree of Peru’s Foreign Trade and Tourism Ministry (Mincetur), PromPeru official Lizbeth Corrales will travel from May 17 to 22 to the city of Cordoba in Argentina.

 She will carry out different tourism promotion activities during the “Door to Door Argentina” event which will be held in Cordoba from May 18 to 21.

 Corrales will contact the most important tour operators from Argentina to provide them with specialized and up-to-date information on tourist destinations in Peru.Other supreme decree of the Mincetur authorizes the trip of PromPeru’s Tourism Promotion director Jacqueline Saettone and also Rocio Florian Ventura to the cities of Rome and Bologna in Italy, from May 16 to 21. 

Both officials will also perform different tourism promotion activities representing PromPeru, during the event called “Workshop Italy,” which will take place in the cities of Rome and Bologna from May 18 to 20.

 

 

Foreign tourists and local people. Photo: ANDINA / Percy Hurtado.

Foreign tourists and local people. Photo: ANDINA / Percy Hurtado.

Iguazu Falls, lie on the Argentina - Brazil border Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Taller than Niagara Falls, twice as wide with 275 cascades spread in a horsehoe shape over nearly two miles of the Iguazu River, Iguazú Falls are the result of a volcanic eruption which left yet another large crack in the earth. During the rainy season of November - March, the rate of flow of water going over the falls may reach 450,000 cubic feet (12,750 cubic m) per second.

These matter of fact details do nothing to describe the grandeur of the falls, the tremendous amount of water (an average of 553 cubic feet per second) thundering down 269 feet, the tropical location and the sheer beauty that led Eleanor Roosevelt to say

Poor Niagara. Four times the width of Niagara Falls, Iguazu Falls are divided by various islands into separate waterfalls. One of the best known is Devil’s Throat, or Gargantua del Diablo with its perpetual spray high over the falls. Other notable falls are the San Martin, Bossetti, and Bernabe Mendez.

Iguazú Falls, called Foz do Iguaçu in Portuguese, and Cataratas del Iguazú in Spanish, lie on the Argentina - Brazil border and are a UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site.

Getting there is an easy matter. Check flights from your area to locations in either Brazil or Argentina for connections to the falls. You can also browse for hotels and car rentals.

The falls are part of a singular practically virgin jungle ecosystem protected by Argentine and Brazilian national parks on either side of the cascades. Two thirds of the falls are on the Argentinian side of the river where you can also tour Iguazú National Park where there are jungle trails and bird hikes. Plan a full day in the park to fully enjoy the wildlife flora and fauna.

It is possible to see the falls and surrounding area in a lightning trip but it is better to plan at least two days. The view from the Brazilian side is the most panoramic and there are helicopter rides out over the falls from Foz do Iguaçu. You may also take boat rides out to the falls. The light is best in the morning for photographs.

Best seen from the Brazilian side is the spectacular Devil’s Throat, garganta del diablo, where fourteen falls drop 350 feet with such force that there is always a 100 foot cloud of spray overhead. Watch for the rainbow! For a close up view, walk through the subtropical forest of National Iguaçu Park to the base of Salto Floriano and take the elevator to the top of the falls. or walk out over the falls at Salto Union. From the Argentine side you can take a series of catwalks over the water rushing into Devil’s Gorge. Protective rain suits are provided. There are some areas where it is possible to swim in the spray of the cascades. Ask locally for instructions but be aware that you might have a resulting problem with cuticle parasites.

The best times to see Iguazu Falls are in the spring and fall. Summer is intensely tropically hot and humid, and in winter the water level is considerably lower. There are hotels on both sides of the river and many tour agencies provide sightseeing opportunities around the area. Browse through this list of hotels on the Brazilian side of the falls, or these on the Argentine side.

Downstream from the falls where the Parana and Iguazu rivers meet, so do the borders of Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay. Each country has created a landmark in their national colors on a spot in each of their countries where you can see all three.

The name of the falls comes from the Guaraní word for “great water.” The first Spanish explorer to see the falls (did you see the film The Mission?) was Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca in 1541 but the vast power of the falls was not fully utilized until the construction of the huge Itaipu hydroelectric power plant built jointly by Paraguay and Brazil. Completed in 1991 the dam is open to tours and provides 12,600,000 KW of power satisfying almost 40% of Brazil and Argentine power needs. The dam one of the largest in the world is touted by both countries as a masterpiece of technology.

 

falls-iguazu

Iguazu Falls, lie on the Argentina - Brazil border

Tourism in Argentina 2009 Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Tourism in Argentina is favoured by its ample and varied natural assets (made possible by its geographical extension) and by its cultural offerings.

The World Economic Forum estimated that, in 2006, tourism generated around US$20 billion in economic turnover. Domestic tourism amounted to over 80 % of this and tourism from abroad contributed US$ 3.4 billion, having become the third largest source of foreign exchange in 2004. Around 4.2 million foreign visitors arrived in 2006, yielding a positive balance vis-à-vis the number of Argentines traveling abroad.

INDEC recorded 2.3 million foreign tourist arrivals in 2007 (a 12% increase), at the Ministro Pistarini International Airport, alone; of these, 26 % arrived from Brazil, 25 % from Europe, 14 % from the United States and Canada, 8 % from Chile, 19 % from the rest of the Western Hemisphere and 8 % from the rest of the World.