| liz |
Nov 20th, 2002 06:14 AM |
First of all, start taking Portuguese lessons now. If not, you will miss alot! I am married to a Brazilian and have been living here fulltime for 3 years. This is a very tricky language and you will want and need it. So first of all, find some lovely person wherever you live and try to do an intensive course, ie. 3 hours per day or two full weeks. This is how I initially learned the language, taking a summer session at Georgetown, 8 hours per day, 13 students, 4 different professors, for a whole summer. But after two weeks we were all speaking. We never saw the written language during the first month. Try to get some form of that. <BR><BR>Second, you will fly into or thru Sao Paulo at some point. Just like Los Angeles in the sense that without a close local friend to show you around, it will just be a big ugly mess of crisscrossing freeways. So don't spend time here unless you have a local contact. Obviously you will spend at least a week in Rio. The best thing there is to work out a deal with a taxi at your hotel to be chauffered around by night and by day as needed. By day you will just basically walk forever, knowing all the different beaches and neighborhoods. Rio is so gorgeous and each time I go there I have a totally different experience! You don't mention your budget or purpose so I won't make specific suggestions on restaurants but it really doesn't matter, Rio is not a food capital. It is just to be alive and look at the views and feel the energy and be with the people. You may just decide to spend the entire time in Rio with some side trips you make with new friends, to hot summer places like Angra dos Reis or Buzios or many, many other lessor known destinations. <BR><BR>Third, you must know Bahia. Brazil is bigger than the US without Alaska and things like Iguaçu Falls and the Pantanal and the Amazon are all out there as attractions, but Bahia is the soul of the country. Salvador is a nice city but what I love is the totally virgin, undeveloped "cocoa coast" which is the region stretching between Ilheus and Itacare. The just built a paved two lane road there last year. You will see the Brazil as the first Europeans to arrive saw Brazil. If you love surfing, this is your place! It is not full of family resorts, big hotels or much of anything other than small pousadas and mile after mile of gorgeous, totally undeveloped, unspoiled beaches. <BR><BR>Alot of people like Florianopolis in the south of Brazil, home to tennis player Guga and Giselle Bundchen. Heavily developed by Germans and Italians, it is a prosperous region. The most stunning beach there is called Praia de Rosa, about an hour south of Floripa, also famous for surfing and whale watching in winter (the babies are born there). <BR><BR>You are coming this far, you must spend a four day weekend in Buenos Aires. That is a marvelous city and a bit of Europe and a culture all unto itself. I would give up everything except Rio and Bahia to include Buenos Aires. There are great cheap packages right now. <BR><BR>Lastly, the road infrastructure in Brazil is not great and forget about trains. To get around you will need to fly alot, there is good bus service and some driving possibilities but it is not like the US except for very major thoroughfares, ie. Sao Paulo to Rio. The trip from Floripa to Praia de Rosa was so horrendous I told my husband I am never going back except by helicopter. People don't know what dollars are outside of big hotels so have plenty of cash and a VISA or a Diner's Club card. Ate logo!
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