First it was a premonition. Then a breeze of craziness. A 2%-possibility that turned into 100%-reality. It feels like destiny, magic, like love.

This blog is to freeze this special period. To give room to our new-won Latino-coloured creativity. And - above all - to let you be part of it.

Eager to read your juicy comments! / Faites nous part de vos remarques ou blagues, lachez-vous! / Vse neumnosti dobrodošle!

P & T



Wednesday, May 2, 2012

From prisons to fashion shows


Lima, one week, lots of work, few photos.

I did exactly what they tell you not to do: stay in Lima for a week. »What?#?*&%? in Peru and you don't go to Machu Picchu?« kept saying the astonished faces. Turists' wisdom has it that Lima is ugly, grey and foggy – you land, get over your jetlag and hop in some of Latin America's best restaurants... and quickly move on.

Glued to Lima by work, I stayed. And absolutely loved it. I tried for a week to understand where Lima's proverbial ugliness came from – in vain. Instead, I stumbled across some of most breath-taking churches I've seen so far. Lovely »plazas« that litteraly call you to sit down and enjoy. Colourful colonial houses that feel like a relief compared to other skyscraper-loaded centers (bingo, the cutest one hosts the very Ministry of Foreign Affairs!). Bars that smell of past. Monasteries that feel as if in Spain. Sun 24/24, seaside walks, parks and the sea full of surfers.

Lima is all about the five senses. The smell of sea, humidity and fish that fills your nose as soon as the plane touches down. The taste of ceviche, tropical fruits and yellow potatoes. The sound of histerical horns (driving takes lots of courage) and nostalgic peña songs. The sight of gold, lots of gold – gold that even has its own museum. The touch of alpaca wool that abounds everywhere – on bodies, market shelves and catwalks. And obvisouly, the sensation of your head spinning after a glass (only one) of pisco. »Eso es un error,« was Luc's opening sentence at my very first Lima dinner while ordering piscos. A mistake that you repeat over and over again. It's addictive.

The sixth sense in Lima, however, tells you that it's a country full of contradictions. Which city isn't, anyway? It boosts Latin America's best macroeconomic numbers, yet 30% still live in poverty. It keeps restaurating amazing gold-loaded churches and temples, neighboured by modern villas (favelas). It's hungry of progress yet not ready to invest in technology (why? if manual workers cost only 1 USD). It wants to get rid of thousands of foreign drug-dealers/prisoners but lets kilos and kilos of drugs leak behind the walls. It's the world's biggest exporter of cocaine - and seems to like it. On the way to the prison, by the way, you pass one that hosts the brother of the current (very popular) president.

The time and the battery ran short to take a lot of pictures but there are some:


 Spread out, covered in its typical pre-winter fog... a view from the Malecon promenade.


Baranco, Lima's Montmartre, central park and library.


Mind the shiny front and the less shiny behind.


Puente de los suspiros (sighs / soupires / vzdihljajev), flooded with turists, just as in Venice.


Pachacamac ruins, next to modern favelas.


The ex-avenida panamericana, to the north.


The new shiny Slovenian room, just before its birth.