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You are here: Home / Archives for argentina

What is a Guanaco?

March 30, 2012 By Jillian

Like Bubba Blu in Forest Gump, I can go on and on about llamas.  There are fluffy llamas, llamas with thick fur, llamas with thin fur, llamas that live in the mountains, llamas that live on the plains, llamas that are brown, llamas that are grey…. Well you get the picture.

It turns out I knew almost nothing about llamas let alone their cousins the alpacas and guanacos.  Pictured below is a guanaco.  I won’t point out the differences, because frankly I cannot.  We spotted this guanaco in the Patagonian region of Argentina.  Guanacos often live at very high altitudes, upwards of 13,000 feet.  They have four times as many red blood cells in a teaspoon of blood as humans – no wonder they survive up there!  Fortunately we didn’t have to go so high to see this one; we were practically at sea level near Penninsula Valdez.

 

IF YOU GO: Patagonian Argentina is a rough landscape, so it’s no surprise animals like the guanaco have not been domesticated.  Bring a good windproof sweater for any excursion into Patagonia.  Penninsula Valdez is relatively hospitable, and there are plenty of all day tours that will take you there.  Opt instead for a multi-day tour- you’ll be glad not to be rushed.

Filed Under: photos Tagged With: argentina, cousins of the llama, guanaco

Photo: Hatching Penguins

January 18, 2012 By Danny

Yes, that’s right, that penguin chick is only hours old.  We encountered this happy mom when we were touring Punto Tumbo in Argentina.  With a few others from our hostel we shared a car rental and drove to here to see the penguins as they hatched before continuing onto Puerto Madryn and Peninsula Valdez.

Our timing at Punto Tumbo could not have been better.  We saw nest filled with eggs, nests filled with broken shells who had just hatched, a few nests like this one and even a few where the eggs were rocking but the chick had yet to break through.  One of the people we shared the car with was an avid birdwatcher and he told us it can take some species all day long to hatch from their eggs.  With this little guy only a few hours old we kept a safe distance and didn’t linger for long.

IF YOU GO:  Peninsula Valdez is incredible but so is Punto Tumbo, a few short hours to the south.  There are several car rental agencies in town and if in a small group this works out loads cheaper than a full scale tour.  Base yourself in Puerto Madryn for exploring and plan to spend a night on the Peninsula as well.

To see more of our favorite photos from around the world check out our travel photo page. Let us know your favorites and we’ll include them in our photo of the day series.

Filed Under: photos Tagged With: Animal, argentina, baby, Chick, patagonia, Penguin, puerto madryn

Photo: Penguins on Parade

September 23, 2011 By Jillian

Fun fact for today, the word for penguin is similar in many different languages: penguin (english), pingüino (Spanish), penguin (French), pinguino (Italian), pinguin (German).    Standing near the beach of Argentina’s Punto Tumbo, it was a cacophony of languages, but it all boiled down to one word- penguins!

Punto Tumbo is just south of the famed Valdez Peninsula in Argentina.  You probably saw it on the BBC’s Planet Earth video. Between September and April, an enormous number of Magellanic penguins come to lay and hatch their eggs.   Magellanic penguins mate for life and it’s the male that returns to the same burrow, year after year to prepare it for his mate.  Punto Tumbo is the largest colony of this species of penguins in the Atlantic.  The penguins live along the South American coast, from southern Brazil to Patagonia, migrating depending on the season.  Although during breeding season it seems like there are hundreds of thousands of penguins, the species is classified as threatened.   Oil spills and climate change have drastically decreased their survival rate, and orphaned penguins are often rescued by zoological institutes around the world.  The breeding grounds at Punto Tumbo are a protected reserve, however as the temperature of the ocean changes the penguins have been forced to go further to sea for food, decreasing the rate of survival.

To see more of our favorite photos from around the world check out our travel photo page. Let us know your favorites and we’ll include them in our photo of the day series.

Punto Tumbo Penguins, Argentina

IF YOU GO: Punto Tumbo and Peninsula Valdez are easily accessible from Puerto Madryn.  You can take any number of tours from the city, but we chose to use independent transportation (a rental car) so we could set our own schedule and time frame of the sites.   Penninsula Valdez is too much for  a day trip from Puerto Madryn, be prepared to spend the night.

Filed Under: photos Tagged With: animals, argentina, oceans

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