In the first picture above, this was on a Friday when two other people and me went to the Centro Geriátrico to help out old people. The Centro was located in one of the poor barrios of Montevideo, but the ward (which oddly enough reminds me of Shutter Island) was pretty clean and well-kept. We joined another charitable group who was in charge of organizing the activity. But we ended up doing nothing. We only donated clothes and then we left. Then we just enjoyed a nice merienda at La Pasiva - had some classic pizza and fainá (fried garbanzo bean paste). On Saturday was the Octafinals game between Uruguay and South Korea. When the Uruguayan team won, the streets were crazier than I had ever seen for the previous games. People crowded onto the major street downtown to dance and chant "Soy celeste, soy celeste, celeste soy yo". People were throwing down confetti from the buildings. People with beer bottles in hand were screaming and climbing on top of anything they could find. It was basically a riot. Of course, I had to join in on the fun.Next I decided to pass my day in Piriápolis, which is about a 2 hour bus ride from Montevideo (close to where I went fishing). Near this seaside resort town was a mountain called Cerro Pan de Azúcar, one of the taller mountains in the plains of Uruguay. To get there, it actually started off with my stealing of someone else's seat. The woman from whom I took her seat ended going in the same general direction. She was a school teacher at a secondary school in the town Pan de Azúcar and was heading there from Montevideo. A very fortuitous encounter indeed. At the base of Cerro Pan de Azúcar reserve there is a small wildlife sanctuary with a couple of odd animals. But I was quick to start the hike. I thought it was going to be a relatively easy but long hike, but it turns out that it was more of a rock climbing thing. And the genius mountaineer that designed the path decided (either out of laziness or apathy) to use the trail carved by a small stream of running water. This made the climb much harder and more dangerous because of the slippery rocks. I probably should have died a couple of times, but all is well. The view from the mountain was spectacular and all you can hear was the brushing of the wind against the flora - combined with the religious icons, it was a serene divine-like experience.
