OK, I am getting excited about this one, we're hosting a wine tasting on Friday, October 16, at 7 PM at the common party room of Brava 28, where we had our pot-luck brunch a couple of months ago.
Monday, September 28, 2009
Our coming events and a commercial space for rent
OK, I am getting excited about this one, we're hosting a wine tasting on Friday, October 16, at 7 PM at the common party room of Brava 28, where we had our pot-luck brunch a couple of months ago.
A pot-luck bbq in Piriapolis, and other expat meetings
Other expats groups meet in Montevideo every Sunday for brunch, and on certain Thursdays for happy hour, and there is a monthly meeting in Atlantida as well. There is much "cross-pollination" going on, and it would appear that Harold and Judith Levy, who live in a farm in Soca, attend all of them!
For meeting schedules , etc., see Total Uruguay.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
For all you Mac lovers out here
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
New Carrasco airport opening delayed till Nov. 15
Despite the disappointment in the postponement -- yes, we held the naive hope that the works would be concluded on schedule -- after living our entire lives with an embarrassing airport, a few weeks more or less don't change the fact that Uruguay will have its first dignified international airport in decades.
I'm not counting the Punta del Este airport, which is tiny-but-dignified, because it's not truly international. That's because the Carrasco airport concession terms hold Punta del Este airport hostage, barring it from becoming truly international by limiting the number and types of flights allowed. Some day someone will pay a bribe in the other direction and Punta del Este airport will take off. We pray.
A word of warning for those flying out of Carrasco and coming from points east. Road works on new access to the airport means that Ruta 101 will remain closed for a few days more. If, like we did recently, you take a right after the second toll-booth on your way to the airport, you'll find that when you're almost there, you'll be forced to detour to your left and get lost with no signs whatsoever indicating how to get to the airport.
Our advice is to abstain for the time being from making that turn and just go to Carrasco on Giannatasio Ave., or even better, on the waterfront road that starts at El Pinar, and then turn back on Avenida de las Americas (where that bridge/overpass are at the entrance to Carrasco.)
This is not the shortest possible, but then again, you don't get lost, confused or obfuscated right before a flight, and you may actually save time by avoiding Giannatasio traffic-lights, traffic-jams, suicidal moped drivers, pedestrians, jugglers and other video-game-like perils, especially if traveling around rush hour.
If you've never used the El Pinar waterfront road, it's a good alternative to Giannatasio at all times. The only bad part is accessing it (going through fourth-world roads/commercial center through El Pinar where the gas station is on the Interbalnearia highway, then making a right onto that road that ends on the waterfront, all the time going into video-game mode). But for those 5 minutes, the rest is considerably less scary than Giannatasio all the way to Carrasco, and faster.
Coming back form Montevideo all you do is continue on the Rambla after Carrasco (making a right after the bridge) and go on until the road ends and forces you to turn left. When you reach the main commercial street, you make another left that will leave you by the Ancap gas station.
Handsome teen dog up for adoption
As our friend says, at ten months, this is not the age you can get away with taking a dog to Tienda Inglesa in hopes of finding it a home.
Jordan is medium sized, neutered and living with his sibling, part of a litter of three that appeared last December at the farm she was living in. Two is one too many dogs for Kathryn who is no longer living in a farm. Post a comment here if you're interested and I'll put you in touch with Kathryn.
Foodies rejoice: PdE Food &Wine Festival is set debut in March 2010
This sounds exciting on many fronts. The first edition of the Punta del Este Food & Wine Festival is scheduled for March 18 - 21, spanning the length and breadth of Punta. (See lists below)
Chefs and sommeliers confirmed so far range from the local to the regional and international, although heavily concentrated on Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and the U.S. Undoubtedly if it takes, which I'm positive it will, in future editions the festival will grow in size and diversity. But for a start, this is fantastic. Kudos to organizer Gabriel Byalistocki.
Besides the obvious fun of having this wealth of culinary events to choose from during a time of the year when the crazy crowds are gone and things are back to civilized, we see many positive aspects in this festival, including the potential for other chefs to discover Punta del Este as a market and choose to set up shop here, as well as the encouragement and exposure to the local ones who serve us year in and year out.
And, as a firm believer that the further internationalization of Punta del Este will benefit everyone living or traveling here, there's the additional benefit of the PR effort surrounding this event, which will attract foreign lifestyle press and help to consolidate Punta del Este as an international holiday and residential destination.
Tickets go on sale October 15. Below is a list of chefs and sommeliers, and of the events programmed.
Participating chefs and sommeliers
Paola Carosella Arturito, Sao Paulo
Hernan Taiana Restaurant T, Montoya (Punta del Este)
Gastón Yelicich Isla de Flores, José Ignacio & Montevideo
Charlie Betbeder Lo de Charlie, Punta del Este
Pam y Hubert O Farrell O Farrell, Manantiales (Punta del Este) & Buenos Aires
Floyd Cardoz Tabla, New York
Douglas Rodriguez Nuela, New York
Francois Payard Payard, New York & Rio de Janeiro
Ben Ford Ford Filling Station, Los Angeles
Rodrigo Oliveira Mocoto, Sao Paulo
Federico Amandola Al Forno, La Barra (Punta del Este)
Carla Pernambuco Carlota, Sao Paulo
Fernando Trocca Sucre, Buenos Aires
Germán Martitegui Casa Cruz, Buenos Aires
Martín Rebaudino Oviedo, Buenos Aires
Pablo Massey Restaurant Uruguay, Buenos Aires
Francis Mallmann Hotel Garzón, Garzón-Uruguay, Patagonia Sur, Bs.As.
Máximo López May Palacio Duhau - Park Hyatt, Buenos Aires
Montse Estruch El Cingle, Vacaresses (Barcelona)
Federico Fialayre Sommelier, Tomo I, Buenos Aires
Charlie Arturaola Master Sommelier, Miami
Rodrigo Kohn Sommelier, Grand Hyatt Sao Paulo
Raul Moreira Beefeaters, Punta del Este
Luis Acunia El Pobre Luis, Buenos Aires
Events
Friday 19/3 1 PM Modern Jazz & Cigars Finca Narbona US$ 100
Friday 19/3 1 PM Women on Top Las Cumbres US$ 100
Friday 19/3 8 PM Best of Argentina Fundación Atchugarry/E. VIK US$ 100
Friday 19/3 8 PM New World Great Bottlings Mantra Beach Club US$ 100
Saturday 20/3 1 PM Great American Restaurants Finca Narbona US$ 100
Saturday 20/3 1 PM Garzón: An experience by Malmann Pueblo Garzón US$ 100
Saturday 20/3 8 PM Uruguay Paseo por los Sentidos Fundación Atchugarry/Estancia VIK US$ 100
Saturday 20/3 8 PM Aquarela do Brasil Las Piedras/Fasano US$ 100
Sunday 21/3 12:30 AM Gauchos & Barbeque La Pataia US$ 50
Friday & Saturday 6 PM Sunset Chillout (Atardeceres) Casapueblo Free
Friday & Saturday 11 PM 360º After Party Torreón Floor 24 Free
Saturday, September 19, 2009
The elephant in the room: safety and crime
Curious about safety and crime in Maldonado and Punta del Este, this week I talked to people on the frontlines of the issue, from cops to security companies and insurance agents. Sometimes anecdotal evidence may cloud the bigger picture, and on the other hand a vague, blanket statement such as “Uruguay is safe” may be the cause of disappointments in the face of frustrated expectations.
So here´s what I found. First of all, Maldonado, the province where Punta del Este and Piriápolis are located, is by all accounts a world apart from the rest of Uruguay. Within Maldonado itself, the coastal towns, villages and neighborhoods are likewise in a different league from other urban enclaves such as Maldonado town, Pan de Azúcar or even erstwhile sleepy San Carlos.
This is because where the poor and working class reside, the infamous pasta base (crack cocaine) has taken hold with a massive epidemic that is still a few years away from subsiding. Thus, the daily robberies of small businesses in towns across Uruguay, often violent, for the few pesos found in petty cash.
The relative security of coastal Maldonado is not an accident. Security here is the hen that lays the golden eggs, and it has to be protected as such. According to the people I talked to, there is an express message from the government to the cops, and down to the crooks here –they all know each other apparently— which is: “No violent crime here guys, or else”.
On the other hand, burglaries are a fact of life in our area, but the good news is that they are on the decline. This according not only to cops but to private security company owner and one of the leading insurers in town, who two years ago gave me a completely opposite impression.
On the recent turnaround of the areas of El Golf and San Rafael, which for years suffered a disproportionate number of break-ins, the consensus is that a neighborhood watch effort with professional help from a former police chief produced the intended results.
Police I talked to stressed the need to be vigilant, to communicate among neighbors and to call either the local station or the 911 line to report suspicious characters or activity. Please call, they said. Uruguayans are not naturally given to community efforts, but any initiative involving security is sure to find positive reception.
About the forms of burglary, modus operandi varies between summer and off-season crimes. In the summer apparently professional bands of robbers come from Argentina and elsewhere looking for cash, jewelry and art. Summer break-ins also happen during gatherings at homes where people retire to the back yard, and often leave the front of the house unattended, doors unlocked or windows open. Opportunistic theft also involves breaking the window of a car where a bag or a jacket are left in plain sight on the car seat.
Another classic tale of burglary involves cleaning out a house on the same evening of people’s arrival. You are seen unloading a car with various bags, and later are seen leaving to have dinner out or to go shopping for groceries, only to come back home and find the cash, the laptop and the digital cameras gone. In winter, the M.O. is to go in looking for laptops and flat-screen TVs, the only two items of any resale value.
The common sense tip is to hide your laptop and valuables when you leave. Usually the burglars are in the house for just a couple of minutes and they do a frenzied, general sweep that may look like the aftermath of a tsunami to the returning owner. Another piece of advice is to abstain from throwing out boxes of new electronic equipment in front of your house. Rather, flatten down the boxes and take them to a dumpster.
On the issue of dogs, where the folklore says that a dog in a yard may be subject to poisoning by a burglar, everyone I consulted scoffed at the idea. Burglars have tricks to leave a dog locked inside a room of a house if the dog is left inside, and there were no known instances of dog poisoning in burglaries that anyone could recall for me. There are however instances of dog kidnapping for ransom, so don´t let your dog roam the neighborhood alone, especially if it is a pure breed, and more especially if it’s a Golden Retriever, and don´t leave your yard gate unlocked. Have a fence surrounding your property.
Lastly, there´s the importance of having an alarm system with a security company to respond to a break-in, if possible with outdoor alarm sensors, to further cut down their action time. Some of the companies working in Punta del Este have extremely fast response times (3 to 5 minutes with Maxima, the others should be checked out) and this reduces the damage that can be suffered in an eventual burglary and can lead to the arrest of the crooks.
Debate on new road in Punta Ballena
Frankly, I have yet to read a factual, analytical statement of the specific damage caused by the new road (all the opposition campaigning seems to be of the emotional, subjective kind, which doesn´t help), and a non-partisan pros and cons assessment. The government is not saying much publicly either. It just went ahead and built the road, which was in the planning stages for years and years and is now a tangible fact.
As I said in a previous posting, the UVPB is decrying this road, which will no doubt prevent many a traffic accident on an extremely busy road preferred by truck traffic going into Maldonado, as nuclear holocaust on the arboretum. But unless I am missing something, when I rode by looking at the new road and its potential damage, the Arboretum did not seem the least bit touched by it.
Frankly, the traffic has to go somewhere. Thinking of potential alternatives, re-routing everyone through Ruta 12 would require an expansion of Ruta 12, which the very vocal and wealthy Ruta 12 UVPB members would no doubt oppose feverishly. So what then, going back to Pan de Azucar, 30 kms, and then going on Ruta 9 and then going down to Maldonado? Is that the proposed alternative? Don´t see how that could fly... Or go further into Punta del Este and just cut across somebody else´s cute, quaint, peaceful, fantastic quality of life neighborhood?
It would be great if both sides could provide quantitative, objective assessments of all alternatives, but I guess that´s not about to happen now... Plus, the road is already there.
In any case, UVPB is calling on all authorities and interested parties to come debate the issue, on September 25, following a 45 minute presentation by the UVPB, at the Club del Lago Hotel, starting at 6 pm.
Escape Artist magazine article on retiring in Uruguay
At this point, I am becoming a firm believer in the notion that Uruguay is not a homogenuous destination with variations in setting, as in country vs. beach or city. I guess I will have to address that later, but in any case, David Hammond´s article provides a good general snapshot of the conventional kind.
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
So the greater bandwidth crusade actually worked
Today El País reports that Antel has embarked on a joint venture with Telecom Argentina (Antel 80%, Telecom 20%) whereby they will invest US$17 million in laying a submarine backbone cable linking Uruguay to a place called Las Toninas, in Argentina, which will enable Antel to increase bandwidth between 5 and 32-fold and to reduce prices to users, by 2011.
To be fair to Antel, for such a sparsely populated and unwealthy country, we should not be complaining about our telecom indices. Uruguay´s phone system was 100% digital ahead of any country in Latin America, and the country has always had one of the highest telecom penetration levels.
Personally, I was extremely thankful to find out that the service I used for almost two years was heavily subsidized (satellite internet connection with only 50 users when I subscribed). Before the existence of cellular modems, there was a relatively affordable way to access the Internet in remote locations if your business really required it. But I digress.
The truth is that Uruguayan broadband access (8.4%), although slightly lower than Argentina and Chile´s penetration levels (8.8%) -- which lead in broadband access in Latin America -- is considerably slower and more expensive on this side of the Andes and the River Plate. Hence the crusade. Kudos to them and to all of us who signed the petition!
Of course there may be lots of political considerations behind this, such as the proximity of national elections in late October and the fact that Antel is loosing ground in cellular communications and has struck a deal with the Argentine telco to market its cellular services in a bid to increase market share. But it´s all good, a state monopoly forced to become more competitive in a sector in where it has no competition by a segment in which it does...
Monday, September 14, 2009
Spanish classes
Actually, it's not so easy. Some are lazy and don't want to even try, others buy some verb books and peruse them every couple of months, and others simply don't know who to turn to for formal lessons.
I now have two people to recommend for formal lessons in Spanish as a second language.
You can write to
Silvia vetpc at adinet dot com dot uy
or to
Judith teacherjudith at gmail dot com
Coming up, Faure Quartett at Club del Lago and ESC meeting at Este Cafe
The Centro Cultural de Musica's upcoming concert will be held, as described in the poster above, on Saturday, Sept. 19 at 7:30 pm at the Club del Lago Hotel, on the Laguna del Sauce. If you've never been, go early and take a stroll on the lake-front or the hotel's gardens by the golf-course. It's an entirely different Punta del Este out there... The prices are 800 pesos or US$35 per adult, and 200 pesos or US$10 for children.
As for our meetings, following a late-winter tough cold, we're ready to get back into action. To make things easy, we'll be meeting at Este Cafe (the location of our high tea a couple months ago) at 11AM, our regular time, on Monday, September 21.
For those who've never been, Este Cafe is located at the entrance of the peninsula, where Calle 20 merges into the Rambla on the Mansa side. We have our regular 10% discount for any beverages or food.
We want to make it clear that we plan to meet in alternating places that offer convenience and are attractive to us for whatever reasons, and we do not intend to relinquish our club or group to a single venue.
I was happy to hear from many members who plan to be back in October, so I thought it would be a good time to organize a wine tasting. I have to fine tune the details on that, but it would be in the early evening, at the site of our potluck brunch (Brava 28 party room), with a moderate admission ticket. The wine tasting will be conducted in English by Tim and Amelie, who've been doing it for a while in Montevideo and are willing to come down here for us.
Uruguay and Punta del Este are top of mind for Spanish real estate investors
Uruguay was mentioned spontaneously by 15% and Punta del Este by 12.5% of the 284 potential investors surveyed, for a grand total of 27.5%, followed by Brazil with 22%, U.S. 10% and Miami 7%. None of the respondents mentioned the spontaneous intention of investing in Argentina.
The average amount those surveyed intend to invest over the next year is around 200,000 euros (some US$290,000).
See the entire survey results in Spanish at Reporte Inmobiliario.
Friday, September 11, 2009
Garzon, prettyfied but not yet fully Disneyfied
North of Jose Ignacio, a few kilometers inland from km marker 176 on Ruta 9 lies the tiny village of Garzon, the latest extreme-makeover subject of chef/entrepreneur Francis Mallmann, the same who put Jose Ignacio on the map.
After hearing the fans and detractors for a couple of years already, we finally made the trek this past weekend. We actually got the idea while having lunch, so we saved dessert for El Garzon, the restaurant.
Our impressions are as follows:
The village is as cute as it is tiny. The square, with the old palm trees is beautiful.
The extreme makeover job is only partially done, and therefore the town is not a Disney version of its former self, although that could easily happen in about 5 minutes, so hurry over to check it out before it's quaint in the bad way.
Trading Post, a cute renovation job
The impeccable good taste of Mallmann, Hojman and other assorted trendies (too much of which can make you gag) contrasts with some of the "renovations" by locals who don't quite get it but think that a couple of cans of paint -- of the most unfortunate shades -- will net them a fortune in flipping profits. Funny.
As for the restaurant, it's charming enough, and the desserts were wonderful, especially the lemon crostatta. It was cute on arrival to see a few local kids using the restaurant's wifi with their Ceibal laptops...
I recommend going back to Punta del Este through a different back road so you can appreciate the countryside, including Agroland's olive plantation and windpower farm.
The restaurant, predictably, was full of Brazilians from Sao Paulo, coinciding with the long September 7 weekend. Both tables next to us were returning clients who were not scared away by the prices (steep) and found the place charming enough for a second visit after their initial one last summer.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
The best education money can buy in Punta del Este, and its costs
Before anyone starts pelting me with rotten tomatoes, I should clarify that we´re talking academic institutions and not "what I learned from life," or from the street, or from the love that so-and-so gave me. For those who feel they can impart to their children whatever is necessary so they won´t turn into spoiled brats (more on that later), and whose children can handle the rough and cruel world of a regular school, then Saint Clare´s is in a different league among schools in Punta del Este. Warning, the English part of the website wasn't working when I checked in, although some items were available in English.
Punta del Este is a young market in terms of private education. First there were the nuns, then the IUA (Instituto Uruguayo Argentino) a solid private school with English content but not bilingual; and then, with the Argentine crisis and the migration of families in 2002-2003, an eurption in private, so-called bilingual schools, concurrently with the bankruptcy of some, (many families here couldn't pay the private school's tuitions during the economic crisis) and in March 2004, the emergence of Saint Clare's with some of the children and staff from the defunct St. Catherine's and others.
The first difference is that SC is the only really really bilingual school in Punta del Este, where various subjects are taught in English language -- 26 hours a week of content instruction in English -- where the elementary school curriculum is organized around the Cambridge International Primary Program, and which offers the International Baccaleaureate of Geneva.
According to headmaster/principal Daniel Reta, the school at present has some 300 students, with a staff of 80, of which some 20 are foreigners. Reta is quick to mention the British Schools in Montevideo as a comparable institution, and at least we can say it's a guiding light. It should be hard to emulate what the BS has achieved in 100 years of existence, but the model is one of smart teaching, and smart learning -- rather than the Uruguayan system of rote, brain atrophing education spiced up with some English classes -- and lots of extracurricular activities.
My feeling is SC will need a few years to achieve the size, recognition and financial means that will allow them to have a large enough number of quality foreign teachers, but as Reta says, "It's not easy, you can't hire the first backpacker who stops by on his way to visit the ruins at Machu Pichu. We need the right backgrounds in education."
As an alumnus of the British Schools of Montevideo, I am well aware of the virtues and problems of the elite school. My mention above of spoiled brats is something I encountered in my own years at school, a risk my father was constantly vigilant against, what with us in school with "the children of privilege." Well, the news is that the experience is survivable. The other news is that most of the "children of privilege" later in life turn out to be normal people. And the last but most important news is that if your children turn out to be trouble like me, drop out of high-school and never really go to college, well, then you can take some comfort in the fact that they did access the best academic education they could during their elementary and secondary years.
Another aspect of SC which makes it quite unique is that it's the most international school in the country, bar none. Uruguayan students make up only 40% of the student body, with Argentines accounting for 30% and the remaining 40% divided between a host of nationalities that sounds quite exotic to my ears. Macedonian? Botswanan? Reta says the school had 55 new admissions this year, a boom for such a small school, and that they are expecting a new "Argentine invasion" for next year. He also mentions 100 new foreign families settling in Punta del Este annually, a rate which I would venture is about to increase as well.
In order to absorb such diverse new students, arriving at whatever time of the school calendar, Reta said the school has a very intense tutoring system that has children speaking either English or Spanish or both in just 6 months, coupled with summer school in the month of February. "We had German kids who arrived speaking not a word of English or Spanish" he says. "In six months they were speaking both."
Asked if the school is offering these intensive programs for adults, he said that as part of the SC University they will probably be adding English and Spanish courses for adults.
As for the fees, here it goes. There is an annual registration fee (matricula) of US$300, with up to 20% discount for advance payment.
Kinder starts at 16 months of age, with AM and PM shifts that are elective through Kinder 3, at the same cost as the full day (say, you can take your toddler only in the morning or only in the afternoon, or both morning and afternoon, it always costs the same) and starts at US$200 per month, increasing progressively up to US$380 per month for Kinder 5.
For elementary grades 1 through 6 the monthly fee is US$440, for Junior High 1 through 3 it's US$470, High-School 4 it's US$520 per month and for the International Baccalaureate, grades 5 and 6 of secondary school, the monthly cost is US$610.
There is a discount for second child of 10%, and of 20% for a third child. Other discounts may apply for advance payment of the monthly fee... but better ask the school for that. Also, they do offer some scholarships for new admissions into certain grades when they have gender imbalances...
Please note that the figures in US$ are my conversions from the peso figure as of yesterday, and that they may vary with the currency fluctuation (they should have been lower all last year) and are adjusted annually, in pesos, according to inflation.
598 42 490 200 / California corner with Los Medanos / info@stclares.edu.uy
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Punta del Este based Mantra to expand to Brazil, Argentina
Their establishments will be branded "by Mantra" such as the Nogaro Casino on Gorlero Ave., to be refurbished with an US$18 million investment
In October Mantra will launch its first international venture, a boutique resort in Paraiba, Brazil. From Brasilturis Jornal.
Charles Aznavour at Conrad, only for "players"
The mysterious, studly look is much better than the grinning old crooner favored of late...
Are you a gambler in good standing at the Conrad Hotel? Then you can request free tickets to go see Charles Aznavour on Friday evening. Other for-VIP-only musical events in the horizon include Cacho Castaña (you don't want to activate your special connections for that one).
On the food front, there is an "Asian food festival" starting today through Sunday, and again on Sat. 18 and Sunday 19th. Buffet style. And through September, on Saturdays at lunchtime you have the chance to try the "puchero" a traditional "throw everything you have around in the pot and then drink the broth and eat the meats and vegetables separately" hearty meal. Highly recommended.
The Conrad's high-tea is particularly good, although with the disadvantage of being served in the depressing dark place off the lobby (Veleros), with "fashion shows" or "flamenco classes" or other such torturing "entertainment". That said, we always indulge a few times a year. Now is a good time to try it out, as Monday through Thursdays there's a 2x1 promotion, that is, US$20 for two people for the buffet, which usually includes a single beverage per person.
If you're of the male, sports-fan, alcohol drinking persuasion, the same place, Veleros, turns into a "sports bar" from Thursdays through Sunday, with 2x1 drinks between 8 pm and 1 am, and US$20 tapas buffet.
Post-concert comment: he rocked! What a treat! And it is supposedly his farewell tour.
Organ concert at the Maldonado Cathedral this Sunday -- come out and support some local talent!
Graciela, our patron of the local arts and of the Maldonado Cathedral as well, suggests attending the concert this Sunday (8 pm) by the very talented and young local organ player Santiago Rodriguez Tort.
Best of all, it's free admission!
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Reason to invest in Punta del Este number 37: Uruguay is getting bigger!
The story in Mercopress is thankfully in English, so go ahead and read it there... Now, because we are presumably not paying for this extra territory, rather than being diluted, your purchase entitles you to more oil! More natural gas! Imagine, Uruguay turning into Norway.
Just don't turn the tables on me and tell me to imagine Uruguay turning into Venezuela, I am not entertaining such scenario.
Consumer spending in Maldonado up 9.4% in the March-May quarter
Consumer spending in Maldonado department went up 9.4% between the months of March and May, compared with the same quarter of 2008, according to figures quoted by El Pais and attributed to an entity called the Observatorio Turistico, a joint venture between various local chambers of commerce.
It appears that we're inching towards a greater availability of economic data in general, and the news article in El Pais yesterday (long and confusing, but here it is) brings a new indicator of economic activity in Maldonado, this time measuring consumption of basic items such as water, electricity and gasoline, aimed at detecting the ups and downs of the tourism business in the department. Well, at least new to me.
The biggest increases were seen in April, which this year included the Easter holiday, usually falling in March. And yet, to everyone's shock, throughout the quarter consumption of food, fuels, water and other staples increased at more than respectable rates. For March and April taken together, the percentage climbs to 10.7%.
In addition to the calendar explanation --which doesn't account for the entire quarter anyway-- the Observatorio attributed the increased activity to uncharacteristically benign weather throughout the quarter. Considering the early spring we're going through, the same should be expected for the last quarter.Three cheers for global warming.
Now the bad news: there was a marked decrease in the number of foreign tourists who visited in Easter, with Brazilians down 10.5%, Paraguayans down 5%, Argentines 4.6%, and with only Chileans increasing by 30%. Now how do I spin this, considering my ever positive taint on anything and everything? It's actually GREAT NEWS! because Chileans are not a "traditional" market for us and their continued expansion is just what the doctor ordered for hedging purposes, and the others, well, they will come out of their global-crisis-shock and resume their increased visits and expenditure in our shores.
Unfortunately no mention was made of foreign visitors throughout the quarter ex-Easter, and there, I would venture, may lie part of the explanation for the positive figures. From what we could see, them Argies would not go away! They came all year long! Then again, this may be just our excessively heightened traffic-plate-spotting awareness talking.
Now, if someone were to combine this data with the real-estate information, then we'd be on to something...