A Porcine Symbol of Common Sense
Roddy Scheer writes in emagazine about our President’s new concern for energy conservation, now that the Gulf’s refineries are down. They’ve even introduced a new theme, “the Energy Hog,” complete with smiling porcine mascot. Don’t be an Energy Hog! “The situation we are facing is a very different one than […]
Bulgarian Nurses Facing Death over AIDS deaths
Ahhh to be back in the U.S. where newspapers are printed in English! Picked up today’s NY Times in the airport and took a lot of time during my Miami layover to read. In Libya, five nurses and a doctor are being held in jail and a death sentence looms. […]
Elise, Carla, Paul and Peter
Travel is the best way to get to know somebody. That and working in the same office for a while. I got to know four great people over the past ten days as we traveled up and down Chile on a press trip. Carla Waldemar is a name I knew […]
Valparaiso, Glittering in the Sun
Flying home tonight and today, a long journey from Santiago, Chile to Miami and later to JFK. The flight wasn’t full, so I was able to have two seats to myself. Still, none of us on this trip could get any sleep despite this extra seat bonus. This trip to […]
Theroux´s Dismal Take on the Spanish Coast
Reading a book on the plane by notorious grump Paul Theroux called ¨The Pillars of Hercules,¨where he travels from one end of Gibraltar to the other, the long way. After leaving the rock, he travels to Spain and has this to say. ¨The utterly blighted landscape of the Spanish coast–Europe´s […]
The Geysers and Flamingoes in San Pedro de Atacama
San Pedro de Atacama is a green oasis in the vast and arid northern sector of Chile, you can see the town miles away as you drive the rail-straight route from the airport at Calama. Calama is a mining town, the world´s biggest open-pit copper mine is here, and our […]
The Beautiful Game
We flew back from the one-horse town of Balcameda tonight, leaving behind our driver Jaime who had to backtrack five hours over the one-lane Austral road to his house in the woods. As we approached Santiago, the highways signs overhead read ´good luck Chile,´and ´´ít is possible,´rooting in public for […]
Hydropower Success Stories from Chile
We visited two hydroelectric plants today, both owned by entrepreneur lodge owners who needed a way to heat and light their ecolodges in remote national parks in Patagonia, Chile. Both hoteliers were eager to show me their handiwork. Heidi took me out in the rain (wearing the requisite ´wellies´or tall […]
The Farmers Who Married Sisters
We climbed a long hill up a rutty driveway up and up and around and up again to the top of a hill overlooking a beautiful lake and huge mountains on either side. We were here to have lunch with Theobaldo Doerno, the owner of a farm that offers ágrotourism´here […]
Driving the Austral Road in Patagonia
Here is a ´´nuevo entrar´´ written from El Pangue, an eco-lodge in the rainforest of Patagonia Chile. This is a rainy and wonderful place, outside it is very green and horses are grazing on the lawn. There is a small hydro plant on the grounds where they make their own […]
Meeting Peter Heller–25 Years Later
When I was a boy growing up in New Jersey, Peter Heller was my pal who lived in Brooklyn. He used to come out and visit us, and they called us ‘city mouse and country mouse.’ I have just reunited with this old friend, who I haven’t seen since 1980, […]
Exploring Patagonia
We have been in Chile for just a few days, and it seems like much longer. We flew this morning from Santiago to Balcameda, a tiny spot on the Argentinian border in the pampas. We then set out over windswept roads the entire width of this 104 km wide country […]
FedEx’s Secret: Empty Jets In the Air
We jumped into a Mercedes taxi in Santiago, Chile, this afternoon and in the back seat flap we found a convenient NY Times news digest waiting for us. Among the day’s news was an item about the “FedEX Economy, evidence that the speed with which American business responds to different […]
What Tina Brown Wants to Read
From Tina Brown’s recent Washington Post column on the lack of juicy memoirs being written by former and current Bush staffers. “And maybe a Bush memoir will give us a road map at least to some of the mysterious gaps and silences of the past five years. What was really […]
The Sign Says…
Our new sign on the Interstate Highway 91 North. Billboard advertising has always been exciting to me. I believe there is no better way to publicize a business than a nice-looking sign on a busy highway. I went out with the signmakers today and counted the cars whizzing past as […]
