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I just reread my previous posts and I am ashamed at all my typos and other mistakes that may seriously challenge comprehension. I said exactly the opposite of what I was intending to in one of my sentences. Public colleges in Argentina are the respected, serious academic institutions. Private universities are the ones delivering diplomas to whoever has the money to pay for their courses. Sorry, I needed to make that clarification.

I also notices I forgot to share the link to my full report on the local Gay Pride celebration. Here you have it. 

My visit to Corrientes is close to ending (I am leaving this Wednesday to Buenos Aires), and I have given up on the sex. After my Veterinarian heart broken students and Pablo, all the connections made online were a disappointment. A few vey promising ones ended because I do not have a place and I am not in the mood to going to an hotel. Please, do not assume all the local guys are a flake, I am picky and rejected a bunch of guys. I may be the flake. 

Soon I will wrote a summarizing report of my whole experience in my blog and will share the link here. There is one place I did not explore, the local gay club, called Castillo Robert. After checking the pictures in their Facebook page, and considering that the night actually starts at 2 AM, I decided it was not worthy.  That place is the only gay club in the area. There is a monthly gay night in a straight club in Resistencia, but I stayed in Corrientes my whole visit.

I did enjoy my meetings with the Veterinarian student. Our first one, when we made out and have oral sex took place in the Parque Mitre, right across my mother's apartment. Here you have some pictures:

IMG_2386.thumb.JPG.f142469663f2309c43a749e02d71fba2.JPG

That is the local Club de Regatas, where I spent long hours on my adolescence week ends. It is located in the right side of the park. You can see on the top right corner of the pictures a floating swimming pool I used to love. I would lay down under the sun as a lizard between my swimming laps. I am glad is still there after all this years. My skin color used to be much darker back then.

IMG_4216.thumb.JPG.7ff232be0b23b952b475241ce33625e9.JPG

This is a creek that runs under the city and ends in the Paraná, constituting the right boundary of the park. The water height is unusually low, normally you would not see much of the crap you can see there in the picture.

IMG_8188.thumb.JPG.67525b1a57ef621e2f273ecf1ee9e98f.JPG

If you see the guy reading in the above picture, he is right where the Veterinarian student and I had our first hot meeting.

As in the rest of the city, you can see several murals in the park. Decades ago a local Arts school brought some muralists from Mexico to teach a workshop. That experience seeded a local muralist school that is unique and not represented anywhere else in the country:

IMG_2967.thumb.JPG.489962526dff60b4f619fafef13ca945.JPGIMG_3861.thumb.JPG.d72b3c5757f86f2f48705faef907090f.JPGIMG_5488.thumb.JPG.0edcfdd7c2c392ce0a95ec7236ecb76f.JPGIMG_6547.thumb.JPG.7ad67346006821054d0bb7def3ee9af8.JPGIMG_9645.thumb.JPG.adba3e388a08895295f3e3864bd48984.JPG

Those are all murals in different places of the Parque Mitre. But you can find them all over the city:

IMG_5923.thumb.JPG.ec5e073497240543a750882d324ac3f4.JPGIMG_9382.thumb.JPG.59d245795afed9d3e470492cb66c34b4.JPG

The lack of sex after so many promising hits from boys in Grindr was not my only disappointment. I got my nephew to buy some weed. I paid $AR 500 for this:

IMG_9392.thumb.JPG.23e9f4de60d2214f2679f3ee939f1e4f.JPG

That is probably 3/4 of what I got, as I had smoked a little before taking that picture. The quality of the stuff is really poor, the same smell I remembered from my younger years, Paraguayan second tier quality stuff. As a funny side note, I smoked for the first time in front of my mother and I think she got high by second hand. She says she did not, but after I smoked a joint sitting next to her, she took an effervescent medication as a regular pill and had to drink lots of water and cope with berping for hours as the medication disolved in her stomach. 

Last night I went out with my brother and his wife to a bar/restaurant with very modern and avant guard design, it could perfectly be a trendy establishment n one of DC hipster neighborhoods. My brother drank a big bottle of beer, I had two disgusting margaritas, my sister in law two girlish over sweeten coctels, and we three shared an order of delicious crispy shrimp sitting in a bed of guacamole and red peppers cream, and a huge table with 6 different kinds of premium quality cheese, 6 of different cold cuts (including yummy jamón serrano), green and black olives, and cherries, all served with home made bread they would not stop bringing to the table.  We all love eating and however could bot finish all of it. The check was only $ 1,200. I forgot to report the Dollar is today $AR 28.64.

It was cold last night (6C) and I think I got a soft cold, so I am staying at home probably for the rest of y visit. Today is the local Independence Day and here is a civic and militar parade in Avenida Costanera that I am missing. Patriotism is one of the many values I am not fond of (I am being diplomatic), so I do not really care. However I did read a nice piece celebrating some good things coming from Argentina. For those who read Spanish and have some knowledge of the local culture (I hope you are there @epigonos) I share it here:

 "Un verso de Discépolo, un texto de Borges, un cuento de Manucho, una canción de Atahualpa, una gambeta de Messi, un tango de Gardel, una melodía de Piazzola, un atardecer en la pampa, un glaciar y un confín helado de la Tierra, una lluvia tropical en la selva misionera, un bayo y un cordero, un hombre de campo que sonríe, una mujer trabajadora de los conurbanos, un niño con la cara sucia, un barco de Quinquela, un cafetín de Buenos Aires, un malbec de Mendoza, una familia que celebra, un asado con amigos, quince minutos de Darín, una salita del under, un do de pecho en el Colón, un malvón, un jacarandá en flor, una pizza en Guerrin, las obras completas de Bioy y de Silvina, la Docta, Salta la linda, la Colección Robin Hood, Mafalda y Manolito, las aguafuertes de Arlt, Rosaura a las diez, el piano de Martha, un poema de Pizarnik y otro de Calveyra, los científicos, los médicos, los héroes de Malvinas, "Casa tomada", una volea de Del Potro, unos mates en una mañana fría, el sable morisco del Gran Capitán, la muerte solitaria y digna de Belgrano, los granaderos, los bomberos, un blues del Carpo, calamaros y garcías, la mesa de los galanes, un beso robado en el Rosedal. Tantas cosas nos justifican..." Jorge Fernandez Diaz.

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13 hours ago, Alaskabear said:

Thank you for your report!    I enjoy reading about smaller villages and second tier cities.   It rounds out your perspective of a place a little bit more.  Hope you feel better!

Thank you, friend. Yes, I am feeling better and decided to stay home today to be strong and recovered tomorrow, when I fly to Buenos Aires to start the real fun. I will be very Busi meeting friends per there, but I have several professionals in my TDL. I will probably focus on them and avoid the hoo up ads. Let's see. Meanwhile, you can check here my last post summarizing the Corrientes Gay experience. It also include some general tips useful to Argentina. There is probably nothing I did not already share in this thread:

https://ilikepinga.com/2018/07/10/corrientes-gay/

PS: I found my weed! :)

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On 7/9/2018 at 2:01 PM, Latbear4blk said:

I just reread my previous posts and I am ashamed at all my typos and other mistakes that may seriously challenge comprehension. I said exactly the opposite of what I was intending to in one of my sentences. Public colleges in Argentina are the respected, serious academic institutions. Private universities are the ones delivering diplomas to whoever has the money to pay for their courses. Sorry, I needed to make that clarification.

I also notices I forgot to share the link to my full report on the local Gay Pride celebration. Here you have it. 

My visit to Corrientes is close to ending (I am leaving this Wednesday to Buenos Aires), and I have given up on the sex. After my Veterinarian heart broken students and Pablo, all the connections made online were a disappointment. A few vey promising ones ended because I do not have a place and I am not in the mood to going to an hotel. Please, do not assume all the local guys are a flake, I am picky and rejected a bunch of guys. I may be the flake. 

Soon I will wrote a summarizing report of my whole experience in my blog and will share the link here. There is one place I did not explore, the local gay club, called Castillo Robert. After checking the pictures in their Facebook page, and considering that the night actually starts at 2 AM, I decided it was not worthy.  That place is the only gay club in the area. There is a monthly gay night in a straight club in Resistencia, but I stayed in Corrientes my whole visit.

I did enjoy my meetings with the Veterinarian student. Our first one, when we made out and have oral sex took place in the Parque Mitre, right across my mother's apartment. Here you have some pictures:

IMG_2386.thumb.JPG.f142469663f2309c43a749e02d71fba2.JPG

That is the local Club de Regatas, where I spent long hours on my adolescence week ends. It is located in the right side of the park. You can see on the top right corner of the pictures a floating swimming pool I used to love. I would lay down under the sun as a lizard between my swimming laps. I am glad is still there after all this years. My skin color used to be much darker back then.

IMG_4216.thumb.JPG.7ff232be0b23b952b475241ce33625e9.JPG

This is a creek that runs under the city and ends in the Paraná, constituting the right boundary of the park. The water height is unusually low, normally you would not see much of the crap you can see there in the picture.

IMG_8188.thumb.JPG.67525b1a57ef621e2f273ecf1ee9e98f.JPG

If you see the guy reading in the above picture, he is right where the Veterinarian student and I had our first hot meeting.

As in the rest of the city, you can see several murals in the park. Decades ago a local Arts school brought some muralists from Mexico to teach a workshop. That experience seeded a local muralist school that is unique and not represented anywhere else in the country:

IMG_2967.thumb.JPG.489962526dff60b4f619fafef13ca945.JPGIMG_3861.thumb.JPG.d72b3c5757f86f2f48705faef907090f.JPGIMG_5488.thumb.JPG.0edcfdd7c2c392ce0a95ec7236ecb76f.JPGIMG_6547.thumb.JPG.7ad67346006821054d0bb7def3ee9af8.JPGIMG_9645.thumb.JPG.adba3e388a08895295f3e3864bd48984.JPG

Those are all murals in different places of the Parque Mitre. But you can find them all over the city:

IMG_5923.thumb.JPG.ec5e073497240543a750882d324ac3f4.JPGIMG_9382.thumb.JPG.59d245795afed9d3e470492cb66c34b4.JPG

The lack of sex after so many promising hits from boys in Grindr was not my only disappointment. I got my nephew to buy some weed. I paid $AR 500 for this:

IMG_9392.thumb.JPG.23e9f4de60d2214f2679f3ee939f1e4f.JPG

That is probably 3/4 of what I got, as I had smoked a little before taking that picture. The quality of the stuff is really poor, the same smell I remembered from my younger years, Paraguayan second tier quality stuff. As a funny side note, I smoked for the first time in front of my mother and I think she got high by second hand. She says she did not, but after I smoked a joint sitting next to her, she took an effervescent medication as a regular pill and had to drink lots of water and cope with berping for hours as the medication disolved in her stomach. 

Last night I went out with my brother and his wife to a bar/restaurant with very modern and avant guard design, it could perfectly be a trendy establishment n one of DC hipster neighborhoods. My brother drank a big bottle of beer, I had two disgusting margaritas, my sister in law two girlish over sweeten coctels, and we three shared an order of delicious crispy shrimp sitting in a bed of guacamole and red peppers cream, and a huge table with 6 different kinds of premium quality cheese, 6 of different cold cuts (including yummy jamón serrano), green and black olives, and cherries, all served with home made bread they would not stop bringing to the table.  We all love eating and however could bot finish all of it. The check was only $ 1,200. I forgot to report the Dollar is today $AR 28.64.

It was cold last night (6C) and I think I got a soft cold, so I am staying at home probably for the rest of y visit. Today is the local Independence Day and here is a civic and militar parade in Avenida Costanera that I am missing. Patriotism is one of the many values I am not fond of (I am being diplomatic), so I do not really care. However I did read a nice piece celebrating some good things coming from Argentina. For those who read Spanish and have some knowledge of the local culture (I hope you are there @epigonos) I share it here:

 "Un verso de Discépolo, un texto de Borges, un cuento de Manucho, una canción de Atahualpa, una gambeta de Messi, un tango de Gardel, una melodía de Piazzola, un atardecer en la pampa, un glaciar y un confín helado de la Tierra, una lluvia tropical en la selva misionera, un bayo y un cordero, un hombre de campo que sonríe, una mujer trabajadora de los conurbanos, un niño con la cara sucia, un barco de Quinquela, un cafetín de Buenos Aires, un malbec de Mendoza, una familia que celebra, un asado con amigos, quince minutos de Darín, una salita del under, un do de pecho en el Colón, un malvón, un jacarandá en flor, una pizza en Guerrin, las obras completas de Bioy y de Silvina, la Docta, Salta la linda, la Colección Robin Hood, Mafalda y Manolito, las aguafuertes de Arlt, Rosaura a las diez, el piano de Martha, un poema de Pizarnik y otro de Calveyra, los científicos, los médicos, los héroes de Malvinas, "Casa tomada", una volea de Del Potro, unos mates en una mañana fría, el sable morisco del Gran Capitán, la muerte solitaria y digna de Belgrano, los granaderos, los bomberos, un blues del Carpo, calamaros y garcías, la mesa de los galanes, un beso robado en el Rosedal. Tantas cosas nos justifican..." Jorge Fernandez Diaz.

One huge thing I remember about Buenos Aires is that the bars didn't really have people until midnight and few clubs opened before 2am. Latest city I've ever been to. I guess this is widespread in Argentina. 

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4 hours ago, tassojunior said:

One huge thing I remember about Buenos Aires is that the bars didn't really have people until midnight and few clubs opened before 2am. Latest city I've ever been to. I guess this is widespread in Argentina. 

Indeed, I really don’t know how people can deal with that lol , I went to Buenos Aires in April in a Business Trip - I went to zoom club at 11pm (it was empty) I left at 1am and first clients were just arriving, from there I went to a gay bar/strip club at 2 am and it was also empty, at 3 am then it was getting full, at 5 am it was finally packed! I left at 6am to my hotel.. and I  had to go to a meeting at 8:30 LOL , And all this was on a Wednesday. 

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54 minutes ago, Latindude said:

Indeed, I really don’t know how people can deal with that lol , I went to Buenos Aires in April in a Business Trip - I went to zoom club at 11pm (it was empty) I left at 1am and first clients were just arriving, from there I went to a gay bar/strip club at 2 am and it was also empty, at 3 am then it was getting full, at 5 am it was finally packed! I left at 6am to my hotel.. and I  had to go to a meeting at 8:30 LOL , And all this was on a Wednesday. 

@Latbear4blk, you are probably the best placed to explain: how does it possibly work?

Are the people who go out only those who do not have a job?

Or are they going to work very late the next and sleep deprived, yet they manage not to get fired?

Or is there something in the water that means they need less sleep?

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I remember going to ContraManos, just a regular bar, at midnight and the bartenders looking at me like I was crazy. They told me no one really comes out for an hour or two. So I went to dinner at midnight, as seems to be the custom in BA, returned at 2am, and there were a few people there. When I left at 4am it was starting to get crowded. The nightclubs are even later.

I'm used to the midnight dinner thing from Paris and some clubs there are late ones but there are also early ones and even the late ones are busy by 1am. Buenos Aires takes it to a whole new level. And then at 7am from my hotel window I could see thousands and thousands of people coming into the train station for their office jobs. Amazing.

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46 minutes ago, Tartegogo said:

@Latbear4blk, you are probably the best placed to explain: how does it possibly work?

Are the people who go out only those who do not have a job?

Or are they going to work very late the next and sleep deprived, yet they manage not to get fired?

Or is there something in the water that means they need less sleep?

It is a mix of all of that (except the water thing). In my worse years I would fall sleep in my office. Then I became more self disciplined and stopped going out during the work week. My fun nights were Fri, Sat, and my favorite ones Sundays or any other day before a holiday. 

It is not wise. My sex is better with less wild times.

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I arrived to Buenos Aires this afternoon and uitfeels good to be back to a cosmopolitan city. I was horny, so I called Douglas: http://www.soytuyo.com/indexmodelo.php?id=11161#.W0acXS2ZPOQ

Carioca, his birthday was today, he just turned 30. Absolutely gorgeous like the pictures. Amazing kisser and an outstanding bottom. I would write a review in some moment. I had a very good time, but I do not think I will repeat. Even if he was very interactive and docile, I did not feel he was actually into me. His dick was never hard. His fee is #AR 1,000 per hour. I will probably try another boy tomorrow.

Good night for now.

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I arrived to Buenos Aires last Wednesday, today is Friday, and I am already exhausted. As usual, if you are interested only about sex, just skip to the last parts of this post.

I need to take a break, so I am going to devote the day to catch up with some writing. Right now I am siting at a Starbucks in the Centro Cultural Recoleta waiting to have lunch with a friend in the Buenos Aires Design terrace. This is the Centro Cultural Recoleta, one of my favorite places in the city. I performed there in my times as an actor:

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These are different views of the Buenos Aires Sires Design, a mall where the local upper middle class buy furniture and decorations. It has a beautiful terrace with bars and restaurants and a view of what is called Plaza Francia, even when it is not the right name.

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One of the first things that struck me of Buenos Aires: Starbucks ubiquity. Two years ago I noticed a few locations but I thought they were not going to be successful. Buenos Aires is a city with a very strong culture of cafés, like Paris, Rome or Madrid. Traditional cafés are spread all over the city and are the place where friends get together for long sessions of chatting without consuming more than one espresso. I thought Starbucks, with their expensive offerings and tailoring more to individuals than to groups, would fail. Damn I was wrong.

They are everywhere, at least in the neighborhoods I move in  (downtown, Recoleta, Barrio Norte, Palermo). They have taken over the best locations in those areas. Many of the locations are just like any regular one in the States, but many have a very fancy look and clientele. The ones around my place in Recoleta look like luxurious stores in NYC Upper West Side.

McDonalds and Burger King have also increased their presence and also took over the best locations. Unlike the States, where these junk food chains target the lower end consumer, here they are a trendy place for the middle class. As soon as I have the chance I will take a picture of the prices, so you can compare. For the local market their prices are high, and the quality of their food is just as trashy as anywhere else. When I was still living in the city and McDonalds was a novelty, there was a huge scandal. The local equivalent of the FDA analyzed McD burgers and found they contained a significant percentage (I do not remember the number) of art worms to meet the protein content specifications. Everyone predicted it would be the end of the chain in Beefland, everyone was wrong.

Here you have a picture of Starbucks prices. Today exchange is U$S 1= $AR 27.91

IMG_0872.thumb.JPG.90fa4b7d7b2b0a5c350fdbff70456cdd.JPG

Unusually, the dollar went down. However, you never know in this country I am still holding my advise on keeping your dollars and go selling them as you need. If you lose, it is going to be very little, but you have the potential to make a difference if you gain. The dollar can go down a few cents but can go up a lot.

Here you have more pictures of the area around the Centro Cultural Recoleta, just three blocks away from my place. Recoleta is the fanciest area relatively close to downtown. There are fancier ones but they all are further away.

IMG_0842.thumb.JPG.04a9db0c057b509856f77cac7bdbbc44.JPGIMG_0844.thumb.JPG.695105a0c33866368041648fb8f990bb.JPGIMG_0845.thumb.JPG.bc724ccd10ff4e1efd6facaff51a43f0.JPG

I already warned you about traffic in Corrientes City. Buenos Aires is not better. Streets with one lane fit two cars. No one respect lanes. Riding a taxi cab is very much like riding a roller coster in an amusing park (it is just not amusing but authentically scaring and dangerous). In this city we add an additional danger: you are not sure not even in the sidewalks.

In one single block you usually have many garage entrances and cars going in and out. Be very alert to the warning light or they will ride over you when you were walking feeling perfectly safe.

The urban design is pretty different to the American cities I know. It does have the regularity of Manhattan Streets, it is easy to get oriented and to navigate. But we do not have here rectangular blocks like in Manhattan, or blocks with alleys and driveways like in DC and most American urban areas.

The blocks here are perfectly squared, about 100m (meters, remember we are in the Metric system in the rest of the world) each side. There are no alleys or driveways. All buildings have private backyards one against the other, in what is called a “Pulmón de manzana”. Here you have a picture of the one in my place:

IMG_0871.thumb.JPG.4b0cb0578be4a417377cb02a52fab7df.JPG

This is the Iglesia Nuestra Señora del Pilar. I used to attend a catholic elementary school associated to this church. During Holidays season (which is summer here), my mother would make me join a Catholic Charity choir. They would dress me on the traditional altar boy outfit (yes, I would melt with those red warm dresses in summer time) and we would go around the big department stores (they do not exist anymore, we used to have to huge ones, Harrod’s and Gath & Chavez) singing Christmas Carrols.

IMG_0846.thumb.JPG.569668980b4e4ab34acc8e930c16c03c.JPGIMG_0847.thumb.JPG.43d37ef6579b77e9c84c7eab4f99458b.JPGIMG_0849.thumb.JPG.ed7870b64a03d3aefa7b207dc226e316.JPGIMG_0850.thumb.JPG.bc870919a55c6c1391409cb69546cc78.JPG

Next to the church, you have the also famous Cementerio de la Recoleta. I am fond of cemeteries, out of all the ones I have visited around Europe and the States, this is one of my top favorite ones. Many aristocratic families have a tomb here, the place is a treasure of architecture and sculpting. Juan Domingo Perón mummified corpse used to rest here, this is the place from where his hands were cut off. He was now transferred to his own museum.

IMG_0851.thumb.JPG.67bf5f67682ebb0e11a9d0dcb5c2876b.JPGIMG_0852.thumb.JPG.60a458a49950d83cbac8320c4ea700d7.JPGIMG_0854.thumb.JPG.0c222bdb2973664e3fbaf81e93e9ad59.JPGIMG_0856.thumb.JPG.ef4fd6c0a313ca3e6be9b1d159c148c9.JPGIMG_0858.thumb.JPG.75f0c05cef72064e4952bcb86b50edcb.JPGIMG_0859.thumb.JPG.6679634a5220c6985f13976742ae00c9.JPG

Right in the corner of the cemetery there is a mall that in my times was a Movies theater complex. They kept many cineplex theaters but added a generous number of stores and eateries.

IMG_0865.thumb.JPG.1af9a7ab5a708f605e3d5548d93446ff.JPG

That is two blocks from my place. Just half a block from there, you have the local residency of the Opus Dei:

IMG_0867.thumb.JPG.a6a877d7cadb18af112d73b25087c462.JPG

One of the many particular things of this city is the unbelievable number if bakeries and kioscos. Soon I will take a pic of a bakery so you can see the local offer. "Kioscos" are small stores that originally would sell only cigarets and candy. They expanded the last 20 years to offer also other products, increasing their side. This is a very typical one, they are everywhere:

IMG_0869.thumb.JPG.62dc7c54572be8048bb3d9812f40d42b.JPG

Let’s talk a little bit about sex.

I apologize if I repeat myself, but keeping posts in more than one place makes me lost track of where I am sharing my observations. I know I already shared this, but I do not think it was here. My observations about Corrientes and the Argentinean NE being a place with a subculture where younger men chasing for older gentlemen were more prevalent compared to other places, seem to be correct.

During my first two weeks in Corrientes I would get about 15 hits every day (it was even more at the beginning but I set up the filters) , during my third week the ratio went down to 5 daily. I have been in Buenos Aires now for about 3 days. I only got two hits from Grindr, and in Scruff a masseur/escort contacted me to visit him in one of the local saunas. I am using the same apps and did not change a word in my profiles and stats.

I  met two professionals. I already posted about the first one Douglas, a Carioca moved to Buenos Aires. I have a review almost finished and hopefully I will post it today in the blog.

Yesterday I found gold. Carlos Aleman, a 21 y.o. Venezuelan that would be one of my favorite regulars if he was living closer to me. The experience was outstanding. The boy is a natural and indeed one of the top five lovers I have had in my life, for free or for a fee. I did not start writing a review yet. I am negotiating a second meeting with pics and video. Physically he kind of remind me of Ashton Summers, with a body not so sharp but equally beautiful and sexy. However what made the difference was not his looks but his performance. The boy freaks in bed, it was really special. His fee was higher than Douglas’, $AR 1,500.

Tonight I am meeting a few members of the local forum. I am not sure how many will show up, but hopefully I will have some input from the locals beyond our online exchanges. I found a gay bar owned by two American expatriates that follows times more aligned with my habits: Fluxbar. I have never been there yet. Our gathering is tonight at 22 (another local particularity: we use military times here). I will share how it went in my next post.

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20 hours ago, Latbear4blk said:

 My observations about Corrientes and the Argentinean NE being a place with a subculture where younger men chasing for older gentlemen were more prevalent compared to other places, seem to be correct. During my first two weeks in Corrientes I would get about 15 hits every day.......I have been in Buenos Aires now for about 3 days. I only got two hits from Grindr, and in Scruff.......I am using the same apps and did not change a word in my profiles and stats.

I’m enjoying your posts (and detailed reviews) @Latbear4blk I’d just like to take issue with what you wrote about younger men/older men as my experience runs counter to yours.

I have vacationed in Buenos Aires 15-17x, each visit lasting a month or so. I am tall and lean, tanned with very short hair, and was often told that I looked ‘very European’ and not Argentine. After my first visit to the city when I dressed smart/casually, I tended to dress more formally (shirt and tie, jacket or suit) and I was hit on repeatedly by attractive younger men (18-30) both online and in the street. 

I can’t say what motivated the younger men. Undoubtedly it helped that I was seen as a foreigner with hard currency (or “dollarized” as I heard a few times). I was happy to be generous and as a single traveller I was happy to take them out and, of course, I picked up the bills. To my surprise, I was not asked for money. I dated many very nice young men who were invariably well-mannered and well-educated.

My view FWIW is that Argentina remains a patriarchal society; the local economy remains difficult; and society can be quite cliquey. Generally older well-dressed men are seen as rich and powerful, and such a foreigner can be seen as very attractive to a young Argentine trying to make his way in the world. 

 

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9 minutes ago, msclelovr said:

I’m enjoying your posts (and detailed reviews) @Latbear4blk I’d just like to take issue with what you wrote about younger men/older men as my experience runs counter to yours.

I have vacationed in Buenos Aires 15-17x, each visit lasting a month or so. I am tall and lean, tanned with very short hair, and was often told that I looked ‘very European’ and not Argentine. After my first visit to the city when I dressed smart/casually, I tended to dress more formally (shirt and tie, jacket or suit) and I was hit on repeatedly by attractive younger men (18-30) both online and in the street. 

I can’t say what motivated the younger men. Undoubtedly it helped that I was seen as a foreigner with hard currency (or “dollarized” as I heard a few times). I was happy to be generous and as a single traveller I was happy to take them out and, of course, I picked up the bills. To my surprise, I was not asked for money. I dated many very nice young men who were invariably well-mannered and well-educated.

My view FWIW is that Argentina remains a patriarchal society; the local economy remains difficult; and society can be quite cliquey. Generally older well-dressed men are seen as rich and powerful, and such a foreigner can be seen as very attractive to a young Argentine trying to make his way in the world. 

 

You may be right my friend. Consider I am not a tourist, I spend most of my time hunging out with relatives and old friends. I am visiting the gay circuits very rarely. As I do not have time to cruise, all my cruising is online. I did have more time in Corrientes, but here in Buenos Aires my schedule is tight and I am going straight for the efficiency, straight to the taxi boys. I am just comparing my online experience with the same apps and the same profiles between Corrientes and Buenos Aires. Also, I do not have formal cloths and I know that can make a difference in the local fashionable culture. 

You have not visited Corrientes. Who knows, perhaps with your older wealthy European aura the boys over there follow you like if you were in Morocco. :)

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You both may be on to something with Argentina. The one time I was there I dressed in my normal shorts, flip-flops and t shirts and was not attracting anyone to say the least. ( I felt like a leper). Locals have their own precept of what a "successful, important" man dresses like. 

btw- I forgot ....there was one sex club- can't call it a sauna because there was not one---that attracted a lot of hot guys, half visiting airline flight attendents, with exceptional good looks and bodies. A few young locals . I forget the name. Outstanding. And there was another , that may have had a sauna, on the 2nd floor of a very old building that was always crowded with hot guys. Very big place with easily 100 guys and sex all over. 

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17 minutes ago, tassojunior said:

You both may be on to something with Argentina. The one time I was there I dressed in my normal shorts, flip-flops and t shirts and was not attracting anyone to say the least. ( I felt like a leper). Locals have their own precept of what a "successful, important" man dresses like. 

btw- I forgot ....there was one sex club- can't call it a sauna because there was not one---that attracted a lot of hot guys, half visiting airline flight attendents, with exceptional good looks and bodies. A few young locals . I forget the name. Outstanding. And there was another , that may have had a sauna, on the 2nd floor of a very old building that was always crowded with hot guys. Very big place with easily 100 guys and sex all over. 

I am not exploring the sex party scene, but in my final report I will include some resources for those interested on it.

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12 hours ago, tassojunior said:

there was one sex club- can't call it a sauna because there was not one---that attracted a lot of hot guys, half visiting airline flight attendents, with exceptional good looks and bodies. A few young locals .

I wonder if what you visited was the long-established Tom’s - a decent, clean place in the business district. I visited once and met a cute young guy who’d arrived at the end of his office-day. Tom’s attracted an interesting crowd at varying times; it was very much “takeaway”, not “eat on the premises”

 

12 hours ago, tassojunior said:

there was another , that may have had a sauna, on the 2nd floor of a very old building that was always crowded with hot guys. Very big place with easily 100 guys and sex all over. 

 I know of some organised sex-parties. I was invited by a fit 21year old to a party in an old converted movie-house not too far from Alto Palermo: anyone could attend; there was sex in various areas on 2 floors. It was dimly-lit but arousing to see the action. I disliked however the bareback fucking. 

There were also monthly sex-parties in an apartment in the Congreso area; would-be attendees were screened by email with pics, as it was meant for the fit/good-looking under 35 crowd (I was ‘allowed’ to go not because I was fit but rather because a local heart-throb took me as his date) 

 

12 hours ago, tassojunior said:

The one time I was there I dressed in my normal shorts, flip-flops and t shirts and was not attracting anyone

Me too: polo shirts and shorts on my first visit, in April sunshine with temperatures of mid-80sF (30C). And tho I speak Spanish fluently, every person immediately spoke to me in English and assumed I was American. I soon noticed that Argentines dress much more formally.

One anecdote: one evening I happened to glance at a handsome young man I passed by outside a supermarket. I was wearing a suit as I had to buy wine (for a dinner-party I’d been invited to); to my surprise, he appeared next to me in the wine section of the store; I smiled and said hello, and he said how he knew I was a foreigner....we ended up having a good time together. 

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5 minutes ago, msclelovr said:

I wonder if what you visited was the long-established Tom’s - a decent, clean place in the business district. I visited once and met a cute young guy who’d arrived at the end of his office-day. Tom’s attracted an interesting crowd at varying times; it was very much “takeaway”, not “eat on the premises”

 

 I know of some organised sex-parties. I was invited by a fit 21year old to a party in an old converted movie-house not too far from Alto Palermo: anyone could attend; there was sex in various areas on 2 floors. It was dimly-lit but arousing to see the action. I disliked however the bareback fucking. 

There were also monthly sex-parties in an apartment in the Congreso area; would-be attendees were screened by email with pics, as it was meant for the fit/good-looking under 35 crowd (I was ‘allowed’ to go not because I was fit but rather because a local heart-throb took me as his date) 

 

Me too: polo shirts and shorts on my first visit, in April sunshine with temperatures of mid-80sF (30C). And tho I speak Spanish fluently, every person immediately spoke to me in English and assumed I was American. I soon noticed that Argentines dress much more formally.

One anecdote: one evening I happened to glance at a handsome young man I passed by outside a supermarket. I was wearing a suit as I had to buy wine (for a dinner-party I’d been invited to); to my surprise, he appeared next to me in the wine section of the store; I smiled and said hello, and he said how he knew I was a foreigner....we ended up having a good time together. 

No, the first smaller one was behind ContraManas about 3 or 4 blocks and I think the larger one was too. The small one was very modern with a burnt-orange color throughout and at peak had maybe 7 or 8 customers, but extremely attractive ones. The larger one was in the same area I think. Definitely not a sex party but an on-going business. It had maybe 100 customers sometimes and was the entire floor or 2 floors of a 19th century building. I remember all the floors were old white marble 1" bathroom tiles. A few very good lookers, many not. I only went within walking distance of the Sheraton so it wasn't in Recoleta but rather in the gay area around a small park a few blocks behind ContraManos.   

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1 hour ago, tassojunior said:

No, the first smaller one was behind ContraManas about 3 or 4 blocks and I think the larger one was too. The small one was very modern with a burnt-orange color throughout and at peak had maybe 7 or 8 customers, but extremely attractive ones. The larger one was in the same area I think. Definitely not a sex party but an on-going business. It had maybe 100 customers sometimes and was the entire floor or 2 floors of a 19th century building. I remember all the floors were old white marble 1" bathroom tiles. A few very good lookers, many not. I only went within walking distance of the Sheraton so it wasn't in Recoleta but rather in the gay area around a small park a few blocks behind ContraManos.   

I do remember that place, although I forgot its name. They opened about 25 years ago and back them ere the most luxurious exclusively gay sauna in the city. The small park you describe is the Plaza Rodríguez Peña, in from of Palacio Pizzurno, home of the Secretary of Education.

I do not know if the sauna still exists.

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