Thursday, April 16, 2026

TerraVentura

 We had a conversation with Timo one of three brothers who run TerraVentura the RV manufacturer in the middle of nowhere in southern Uruguay.

17 years ago two Germans came here and settled with their three adult sons who opened the RV shop even as their parents moved back to Germany. Since then they’ve built a reputation.
We have some issues to deal with since Brasilia and as annoying as it is we need to stop and finish off some work, the idea being Timo will get us set up for another five years of nomad life. 
Timo listened to us and offered solutions. First he showed us his to get rid of the second alternator which won’t stop making off noises. Then he suggested a new inverter/shore power charger system which will take voltage from 90 to 240 without burning up making it easy to travel in 220 volt countries. He also has a gasoline burning cabin heater so we should have a warm cabin on cold Patagonian or Andean nights and he’ll give our installation a look over. All this is to happen after we go to Buenos Aires next week to meet friends visiting from the States.
We checked out their refrigerators as ours has made some noise but the one they have that fits is a bit small for the chef in chief. 
The idea is to get fixed up at our leisure after we get bs knfrom Argebtina and have discharged our obligations. Then we can take off again with our house in order.
So in between making plans I read and tried to walk an unwilling Rusty and wandered around under gray skies waiting for rain that never came. 




I’m reading a book on the French Revolution which seems appropriate in these revolutionary times. Rusty watches my back. 




Many Europeans store their vehicles here while they spend summer at home. A different way to be a snowbird. 

It’s the season as winter approaches. 






Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Waiting

 We spent a rather pleasant day driving twenty minutes to the supermarket called Tienda Inglesa (“the English store”) where Layne managed to spend $120 on two modest bags of groceries.

Including a three dollar loaf of bread that tasted okay but looked interesting. The English call this “tear and share.”
I had a chat with a passing Uruguayan who was actually Colombian but resident here for 17 years. His English was excellent and he was delighted and surprised to discover we’d spent months in Colombia and greatly enjoyed it. We reminisced. But then I asked how do you afford to live here. He shrugged. We shrugged. There is no secret password that makes Uruguay more inline with the rest of the continent. He was in Miami recently and he agreed the US is cheaper. 
40 pesos to the dollar. You can ask Google: 307 UYP to USD for an exact exchange rate. 
When I walked Rusty found the block I passed a gas station and gasoline you will be delighted to know is $7:71 a US gallon while diesel is only $5:40. I guess pretty soon the shenanigans in the Strait of Hormuz will bring the prices in line.
While Rusty napped I watched the local looney shouting to himself as he sorted through the trash. Even Uruguay the paradigm of the welfare state isn’t immune I guess. 
He left behind the messiest corner of Uruguay I have seen. I was across a moat and a wall and he saw me watching him but we were too far separated to make anything of it. I saw so much destitution in northern Peru I knew I couldn’t take Africa on the ground any more. This stuff rips me up.
Uruguay has no stray dogs that I’ve seen so far. Just the one human being. 
A big old bus for sale by the side of the road. Your home on the road: 


We will end up visiting one of these one day. I’ve never heard of Uruguayan wine anymore than I had of Brazilian wine. 




We were supposed to meet the boss Tuesday but he was away. 
Windmills nearby. 
Maybe Wednesday so we can work out a repair schedule. We aren’t in a hurry so we shall see.
The concept is bizarre. Buy a field in the middle of nowhere and then decide to build and repair RVs there, far from any industrial zone where we might expect see such a business. 
We have a fridge problem, a second alternator problem, a drawer that won’t stay closed and a shore power charger we need to buy and install. Let’s see what happens. 

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Punta Del Este

Three free nights camping in Uruguay was good for the budget but Monday morning we knew we had to move south and make our way toward our date with an RV repair shop outside Montevideo.

In summer this place is apparently packed and it’s remarkable to me you can stay in this parking lot in an RV or rooftop tent for free with a dump station and a potable water faucet and distant toilets and hot showers at the marina. Much of Uruguay is as pricey as the US but then you come across this. 
Our plan was to check out Punta Del Este on our way to TerraVentura RV repair run by a German family of mechanics. Our Brazilian updates to our house systems need some refining.
The main highways are as smooth as the proverbial billiard tables while the secondary roads though paved tend to be bit patchy and rough.  We also saw several broken down cars in the road leading me to suspect Uruguay is not an easy place to live if you aren’t loaded. There are a lot of old cars being kept alive with baling wire and fervent prayer by the looks of things.

This horse had broken loose and was enjoying freedom by running in happy circles kicking and tossing his mane, staying off the road but d joying not being tied down in one small circle. I took the picture through the passenger window as Layne travels in the bed with her injured leg up as it slowly heals. 
20,000 people live in Punta del Este year round a city built in 1860 on a peninsula jutting out into the Atlantic Ocean. It has a mild climate year round between the 50s in winter and upper 70s in summer and I saw a couple of people swimming in the ocean yesterday and not in wet suits…
Luckily Layne can’t swim with her infected wound in her leg so I wasn’t put to the test but I’m thinking it’s too cold for me. 
I walked Rusty and watched a bit…
…but it was time for lunch. 
Layne thought she had found a cheapish place to have lunch and try the national sandwich the “Chivito” which means little goat though there is no goat meat involved.
Layne described it as akin to a Cuban sandwich as it has cheese ham a slice of beef lettuce tomato and a friend egg - constituting lunch with leftovers.
The sandwich was quite good if over the top and they were pet friendly so we could have taken Rusty but at his age a nap on his bed under the air conditioning was more his speed. 
We ran the a/c for his comfort and in direct sunlight we were still putting 12 amps into the batteries as the Dometic air conditioner used 21 amps to cool our dog.
Punta Del Este is not really our kind of town as it’s the summer home of jet setters, wealthy South Americans and Europeans come here to enjoy summer especially when it’s winter at home. 
It’s a city described variously as the Monaco, Miami Beach, or Saint Tropez of the South, none of which towns are my cup of tea.  
But in the Fall we easily found beach front parking a block away from our sandwiches. 
We bought some adequate fruit for $13 thinking back to messy Portuguese speaking Brazil where for ten bucks we got more fruit than we could carry and all of it delicious.
We fight drive the old town tucked away inland but the streets near the water looked like they could be in Miami.
There is no trash anywhere in Uruguay and there are lots of public dumpsters and trash cans. 


The odd thing about Punta del Este was how open the waterfront appeared. Google Maps took us round the coast toward the capital of Montevideo and we drove past miles of what looked like like totally available parking right on the beach.
I’m certain that in summer, between Christmas and the end of February this place is totally packed and sold out and full of cars but right now we had our pick. 
The coastal drive was sort of scenic especially if you enjoy architecture.

There were parking lots all along the waterfront and the beaches right behind the shrubbery you can see below. 
I saw no prohibitions on overnight parking or limited hours. 
I have no idea how feasible parking is here overnight but if we come back we might put it to the test. It was an odd contrast to the expensive waterfront realty and our experiences in Florida made me skeptical free street parking would be tolerated overnight but who knows.  





I’m guessing there is some public housing in this unaffordable country: 
We got on the road facing a 90 minute drive to TerraVentura, the RV shop. On the way we hit the infamous toll booths that are to be found on the main highways.
Since 2024 they have all been automated but there is an office by each one staffed 24 hours where you can buy a tag or refill your account. Apparently there are two ways to pay and I think I have this right you can either get billed which is more expensive or you can pre-pay using a reader like Florida’s Sunpass. So we bought the reader for our windshield. 
As we haven’t be in Argentina in ten days we loaded it with the foreigner account which had us paying $28 for unlimited use for two weeks. I got lost on the way to Montevideo (yay!) and had to drive through and back a toll booth to get back on track so I was glad we had unlimited use of the tag (double yay!).
Each toll is about four bucks which had Layne grumbling but I pointed out it’s cheaper than Mexico which I don’t think made her feel better. I quite like rolling through without stopping. You can see the office below which required us to stroll across four lanes of traffic. Luckily traffic is light and with gas at $7:70 a gallon I’m not surprised.
So now fully equipped for a week in Uruguay we drive on to our appointment. Layne has found wineries and museums so I have no doubt we will be bs j even after we fix up GANNET2 and visit Argentina across the river. A lovely 72  degree day in Uruguay: 










Mind the native wild animals: 
Up next: a conversation with the RV guy where we found our first paid campsite:
Lots of European overlanders store their vehicles here while they spend summers at home. North Americans as usual, none. Except us.