Monday, May 11, 2026

Work Starts Today

Adrián drive 75 miles Friday to the German workshop where we stopped previously and picked up supplies for our various jobs. UY Storage is the  importer of Victron electronic parts for camper builds and Adrián had stuff to gather for our build.

So after much discussion we want to install a gasoline heater which will undoubtedly blow up but before it does it will heat our cabin easily and it won’t suffer from altitude problems like a diesel heater. Nor will we have to carry separate fuel to feed it.
Our new 110 volt 3,000 watt inverter is en route from Miami supposedly so it hasn’t arrived but it should be here soon I hope and it will look like this.
And Adrián will be removing our squealing second alternator and replacing with a small blue box that will charge our house batteries from our engine battery:
Our 2 old Canadian Go Power lithium batteries, 250 amps each will be replaced by three 180 amp Victron batteries which will be the size of one of our 250 amp blocks  saving space and power. Plus we will have a new shore power charger which will take any voltage from 110 to 240:
How long will it take to install it all? Good question  meanwhile we suffer through 45 degree days in Adrián’s rental cottage.
Thank god the  rain has stopped because that put a serious damper on going outdoors. Now it’s just cold. 












Sunday, May 10, 2026

A Border Fiasco


Last Sunday we entered Uruguay from Argentina on our way to Adrián’s workshop where we are parked right now. We have crossed so many borders they don’t typically stress us very much, though for many overlanders they are one of the most feared moments on a drive through foreign countries.

We like to approach a border late in the morning after the stressed out early arrivals and local commuters have gone through and the officials have had time to have a coffee and settle into their desks. We are unstressed because we have the correct papers and they are unstressed because they have finished dealing with the Type A border crossers.  Good.

As we came off the bridge at the Uruguayan end traffic ground to a halt. There was a problem ahead. No one moved. We pulled off and watched a TV show as the officials sorted out whatever was wrong. We had started late in the day as we didn’t have far to drive so our relaxed approach led us to be still waiting to get to the checkpoint at four pm. Oh well we thought as we got back into line to see what was going on.
The line nudged through the bridge toll booth and we were just behind an Australian Land Cruiser with a Victoria State license plate. It was a slow pair of lines that inched to the first border booth.

Argentina has closed its frontier post on the west end of the bridge and nowadays both countries use the facilities at the Uruguayan  end of the bridge in Fray Bentos. We handed our vehicle temporary import permit to a dude standing roadside in an Argentine customs jacket and drove on to the green light at the first immigration booth. We got a 90 day stamp in our passports without even getting out of the car.

The customs is always harder for us because that’s where agriculture hangs out waiting to inspect dog papers, and we have some rather uncertain papers for Rusty from Brazil creating a smidgen of uncertainty. 
The vet in Uruguay assured us the permit is good for sixty days, until June 8th for us to cross any Mercosur border. Mercosur is a collection of countries forming a common market in South America,  and that allows easy passage of goods and people similar to the European Union. The US isn’t in the common market of course so we have to get the full treatment at the border with a passport stamp and a Temporary Import Permit for GANNET2. We show up with our passports and our car registration and we have Mercosur car insurance coverage but no one ever asks for that though they are supposed to…So the car part should be easy and the dog part, the final inspection point, should be too even though Uruguay has the strictest pet entry rules of any country.
So that was the scenario before we got to the border. Unbeknownst to me Layne was also privately worrying that our insurance expired in a couple of days and we hadn’t yet received our coverage letter for this next year of Mercosur car insurance coverage. It costs $900 a year for liability in every country except Colombia Venezuela and the Guyanas. As it turned out no one cared, and then the customs lady in the Uruguayan booth looked deeply embarrassed telling us the computers were down and they couldn’t process non Mercosur cars. Locals breezed through but the Australians and ourselves had to park to one side and wait for the computers to get back online. It was nearly five pm already and we were stuck.  We weren’t going to let Rusty out as we wanted to draw no attention to him and there we sat chatting with the Australians, veterans of overlanding in Africa and no strangers to bureaucratic delays.
Eventually the computers came back up and our embarrassed clerk hustled our papers and we were allowed to go. Just like that, no fridge inspection, no mention of Rusty or his papers we were free to drive into Uruguay. That worked for us and we stopped only when we were well out of sight to let Rusty out of the van for a bit. It was pitch dark by then and we were all ready to stop for the night.  
That wasn’t the end of a rather long day because I made a monumental error worthy of an inexperienced traveler: I lost sight of the decimal point.  I decided to update our highway toll account in Uruguay.  All toll booths are automated and you have to buy the local equivalent of a Sunpass and stick the transponder on your windshield. Duly noted.
I got my currency conversion muddled up and to make a long story short I put US $3,000 on our account instead of $30.  That discovery put a damper on our long awaited dinner in our van last Sunday night but to her credit Layne did not tear my head off for my stupidity. Not one word of recrimination passed her rather tense lips.
Every Uruguayan toll booth, though automated has an office on site staffed 24 hours a day so you can charge your account or ask for help. The next day  I showed them my phone screen to speed up their comprehension of my blunder and after they got a startled look on their faces they burst into laughter after I asked them to please save my marriage. You will notice the amount is preceded by a dollar sign. In Latin America that represents the local currency in this case pesos which convert at 40 to 1. So $120,000 equals $,3000 in US dollars.  I showed this to the toll booth staff:
Of course they agreed to annul the charge and let me put a more sensible thirty dollars, 1200 pesos, on my toll account. All was well after a fair bit of mockery that I richly deserved.
And some time later than expected last Monday we got on our way to the workshop after the worst border crossing we’d had in a very long time. And actually aside from having to wait a bit it wasn’t bad at all. 
The toll fiasco had looked appalling at first but even that got straightened out easily thanks to the very helpful staff. I couldn’t believe my luck. 
Almost all Uruguay’s electricity is generated by renewables and delivered by a national public utility. The country has the least blackouts of any nation in South America. 

I like driving these highways. 
Iowa in South America. 
55 mph. 


Our destination.



Saturday, May 9, 2026

Interim

Some pictures around where we are staying. I cannot deny it’s boring but the work is important. I’m hoping we will be energy independent for a few years ahead. So here we are, mostly cold and damp.


They love to grill (asado) in Uruguay just like in Argentina.  We use our Skotti grill. 
Gas grilling is frowned upon in countries where they require wood to cook meat. I like our gas burner. 



Vans awaiting conversion. 
The cement marks new column locations for a workshop to be built as the business grows.  
A local customer with a Peugeot Boxer, a common diesel variant of our Promaster, both based on the Fiat Ducato.  
Nueva Helvecia the big town nearby, cheese capital of Uruguay. New Switzerland:
Look at that smooth black top…Uruguay has quality main highways. The back roads and city streets tend to be crappy but 60 mph is easy on the main roads.
I don’t know how they do it but most of the dirt streets we’ve driven have been very good quality. Uruguay is known as the least corrupt most orderly country in Latin America. And the most expensive. 
Fall is here. Housing stock looks like good quality bungalows but people drive a lot of older cars. We see broken down cars a lot more here than you’d expect in a functioning nation. I get the feeling locals feel the high cost of living more than they might admit. 
Montevideo is the main landing port for Europeans shipping their cars to South America. They don’t hang around here much and I think that’s because Uruguay is too much like where they came from. They land on this new continent looking for adventure and mountains and folklore and llamas and all that stuff. Instead they find Iowa, so they head west towards Bolivia and Peru.  
If you’re looking for a peaceful secure country with easy tax laws to settle in, Uruguay would be a good choice. It’s not cheap here but for us it’s a nice break from the organized chaos in other countries. 
Chile is still my favorite country its spectacularly varied scenery and social cohesion similar to Uruguay’s. Our plan is to fully test our new systems once they are installed by driving around the country and checking it out fully. I’m curious to see what we find. Eventually we’ll be on the road.