South America Blog
About this blog
Wayne Bernhardson is the author of Moon Handbooks to Buenos Aires, Chile, Argentina, and Patagonia. Here he shares his vast knowledge of South America and its people.
Recent Posts
- The Great Patagonian Ice Theft
- On Wednesday: Around the Southern Cone
- Argentine Trains: Off the Rails, So to Speak
- Book Review: The Practical Nomad
- Torres del Paine: The Final Word for 2012?
- Subte's Soaring Fares; Airports & Ashes
- Paine's Road Back; Chiloé Concerns
- Tango Mexicano, ¿Rancheras Argentinas?
- Book Review: Malbec Conquers the Wine World
- Paine Catches Fire: the Aftermath
- Paine Catches Fire
- Cancer with Perón?
- Saturday Sundries: Chaitén, the Carretera Austral, Argentina's At-tax Dogs
- The Malvinas Museum of Argentina
- Patagon Journal Takes Off; Cape Horn's in Dutch

A Mighty Wind Hits Buenos Aires
After I descended from a five-hour bus ride at Buenos Aires’s Retiro bus terminal at 6:15 this morning, the ensuing taxi ride to my Palermo apartment took me through a scene of arboreal devastation. An early morning storm, with high winds, had left dozens of fallen trees and limbs, ripping some of them straight out of the soil. As of this evening, some of them are still blocking streets and sidewalks (as pictured here, barely a block from my place), though it's clear and sunny, and the winds have abated.
Some 40 cars suffered damage from falling branches, at least one bicyclist was hospitalized after being hit, and the wind even lifted the roof off a large downtown gas station. In the Buenos Aires province town of Caseros, a pedestrian was electrocuted by a high-tension cable, and in some areas it was necessary to shut the electricity off for several hours.
In fact, this is a predictable occurrence whenever a big storm hits the city. In part, it’s because of the near total lack of maintenance - rather than being regularly pruned, street trees here are often left to grow up to seven or eight stories, rather than being kept at a uniform height. The branches often spread out of control as well, with many weak joints that are almost certain to break under the stress of a big storm. Rotted or rotting branches and trunks are rarely removed.
In a warming world, Buenos Aires (and all big cities) need more shade trees. But taking care of the ones they already have is at least as important - rather than just showing up with chain saws, a few days later, to clean up the mess.
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