Welsh Customs
Who can resist learning about Welsh customs at exquisite tea tables served with the original daintiness and tradition? Today, the descendants of the first colonists offer these delicacies at...
Dinosaurs in Trelew
Argentinian Patagonia has given evidence of the presence of dinosaurs during several prehistoric periods. Research centers such as Egidio Feruglio Paleontological Museum and Bryn Gwyn Geological...
Pueblo de Luis, Life Stories
Entering Pueblo de Luis Museum is being touched by each memory, photograph or story showing the birth and growth of a town with Welsh roots in the middle of the Patagonian desert.
Discovering the Florentino Ameghino Dam
The Chubut River bumps into an attractive construction raised by man and is modified and enhanced by it: the Florentino Ameghino Dam. Everything has changed due to its presence and this is evident...
Gaiman’s Sea Fossils
A geological park in the open air invites visitors to get deep into the wonderful world of the geological eras in order to understand the life and death of prehistoric sea animals.
Punta Tombo, Cradle of Penguins
With a clumsy but elegant pace in their black and white suit, the amazing Magallanic penguins in Punta Tombo Reserve have become a must see to be enjoyed without haste and accompanied by the family.
Discovering Valle de los Altares
The famous area known as Valle de los Altares is the perfect site to enjoy the day. Huge natural cliffs emerge from the land to amaze visitors.
Discovering Gaiman, a Welsh Town
If there is one place in Argentina where Welsh roots evoke those immigrants who landed in America in search of a better world, that place is certainly Gaiman.
Skiing in Argentina is a unique experience capable of attracting tourists from all over the world to the privileged winter centers in our country. The coming of the snow tinges everything in white while winter sports summon more and more followers day after day. They enliven the ski resorts and the snow parks from the Province of Mendoza to southernmost Tierra del Fuego.
The wine-making region in Argentina spreads at the foothills of the Andean Mountain Range along over 2,400 km., from the Province of Salta to the Province of Río Negro, with a variety of climates and soils that makes each region a unique land.
Abundant sunny days and thermal amplitude favor a good maturity and concentration of aroma and color in the grain.