Best Argentina Tours

All Inclusive Vacations

Argentina Travel - Buenos Aires All inclusive vacations - Buenos Aires History Tour

Buenos Aires Secrets - 7 days / 6 nights


Argentina Travel - Argentina All inclusive vacations - Gaucho Adventure Tour

Gaucho Adventure - 7 days / 6 nights


Sightseeing Tours

Argentina Travel - Buenos Aires Tours - Sightseeing tours - All About Evita Tour

All About Evita - half day tour


Argentina Travel - Argentina Tours - Ranch Tours - Horseback riding - Estancia Argentina Tour

Day at the Estancia - full day tour


Argentina Travel - Buenos Aires Tours - Sightseeing tours - Recoleta Cemetery History Tour

Recoleta Cemetery - half day tour


How to understand Argentineans

Argentina’s own language

National culture, ser nacional (national being), cultura rioplatensecultura gauchescacultura criolla (creole culture). In Argentina the word creole often has a different connotation than in the rest of Latin America. While in most countries the word is used to refer to the offspring of Europeans born in the Americas, in Argentina it generally connotes a person of mixed origins, European (mainly Spanish) and Native American. Many people use it as a synonym for gaucho (Argentine cowboys) and mestizo. It is also known as cultura rioplatense (River Plate culture). This is a more inclusive concept, as it refers to the culture of Uruguayans and Argentines inhabiting the River Plate

Argentine Tango - Buenos Aires typical instrument, the Bandoneon

Argentine Tango - Buenos Aires typical instrument, the Bandoneon

Basin region. Official conservative interpretations of the Argentine culture have often emphasized the Spanish and Catholic heritage, rooted in the early contributions made by Queen Isabel of Castille and Ferdinand of Aragon, artifices of the conquest of the Americas in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth century. Latin Americans often identify Argentines as “ Ches,” a colloquial form of address for the second person, similar to the American “hey, you.” This is the reason Ernesto Guevara, the Argentine-born commander of the Cuban Revolution, was called “ el Che.”

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