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Here I will copy a tour I used to do for your reference:
The wheather like was pretty clear, shadowly fresh and sunny mild. (I don’t know if these expression make sense to you, for me they do). The tour started with a non relevant delayed because of an important (5-days) subway strike. Aine (Irish) and Simone (Swiss) wanted to know the city off the beaten track, not just the usual monuments that they could find themselves. So I though of a full Belgrano tour, the neighbourhood where I was born and I grew up.
Belgrano C. proudly possess the noisiest corner in the City and from that music horns buzzy noise (you cannot hear the person next to you) we walk to the noisiest corner of Belgrano R. where we could see and listen to different birds on the parks. History is really everywhere you look and Argentinean ’76 dictatorship is still very fresh in our minds. We’ve learned the story of St. Patricks massacre of the Palotino’s pastors where it happened. They were targeted as a negative influence on young people’s mind and that was enough to get them assassinated on their parish on July 1976.
The Belgrano R. cobblestone streets lead as to a restaurant to try the Sandwiches de Miga (don’t idea the translation, just google it) around Plaza Castelli. Afterwards we’ve returned to the other side of the Neighborhood to surprise ourselves with an ancient (and gigantic) Ombú tree in the backyard of the colonial museum. Heading down through Plaza Barrancas and the Porteño’s Statue of Liberty, a little piece of that history arose again.
We ended up, after a tea walking in Las Cañitas where as the sun went down, pubs and restos were lighting up to celebrate once again the beginning of the weekend.