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Igreja de Nossa Senhora das Dores. Our Lady of the Sorrows. Why the sorrow? It's closed for renovation. |
The plan for my three days and four nights in Paraty is decompression. I don't have a schedule. This really isn't the type of town where you have a schedule and check the items off one by one. This is more of a "sit around, lay around, and absorb" sort of town.
Today's agenda was to mosey. This is the view looking down Rua Ten. Francisco Antonion.
This is the view from the bridge Ponte Portal, looking out to the Atlantic or, at least the Bay.
Same bridge. Looking landward.
Rua Ten. Francisco Antonio. Now with horses. Well, one horse. There'll be more.
The Centro Histórico of Paraty is quite small, maybe an eight block by eight block rectangle (not a square, the blocks are longer east-west than north-south) (for some reason not germane to my moseying).
This is Igreja de Nossa Senhora do Rosário e São Benedito. Church of Our Lady of the Rosary and St. Benedict.
As befits a colonial town in Latin America, the place is lousy with churches all in a state of splendid decay. In fact, I would describe the whole of the Centro Histórico as being in a state of photogenic decay.
And then I looked down Rua Santa Rita and saw water.
Let's mosey on down to the water. Not too fast, though, we are in a moseying mood. And here, at the end of Rua Santa Rita, you're going to find this hard to believe, was:
Igreja Santa Rita! The Church of Santa Rita.
And it is protected from invasion by the French by holy cannon fire.
This would be the signature view of Paraty except that it is missing one thing. Water.
The signature view has the waters of the bay in the foreground. Which means, unless one can walk on water and I cannot, that you have to be in a boat to get that shot. I booked a boat tour for tomorrow (unofficially, by word, not internet, so it doesn't go against the spirit of the mosey). Let's see if I get that signature pic.
So let's mosey along the beach.
Well, first, let's mosey down the pier.
This is boat I booked for a two hour of the bay tomorrow, before the Brazil game in the World Cup. Everything in Brazil comes to halt when Brazil is playing in the World Cup. It's like that movie "The Day the Earth Stood Still." Only it's only Brazil that's standing still.
The Maria Flor. Looks seaworthy. But what do I know about seaworthiness.
I promised you more horses and ... I am failing to deliver. There are horse carriages in this picture:
The horses are there. Trust me. I just can't see them in the photo. They must be wearing their invisibility cloaks that they use to prevent turistas from snapping their pictures without paying for a ride. Guilty.
And we're back at the Ponte Portal, to cross over the bridge (dang that sounds so ominously final), to walk across the bridge (much less ominous) to go Praia do Portal, the main beach in the area around the historic core of Paraty.
More boats in the river or canal or creek or drainage channel or whatever it is. Google maps refuses to give this little river a name.
And we find beachfront physical fitness equipment adjacent to the beach. Including free weights! Just like Arporador and Ipanema in Rio.
But neither surfer-soaked Arporador not fancy-fancy Ipanema have a fish sculpture to match this!
They do have hippies on the beach singing, dancing and playing musical instruments however. So, on at that score, the beaches are level.
There were not many people in the water today.
More dogs that giant birds of some sort. This one looks kind of condor-ish.
It was very loud when it flew away to avoid me getting a second picture. Everyone and everything hates the paparazzi.
And just like that, it was time to scurry home to catch the Croatia/Belgium game. Yes, scurry. No time to mosey as the game had already started. Only one of those teams was going to advance to the knockout round. Belgium's nickname is the Red Devils. Because they are Satan's team. (See, e.g., King Leopold and the subjugation of the Belgian Congo.) That means Croatia was God's team, as evidenced by the fact that two Belgian shots on goal hit the crossbar. Croatia could do it with a win or a tie. And ... DRAW!!!! A glorious draw, one of those glorious draws.
Yes, watching World Cup soccer is a VERY Brazilian thing to do on vacation.
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