Saturday, October 18
We leave our first hostel, Casa Vegana, and head to Casa Copada, located in a different neighborhood. A thirty-minute walk, backpacks on our shoulders, the sun is already blazing. Casa Copada is an old building with a wobbly pool table, a kitchen with three pots and pans lying around, and a refrigerator that purrs like an old cat. We reserve two bunk beds in a four-person dorm. The floorboards creak, the sheets smell of cheap laundry detergent: we fall under the spell of the place.
Today’s mission: track down the two local Bitcoin businesses tagged on btcmap.
Cell Ternier: Smartphone repair shop
Satoshi Crossfit: CrossFit gym, as the name suggests. The first one is closed, the second one’s owner is absent, and the coach doesn’t speak very good English: we decide to try our luck again on Monday. Next time, we’ll be better organized!
Thanks to this change of scenery, we discover the “modern” Montevideo, with its skyscrapers and wide avenues. Our stomachs are rumbling, so we take a quick break for empanadas to sample the local flavors. They’re not bad, but we need a few to fill us up!
Sunday, October 19
The staff shows up with the towel neatly folded: “We put it away so it wouldn’t blow off the line.” Group hugs all round.
Just as we’re about to head out again… the locker padlock jams solid. Thomas turns into MacGyver: grabs a screwdriver and a hammer. One hour (and a small cloud of metal dust) later, the lock lies in pieces on the floor. VICTORY!
But the afternoon is toast anyway.
First real mishap of the trip—just the warm-up round.
Monday, October 2
We cross the Rambla under a blazing sun and BAM: a roller-derby track (my heart does a full back-flip).
Andrés—healthy body, healthy mind—drops the mic:
“Bitcoin isn’t just money; it’s a philosophy.”
Another golden contact for the little black book.
Midnight, back at the hostel, still vibrating from the strikes.
One more epic encounter in the bag.
Tuesday, October 21
Quiet start—Thomas edits the Satoshi CrossFit video. Early afternoon, we roll into Flor De Kaffee, a tiny café run by a Frenchman. Three fellow bike travellers are already there: Justine, Thibault, and his wife, all stuck in the same customs nightmare. We laugh, swap war stories, compare routes. Can’t wait to hug our bikes again!
Then the bombshell: they invite us to train with the Uruguayan national team. We’re floating.
1 a.m., back to the hostel, falling asleep to the echo of perfect ippon.(Still no bikes… but the bruises are adding up nicely!
Wednesday, October 22
Thursday, October 23
We wash our socks in the hostel shower (yep, that’s the nomad life).
Stroll through Colonia’s cobblestone streets, then crash on the beach for a siesta. Pure bliss.
One full month late. We groan, curse, then shrug: our Buenos Aires plan B is stacked—kendo, Bitcoin meet-ups, Halloween party. Boredom is not an option.
We pack the bags and fall asleep daydreaming of walking Buenos Aires… on foot, for now.
