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Classical Music and Wine Make a Perfect Pairing

Friday, April 22nd, 2011

For the past two weeks Mendoza has gone classy, with bodegas and orchestras teaming up to create memorable evenings of good wine and gorgeous music.  The festival is called Festival Musica Clasica Por Los Caminos del Vino and features classical music concerts in venues throughout the city as well as several events in local bodegas. Last Wednesday I was pleased to attend part of the series at Teatro Independencia.  Presenting a program of interpretations of composers Scriabin, Liszt, Smetana, and Glinka, the Symphonic Orchestra of the Universidad Nacional de Cuyo enchanted the audience for two hours. A highlight of the show included the impressive Korean pianist Liza Chung, who seemed to play the score with her entire being.

This weekend wraps up the final events of the series in and around Mendoza, with concerts today at Clos de los Siete and the Wine Museum in Maipu.  I would highly recommend treating yourself to a concert or two this weekend!

Up coming concerts include:

Tonight

20.00 Lázaro Mendolas, quinteto. Pablo Grosman, Lucas Altamore (violines) Mauro Marquet (viola), Noelia Pavez  (cello),  Juan Lázaro Mendolas (quena). Obras de Lázaro Mendolas, Olmos, Molina, Caba y García. Museo del Vino (Maipú).

20.00 Trio Ar.Co. Dora De Marinis, (piano), Marianna Kononenko (cello-Rusia). Tatiana Tchijova (violín). Trío op 50, Tcahaikowky. Casa Burgos (San Rafael).

20.00 Duo Violín y Piano. Jaume Llinares Giner – Anais Crestin. Obras de Beethoven, Brahms, Tchaikowsky.Museo Municipal de Arte Moderno(Plaza Independencia).

20:30 Cuarteto Numen. Obras de: Glazunov, Bragato, Matos Rodríguez. Capilla Patrimonial de Malargue.

21.30 Concierto de la Orquesta Filarmónica de Mendoza. Coro Universitario: Dir.: Silvana Vallesi. Solistas: Soledad de la Rosa (Soprano) – Gloria López, Contralto, Cristian Mella, tenor, bajo. Dirección General: Ligia Amadio. Obra: Réquiem en re menor K 626. Teatro Independencia.

Saturday

11.30 Dúo Soledad de la Rosa – Anais Crestin. Obras Italianas. Bodegas Salentein (Tupungato)

12.00 Tangastor. Obras de Astor Piazzolla. Bodega Dominios del Plata (Agrelo, Luján de Cuyo).

13.30 Cuarteto de Cuerdas Gianneo – Buenos Aires. Obras de: Piazzolla, Gianneo, Dvorak. Bodegas Atamisque (Tupungato).

17.00 Trío de Cuerdas Stephanie Boutonnier,violín, Mariana Kononenko, cello, Dimitry Kvrivishvili, viola. Programa de Bach : Aria, Bodin de Boismortier: Sonate, Mozart: Rondo del concierto en Sol mayor para violín, Saint Saens:Danse Macabre, Massenet: Elegie. Bodega Lurton (Vista Flores, Tunuyán).

17.00 Mariana Rodríguez Rial (canto), Sebastián Zavala (órgano), Ancelma Rosales (oboe). Música  barroca. Bodega Dante Robino.

18.00 Ciclo de Piano en la Capilla. Dúo de flauta y piano. Nicolás Ojeda – José Luis López Morán (Piano). Obras de Beethoven, Guastavino, Scarlatti, Liszt. Auditorio Patrimonial de Cámara.

18.00 Grupo Experimental Amicana. Música sacra contemporánea: Obras de: Gallus, Torrejon y Velazco, Dávila, Moruja, Duruflée y Busto. Capilla de Nuestra Señora del Rosario de Malargüe.

19.00 Ciclo de Guitarras en la Biblioteca. Dúo Mano a Mano. Federio Tomba – Adrián Bassi: Obras de Martin, Pujol, Gnatalli. Biblioteca Pública General San Martín.

19.00 Ensamble L’Alto. Director: Fernando Giunta. Obras de Leopold Mozart, Baston, Hassenver, Telemann. Museo Fader (Luján de Cuyo).

20.00 Camerata Cordoba Nueva. Obras: “Las cuatro estaciones”, Vivaldi. Bodega Binchi (San Rafael).

20.00 Cuarteto Encore. Obras de : Hindemith, Brahmas. Bodegas Faraó (General Alvear).

20.00 Compañía Danza Teatro El Arbol. Dir.: Vilma Rúpolo. Aria Madres- Tras los Cristales. ECA.

20.00 Duo violoncello y piano.Fernando Gentile (Violoncello), Laura Brunetti (Piano) (Rosario).Obras de Brahms, Lasala, Juan José Castro. MMAMM (Plaza Independencia).

20.00 Violetta Club. Bodegas San Huberto (Guardia Vieja 1100-Vistalba-Luán de Cuyo).

21.00 Grupo Zeffiro y Jimena Semiz. Bodega Fantelli (Retamo s/n, Santa Rosa).

21.30 Gala de Pianistas. Homenaje a Liszt. Leonardo Gell (Cuba), Marcelo Balat (Buenos Aires), Analía Marigliano (Mendoza). Obras de Bach –Busoni, Brahms, Liszt, Beethoven, López Gavilán, Chopin. Teatro Independencia.

Sunday

11.00 Cuarteto Ziklus.Obras de : Mozart, Piazzolla. Bodegas O. Faurnier (San Carlos).

12.00 Dúo de Canto y Piano. Mariana Rodríguez (soprano) y Tatiana Tackmanova (Piano). Dúo de Flauta y Piano Adriano Calcagno (flauta) – Andrea Hoz (Piano). Obras de Mozart, Bellini, Dvorak, Puccini, Vivaldi, Liebermann. Sala Elina Alba.

18.00 Ciclo de Piano en la Capilla. Duo de piano a cuatro mano. sAna Inés Aguirre – Javier  Villegas (San Juan)Obras de Pompeyo Camps, Donostia, Brahms, Poulenc, Ravel. Auditorio Patrimonial de Cámara.

19.00 Ciclo de Guitarras en la Biblioteca. Federico Tomba- guitarra. Obras de Ponce, Torroba, Sinesi, Pujol. Biblioteca Pública General San Martín.

21.30 Megaconcierto Clausura del Festival. Artistas locales e invitados en la velada de despedida. Teatro Independencia.



Malbec World Day

Saturday, April 16th, 2011

Tomorrow marks the first ever Malbec World Day, a celebration of Argentina’s flagship grape varietal taking place in over forty-seven countries worldwide! Here in Mendoza, the weekend is full of Malbec-related activities and the main even happens today at Tupungato Winelands. Over 200 special guests have been invited to enjoy a cocktail party, hot air balloon rides, and a special auction of vintage Argentine wines. A 1984 Luigi Bosca Malbec worth 2,000 pesos will be sold, as well as a rare 1981 Finca Flichman Caballero de la Cepa.

Elsewhere, in cities like New York, London, and Shanghai, similar events are taking place throughout the weekend. In an interesting international collaboration, wine experts from the U.S., Canada and the UK have been invited to Mendoza to team up with a local winery and pick Argentine grapes. Those grapes will then be shipped in temperature controlled containers back to each country, where they will be crushed and made into wine by local winemakers. In one year the wines will be tasted to see who’s is best!

April 17th has been chosen for Malbec World Day because it marks the day in 1853 when the Quinta Agronomica bill was passed, providing more government funds for agriculture, and specifically the development of vineyards in Argentina. This bill changed the future of local wine forever, and now Argentina is the fifth largest producer of wine worldwide. That’s a pretty good reason to celebrate!

Of course, the best way to celebrate is by drinking lots of delicious Malbec! For tomorrow only The Vines of Mendoza is offering 30% off all bottles of Malbec in our online store! Just type “Malbec” in the offer code box at the top of the screen to get the discount. Take advantage of this great deal and help us “festejar” this important day for Mendoza and Argentine wineries!

A bit about some of the Malbecs you can find in our online store:

2007 Atamisque Malbec  $49

Concentrated and elegant with many layers.

2007 Bacan Reserva Malbec $35

Round and juicy with sweet notes of mint and caramel.

2006 Bodega del Genio Malbec $19

Bold, dark fruit and warm spices.

2007 Bressia Monteagrelo Malbec $30

Powerful yet delicate, an enticingly complex wine.

2007 Caligiore Malbec $15

A savory Malbec with eucayptus and pepper notes.

2004 Cavagnaro Malbec $40

Full and jammy with hints of smoke and coffee.

2006 Dona Silvina Reserva Malbec $69

Rich and complex, with black cherry and floral notes.

2005 Enrique Foster Limited Edition Malbec $60

Get it while it lasts! A local favorite.

2006 Enrique Foster Terruno Lunlunta $31

Lots of berry fruit and good concentration.

2007 Gimenez Riili Reserva Malbec $49

Red and black berries with vanilla and toast.

2006 Inizio Reserva Malbec $23

Earthy, with black fruit and clove.

2006 Laborum Malbec $49

Deeply concentrated with ripe plum and hazelnut.

2006 Lindaflor Malbec $51

Lovely and balanced, a wine to fall in love with.

2006 Maia Malbec $23

Juicy red fruit perfect for picnics!

2005 Montecinco Malbec $79

Rated worlds best Malbec in 2008.

2006 Ricomenciare Altisimo Malbec $40

Cherries and earthy notes, one-of-a-kind.

2009 Serbal Malbec $22

Young and fresh, with lively tannin and plum jam.

Happy Malbec World Day everyone! Let the vino flow!!

About the author: Cara De Lavallade is a Level II Court of Masters Sommelier from Seattle, Washington. Temporarily relocated to Mendoza, she is smelling and tasting all she can to gain a better understanding of the local juice.  Look for her wine reviews, bodega visits, and other winey musings on The Vines of Mendoza blog this spring.



A big year for the Argentina Wine Awards

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

Go Argentine wines!! Each year Mendoza hosts the Argentina Wine Awards, the most important competition for  Argentine export wines.  This year, with a record-breaking number of entries (over 700 samples were submitted), the local wines received more praise than ever before!

With the goal of promoting wine exports in key markets, the event consists of three parts: a blind tasting by an international panel of judges, a seminar in which the judges are able to share impressions and critiques with an audience of industry professionals, and finally the award ceremony and celebratory cocktail party.

This year’s edition, titled “World’s Best Sommeliers”, featured twelve international Masters of Wine chosen specially for their knowledge of the international market.  Renowned sommeliers from France, China, and the U.S. joined together with six highly-respected local winemakers to form the panel this February. Organized in a double-blind tasting format, the wines were judged using a 20-point system.

With more praise for Torrontes, Syrah, and Bonarda this year, the judges emphasized Argentina’s need for diversity in the export market.  Though Malbec has been extremely successful in recent years as Argentina’s emblematic varietal, the judges stressed that the industry will do well to focus on improving and promoting the other varietals that shine in this region.

Nineteen wines received trophies this February, more than have been awarded in any year since the inception of the competition in 2007.   88 gold medals as well as 332 silver and 220 bronze medals were also given out over the course of the evening.

Curious about which wines took home the medal? Here’s the list!

Trophy Winners:

-Doña Paula Estate Sauvignon Blanc 2010 (Sauvignon Blanc)

- Callia Reserve Torrontés 2010 (Torrontes)

- Xumek Chardonnay 2010, Xumek (Chardonnay)

- Argento Bonarda 2009 (Bonarda)

- Kaiken Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 (Cabernet Sauvignon)

- Bodegas Santa Ana La Mascota Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 (Cabernet Sauvignon)

- Vina Cobos Bramare Appellation Cabernet Sauvignon 2008 (Cabernet Sauvignon)

- Trivento Golden Reserve Syrah 2008 (Syrah)

- Las Moras Gran Shiraz Zonda Valley 2006 (Syrah)

- Trapiche Broquel Malbec 2009 (Malbec)

- Punto Final Reserva Malbec 2008 (Malbec)

- Bramare Vineyard Designation Rebon Malbec 2008 (Malbec)

- Monteviejo Lindaflor Malbec 2006 (Malbec)

- Trivento Amado Sur 2009 (Red Blend)

- Benvenuto de la Serna Trisagio 2006 (Red Blend)

- Caro 2007 (Red Blend)

- Felix Blend 2007 (Red Blend)

- Famiglia Bianchi Late Harvest 2007 (Sweet/Dessert)

- Susana Balbo Late Harvest Torrontes 2010 (Sweet/Dessert)



Conference Call | Argentine Wine Sales and Trends in the US Market

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

Argentine wines are hot right now in the US market and have seen substantial and sustained growth over the last few years. The Vines has invited a few top industry experts, who have seen and dealt with this growth first hand, to talk about the current status of Argentine wine in the US market, how it has changed over the last 10 years and what is in store for the future of Argentine wine brands.

The Vines co-founders Michael Evans and Pablo Gimenez Riili, along with consulting winemaker Santiago Achaval, will be joined by Sharon Sevrens, the proprietor of Amanti Vino which was recently named wine retailer of the week in the Wall Street Journal, and Nick Ramkowsky, the founder of Vine Connections, a wine importer specializing in Argentine wines and Japanese sake.

Join us on Wednesday February 16th at 5pm EST

To register for this call click here

There will be a live twitter chat for questions and comments. (@vinesofmendoza) You can use hashtags #vom and #vomtalk to follow the conversation on Twitter!

We will also record the conversation and share it as a podcast at  www.vinesofmendoza.com.

We look forward to your participation! Saludos!



Argentina Lures Bankers Dreaming of Owning Their Own Vineyard - Bloomberg

Monday, January 24th, 2011

For his 50th birthday two years ago, Phil Asmundson, vice chairman of technology at Deloitte LLP, flew to Argentina for a vacation and ended up buying a vineyard.

As a long-time wine collector, making his own was a secret dream. During harvest in March or April, he’ll fly down from New York to pick malbec grapes and play cellar rat.

Asmundson bought 3 acres of land in the Uco Valley for just under $200,000 from Vines of Mendoza, a five-year-old company in Argentina that sells parcels of prime vineyard acreage, plants them to owners’ specifications, then manages caretaking and winemaking. Owners can participate as much or as little as they wish. The 87 so far come from 7 states and 9 countries.

“There aren’t many passions that are made easy to do,” says Asmundson. “This was turnkey.”

The other deciding factors? He loves the country’s signature malbec grape, and was persuaded that the wines could be “really great quality” because Vines of Mendoza has the help of well-known winemaker Santiago Achaval.

When the deal was final, he and his wife celebrated with bottles of Salentein Primus malbec ($45) from Argentina and Heitz Trailside cabernet ($80) from Napa.

Vines of Mendoza sent him a case of unmarked wines to taste, and used his notes to help focus the style of wine he wanted to make.

Luxury Resort

On a freezing December day, I caught up on the latest developments with co-founder Michael Evans, 45, bronzed from days in vineyard sun, at Manhattan’s Topaz Thai restaurant. Over a spicy salad lunch, he clicked through drawings on his laptop of the company’s new luxury resort, opening in 2012, where vineyard owners like Asmundson can stay while playing vintner, and tourists can be part of the wine lifestyle.

Lots of glass, local stone, a tiny wine blending lab, courses on Argentine wines — it looked like ambitious high-end Napa with South American cowhide flair and a breathtaking snowcapped Andes backdrop. What started in 2005 as a way for Evans, now 45, to afford his personal vineyard-owning dream has expanded into a range of ventures.

“I alternated between working in wireless technology and politics, but was also passionate about wine,” he said.

Exhausted by the John Kerry presidential campaign, he was vacationing in Argentina when he was introduced to Pablo Gimenez Riili by a bookseller in Buenos Aires. The two became business partners and in 2006, after looking at 76 pieces of land, they settled on 1,000 acres accessible only by horseback in the Uco Valley south of the city of Mendoza, near top wineries Bodegas Salentein and Clos de la Siete.

Financial Crash

They ran up credit card debt and tapped friends, family, and angels for $5 million in costs and $500,000 in legal fees, and started offering 3 to 18-acre parcels in 2007. More than 50 of the total 100 sold quickly, but all stalled in 2008.

“You don’t know how hard it is to sell a $200,000 vineyard when the financial world is crashing,” Evans said. In 2010, though, they unloaded another 25. Planting 1.3 million vines, building a winery, and more has cost another $15 million.

There are hundreds of wineries in the Mendoza region, but on my first trip in 2001, there was no wine bar in Mendoza city where you could taste the best. So Vines of Mendoza opened The Tasting Room in March 2007, then a retail shop and wine bar in the city’s Park Hyatt hotel in 2008. They started a wine club, with a warehouse in Napa and recently added a downloadable insider’s guide to the region on the Vines of Mendoza website.


Mid-Life Crisis

Judging from the emails I receive, the owning-a-vineyard fantasy is especially popular among wine lovers in midlife crisis mode looking for a life-change. There are now dozens of projects catering to them.

In Oregon wine country near McMinnville is just-launched Hyland Vineyard Estates, a 154-acre project where winemaker Laurent Montalieu is offering homesites with already planted vines he’ll manage for $700,000 to more than $1 million. Planned communities of home-plus-vineyard are also being sold in Portugal’s Alentejo and France’s Languedoc regions.

Evans sent me a barrel sample of Vines of Mendoza’s first wine, a blend of owners’ malbec grapes, that will be released in March. It was smooth and balanced with lots of dark fruit and earth flavors, though it certainly wasn’t the best Argentine malbec I’ve had.

“It’s not only people with 3,000 bottle cellars who buy, says Evans. “These are investment bankers, doctors looking for participatory vacations.” And, of course the chance to make wine they’d like to put their name on.

Restaurateur Puck

They also include restaurateur Wolfgang Puck and a Napa vintner. London-based Nick Smith originally bought in for investment but says owning his 3 acres has turned him into passionate wine buff.

Just after Christmas I received a holiday e-mail from Evans, who was back home in Mendoza with his chocolate Labrador, throwing meat on the grill for friends at his regular Sunday asados. He sent a beautiful photo of sunrise over the company’s vineyards in Mendoza. Outside my door was a foot of snow.

I remembered a comment from Asmundson, whose wine, from bought grapes, is now in barrel and will be bottled in 2012 in time to serve at Thanksgiving.

“When I think about my vineyard, I smile,” he said. “I just wish I’d bought 5 acres.”

Elin McCoy writes on wine and spirits for Muse, the arts and leisure section of Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are her own.)

To contact the writer of the story: Elin McCoy at elinmccoy@gmail.com.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Manuela Hoelterhoff in New York at mhoelterhoff@bloomberg.net.



2010 The Vines- A Photographic Year in Review

Friday, December 31st, 2010

2010 is rapidly coming to a close and it has been a very busy year for us in Mendoza at The Vines. We have built phase I of our winery, had our first harvest from our first vineyards planted in 2007, created a new high tech blending lab in our downtown Tasting Room, planted more than 125 acres of new vineyards and now have a family of 85 international vineyard owners as well as many friends, family, Wine Club members and employee’s which have made this all possible.

We decided to highlight some of our favorite moments throughout the year, however, there are too many to count and if we included them all it would probably end up being a feature length film!

We are thankful to everyone who has made this possible and invite you all to come and visit us in 2011!



The Vines in Worth Magazine

Friday, December 10th, 2010

“We may not make the same decisions, but I can trust that he’s going to make a good one,” Evans says of partner Pablo Gimenez-Riili.”

MICHAEL EVANS AND PABLO GIMENEZ RIILI

WHAT THEY DO:

Co-founders of Vines of Mendoza, a cooperative vineyard in Argentina (vinesofmendoza.com)

HOW THEY TEAMED UP:

After an exhausting stint as a consultant to John Kerry’s 2004 presidential campaign, Evans came to Argentina for a three-week vacation and met Riili through a mutual friend. The two hit it off and spent several days visiting vineyards in the Mendoza, a rugged province in western Argentina. When Evans expressed interest in starting his own small operation, Riili explained that, below a certain amount of acreage, grape growing wasn’t financially feasible. So the two concocted the idea of a co-op in which investors could own fractions of a vineyard, bringing in several of Evans’ friends to purchase the land and start the Vines of Mendoza operation.

Read the complete article here.



The Vines in Los Andes

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Estamos en un rincón del Valle de Uco (más precisamente en Los Sauces, Tunuyán, sobre ruta 94). Entre viñedos plantados en una extensión tan grande que es posible hacer una panorámica de 360° y tan sólo ver las vides que se encuentran con las montañas, hilando fino vemos el Tupungato. Estamos en Private Vineyard States de The Vines of Mendoza.

Éste es un proyecto de grandes dimensiones que tiene su veta turística, entre otras. Más de 80 inversores del mundo han comprado viñas allí (de entre una y dos ha.) seducidos por el momento del vino argentino y con el deseo de vinificar en esta promisoria tierra. Aficionados, la mayoría de ellos, atesoraban el deseo de producir su propio vino mendocino y en esa empresa devinieron bodegueros.

Hace 4 años que el proyecto dio sus primeros pasos. Cada propietario decidió qué varietales plantar (lo mismo que harán los futuros adquirentes). Si bien son varios, el Malbec es el que manda. Todas las decisiones son tomadas por los dueños y The Vines les presta los servicios que soliciten en la tarea de producir. Así, algunos delegan todo el proceso a los idóneos locales (viniendo una vez cada un par de años) y otros deciden hacerlo personalmente. Tal es el caso de Luis Torres, un financista brasileño que por estos días ha llegado a Mendoza para hacer los cortes de sus vinos.

Leer el artículo completo aquí



The Vines in the New York Times

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

THE sunlight sliced through the clear glass of the gazebo-like restaurant at Familia Zuccardi, one of dozens of wineries located in the small town of Maipú, just outside the city of Mendoza, Argentina. The purple-red malbec and torrontés grapevines glistened in the early afternoon sun. Inside, a waitress poured us chardonnay as bread sticks and an appetizer of ham ravioli arrived. She brought a different chardonnay for the cannelloni filled with sweetbread. Then a hearty malbec, Argentina’s signature wine, accompanied the main course of baby goat rolls filled with sun-dried tomatoes and aubergine.

For the apple with cardamom soup, oak ice cream and goat cheese — the “pre-dessert” on this tasting menu — a sweet white wine cleared the palate. Then one more malbec appeared for the dessert of yerba mate foam with grapefruit and orange caviar.

After getting up from the table, more than a little lightheaded, we passed through a courtyard where visitors had put their feet up and were sipping tea while reading books amid the chirping birds and warm sun peeking through the trees. No one seemed in any rush to leave.

Such is winery-hopping in Mendoza — Latin America’s largest winemaking region. Situated some 600 miles west of Buenos Aires, the province is home to more than 800 wineries, about 100 of which actively receive tourists. And as Argentine wine exports continue to grow by 25 percent a year, this 57,000-square-mile area is drawing not only more tourists, but also vintners, who see in Mendoza the same charm and potential that propelled more established wine regions decades ago.

“Mendoza is Napa 30 or 40 years ago,” said Michael Evans, a former Democratic campaign strategist from Washington, D.C., who moved to Mendoza six years ago to go into the wine business.
(more…)



For Argentina, a moment in time: Kirchner & the Census

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

1027

Today, October 27 th,  is a momentous day in the history of Argentina. Two dramatic events have or are taking place. In the news this morning, ex-president and husband of current Argentine president, Nestor Kirchner died from a heart attack in El Calafate at the young age of 60. He has had a huge impact on Argentine politics over the last 7 years and was thought of as a top contender for the 2011 presidential election. Now Cristina will have to reign the country alone, we will have to stay tuned as to the always interesting and sometimes turbulent politics will challenge her and her party. It is said there is now a big hole in Argentine politics now that Nestor is gone.   (photo by Jorge Saenz/File/AP Photo)

Also in the news is the national Argentine Census. Basically the entire country shuts down for 1 day while they take a count. This is an interesting method, maybe more effective than that in the US, where is is taken over the course of 10 months. Everyone is by law required to stay in their house for the Census to come and then ask questions and document your presence. The hours are between 8am and 8pm and there are 2 types of questionnaires. If you live in the city you will be asked a brief 35 questions, whereas if you live in a private gated neighborhood, in the country, the ghetto, etc they will be asking 67 questions. I had the pleasure to engage in this civic duty this morning and the questions were interesting, not sure how much they are going to get from it and/or who created the list of questions. Obviously there are the regular:

first name?
age?
marital status?
do you have a refrigerator, bathroom?
computer, cellular phone?
education?

My favorite though was- Did you work at least 1 hour last week?

Really… what is this question? Nothing about profession, part time, full time, temporary work, employee, own a business… I think those might be more interesting and constructive questions. But, well that is what it was.

So today in Argentina it is both a national holiday in honor of the census as well as a day of mourning as one of their great political leaders passes into the history books.