Well, then : Spanish for Travelers

Language is hard, be it your own or (God forbid) someone else’s. However, without language we’re reduced to charades which is embarrassing and hard and imprecise. This means language is essential–especially for non-mime travelers.

As followers of our Journey  know, we have been slowly but surely chipping away at the Spanish language over the past year or so. First, there was Pimsleurs and we listened to lessons in our truck which we found mildly useful in a non-visual, purely audio way. The price tag can be a problem, however and the haphazard hopscotch through the rules and principles of the language gave us a headache. Rosetta Stone? Too much repetition. Too much repetition.

Then we spent five weeks attending the IMAC language school in Guadalajara where we made some progress despite being frustrated and limited by the strict “no English” policy. Our adorable teacher did end up in a music video for Mexican pop superstar Alejandro Fernandez thanks to us, so something good came out of it.

Lately we’ve become aware of a new type of Spanish language learning program designed for travelers. It’s called Bueno Entonces (which basically means “Well, then” in Spanish) from a company called General Linguistics (which does sound like a made up James Bond movie type of company name, but whatever). You can take each lesson on your computer, iPad, iPhone or iPod and, after quickly previewing the first level of lessons, here’s what we like:

  • lots of cheeky attitude (make us laugh and this whole process sucks a lot less)
  • snappy musical interludes
  • plenty of hysterical (one-sided) flirting between David and the teacher, Jimena
  • a concentration on JUST the type of language and grammar skills a traveler would need in order to be understood and respected in a Spanish-speaking country
  • color-coded graphics that differentiate verbs from pronouns from adjectives in a given sentence at a glance
  • arrows (behind and ahead) indicating whether a verb conjugation is past or present or future tense
  • a simultaneous English translation of the lesson at the bottom of the screen which makes it easy to grasp how Spanish sentence structure differs from English sentence structure
  • rapid fire speech–this is the reality on the ground in any Spanish speaking country where people talk like the world is about to end and they only have 18 seconds to say what’s on their minds


Take alook at what the heck we’re talking about in this video.


We will be spending more time with our Bueno Entonces Spanish language program and we’ll report back as we learn more. Until then, saludos!

In the meantime, you can try Pimsleur Spanish I and Spanish II audio-only programs for $460 dollars at Amazon, or spend $149 on the audio and visual (and entertaining) Bueno Entonces program.

Buy Bueno Entonces, Now 30% Off, only $147.




4 Comments - Join the conversation »


We Talk Pretty One Day – Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico

Learning a new language is hard. If you don’t know what we’re talking about then you never learned a second language OR you’re one of those freaks who love to conjugate verbs, gobble up new grammar like it’s gummy bears, can’t wait to wade through new vocabulary and says things like “Next, I think I’ll learn Swahili…”. Yeah, we’re talking about YOU Megan.

Anyway, we’ve just completed five weeks of Spanish language immersion classes at a school in Guadalajara called IMAC. With the help of our teacher Saray (pitcure a 23 year old Spanish-speaking Julie McCoy after a few double espressos), we learned four new tenses, a ton of new vocabulary and more grammar rules then we remember ever learning in English.  Right now it’s all a muddle of Spanglish in our heads.

Why did we choose to torture ourselves at IMAC as opposed to any of the other language school options in Guadalajara like CEPE or the Harvest Language Center? Well, after fairly exhaustive comparative research, it became clear that most language schools are essentially the same and you’re just  not going to know which one works  best for you until you’re sitting there in class. Also, IMAC was offering a two-for-one special.

Conicidentally, near the end of our course, the “Travel with Val” program on NY1, a local news station in our hometown of New York City, aired a segment on IMAC.

So, did we learn how to comprehend, read, write and speak Spanish? This post is in English, isn’t it? Seriously, we know a LOT more about speaking, reading, writing and understanding Spanish then we did five weeks ago–and certainly more than we did after graduating from our weak high school Spanish classes. Karen’s two big take-aways from two years of high school Spanish are that she knows all of the words to Cielito Lindo and she can remember that her “Spanish” name was Ramona. Thanks, public school.

However, it’s going to take a heck of a lot more than five weeks to get us speaking with confidence, but we’re on our way. Our skills are WAY better than this guy’s

We have to say, we came up with what must rank as the best gracias por todo gift a Spanish language student ever gave their 23-year-old female teacher: access to the set where Alejandro Fernández–a singer almost inconceiveably huge in Latin America–was shooting his latest music video. Many thanks, also, to our friend Pepe Homs, an executive producer at  Cedro Films and co-owner of the awesome Casa del Atrio in the city of Queretaro, for making dreams come true. Again.

Trust us when we tell you that Alejandro Fernández is hotter (and more universally appealing) than a cross between Justin Timberlake, the Jonas Brothers, Frank Sinatra and Barry White. Oh, and he’s about to embark on an eight city, month-long tour of the US in the spring so check your local listings.

Where are we headed next? Don’t you know not to ask us that by now? All we can tell you with any certainty is that wherever we go, they’ll speak Spanish when we get there.


—————————————————————————–
How you can support the Trans-Americas Journey:

If you are interested in learning Spanish, check out our Amazon store for our personally recomended Spanish language learning products and resources.

Listen to and buy Alejandro Fernández’s new Album, Dos Mundos (Two Worlds) – Two albums produced and released at the same time. One is a pop album (Evolución), the other contains traditional ranchera and mariachi music (Tradición).

Or, Shop at the iTunes Music Store.

Note: If you purchase any of these products from the Amazon or iTunes links above, you help fund on our Journey just a little bit, without paying a penny more. As they say, muchas gracias.




[geo_mashup_map]


Leave a comment


A Week in the Life – Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico

We apologize for not getting any new blog posts up recently but we’ve been even busier than usual. This is not  a “the dog ate my homework” excuse. Really. First there was a wonderfully never-ending roster of holiday fiestas followed by a particularly hectic start to the new year with a first week in January that looked like this:

1. Hablamos Espanol (un poco)!

On January 4 we started an intensive Spanish language course at the IMAC school in central Guadalajara. Now our weekdays start at 8 am with a two mile walk to school followed by  four hours of classroom instruction, a quick jaunt to the massive Mercado Independencia to grab a cheap and delicious lunch from one of the hundreds of food vendors, then back to school for individual computer tutorials and more studying before the two mile walk back home around 6 pm. to do homework. Where is home? We are incredibly lucky to be staying with our friend Iliana’s parents at their home in Guadalajara. It’s like having a Mexican madre y padre and we’re working hard to improve our Spanish enough to be able to really thank them for all of their overwhelming generosity and all of the ways they’re enhancing our stay.

2. Gone in 53 Seconds

On Tuesday, someone stole both of the side view mirrors off our truck which we stupidly left parked on the street. They just popped the mirrors right out of the housings and (thankfully) left the housings mounted on the truck. In the grander scheme of things this is not a tragedy. After all, it’s the very first time anything has been stolen from the truck in more than three years on the road and the thieves were kind enough to leave the mirror housings intact.

However, since the custom cargo box in the bed of our truck makes it impossible for us to see out the back window our side view mirrors are even more crucial than normal. Also, we don’t have hundreds of dollars to spend on replacing them through an authorized Chevy parts dealer. Solution? A street in Guadalajara called Cinco de Febrero, a multi-block-long clearing house for every imaginable part (most of them stolen) for almost any make/model of car.

Most Guadalajarans have made at least one purchase on Cinco de Febrero so we hit the street to see if someone had the mirrors we needed–there was even a good chance we’d end up buying back our own  mirrors. The moment we turned onto the street guys began flagging us down trying to entice us to pull over at their “stores.” We ultimately followed a guy to a store stacked to the rafters with bits and pieces: headlights, rims, bumpers, emblems for every make and model under the sun, etc.

It did feel like dealing with the devil (was this the very same guy who stole our mirrors in the first place?) but he had the right mirrors (not ours) so we began haggling over the price. A motorcycle cop cruised by in the midst of the conversation but no one–not even the guys rolling joints on the sidewalk in front of the store–batted an eyelid.

We ultimately settled on 1,500 pesos (about $130) for both mirrors plus glued-on “security” rims around each mirror which theoretically make it harder (but not impossible) for someone to pop them out again. Some kid who said his name was Juan Carlos (yeah, right) even traveled with us to the nearby lot where our truck is now securely parked in and installed the mirrors and made sure they worked properly. We could tell “Juan” was taking an inventory of our truck (Mile Marker winch and heavy duty bumper, fancy PIAA lights, etc) and then he started pointing out all the ways our truck is incredibly vulnerable to even more catastrophic quick stripping (who knew the tailgate slides right off?). We were tempted to deepen our dealings with the devil and give this kid a few hundred pesos to tell us what we need to do to prevent future pilfering but we’d had enough of the underworld for one night.

3. Humans are Doomed

Last week we also went to see Avatar in IMAX 3-D at a Cinepolis theater in a fancy mall in Guadalajara (they truly LOVE their shopping in this town). The movie ticket was cheaper than in the US but the popcorn and soda cost about the same. Like everyone else whose seen this movie we marveled at the visuals and the technology, even if the story (human greed consumes the species after we fail to see the wisdom in other Buddha-like creatures’ ways) was less than fresh (the paralyzed/not paralyzed plot line was clever and unexpected, however). All of the Na’vi language conversations were subtitled in Spanish and we were thrilled that we had learned enough at imac to understand most of them.

At the end of the day Avatar is definitely a movie for your eyeballs not your brain, but after a week that included becoming serious students for the first time in many, many years and negotiating our way through the car parts black market of Guadalajara our brains needed a break anyway.

4. Liberace Mariachi

To cap off the week that was, we went out on Friday night with Megan and Barret, a cool couple that’s also studying at imac. The night culminated with a bottle of tequila at Bariachi, an enormous (and enormously popular) bar in Guadalajara that features live mariachi music and a rotating roster of guest performers. One of the special guests the night we were there was a singer who combined the camp of Liberace with the theatrics of Mariachi. Too bad there are no pianos in a mariachi band. And that, friends, is why we didn’t get home until 3:30 am. Hey, Friday isn’t a school night!

Fresh posts next week. Stay tuned!



[geo_mashup_map]


Leave a comment