To open my mailbox like someone opening a surprise box and to feel the pleasure of discovery unleashed by an envelope decorated with stamps.
To be part of the world and also to discover it this way, with the help of those who share this vision.
Showing posts with label Argentina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Argentina. Show all posts

Monday, 11 August 2025

COVER N. 612 - ARGENTINA 

Postmark: Correo Argentino - Coficial de la Republica Argentina Suc. Plaza Italia NIS C0025 Av. Santa Fé 3882 - C1425ZAB 10.07.2025

Posted on the 10th July; Received on the 17th July 2025

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As much as I'm very pleased to receive letters from such a distant place from me like Argentina, it is always quite discomforting to look at the face value of the stamps on the letters  and think about how much the friendly name on the back of the envelope had to desimburse so that a humble letter could travel all across the ocean to my door. At today's exchange rate, the stamps on this particular cover cost more than 7 Euro...  positively insane! 

Muchíssimas gracias  Rafael! 


Stamps left to right:

The three stamps with images of national parks, are part of definitive series dedicated to these protected areas, in 2019. 

The 200 pesos stamp dedicated to Lanin national park, located in the province of Neuquén, is part of the original first issue of the series, dated of 07JUN2029; 

The 400 pesos stamp dedicated to Los Alerces national park in the province of Chubut, is either the  07JUN2029 original or the  2023 reprint.

The 1500 esos stamp, dedicated to Laguna el Palmar national park, in the province of Entre os Rios is part of the 2023 issue, dated of November.

Some of the stamps exhibit the acronym UP, further to the face value. I noticed that in 2029, for instance, there were two issues for the same values. One marked with the UP letters and the other, with the same face values but different images, withouth the UP letters.  Any explanation for this would be most welcome in the comments section. Thanks.

The two 4 500 Pesos stamp stamps with photographs of ponchos  constitute the 2025 Mercosur issue, dated of 30April 2025. The white poncho on the left is typical of the region of Catamarca while the one on the right is labeled as Surero, which means, from the South.



Friday, 8 November 2024

COVER N. 529 - ARGENTINA

Postmark: Correo Argentino Santos Tesei NIS B0035 Pedro Diaz 444 B1688ZAA 31.10.2024

Posted on the 31st October; Received on the 7th November 2024

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"You've got to be kidding..", thought I... 

Adding all the face values on the stamps on this cover, both front and back I came to a total of  8,600 pesos.  

Now this didn't mean much, as I didn't know the exchange rate for Argentinian currency. So I hopped to Xe currency converter on the internet and typed in the 8,600 on the left box, asking for a conversion to my own Euros. 

And I got a result of 8 Euros!!!!!! Damn... how can this be true...? just to think that to send a humble rectangle of paper across the ocean in my direction someone would have to pay this enormous amount of money is enough to make me want to apologise to that person, and a sure measure of how some people have it amazingly hard to pursue such an innocent hobby as mine.

I know traditional mail has dwindled in later years due to us writing one another with bits of electricity, but mail companies and postal administrations have found ways of compensating for that with the increased number of parcel transactions and diversifications of services they provide.

And I also know that inflation is a tiger whose cage is sometimes very hard to close, but to think that to send an international letter one has to spend about 5% of the national average monthly wage (according to official  data cited here) is mind-blowing, to say the least.





Some countries share traditions, other share languages, some religious affinity, others political affinity, but some do share matter of wonder, and so do Argentina and Colombia, it seems. What best to share than to be blessed with the joy of having in  our waters some of the most impressive creatures that inhabit our planet?

Whales, the biggest mammals on Earth and they peacefully roam the waters of the oceans that bathe Argentina and Colombia.

The  Southern Right Whale (Eubalena australis) is dweller of the seas, south of the Equator and close to Antarctica, being thus present in Argentinean waters. 

Before the global hunting ban, its population was calculated in 1999 to be of  7500 individuals, but since hunting stopped it has been growing at a rate of 7% a year.

Adults can measure up to 18 m in length and weigh up to 90 tons.

Humpback whales are present in virtually every ocean of this world and can be found in latitudes up to 81º N, so it is possible to see them both in Argentinean and Colombian waters.

Diplomatic relations between Argentina and Colombia were established by treaty on the 8th May, 1825.

To mark the passing of the 200th anniversary of the treaty, the Postal Administrations of both countries created  a joint issue which began to circulate on 29JUL2024, highlighting whales as a common heritage, cherished by both countries.

The full Argentinean issue was used on the cover and the two 2300 Pesos stamps feature  photographs of:

-  a Humpback whale (stamp on the left), with a legend containing the Spanish and scientific names of the species and a silver ink silhouette with the indication of the typical  size the animal can reach and the information that the photo was taken at the National Natural Park of Gorgona, Colombia;

- a Southern right whale, the legends and silhouette now relating to this particular species and indicating that the photo was taken at Península Valdés, Chubut, Argentina.

- the infamous 8,600 Pesos postage rate was completed with two 2,000 Pesos, stamps on the back of the cover, with a photograph of the Campo San Juan Federal Park, part of the 2023 issue of the definitive series dedicated to national parks, initiated in 2019.

The postmark indicates that the cover was sent from the post office at Santos Tesei, a town in the outskirts of Buenos Aires.