Misiones: Paisajes, Historias y Leyendas. Cataratas del Iguazú, Ruinas, Tabay, Moconá.
Touring the San Ignacio Miní Ruins, the Tabay Falls, the Wanda Mines, Iguazú National Park, and almost Mocoretá National Park in the province of Misiones, describing some stories, some legends, and trying to capture their beauty. 12:00 AM San Ignacio Miní Ruins. 1:45 AM Tabay Falls in Jardín América. 3:42 AM Wanda Mines. 7:27 AM Road to Iguazú National Park. 8:49 AM Macuco Trail to Arrechea Falls. 12:07 PM Lower and Upper Circuits. 1:16 PM Legend of the creation of Iguazú Falls. 5:06 PM Devil's Throat Circuit. 7:11 PM "The Great Adventure" Navigation to Devil's Throat. 9:51 PM On the way to Soberbio and Mocona Park. I want to show you my trip along the Argentine Coast in 2022. Moving and sleeping in my Citroën Berlingo at the different campsites I find. A journey to discover places, meet people, take photos and videos, where the important thing isn't the destination, but the journey itself. My way of looking at things. If you want to support this project, you can do so for free with a subscription and a like! https://www.youtube.com/@proyectorodr... If you also want to support this project through a deposit or bank transfer from Argentina: Caja de Ahorro Banco Frances. CBU No.: 0170325040000045763160. CBU Alias: PROYECTO.RODRIGUEZ Or if you are abroad: PayPal.Me/juliorodriguezprost Your help, large or small, is very important to continue creating content. Thank you! Argentine National Parks Rates: https://www.argentina.gob.ar/parquesn... Moconá Park Information: https://mocona.misiones.tur.ar/ Legend of the Iguazú Falls: In the bed of the Iguazú River, which swells with the rains, like a sentinel of the depths, lives M'boi, the serpent-god. Fearsome is his appearance, but even more fearsome is his fury. M'boi's wrath is capable of unleashing storms, razing entire villages, and uprooting the largest trees in the jungle. The Guaraní people who inhabited those regions knew this, and since the beginning of time, they had tried to appease his anger with offerings of all kinds, but his anger only calmed when they began to offer him, year after year, a beautiful young woman. As they entered the waters, from which they would not return, the maidens knew that their sacrifice would save their people from M'boi's wrath. Representatives of other tribes came from the most distant lands to witness this ancient rite. And so Chief Tarobá arrived, and was received with honors, like all Indian chiefs, with delicious delicacies, dances, and songs. It was then that he met the beautiful Naipí. The young woman walked by, her enormous black eyes filled with tears. She smiled when she saw the chief, but her smile could barely hide her sadness. Tarobá soon learned that the young woman had stolen his heart, and she soon learned that she was the young woman chosen to be given to M'boi, the serpent-god. The chief then confronted the tribe's elders. He tried in a thousand ways to convince them not to sacrifice Naipí. He spoke of honor and justice, and even of love. It was all in vain. Neither his words nor his threats nor his pleas were heard. Naipí was doomed, and nothing could save her. Tarobá refused to give up. The night before the sacrifice, while everyone was asleep, he managed to reach Naipí and tried to escape in a canoe, sailing upriver against the current. Great was the fury of M'boi, the serpent-god, when he learned of the escape. His monstrous body writhed in rage, shaking the very depths of the earth. A deep fissure then opened, and the once-smooth waters of the Iguazú River rushed down it, forming the Iguazú Falls. Pushed by the waters, the fragile canoe fell from that great height, and the young fugitives disappeared. But M'boi wanted to punish them even further. He transformed Naipí into a large rock, which there, in the very center of the waterfall, receives the furious onslaught of the waters day after day. He transformed Tarobá into a palm tree, which, from the edge of the abyss, bends down to look down on Naipí. The Guaraní say that M'boi lives in a cave deep within the Devil's Throat, watching over lovers so that they may never be reunited. But they also say that when the sun shines, amidst the raging waters, a rainbow is drawn between the rock and the palm tree. Like a bridge of love that unites Tarobá and Naipí. Music: YouTube. Love is the Chase by Admiral Bob (c) copyright 2021 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial (3.0) license. http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/admiral... Source: Apoxode. 5. An Ode to Otis by Another Brick is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

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