Visiting Brazil

Visit Brazil - travel hints for Brazil with real-life stories and suggestions on what hotels are good, where to go, what to see and which airlines to fly. Don't spend any money booking travel until you read through these posts!

Helpful links for Visiting Brazil

Transiting at GRU Sao Paulo airport & customs
Airport transfers in Rio de Janeiro Brazil
Maps of Brazil
Getting between airports in Sao Paulo

November 07, 2007

Belo Horizonte, City of Bars

The New York Times gets it right about Belo's bar scene!

A Town Where All the World Is a Bar
Lalo de Almeida for The New York Times

BELO HORIZONTE, in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais, has managed to become the country’s third-largest city while remaining almost completely unknown to the outside world. If tourists more drawn to the sybaritic pleasures of Rio de Janeiro or the urban clamor of São Paulo know it at all, it is because they may pass through it on their way to Ouro Preto and Diamantina, treating it as a little more than a refueling stop as they head toward those picturesque colonial-era mining towns.

Its international anonymity was born of no coastline and thus no beaches, no famous Carnival and thus no February madness, and no big attractions save a few buildings designed by Oscar Niemeyer that pale next to his famous works in Brasília.

But Beagá, the city’s nickname (from the pronunciation of its initials in Portuguese), does have a claim to fame: as the bar capital of Brazil. Not bars as in slick hotel lounges or boozy meat markets, but bars as in botecos, informal sit-down spots where multiple generations socialize, drink beer and often have an informal meal. If you believe the local bluster, there are 12,000 bars in the city, more per capita than anywhere else in the country. Why, no one is completely sure, but one theory has turned into a popular saying: "Não tem mares, tem bares." Loosely: "There are no seas, thus there are bars."

[Read the whole article]

July 03, 2007

Christ Statue in Rio Video

Nice video from up top where the statue sits. Panoramic views of the whole city.

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March 28, 2007

ATM machines in Brazil and Banking

ATMs in Brazil are everywhere and you won't have any problems using them with a US or EU ATM card.

Banco Bradesco, HSBC, Banco 24 Hors and Banco de Brazil all work well.

Banco 24 Horas tends to charge high fees - their rate is about 10% higher than the interbank rate (R$2.44 versus 2.64).

Bradesco is somewhat better - about 5% over interbank rate.

Banco do Brazil is perhaps the most fair - usually charging at the interbank rate itself.

Banco Itaú is normally a bit of a problem. They don't always except foreign carts well. Avoid if possible.

Note that at most ATMs, you can't get more than R$100 after nine PM, so don't plan on paying big bills after that time! This is for security reasons to prevent robbery.