For more information check out our blog post 📖 👇 www.goingsomewheretravel.com/2024/10/santiago-de-chile.html Interested seeing more of Chile? 👀 check out our video on the vibrant Valparaíso! ruclips.net/video/1MBytrCr5V4/видео.html 🎥 We also have a South America playlist with some must see places in the region! ruclips.net/p/PLVFiQ44-9cx7gFDS5KDslgOCoOMyxPvfW
Hello, thank you for enjoying my country, if you are still in Chile I highly recommend you to eat "completos", we eat it very often. I recommend going to Portal Bahamondes in Plaza de Armas, they have the best completos in my opinion.
If you go to Santiago be careful with your smartphone there're so many thief came from Venezuela, Colombia and Haiti the local people are very quiet and friendly
great video! the food in santiago is very good and varied. just as a recommendation, be careful with your camera and phone when filming in the street, santiago is not very safe especially in the center of the city.😅
@@natdongoingsomewheremy cousin had her phone stolen right out of her pocket and she never felt anything. When I go anywhere in Santa I use a paracord for my phone, around my neck and hidden under my shirt
Stgo downtown is, nowadays sadly and shamely ruined with street illegal people selling stuff. Polluting with garbage and smelly food😢. Migration has ruined my country😢
The street venders were rarely seen before up to ten years ago when they open the borders to illegal imigration. As far as the mote con huesillos, it is barley with a boiled dried up peach. Huesillo means seed.
Thanks for watching! It was very creative to make the street food cart out of a shopping trolley! The Mote con huesillo tastes much better than it looks! The peach at first looked odd, and I didn't know how to takle it!
Sorry, a lot of censorships. Chile is very nice. It was a lot nicer ten years ago. But the lake region and Patagonia are still very nice. The food is very good if you eat at the right places. Yes, mote con huesillo is a little scary at first.
@@natdongoingsomewhere What this person says is false. Chilean here, senior citizen from Santiago. There have been vendors in the streets literally since we were a Spanish colony, and probably before of that - we were part of the Inca Empire. Their amount varies according to the economy; there have been times in which there have been more than now. It is also false that "ten years ago the borders were opened to illegal immigration." Our borders have been always porous, as we are not obsessed with closing them like other countries. Now that there has been a new wave of immigration of Haitians, Venezuelans and other South Americans (before them there were Spanish, Italians, Croatians, Germans, Syrians/Palestinians/Jews/Lebanese, Peruvians, Koreans, Chinese, Indians) you see immigrants working in the streets, but if you cared to talk to them, you'll find out that there are many Chileans doing that. In my experience, the majority. If you look around for a longer time, you'll find immigrants working in formal commerce, libraries, restaurants, dental clinics, offices, companies, etc. Also, Santiago has always had cleanliness issues, as any city in the world (except Japan and Switzerland, maybe?), and regarding safety, you can see thefts, but you don't go around fearing terrorist attacks, bombings, kidnappings, and definitely not mass shootings. Our children do earthquake drills, not active shooter drills. I am Chilean, and I worked selling in the street for a while. I made acquaintances both with other sellers and with people working in formal commerce. I do know. Uh, by the way. Mote con huesillo is not barley, but wheat berries.
For more information check out our blog post 📖 👇
www.goingsomewheretravel.com/2024/10/santiago-de-chile.html
Interested seeing more of Chile? 👀 check out our video on the vibrant Valparaíso!
ruclips.net/video/1MBytrCr5V4/видео.html
🎥 We also have a South America playlist with some must see places in the region!
ruclips.net/p/PLVFiQ44-9cx7gFDS5KDslgOCoOMyxPvfW
Hello, thank you for enjoying my country, if you are still in Chile I highly recommend you to eat "completos", we eat it very often.
I recommend going to Portal Bahamondes in Plaza de Armas, they have the best completos in my opinion.
Hello! Thanks for the recommendation 😀 yes we did eat completos many times! We did film it, but I think the video will never be made lol
Great video! Hope you enjoy Santiago and the south of Chile! Welcome❤
We loved it thanks!
If you go to Santiago be careful with your smartphone there're so many thief came from Venezuela, Colombia and Haiti the local people are very quiet and friendly
So true
great video! the food in santiago is very good and varied. just as a recommendation, be careful with your camera and phone when filming in the street, santiago is not very safe especially in the center of the city.😅
Thanks for watching! Food was awesome! Yeah we use gorpro, and it stays in my pocket for most of the time!
@@natdongoingsomewheremy cousin had her phone stolen right out of her pocket and she never felt anything. When I go anywhere in Santa I use a paracord for my phone, around my neck and hidden under my shirt
The iron structure was made in Glasgow Scotland....to be honest the mercado is a tourist trap
Interesting! Thanks for the info!
Nice video!!😀👍🎉🎉
Nice❤
All the street vendors are immigrants, Santiago was not like that, used to be a clean and safe city.
I'm going to guess that Don is a Scorpio and Nat is a Virgo.
Hello, I think Virgo and Leo!
Chile is Europe in South America
Maybe is Venezuela or Cuba
@@juanr9446 quisieras. Pelafustan 👍
@@rootzjunkies whoaa !!! Somebody trying to be european here Mr.mapucho
😡hope you enjoyed Santiago
We did! thanks for watching!
emporio la rosa is one of those overpriced gourmet ice cream shops. expensive, but not particularly good
Stgo downtown is, nowadays sadly and shamely ruined with street illegal people selling stuff. Polluting with garbage and smelly food😢. Migration has ruined my country😢
The street venders were rarely seen before up to ten years ago when they open the borders to illegal imigration. As far as the mote con huesillos, it is barley with a boiled dried up peach. Huesillo means seed.
Thanks for watching! It was very creative to make the street food cart out of a shopping trolley! The Mote con huesillo tastes much better than it looks! The peach at first looked odd, and I didn't know how to takle it!
Sorry, a lot of censorships. Chile is very nice. It was a lot nicer ten years ago. But the lake region and Patagonia are still very nice. The food is very good if you eat at the right places. Yes, mote con huesillo is a little scary at first.
Awesome thanks for the info!
@@natdongoingsomewhere you are welcome. I hope you enjoy Chile very much if you are still there.
@@natdongoingsomewhere What this person says is false. Chilean here, senior citizen from Santiago. There have been vendors in the streets literally since we were a Spanish colony, and probably before of that - we were part of the Inca Empire. Their amount varies according to the economy; there have been times in which there have been more than now.
It is also false that "ten years ago the borders were opened to illegal immigration." Our borders have been always porous, as we are not obsessed with closing them like other countries. Now that there has been a new wave of immigration of Haitians, Venezuelans and other South Americans (before them there were Spanish, Italians, Croatians, Germans, Syrians/Palestinians/Jews/Lebanese, Peruvians, Koreans, Chinese, Indians) you see immigrants working in the streets, but if you cared to talk to them, you'll find out that there are many Chileans doing that. In my experience, the majority. If you look around for a longer time, you'll find immigrants working in formal commerce, libraries, restaurants, dental clinics, offices, companies, etc.
Also, Santiago has always had cleanliness issues, as any city in the world (except Japan and Switzerland, maybe?), and regarding safety, you can see thefts, but you don't go around fearing terrorist attacks, bombings, kidnappings, and definitely not mass shootings. Our children do earthquake drills, not active shooter drills.
I am Chilean, and I worked selling in the street for a while. I made acquaintances both with other sellers and with people working in formal commerce. I do know.
Uh, by the way. Mote con huesillo is not barley, but wheat berries.