An important program of the manor tour is to taste the local special barbecue. The huge dining room, which can accommodate four to five hundred people to eat at the same time, is converted from an old barn. All the furnishings in the restaurant are the original color wooden tables and chairs used in the old farm. At the entrance of the restaurant there is a small old-fashioned bar, and in the hall there are several chairs made of cow bone and cowhide and a coffee table, which are both for exhibition of antiques and for visitors to sit down and rest. Beef and sausages are grilled over charcoal on a barbecue grill about seven or eight meters long outside the restaurant, filling the air with smoke and aroma. After lunch, a song and dance show begins, with a pair of dancers dancing the tango and folk dances that express the life of the gaucho people to a rousing musical score. Then, the tourists present also left their tables and entered to sing and dance with the farm attendants dressed in cowboy clothes. Unlike the predominantly female wait staff in domestic tourist attractions, the waiters here are basically men. They are almost exclusively multi-faceted, as riders, restaurant servers, tour guides and dancers, and all of them are very good at what they do. They are dressed in traditional cowboy clothes and are very powerful and spirited.
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Romantic Love Song on Horseback
The most beautiful view of the Pampas Grassland is from the back of a running horse. In Spring Breakers, Tony Leung works as a night laborer in a beef warehouse. The beef here is probably exported, because the beautiful Pampas grasslands of the people of Buenos Aires never like overnight beef. The city is surrounded by the ocean-like Pampas grasslands in several directions except to the east, where the vast South Atlantic Ocean lies. This is the vast spiritual home of the Argentineans. The grasslands have always been a breeding ground for legends. While the Mongolian steppe nurtured shepherds with lasso poles and the North American prairie produced cowboys with wide-brimmed hats, the Pampas has its own legends - the gauchos who roamed the grasslands and made their living by herding cattle and horses. They were the swiftest riders, the bravest horse trainers, the deepest singers, and they roasted the best beef. The gauchos, if you go back in time, were a mixture of early Spanish colonizers and local Indians, unrecognized by the indigenous people of the mountains and not respected by the European descendants of the cities, but fortunately the vast pampas took them in. Before the grasslands were privatized and divided by barbed wire, they could graze their calves on horseback from Patagonia to the Rio de la Plata. To get up close and personal with these heroes of the steppes, and to savor the delicious taste of their roast beef, I left the flavorful city and headed for the steppes. A few dozen kilometers out of the city from Buenos Aires, these pampas herdsmen can be seen crossing the grasslands next to many switchback roads. Meanwhile, we in the SUV struggled to wriggle along the muddy path, and although it was a good 4WD, we could only watch them go by. The gauchos in front of us were in standard attire: a dark, round-brimmed hat, light-colored shirt and leather pants, a triangular scarf tied around their necks, and wide belts around their waists adorned with heirloom silver coins. These cool and airily proud hombres with dusty etched faces were actually very friendly. At first, I rolled down my window to greet them, holding out my camera to take pictures. The shepherds responded enthusiastically and were cooperative enough to stop and pose. After a few more encounters, we simply got out of the car and joined their party. As it turns out, the "Matai Tea Party" doesn't mind outsiders joining in. A casual roar was rewarded with a long windy chant from the gauchos. I even had the audacity to ask for a horseback ride because I thought I was a good horseman. Their wide stirrup leather saddles are much more comfortable than the Mongolian wooden saddles. At first, I just let the horse stroll, but after familiarizing myself with it, I began to try to let the horse run at free speed under the guidance of another herdsman. It was only then that I realized that the most beautiful view of the Pampas is from the back of a running horse. The spiritual home of the gauchos is in a town called San Antonio de Areco, where the famous gaucho novel "Don Segundo Sombrero Picturesque La" is set. Similarly, this is also my lucky place, not only to see the hibiscus flowers that I have longed for, but also lucky to catch the Gaucho Rodeo, all the competitions are closely related to the life of the Gauchos, nailing the horse's paw, taming the horse, lassoing the calf? The most romantic is a game called ring-picking, in which the rider stands up on a galloping steed and picks off a ring hanging in the air with a small stick in his hand. Amidst the cheers of the crowd, he easily takes the seemingly impossible task. As a rule, he gave the ring to a beautiful lady in the crowd, and in return he received a kiss. The whole scene, passionate and romantic, is more touching than a movie scene. Hence the more handsome and charming looks