Howdy, Partner

Brasil's state of Paraná is located in the south of the country, and it is an agricultural breadbasket for the nation.   There's a whole lot of soy beans, corn, wheat and sugarcane as well as pork and beef.  And, when you have cattle, you hopefully see cowboys.  I was on the search for a cowboy portrait whenever we drove through the vast countryside.

One of those trips was a morning drive to Mambore for a live radio interview with Radio Uniao RM.  I really wasn’t sure how interesting the interview would be with an interpreter, but I was up for the experience.  And, I have to tell you that I thoroughly enjoyed the experience. 

It wasn’t my first live radio interview.  (And, I never thought I’d ever be able to say that.)  Earlier in the year, I had a half hour interview in Liberia.  But, I can easily tell you the biggest difference.  This time, I sat in an air-conditioned comfort.  There was no swelter, no sweat, and I wasn’t left alone in the room to wither and drip.  I sat in the same room with my interpreter, the interviewer, my host, one of the painters from my first mural and her mother. 

I must have done well on the radio. 

The interviewer was so pleased.  He had to give me a little walking tour of the neighborhood after the interview.  And, that tour included something I’d been trying to find the entire time I was in the country – an old Brasilian cowboy!  This guy heard the radio interview and came looking for me.  I guess he liked what he heard as well.  Regardless, I was thrilled to get his portrait. 

I travel with a short “to do” list.  I consider anything in addition to that list as dessert.  Meeting such a friendly old cowboy after the interview was definitely the dessert to a very positive experience.
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2016

January

Faces in the Crowd
I Draw
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