Argentina Media Citations & Travel Archive
A public record of third-party references, media mentions, academic citations, and travel resources connected to our Argentina coverage from 2012 to 2026.
How This Archive Is Organized
This page collects third-party references to our Argentina travel work, including media mentions, backlinks, academic citations, datasets, interviews, and travel resources that have referenced our articles, videos, photography, or destination coverage.
Why Argentina Matters to Our Work
Argentina has become one of the central places in our creative work, our travel publishing, and our day-to-day life.
Our connection to the country is also personal. We are currently restoring a heritage property in the Sierras of Córdoba, which has given us a more grounded relationship with Argentina beyond short-term travel. At the same time, Project 23 is our long-term effort to document, film, and create useful travel guides for all 23 provinces of Argentina.
This archive serves as a record of that work. It brings together references connected to Nomadic Samuel, Audrey Bergner, Che Argentina Travel, and the broader Samuel & Audrey Media Network.
Categories of Third-Party References
Argentina is a large and varied country, and our long-term coverage has touched many different subjects: travel planning, regional food, transportation, Patagonia logistics, cultural history, and local destinations.
To keep this archive organized, the references are grouped into four broad categories. Each card below explains the kind of source included and the role it plays in documenting our Argentina-related work.
Institutional
References from academic projects, historical resources, public databases, and official tourism organizations.
- Historical and cultural resources
- University bibliographies
- Government tourism boards
Industrial
Mentions by specialized trade media, regional publications, and transport-related resources covering logistics, infrastructure, or local economics.
- Oil & gas media
- Railway and transport resources
- Agricultural reports
Cultural
Features by national or regional newspapers, food publications, cultural guides, and destination-focused media.
- National and regional newspapers
- Food and gastronomy coverage
- Local destination guides
Platforms & Indexes
Travel-planning platforms, curated lists, database entries, and digital resources that reference our articles, videos, or destination coverage.
- Curated travel rankings
- Travel-planning platforms
- Structured digital resources
Uno TV (Mexico)
Food Culture Reference
Uno TV, a mainstream news platform based in Mexico, published a feature on traditional Argentine culinary customs in October 2024.
The article highlighted Argentina’s open-fire cooking traditions, including the historical role of gaucho culture, slow-fire grilling, hardwood fuel, and classic asado accompaniments such as chorizo, morcilla, and chimichurri. It is useful here as an example of how Argentine food culture is explained to a wider Spanish-speaking audience outside Argentina.
Public references like this help show how Argentina’s food traditions are described across Spanish-language media, especially for readers researching asado, gaucho culture, and culinary travel in Argentina.
Diario Uno (Mendoza)
Mendoza Travel and Food Reference
Diario Uno, a daily newspaper covering the Cuyo region, referenced the Samuel & Audrey travel network during the Easter holiday period in 2019. The article looked at domestic travel patterns in Argentina during a difficult economic period, including observations about quieter bus terminals and changing travel budgets.
The piece also referenced a more local food detail from Mendoza: the use of native flora in traditional wood-fired cooking.
Small details like this help readers understand regional food traditions that often get missed in broader Argentina travel guides.
ADNSUR (Chubut)
Comodoro Rivadavia Travel Reference
ADNSUR, a regional news source for the San Jorge Gulf Basin, documented the Samuel & Audrey network’s travel coverage of Comodoro Rivadavia, an important economic and coastal hub in southern Patagonia.
This reference is useful because it looks at a side of Patagonia that many travel guides skip. Rather than focusing on mountains, glaciers, or national parks, the article presents Comodoro as a working regional city shaped by the energy sector, higher local costs, coastal weather, and practical infrastructure. It also notes the city’s usefulness as a connected base for travelers working online.
Travel Note: Strong wind gusts can blow sand along the coast.
Why it matters: The persistent wind in this area is a major feature of local life. Travelers should prepare for conditions that can complicate driving, filming, and outdoor activities.
El Comodorense
Comodoro Food, Weather, and City Context
El Comodorense, a local news platform in Chubut, covered our travel impressions of Comodoro Rivadavia, including the city’s food, climate, prices, museums, and everyday travel practicalities.
This reference is useful because it looks beyond Comodoro’s industrial reputation and captures the city as a practical coastal base with local restaurants, museums, strong winds, higher prices, and useful infrastructure for travellers spending time in southern Chubut.
Multiple local references help readers understand Comodoro as it is experienced on the ground: windy, industrial, coastal, more expensive than expected, but also practical and well connected for a Patagonian city.
Cholila Online
Rada Tilly Beach and Coastal Context
Cholila Online, a Patagonian news resource, highlighted the Samuel & Audrey network’s travel coverage of Rada Tilly. The article noted the town’s setting just south of Comodoro Rivadavia, with wide sandy beaches, clear water, and modern coastal homes.
The coverage also noted an important travel detail: Rada Tilly can look surprisingly tropical on a sunny day, but the water remains cold because of its open Atlantic location in southern Patagonia. That distinction matters for visitors planning beach time, photography, walks, or outdoor activities along the coast.
Understanding these local distinctions helps travelers choose the right gear and plan more realistic beach stops, especially when pairing Comodoro Rivadavia with nearby coastal towns like Rada Tilly.
Diario Necochea
Necochea Family Return and Local Memory
Diario Necochea highlighted Daniel Bergner’s return to Necochea after 55 years away, using his family memories and travel reflections to look at how the coastal city has changed over time.
The article draws on his perspective after decades in Canada, noting visible changes to Necochea’s public spaces, beachfront, dunes, and historic casino complex. It is a useful local reference because it captures how a familiar Argentine seaside town can feel different when seen again across generations.
The reference describes the local beach habit of rolling in dry sand — jokingly called “making a milanesa” — to warm up after swimming in the cold Atlantic waters off Necochea.
Directorio Calamuchita
Villa Berna Location and Local Directory Listing
This entry documents a local directory listing connected to Samuel & Audrey in Villa Berna, a mountain village in the Calamuchita Valley of Córdoba. It adds a physical place-based reference to an archive that is otherwise mostly built around media, travel content, and online publications.
The listing in Directorio Calamuchita helps connect the network’s Argentina coverage with a real location in the Sierras de Córdoba. For readers, it provides regional context around Villa Berna, local lodging, mountain tourism, and the Central European-influenced architecture found in parts of rural Córdoba.
Villa Berna adds a place-based Córdoba reference to the archive, connecting our Argentina travel coverage with the Calamuchita Valley, mountain lodging, and local tourism infrastructure.
A Wander Food World
Patagonian Train Travel and Logistics
This entry documents a contribution from Audrey of Che Argentina Travel to an international travel publication focused on train journeys in South America. Her section shares practical insights about long-distance rail travel in Argentina, especially the route across Río Negro between the Atlantic coast and the Andes.
The feature focuses on the Tren Patagónico, a passenger rail service that runs across Río Negro Province between Viedma and Bariloche. Because schedule and route details can be hard for international visitors to piece together, this kind of firsthand explanation helps travelers understand the route, travel time, and what to expect onboard.
Wildlife Notes: Travelers may spot guanacos, rheas, and birds along sections of the route.
FeedSpot (Global Database)
Argentina Travel Blog Rankings
FeedSpot, a web directory and blog aggregator, listed Che Argentina Travel at #7 on its curated index of Argentina travel blogs.
The list brings together websites covering Argentina travel advice, destination guides, planning tips, and regional logistics. For this archive, the listing is useful as a third-party directory reference connected to Che Argentina Travel’s Argentina-focused publishing.
- #2 Wander Argentina
- #4 Sol Salute
- #7 Che Argentina Travel
Context: The index collects Argentina-focused travel sites and blogs, giving readers another way to discover destination guides, planning resources, and regional travel information.
Directory listings like this are useful because they place Che Argentina Travel alongside other Argentina-focused travel resources in a format readers can browse and compare.
Ecos Diarios (Necochea)
A 55-Year Return to Necochea
Ecos Diarios, a local newspaper in Necochea, covered Daniel Bergner’s return to the city after 55 years away, focusing on personal memories, family history, and how the city had changed over time.
The feature connects several pieces of family history in Argentina, including an Austrian family background in Misiones in the late 1920s, memories connected to Córdoba during the time of the Cordobazo in 1969, and the family’s present-day connection to Villa Berna. For this archive, it adds a multi-generational layer to our Argentina work beyond standard travel coverage.
The article recounts the story of a three-story family home and local venue built on the coastal dunes along Avenida 10. It is a memorable local detail that connects family history with Necochea’s beachfront, changing dunes, and shifting town economy.
| Era | Location | Key Event |
|---|---|---|
| 1927 | Misiones | Family background connected to timber work |
| 1960s | Necochea | Family home and local venue built near the coastal dunes on Avenida 10 |
| 1969 | Córdoba | Family memories connected to Córdoba during the Cordobazo period |
| 2024+ | Villa Berna | Family return to Argentina and present-day Villa Berna connection |
Jessie on a Journey
El Bolsón Solo Travel and Safety Context
Jessie on a Journey, an independent travel publication focused on solo exploration, interviewed Audrey Bergner about recommended destinations for solo travel in South America. Audrey highlighted El Bolsón as a practical and welcoming choice for independent travelers in Argentina.
The feature outlines specific elements that make El Bolsón an accessible stop for independent exploration, including its small-town atmosphere, walkability, and active outdoor community. The piece also includes photography from the area, offering a firsthand look at northern Patagonian trails, local artisan markets, and mountain valleys.
Contributor features like this are useful because they share destination-specific context for independent travelers, including town scale, walkability, outdoor activities, and practical expectations for exploring El Bolsón.
Only By Land (UK)
Photography Credit and Argentina Landmark Reference
In June 2025, Only By Land, a UK-based travel website focused on overland journeys, used photography from our network to feature the Southern Fuegian Railway, often known as the “Train at the End of the World,” in Ushuaia.
This entry shows how independent travel publishers sometimes reference our Argentina photography when covering major landmarks and regional travel routes. For this archive, the citation connects Che Argentina Travel’s on-location image work with Tierra del Fuego and Patagonia travel coverage.
This reference connects the image credit with our broader Tierra del Fuego and Patagonia travel coverage.
Wanderlog (Global Platform)
San Antonio de Areco Dining and Travel Reference
This entry notes a travel reference on Wanderlog, a travel-planning platform that includes Che Argentina Travel alongside publications such as LA NACION in its recommendations for San Antonio de Areco.
The recommendation covers family-friendly dining options in San Antonio de Areco, a town known for gaucho traditions and rural heritage in Buenos Aires Province. For this archive, the listing is useful because it connects Che Argentina Travel with practical dining and destination coverage for a traditional Argentine town.
Context: The platform groups these sources as references for travelers researching traditional dining options in the region.
Local Highlights: The dining guide mentions classic local spots such as Pulpería Lo de Tito and Almacén de Ramos Generales, both tied to the town’s traditional food and hospitality scene.
WanderVlogs (2026 Update)
El Hoyo Video Feature and Itinerary
This entry documents a travel summary by WanderVlogs based on video coverage from the Samuel & Audrey network. The page turns the video into a structured destination summary with itinerary notes and practical context for travelers researching El Hoyo.
The feature focuses on El Hoyo, a town in the mountain valleys of Chubut Province known for its quiet atmosphere, fruit production, and agritourism. For this archive, the listing is useful because it connects our localized video coverage with specific activities, local businesses, and regional highlights in the Comarca Andina.
Featured Highlights: The summary references local stops such as La Porteñita empanadas and the National Fine Fruit Festival (Fiesta Nacional de la Fruta Fina). These details help travelers understand El Hoyo beyond scenery alone, with food, festivals, and rural Chubut culture included in the itinerary context.
World Heritage Sites
Los Alerces National Park Guide
This entry documents a specialist guide written by Audrey of Che Argentina Travel for WorldHeritageSites.net, an independent database covering protected landmarks. Her feature provides detailed coverage for Los Alerces National Park in Chubut Province.
The guide covers the unique ecosystem of the Valdivian Temperate Forest, highlighting landmarks like the Alerce Milenario, an ancient conifer tree estimated to be around 2,600 years old. For this archive, the publication serves as a third-party reference connecting the network with practical travel logistics, route descriptions, and conservation details for accessing areas like Puerto Sagrario.
- Esquel: Primary gateway hub, located roughly an hour and a half from the main park areas.
- Trevelin: Access loop to the southern sections of the park.
- El Bolsón: Alternate route from the north involving unpaved gravel sections.
The guide includes firsthand reminders from the field, such as reminding drivers to carry a functional spare tire when navigating the unpaved provincial routes leading into the park. These real-world observations give independent travelers realistic planning expectations for remote Patagonian road conditions.
ADNSUR (Chubut)
Rada Tilly Destination Profile and Observations
Local news outlet ADNSUR covered the visit of Samuel and Audrey to the coastal town of Rada Tilly in Chubut Province. The feature highlights their firsthand impressions of the area, noting its coastal architecture, residential feel, and scenic beachfront surroundings.
The coverage includes specific details from their visit, including a lunch stop where they discussed local food, restaurant prices, and how costs in Rada Tilly compare with nearby parts of Patagonia. For this archive, the article provides a regional media reference connected to their coastal Argentina travel coverage.
The feature notes that Rada Tilly can feel more expensive than nearby areas, which is useful context for travelers planning meals, accommodation, or a longer stay along the Chubut coast.
Hi There Im Jun
Chubut Wildlife and Route Planning Reference
This entry notes a detailed itinerary description published by independent travel blogger Hi There Im Jun, which referenced video material from our network while mapping out a multi-stop wildlife trip through Chubut Province.
The travelogue highlights a route across the region to watch marine wildlife, with stops including Puerto Pirámides, Punta Norte, and Estancia San Lorenzo for sea lion and orca viewing. For this archive, the citation connects our video coverage with practical traveler routes, timing decisions, and destination planning in Patagonia.
| Whale Watching | 125,000 ARS |
| Punta Tombo | 18,000 ARS |
| Peninsula Entry | 30,000 ARS |
Info Viajera
Organic Community Forum Mention
Info Viajera is an Argentina-based travel blog and community site. This entry notes reader comments in the site’s discussion section that mention Samuel and Audrey as travel video creators to follow.
The comments are useful because they show Samuel and Audrey being discussed by readers in the context of travel-planning YouTube channels. One comment points to the mix of Argentine and Canadian perspectives, while another mentions following the channel alongside other Spanish-language travel creators.
“The girl is Argentine and the boyfriend is Canadian… they have travel guides!”
— Elias Gudinho, forum contributor (translated excerpt)“I also follow Samuel and Audrey…”
— Maru, forum contributor (translated excerpt)Katy Schutte (MA Portfolio)
Welsh Settlement Geography Reference
This entry notes a bibliographic reference from writer and researcher Katy Schutte, who cited Che Argentina Travel in a feature about the history and geography of Y Wladfa, the Welsh settlement in Patagonia.
The citation lists our local coverage as a resource for mapping towns connected to the Welsh diaspora in Chubut. For this archive, the reference is useful because it shows Che Argentina Travel being used beyond standard travel planning, in a context connected to regional heritage and settlement history.
“6. Audrey. Che Argentina Travel. Accessed 2 January 2024. [Source for: Gaiman, Rawson, Trelew, Dolavon, Las Plumas, Paso de Indios, Trevelin].”
Blog DevorAR
Traditional Patagonian Asado Reference
DevorAR, a food culture blog focused on Argentine culinary traditions, cited the Samuel & Audrey network as a visual reference for its coverage of the Fiesta Nacional del Asado.
The feature explores the historical context of Argentine barbecue traditions and uses our footage to illustrate the festival setting in Cholila. It also explains the estaca method, where meat is cooked vertically near an open fire, contrasting it with the more familiar horizontal parrilla style.
Common Grill Method
Parrilla (horizontal grill)Festival Fire Method
Estaca (vertical spit near open flame)Cultural Context: By documenting the estaca method in Cholila, the feature highlights a traditional style of Patagonian festival cooking.
Never Ending Voyage
Iguazu Falls Long-Term Reference
This entry notes an early travel-resource reference from Never Ending Voyage dating back to 2012. The mention helps document Samuel’s presence in the independent travel blogging world during an earlier era of online destination guides.
The reference appears in a South America travel-resource compilation and connects the archive to early coverage of Iguazu Falls and northern Argentina travel. For this page, it is useful mainly as a historical citation showing that Nomadic Samuel was being referenced by other travel publishers as early as 2012.
Memo.com.ar
Argentine Wine Pricing and Visitor Tips
Regional news outlet Memo.com.ar featured Daniel from the Samuel & Audrey network in a report about Argentine wine prices. The article focuses on practical shopping observations for visitors, including how prices can vary between supermarkets, wine shops, and tourist-facing retail spaces.
The feature notes how travelers may find meaningful price differences on premium bottles, including an example where El Enemigo cost about $5 USD less at a local supermarket than at a tourist-focused wine shop. It also mentions Daniel’s observation that buying a bottle in its region of origin, such as some Pyros wines from San Juan, does not always guarantee a lower price than buying in a major market like Buenos Aires.
$22.00 USD
$17.00 USD
Example savings noted when comparing a supermarket price with a wine shop price.
