Andes
Ruta 149 - Province Mendoza
Las Bóvedas de Uspallata
Pampasgrass - Arroyo Upsallata
Rio Mendozoa - Ruta 7
Rio Mendoza
Rio Mendoza - Transandine Railway
Rio Mendoza - Transandine Railway
Cuba Fence - HFF!
Ruta 7 - Transandine
Ruta 7 - Puente sobre arroyo Cortaderas
Andes skiing - Los Penitentes
Capilla Colonial del Puente del Inca
Puente del Inca - Transandine Railway
Puente del Inca - Transandine Railway
Puente del Inca
Puente del Inca - 2744 m
Puente del Inca
Standing on the edge - Puente del Inca
Parque Provincial Aconcagua
Cerro Quebrada Blanca - 4499 m
Cerro Aconcagua - 6961 m
Cerro Aconcagua - 6961 m
Ruta 149 - dusty encounter
Ruta 149 - Province Mendoza
Andes
Wine - Tamberias
wild horses
Valley Rio San Juan
Deres - Venetian settlement
Deres - Venetian settlement
Deres - Venetian settlement
Cretan bulldozing
Cretan bulldozing
rusty evening crab - HFF!
remains
baking bread
Venetian settlement - inner yard
Deres - Venetian settlement
Deres - Venetian settlement
Cretan Blue
Pirates of Crete
the big and the small
Greetings from Falasarna
Ruta 12 - little Kangoo's adventures
Location
Lat, Lng:
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
185 visits
Difunta Correa - Ruta 149


Another more simple "Difunta Correa shrine" at Ruta 149 (see PiP for one at Ruta 40). People mainly pray to survive on the lonesome roads and deposit water bottles, tires and another trash, believing, this helps not to die of thurst in the wilderness.
Difunta Correa (the late Correa, actually María Antonia Deolinda y Correa) was a woman who allegedly died of thirst in 1841 while looking for her husband in the desert of Argentina. However, thanks to the mother's milk, her child had not died. It has been found laying suckling on the dead mother's breast.
scanned slide, Minolta X700
Difunta Correa (the late Correa, actually María Antonia Deolinda y Correa) was a woman who allegedly died of thirst in 1841 while looking for her husband in the desert of Argentina. However, thanks to the mother's milk, her child had not died. It has been found laying suckling on the dead mother's breast.
scanned slide, Minolta X700
Andy Rodker, Smiley Derleth, micritter, Erhard Bernstein and 14 other people have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Happy week ahead.
The PiP is more obvious..............the rubbish has been recycled and used to decorate the area round the shrine (which is much more substantial). Quite ingenious!
da fällt mir ein, solche "Gläubige" gibt's bei uns auch
Berny club has replied to FarbFormFreude clubThanks for sharing, Berny
Sign-in to write a comment.