Dec 8, 2024
Great value tour - Excellent guiding by Yamilla!
I had great insights into the Barrio, it's history, Tango etc.. she is a very enthusiastic guide and a good company too. I also got some recommendations on local places as an added friendly gesture.
Highly recommended
Review provided by Tripadvisor
Sep 2, 2024
Very interesting walking tour!! - Juan Manuel was ver knowledgeable and flexible with our stops. He taught me a lot of cool facts about Argentinian history, tango and art of the city. I absolutely recommend this tour and Juan as your guide!!
Review provided by Tripadvisor
Jan 24, 2024
Beautiful - I loved the color of the neighborhood, it is clearly an area for tourists but it retains its charm, it would seem somewhat dangerous if one left the path
Review provided by Tripadvisor
Dec 30, 2022
Great walking tour of LA boca! - Elizabeth was our guide for the walking tour. She had lots of information for us and was very nice. Walked around la boca and la caminita and she informed us of the history and showed us the important sites etc. She even helped us with recommendations for lunch and other places to see in the city during our time in buenos aires. Highly recommend!!
Review provided by Tripadvisor
Mar 2, 2019
This is a must. - Yes it’s in La Boca. Yes it’s a poor area. But the Caminito is worth the time spent and the locals need the tourist dollars from people like us. Just use common sense when you go.
We spoke to locals about getting there and took their advice. You don’t need a tour. Just jump in a taxi (eg ARP 120-150 from Plaza de Mayo) they’re cheap, and get dropped off IN the Caminito so you don’t need to walk there.
Enjoy the colour, the vibe and some genuinely nice souvenirs amongst the inevitable tacky that you get everywhere. Finish up with a beer and ask the cafe staff to ring for a taxi for you at the end of the visit.
Review provided by Tripadvisor
Mar 2, 2024
La Boca - Our guide was knowledgeable but he added 2 people to our private tour without letting us know in advance. The tour was advertised as 4 hours but ours ended after only 2 hours.
Review provided by Viator
Feb 13, 2024
Elizabeth our guide was... - Elizabeth our guide was awesome. We had some miscommunication as regard to a meeting spot and she tracked us down a half an hour after tour was suppose to start. She then took us on tour and was a wealth of information on the history of the area. Thank you so much Elizabeth !
Review provided by Viator
Jan 18, 2019
Colourful Caminito - touristy but worth a look - Every major city has one - a bright, vibrant area to showcase aspects of its culture which also attracts tourists. Caminito is in the suburb of La Boca and you'll be bombarded by colour and noise. It's vibrant, very colourful and interesting with its array of streets and alleys full of shops, restaurants and cafes, Tango dancers, and market stalls selling clothing, shoes and souvenirs. It's really for the tourists with some parts just plain tacky but that adds the appeal and vibrancy of the area.
You can lunch at a restaurant on the street and be entertained by Tango dancers, even dress up and be photographed as a Tango dancer. The old cobble stones and railway lines from another time are still there.
Caminito (Spanish for street or laneway) is supposed to have inspired the famous tango Caminito in 1926. La Boca is the old industrial area of Buenos Aires which was home to the Italian immigrants in the late 19th century. They worked in the nearby docks and used left over paint for the outside of their homes resulting in a riot of colour.
The area became an eyesore in the 1950's and was revived in the 1960's/70's by local yet renowned Argentine artist Quinquela MartÃn. He painted the buildings with vibrant pastel colours reminiscent of the original colours which eventually brought the area back to life.
It’s worth a visit and is open most todays. You can spend hours walking the streets, being entertained by street musicians and looking at the shops. However check opening times as most of the stalls were packing up by 3pm. Avoid going into the back streets - some parts looked seedy and certainly uninviting.
Review provided by Tripadvisor
Dec 18, 2018
Run away! It is a trap! - This is one of the traps to tourists, like, for example, Pelourinho at Salvador in Brazil. It is simply an open air slum, pretending to be a cool tourist site. Prices are high, attendants are not trainned and the atractions are typical from a poor neighbourhood trying to convince the less warned. Forget it!
Review provided by Tripadvisor