Damus
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@travelsats

🇦🇷ARGENTINA AWAITS YOU: #Bitcoin accepted here!⚡️

Discover authentic Argentina through freedom-focused travel. Connect with local Baqueanos, pay with Bitcoin, experience true economic sovereignty.

⚡ Lightning | 🔓 Built on Nostr | 🇦🇷 Freedom

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Recent Notes

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Travelsats recognizes the step taken by Javier Milei's government with CNV General Resolution 1125/2026, which now includes bitcoin, ether and stablecoins as valid assets to qualify as an investor.

This measure doesn't create something new. It formalizes what millions of Argentines already practice: saving and operating in bitcoin as a legitimate store of value.

Free currency competition is not decreed. It is enabled by removing barriers. And in that direction, this resolution is a concrete step forward.

Argentina has a historic opportunity: to become a regional leader in integrating Bitcoin with the real economy. TravelSats works exactly at that intersection, connecting Argentine tourism with the Bitcoin economy in a sovereign, simple way, without unnecessary intermediaries.

We recognize the path. We keep building.

⚡ TravelSats. Argentina Awaits. Bitcoin Accepted Here.

https://www.criptonoticias.com/regulacion/argentina-bitcoin-eth-stablecoins-patrimonio-inversor/
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⚡️LA ZURICATA · 2w
Excelente medida 👏🏽
Elena Vasquez · 2w
Milei’s move is pragmatic—it reflects reality but doesn’t yet address structural barriers like capital controls. The CNV resolution is a nod to demand, not a free-market shift. Reminds me of how Bitcoin ETF flows in ‘26 (see below) show institutional adoption often follows retail, not leads ...
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Travelsats — Argentina Awaits You. Bitcoin Accepted Here.

There are places in the world where Bitcoin stops being an idea and becomes a real tool for everyday life. El Salvador proved it. Argentina is ready to be next destination.

The bitcoin tourism is not a niche. It is a circular economy that transforms destinations. El Salvador is the example and the inspiration. Argentina is the stage.

That is Travelsats.
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We combine the best of the modern web with the strength of Nostr and Lightning Network. The reliability of a functional platform, the freedom of an open protocol, and the speed of borderless money.

We are not purists — we are pragmatists. We build with the best available tools: Bitcoin Connect, Nostr Wallet Connect, Alby Hub.

A platform where Xplorers — bitcoiner travelers looking for genuine experiences — connect directly with Baqueanos, professional guides with a sovereign payment and communication tool. And where Agencies can expand their reach to a global market that already travels with sats.

No intermediaries. No borders. No permission from anyone.
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About the code

Your identity, your reviews, your reputation — all of it lives on Nostr, not on our servers. The day Travelsats disappears, you are still you. That is more sovereignty than most "open source" projects that no one ever audited.

Coming soon our beta. We want to mature the product and validate it with the community. Travelsats build on Nostr and Lightning Network because we believe infrastructure matters.

Payments and reputation system where every review, every badge, every sat exchanged lives on an open protocol that no one can censor or shut down.
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We are launching our beta. We need you.

Come explore the platform. Tell us what's missing. And if you believe in what we're building, every sat you contribute helps us go further.

The Indomitable Argentina awaits.

https://travelsats.ar
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ethfi · 4w
Movie buff
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The UTMB just ran its second Fin del Mundo edition through Tierra del Fuego. 2,500 people from 52 countries, running through beech forest and mountain terrain that has held no roads for most of its history.

Ushuaia is calling what comes after Otoño del Fuego — autumn of fire, when the lenga beech turns red and gold and the trails empty out.

The landscape doesn’t need a race to justify it. But it’s good that people keep finding reasons to come.

travelsats.ar





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Big Ice means you get crampons and a guide and you step onto the glacier itself.

Not the walkway. Not the viewpoint. On it.

The ice is 700 years old. The blue pools are glacial meltwater and they are a color with no name in most languages. You hear it crack from somewhere deep and the guide does not flinch and neither do you, after a moment.

Perito Moreno advances 2 meters a day. You move across it. The math of scale adjusts slowly.

travelsats.ar



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The summer crowd is gone. The ships are fewer. Ushuaia in March is a different city.

The lenga beeches — Nothofagus pumilio — turn red and gold from the roots up. On the trails, you hear your own boots.

Lago Escondido in autumn: the water is still, the forest is on fire with color, and you might be the only person there.

Is this the better Ushuaia? I think so.

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There's a glacier above Cerro Tronador that no one talks about — Ventisquero Negro, the black glacier. Andean rock dust accumulates on the ice surface over centuries until the white disappears entirely. You stand beneath it and watch water fall from something that looks more like obsidian than frozen water.

The mountain earned its name honestly. When ice chunks detach and fall, the sound rolls through the valley like distant artillery.

Some places teach you the scale of time. This is one of them.

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Luján de Cuyo is Argentina's first officially designated wine appellation. Not because someone decided it sounded prestigious — because the soil and altitude produced something worth protecting. Vineyards at 900 to 1,100 meters, fed by snowmelt through ancient acequia irrigation channels built before the Spanish arrived.

Malbec thrives here because the grape left France and found something it understood: extreme sun, cold nights, thin air.

Drink it once in the vineyard at sunset, Andes behind you, and you'll understand what terroir actually means.

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The Beagle Channel runs between Chile and Argentina, carved by the same glaciers that made Tierra del Fuego look the way it does. The Yagán people navigated these waters for 10,000 years in bark canoes, in temperatures that would stop most people cold.

You sail it now on a catamaran. Sea lions on the rocks. Magellanic penguins waddling on the shore. The wind comes from Antarctica — you can feel that.

Somewhere down here the map just ends.

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Glaciar Vinciguerra sits above Ushuaia at roughly 1,000 meters. The trail gains 600 meters of elevation through lenga beech forest, then sub-alpine meadow, then rock. The glacier appears suddenly — a wall of ancient compacted snow that's been there longer than anyone has had a name for this place.

You can walk there and back in a day. No expedition, no logistics. Just a start and a decision to keep going.

The Fuegian Andes are like that. More accessible than they look. More serious than they seem.

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Aconcagua has marine fossils at 6,000 meters.

The Andes were once a seabed. The Nazca Plate collided with South America 25 million years ago and the floor of the ocean became the roof of the hemisphere. The mountain is still rising: 4mm per year. No hurry.

You can reach Confluencia base camp at 3,400m in a day hike from Mendoza. No technical gear. Just the altitude, the view of the south face, and the quiet understanding that some things take longer than any of us can see.

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Kamo Weasel · 5w
Don José de San Martin Intensifies 🇦🇷
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The Mapuche called it Nahuel Huapi — the island of the jaguar. The jaguar is gone now, but the lake remains exactly as they found it: a glacially carved basin of extraordinary depth, colder than you expect, surrounded by lenga beech that turns red in autumn.

Sail across it and the city disappears. The Patagonian silence is not the absence of sound — it's the presence of wind, water, and distance without human interference.

Bariloche's Chocolate Festival comes at Easter. Go before. The lake doesn't need an audience.

travelsats.ar