¿Cómo se VIVE en Osaka? La respuesta está en su Museo y en las Nubes

I’m getting off the subway, trying not to get lost, as I normally do. And can you believe I come across a stamp station with three stamps. They’re incredible. The three stamps are super pretty. We’re going to a super-incredible museum. See you. Hi, my name is Andrés, and I decided to travel the world with you, discovering new sites and places. So join me. This is Auma discovering. I almost couldn’t find the museum. The museum is on the eighth floor, in the same subway station, and I was getting out and Google Maps made a mistake, because it doesn’t tell you anywhere that it’s on the eighth floor. If not, look for it, and it’s easier. But anyway, I’m there, I’ve found it. So, wow. Wow, I’ll show you. Look at this marvel. It’s designed so that one can experience what things were like here back then. It’s incredible. Hello, hello, good morning, good afternoon, good evening from wherever in the world you are at whatever time you’re watching me. Today we continue with last time’s video and we’re at the incredible Osaka Housing Museum. There’s a bookstore, there’s a doll shop, like over there. There’s a doll shop. This one here is the bathroom where they used to bathe. Osaka is like a living history book with fascinating chapters ranging from its ancient splendor to the modern Anipolis that I am. Every era created innovative urban models, but this incredible story hasn’t been told enough. That’s why the Osaka Housing Museum was born, a unique space that invites us on a journey back in time to discover how Osakans have lived throughout the centuries. How beautiful! It’s not just a museum, it’s an innovation center that blends past and present to answer a key question: What makes a city a home? Today we’re going to explore the ingenious evolution of urban life and discover how Osaka’s past inspires the future. So, let’s get to know this. Come on, discovering these things is always super impressive and always super beautiful for the soul. Well, how to soak ourselves in, and impregnate ourselves with this whole thing. The chickens are divine, like their wooden buckets. [Music] Here you can rent a kimono and you can wear it while you walk around here. So, as I was saying, this is like a type of house from that time. Yes. So, down here they put the firewood. Put the firewood. They put it here. If you see. And so they heated these cauldrons up here. Then they could put pots inside, if you see, to cook, larger ones to heat water. These are supposedly like to always have water boiling, you see? And it was like a complete space. There’s their musical instrument, their clothing, the door to go out to the other side, their soccer ball. And if you see, this is the tatami that I told you is super nice, the tatami is incredible, right? And there they had their trash can, well, their trash can, no, their bales. And this should be saved for, I’ll find out for you later, but if I’m not mistaken, I think it’s for the rice. I’ll tell you, I’ll tell you, I’ll tell you, they don’t tell me what it was for. After having done the work, what they did was they put the skins, the fabrics after the work to dry them, they put them like this. So the water kept falling, falling, falling, falling. But all the works they did in silk with the paintings and with all this, this was how they could do it. This was how they put them. See, this is another room belonging to someone else. And if you come to the park, well, the park, the garden on the other side, the house on the other side is right there. There’s going to be about a meter of distance between one and the other. There are no second floors, but this is a little cover so you can pull it out and hang your clothes, your little things. If you could take out the board, the cutting board with its mega knives that are obviously super-glued so no one can take them out. And these are made of porcelain because what they do is keep things cold or warm or whatever you have, but mainly it was to keep things cold, right? So they keep the temperature. Yeah, you see? So you raised that little sink, opened the roof, and you could go up and put your things in. Here it’s more interactive. See, they’ll store food and other things. They’re like different things. of different people. It’s more like a worker with firewood. If I’m not mistaken. This one can’t be opened either. No, it can’t be opened. Ah, yes, it can be opened. Wow, quite a feat. Now I understand why he worked with firewood. Incredible. We can get in here. Then we’ll gossip. his things for his little drawers for all kinds of things. This will look like a lady’s house and this is like a storage unit. It’s s, it’s not s I love it. I love these super pretty music and you can hear the music just like that, also from the era. I have toe socks and I wasn’t planning on coming all the way here, come here and see, it plays perfectly all the No, you can’t, but the whole idea of ​​you pulling here to be able to close the roof. We’re talking about what a stove was in the year 1100, it only had one stove. only with a very small stove, which is actually super pretty. He’s already sustained himself with this stove, and the rest was like with preserved foods, with jams, with—ah, that could be for making soy, I don’t know, it could be used for a world of pods, but they can make soy with that. So they leave you, I don’t know what it’s for. We’ll go in and visit. Look over here, another more elegant bathroom. And look at the flip-flops, sandals, or whatever from that era, because remember that to enter the bathrooms there are special sandals. Each person has one to enter the house, and to enter the bathroom there are others. And here, it’s a room with absolutely no kitchen. So, we’ve already seen all the types of rooms there were. If you see, they gave you more or less the same as when you buy a house, a rough construction. More or less that’s how it was. This is your house. Love it, decorate it, put it on. And if you see, look, here the roof is already closed. And here it’s for everything. Here it’s for living together, for eating, for cooking, for everything to be in the same place. Obviously, all their towns, all their neighborhoods should have their shrine. So, there’s the shrine with its little bell, with everything. Oh, it started to rain. It’s great. This is the best. And look, it’s starting to rain. We’re already on our way. Okay, let’s go. And look, there are even little dogs. Isn’t it very cute. Look, it’s incredible because the lights also play perfectly with the background music, with the whole thing. This is incredible. How wonderful to see this discovered with you. So, here we have the shrine, and the shrine, we move on to those will be all the same toilets of the time. Let’s see what this is. Of course, look, like some kind of toilet, one and there’s another toilet, two types of toilets. Because the map they gave me is in Japanese, so no way, it got dark. It was already sunset and it got dark. We took off our shoes and went up. Oh, it’s there. Staircase one, staircase two. And it says please take off your shoes to go up. Wow, look, a super meal, a very elegant meal for six people. These must be like the village managers. Of course, since it’s nighttime, the bathroom isn’t that amazing . This is the tub. So, with this, they would fill this giant bucket to bathe. Then, they would get in there, and then bathe. But if you see, everything was made of wood, everything was made of wood. The kitchen, this was a super industrial kitchen with its pantry, these cabinets that also end up functioning as ladders. Seriously, thank you so much. Thank you for subscribing, thank you for watching my videos, but above all, thank you for traveling with me to see the world and make a dream a reality. Look at the rest of the kitchen with one, two, three, four stoves. The lamps are beautiful for washing. It’s like cleaning fish, cleaning food, cleaning everything. And here, this is a well. So, you would take this and put it in and go down. [Music] Look, it’s incredible, really, because it takes you back to that time, the time of… It’s very beautiful, isn’t it? It’s the mayor’s house, well, more or less in English it’s called a warehouse. It’s like the main house. So, this is where meetings are held, where things are done, right? It’s like the mayor’s office, but it’s not like the community hall, more or less. And if you see the light, it’s incredible because it’s midnight, So they transport you and take you to midnight of the time. And if you see the crickets and everything, it’s already dawn. It’s already dawning. The sun is rising over there. No, it’s incredible. How crazy. Literally. Wow. This definitely transports you back in time. Look how dawn is coming. Wow. You don’t really feel like you’re in that time. And then we get to the eastern part, we were already at the house. Yes, look, it’s getting light, it’s already daytime, and we’ve reached the commercial part. So, we’re already in the business district and all that. And here it is. Yes, gentlemen, it’s the … I’ll show you. We can also take off our shoes here. Yes. Ah, here’s the whole map. Let’s see, I’ll tell you. What is this? This is a herbal medicine pharmacy from the Edu period. It had 38 different foods. I imagine they combined them and then you could create whatever you wanted. Let’s go in and see. It looks more than 38. Well, I have no idea, really. You have to take advantage of going to the plaza. No, it’s incredible to go in. So here it must have been like the dry things. One of those abacuses. If you see, look, here it is. With this they make the macha, with this they also grind and do things. But with this, then they put things in here and they make this rotate and when it rotates around here, it bounces, it bounces the flour. So, these are two stones, super-stuck together. You should know this one because it appears in several movies on Chijiru’s journey. I don’t know if you’ve seen it, please watch it. Divine movies and the man puts the herbs here and starts moving this to grind the herbs and then with a little brush, tin trin trin trin, he takes them out and bounces them, right? That’s how those worked. And this one must have. Here’s the hole. Of course. That’s right. That’s what this is all about. So you came here, you arrived here. Here’s the person in charge of seeing this. So this is ink. So here I’ll have a brush. She wrote here, and she writes here. If you see, look, to know what your errand is, what you were going to buy. And with this, they started collecting and moving it. How these abacuses work? I have no idea because they have five. I have no idea how it works, but they’re divine. I have 10. No, I don’t know how it works, to be honest, but yes, this is in memory of the gage. The lady appears and moves it around here and up and down. It seems amazing to me. And here, I imagine, here. Yes, of course. These are all the names of the herbs they had. No, it’s incredible. What a spectacular museum. It’s very, very beautiful. So, we already saw the warehouse, the pharmacy, which is incredible. This one, no, now I understand why people wear kimonos, right? This is a crazy experience with kimonos and friends and people. It must be very nice to be here with other people. I’m alone, but it doesn’t seem serious to me either. It’s for men, but it’s not serious. If you see, this is where they made the kimonos and where they made all the things, there’s really spectacular work on them because remember that kimonos could be worth billions. Today they’re worth millions. Why? Because look at these. These are embroidered. Those are embroidered. There are others that are painted like those. You see? So those and those are painted, and there are others like these that are embroidered. And here are the kimonos. I love it. I’m taking my shoes off absolutely everywhere. I’d think this was someone’s house. This is the meeting room, the meeting room , the meeting room. Of course, surely if they came, they would come and everything, because they’re courtesans, even to entertain and all the things, as I told you. Oh, no, the chest thing, right? So here she has her beautiful umbrellas, a super kitchen, with her board, with her things. So, here she has her water with her toilet. [Music] And there are her little fabrics, her fabric drawings. Look at everything, all the way up to the top, like that must have been like the call center for the town for security, well, it must have been like the attention center for the entire neighborhood. Another sanctuary because with offerings. I don’t know if she has rice, incense, and her flowers. An artist here. Yes, yes, we can go in again with his abacus , and here he had his kitchen and his room. A very good kitchen again. The water table. I’ll tell you exactly what that famous one is. Well, yes, gentlemen, it’s for water. That one is for water. See? I’ll tell you what these are for. Well, this is a pot. I don’t know what this jagaman is. I have no idea what it is. Ha maam, no idea what it is. However, look at the interesting thing here, all these strings are to hold ventilation up there, to hold the lamp, and the other one, and that bottom one there is to open the little door so you can reach the ceiling to hang the chirios. What’s up? Nice, right? It’s lovely that it’s all utilitarian. Yes, you see? I mean, you can open things, close things. That’s what the Gibling studio was like, and it really pisses me off that I couldn’t have shown you their sliding doors as they were back then. So, one could close and separate the two spaces, the personal space from the commercial space. Incredible, this place in front is so beautiful. It’s called Caramon Caramonoya, and it was generally for things brought from China. So, their jars, their vases, well, of course, China was in a different place and was the closest country to do big business, right? But it’s super interesting. Also during that time, we got the toy store. My mom made these when she was little, when we were little. Look, if you saw [Music], it’s the toy store. Oh, I remember perfectly playing with these things my mom made. I love that in the back, I have some kids trying to figure out the explanation, and there’s no very complex explanation for how to make these. The threads are interspersed. The threads come both on this side, then they come over here, then they come over here, then they come over here, and on the other side, between the two , one comes in and then it goes to the other side. We have the famous spinning tops. Those ones that are like Fuchi, but the place is packed with this one, look at the kites. Oh, I don’t know what this one was like. I’ll look. Okay, let me explain. You have to give this one a tug and then start passing the stick through here. And this makes a vibration like that. Look, if you see how it sounds, it has a vibration that makes these start to spin and keep spinning. I don’t know if they’re made with the same balls I have on my pillow. And these are the spinning tops. And if you see them, there are flat ones and these are tiny ones. I was never good at that, as you just realized. And for the string ones, I was good. See? This one has a stick. And these have a tiny one. No, I can’t. I don’t understand the masks. And these, I don’t know what they are. This one is very famous. You’ve probably seen it in a movie. It’s very famous. Here’s a video where they explain everything, and the beauty one, the cosmetics one. So, of course, there are their brushes. As I showed you when we were in Kyoto—do you remember in Kyoto I showed you the brushes, the combs, all the things that were so beautiful, so spectacular? I love the day. If you see, it’s full of life. This isn’t an artist’s shop, this is a bookstore. Those are books. All of those are books. And he, the person who lived here, sold books. No wonder the back room was so glamorous, so spacious. Afterwards, it’s not like you don’t know what just happened. I was already leaving and found the guide in English, so, well, it’s done. It’s really cool. And downstairs they have these models that are very well done, very beautiful. I’m going to show you all of them, showing how times changed and how things changed. If you see, this is when foreign civilization began to creep in a bit more. The houses had something, or rather, I’m going to show you so you can see everything. But you see, even the way people dressed. You can see that everything had changed. 1884-1832 . If you see, there are already wagons, and the towns are starting to get much bigger. tighter, you see? But these little indentations are absolutely incredible. 1935. Look at all the little tatami apartments. How lovely. Look, this is when these two-family houses began to be established, which are one house, one house, one lot, or rather, they own two nice houses. Look at the bathroom. It was always on the outside. [Music] Look at this incredible festivity. It’s [Music] spectacular. 1956 , much more industrialized. The buildings are now much larger, and the land is starting to cost a little more. The rice cooker in 1958 was gas. Gosh, they’re light years ahead of us. They already had gas cookers at that time. [Music] A gas heater, 1926. Wow. To put gasoline in. [Music] It was to put gasoline in. Another one. Yes, another rice cooker from the 70s. This one is now very modern. The Singer, which yes, we’ve all seen at home or in the family or at our aunt’s or grandmother’s or great-grandmother’s. One of these always existed. That was key. Divine incorporation. And right now it’s about removing this and putting a sink there and making this the bathroom table. But that Singera, so divine, the rays. [Music] I lived in, four people lived, that it had to be transformed into their space. It had to be transformed into everything. [Music] Dining room in, let’s remember that all this is specifically in Osaka. This speaks to the evolution of Osaka. Yeah, look, almost the little town we were in just now. Exactly. Well, we’re not going to bore you anymore with all this. We’re going to the other side. Let’s walk. I came back out to this little hallway and you can’t believe it, I mean, I’ve even found acupuncture places. There’s everything. I’m going to go to this place to see if I can find something I ordered, a Nivea sunscreen that’s around $10 here, and on the website, in my country, it’s around $20 or $30. So it’s highly recommended. Okay, I’m leaving now, and I’ll keep telling you. I’m lost on this street, like a salesman. I’m completely lost. I have no idea where I am. And Google Maps is telling me how there’s an entrance to the right, and it’s the entrance to a building with only shops. There’s nothing there. Look for the basement, there’s nothing there, but he insists you have to go in there. So, it’s the same here. Down here, what’s there? Down here, there are gachipón machines, a really strange game where you throw little balls and little balls and at some point you win something, I don’t know when or anything. So, well, I’m going to see how I can find my way and get out of here urgently before it gets dark. I don’t want to be here at night, not because it’s unsafe, but because where I want to go, I want to go during the day, in daylight, or rather, and it’s turning out to be the perfect day to go there. And look at these escalators, they’re incredible. Hello, hello, welcome to Humid Skybilding. In this incredible building, they decided to join two buildings at 173 meters high with glass bridges and an escalator in the sky. Where does all this madness lead? To the floating garden. From up there, the view of Osaka is spectacular. I must confess I have a bit of vertigo, and those things give me a bit of vertigo, but it’s all for you. So, if you see the place, it’s super pretty. We’re currently on the 40th floor, I think . It’s not very high, to be honest. What’s great to see, I mean, are the windows. I love that there’s always anime on. We’ll have to find out what this anime is about. Stan My Heroes at the Tokyo Tower. Do you remember there was one about some girls and I collected the girls’ stamps? Could it be that the men are here? But the place is super nice, super. So, everywhere is the viewpoint, and if you look at the building, it has windows on all sides, that’s super nice. Here you have stories about the architecture. I also think that’s super nice, they show you how things were, better said. So, they show you absolutely everything, what the structure was like, what the building is like. You see? We’re here right now. And we’re going to go up here and everything is with Ya, you’ll see. It’s incredible, it’s spectacular. Also, keep in mind that it was in ’92 and they built the entire lower part, and where we were standing at the top, they gradually raised it. Look, look, look, look, look. [Music] If you see, they built both towers. And then they put this on. See? There they go up this space, which is where we are right now. [Music] The Japanese in ’92 were already raising buildings with elevators. In 2025, we might not have finished a skyscraper that we supposedly have—the first skyscraper in South America—we haven’t finished it. Light years, light years. Well, there are all kinds of these kids, right? They’re everywhere. I’ll show you. You know the girls are fascinated by all of them, right? Because then each one must have a distinct personality, something different, something distinct. Here in the little store, cucha, but there are a lot of them. In the little store here, you find those hearts. I’ll show you. They’re hearts slash padlocks. And you can put your name, the other person’s name, and the date on top. You’ll see why they’re spectacular. So, if you see here, come, write whatever you want, and take the padlock upstairs. Oh, look at the floor, it’s incredible. Wow, Mom. Wow. It’s incredible. Besides the floor being incredible in this light, it’s very, very fun. The view is spectacular. Welcome to Osaka, the metropolis that pulses with an energy all its own and one of my favorite cities here in Japan. If Tokyo is the pristine tea room, Osaka is the delicious, laughter-filled kitchen where oil sizzles and fun is served. It’s not just the third largest city in the country; it’s the beating heart of the Kansai region and the engine of a gigantic metropolitan area where more than 18 million people live. Strategically located at the mouth of the Yodo River, its history as a vital port has shaped it as the quintessential industrial commercial center, but its true spirit lives on in its streets. Over there, it remains still. And yes, you see it as a circle, as if it’s hollow in the middle. There you can see the elevator going up and the one going down. And we arrive at the super pretty place, where it’s designed to leave the padlocks. Bring a little message there. I’ll show you why that little table there is specially set up so that when you make your promise of love, you can take a photo. You don’t necessarily have to be a couple; it can be a family, like they’re doing. Here you see, then here, sung for the rest of your life, or you’re not there when. I’ll show you down below how pretty it is. Yes, well, there are people who also bring their own padlocks, but these… Oh, look, here are some A2 ones. Let’s see, where are they? Here. Here are some A2 ones. Here are some fingers too. Here are some fingers too. It could also be when they celebrate their anniversary. I don’t know what they’re saying. And yes, it’s not from a family. This one is very beautiful. They’re going to make me cry from the family, I don’t know which one that feels harmony between them all. M. And yes, they are Yes, sir. An anniversary. That black one is an anniversary. This one here, how beautiful. [Music] I want to get married. Oh, love is beautiful. And well, it’s on the other side more or less. It’s super beautiful. I didn’t think it was going to be so beautiful at night and it made me angry when I arrived and saw the line because I thought we weren’t going to be able to see the sunset. In fact, we couldn’t see it, but at night I don’t know what you think, but I find this city fascinating at night and we’re not that high up, right? We’re on the 40th floor or something, it’s not that high. And this lady looks spectacular today. Ah, she’s beautiful, beautiful today. And the silence because if you look, there aren’t that many people here talking loudly or shouting or anything and it’s a gigantic city, people. So you can imagine, look, the floor started to light up. Well, Osaka Osaka has 19 million inhabitants. So, the figure they gave me right now is almost twice the size of Bogotá. Yes, twice the size of Bogotá, that is, it’s like three times the size of Lima. I don’t know, Argentina, how many inhabitants does Buenos Aires have, how many inhabitants does it have? Too many people. 19 million pesos is a little less than F, but let’s keep that in mind. That Tokyo Sakata isn’t the main city. The main city is Tokyo. Obviously, it’s not as big as Sao Paulo, but Sao Paulo is also huge. I’ll show you. They’re like this, you have to order them with a reservation, and other times it says “love forever.” Divine, super cute. And obviously, the Yoyos had to have their JR. This is on the floor below, where the Jooyos are located. There’s a little shop, and you can go there without any problem. Oh, there are stamps here. You stamp your stamp. Ah, how nice. Well, the names are there, but I don’t know if that’s really my stamp. Come on, it’s time to go back to the hotel, eat something because I haven’t eaten most of the day today, and go to bed so I can think about what we’re going to do tomorrow , what time, where, when, how. I wanted to go to another food museum. I don’t know if you’d find it interesting. I wanted to go to the mayonnaise museum. Look, it’s not just any museum, it’s not just any mayonnaise, it’s the mayonnaise. In Japan, they love mayonnaise and it’s incredible. I’m going to look for it carefully to see if it’s here, it’s not available. And if it’s here, it’s not available. Marvelous. Let’s go. The building really is beautiful. It’s spectacular. The building is a spectacle. So, you know, that was put up. It was put up after the two towers were built. Incredible. Hello. Hello. Back at the hotel, I bought something to eat here in the room. Downstairs, it has everything you need to heat it up, to eat, for everything. So I bought a kind of, ah, I don’t know if you can see, like a kind of soup, my God. And it has two floors, that one and downstairs, downstairs is the rice. So, you throw this on top. I’ll show you. And then you pour this on top and you have a warm, delicious meal. And it has an egg. Ah, it looks delicious. So let’s eat it. It has tofu, some eggs. Tofu. I know. It may look like sick food. It may. It’s not bad. It came with this seasoning. Well, I’m going to eat this with jasmine tea and my spring rolls, my delicious triangles. As you know, I love the plum one, but I’m going to eat that one later. It opens like this, it opens first here and it comes out perfectly. There they tell you the numbers one, two, and three. So, that was one. This is three. This is two. Then you pull it from here and that comes out, and you pull the other side and it’s ready. You fold the tips and it’s ready to eat. [Music] Because it comes with that, it comes with all this so that the nori, the nori, which is the seaweed that borders it, doesn’t soften with the moisture from the rice. So, if you see, the nori is completely roaring. Something that a lot of people learned, they open the chopsticks like this, like this. I learned that here they open horizontally. You put them like this horizontally and open them like this. Why? Because if you open them like this, you can hit the people standing next to you. If you do it like this, there’s no way you’ll hit any of the people eating next to you. You can do anything with chopsticks. So, enjoy your meal. I’ll leave you, guys. Have a good night, good day, good afternoon, enjoy your meal, and I’ll see you tomorrow.

🌃 ¿Quieres descubrir el alma de Osaka? En este video vivimos un viaje único: desde las raíces de la vida cotidiana japonesa hasta las alturas de su modernidad. ¡Acompáñame a explorar los dos polos que definen esta ciudad increíble!

⏱️ MARCAS DE TIEMPO:
00:00 – Introducción: ¿Dónde está el corazón de Osaka?
01:15 – Museo de la Vivienda de Osaka: Viajamos en el tiempo para descubrir cómo han vivido los osakenses a lo largo de la historia. ¡Casas tradicionales, ingenios urbanos y la evolución de la ciudad!
15:40 – Rumbo al distrito de Umeda.
17:22 – Umeda Sky Building: Subimos al famoso “Jardín Flotante” para presenciar una de las puestas de sol y noches más ESPECTACULARES de Japón. ¡Las vistas te dejarán sin aliento!

🫶🏼🩵☕️ Si quieres ayudarme a crecer y lanzar este canal, ¡estaría muy agradecido si pudieras invitarme un café! Puedes hacerlo en el siguiente enlace:
https: //buymeacoffee.com/aumadescubriendo
Muchas gracias. 🫶🏼🩵☕️

✨ ¿Qué verás en este video?

El museo más curioso e interactivo de Osaka.

Cómo la gente ha vivido aquí desde la era tradicional hasta la moderna.

La experiencia de cruzar una escalera mecánica ¡EN EL AIRE! entre rascacielos.

La vista panorámica de 360 grados desde el observatorio “Kuchu Teien”.

BONUS: Osaka iluminada de noche, un espectáculo que no olvidarás.

🇯🇵 ¿Te gusta Japón? ¡No olvides suscribirte y darle like para más aventuras por Kansai y todo el país!

🔔 Activa la campanita para no perderte mis próximos videos.
📍 MUSEO DE LA VIDA Y VIVIENDA EN OSAKA:
Dirección: 6-3-35 Tenjinbashi, Kita-ku, Osaka
Cómo llegar: Estación Tenjinbashisuji 6-chome.
Está ubicado en el edificio del Centro Municipal de Información sobre Vivienda, frente a la calle Tenjinbashisuji en el distrito Kita.
📍 UMEDA SKY BUILDING:
1 Chome-1-88 Oyodonaka, Kita Ward, Osaka, 531-6023, Japan
esta cerca de la estacion de Osaka y Umeda son 10 minutos caminando
⏰ LINKS Y MENCIONES:
https://www.osaka-angenet.jp/konjyakukan/
Hotel Osaka: https://en.sotetsu-hotels.com/fresa-i…

🎥 MI EQUIPO DE VIAJE:
Termo: https://amzn.to/3HoXemA
Maleta: https://amzn.to/3JnAGTQ
Mochila: https://amzn.to/45G4jse
Cámara 1: https://amzn.to/3JnAUKG
Cámara 2:https://amzn.to/4fsNhRP
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