Our first
two weeks in Chile were a little frantic as we stayed in 6 different places. The big surprise was that we suddenly couldn't
speak Spanish! Right away, we wondered
if we had taken a flight to Brazil by mistake - the people might as well have
been speaking Portuguese! We learned
that Chileans speak very quickly, use a lot of slang and don't finish their
words. Numbers were even a problem - "vente-ocho-mil"
(28,000) becomes “venochmil” in Chilean. So, we scrapped our plans to study Spanish in
Chile!
We rented
a car that allowed us to visit many spots off the foreign tourist track. After three relaxing days on the beaches at Vina
Del Mar (Chilean Jersey shore), we headed into wine country. We had two vastly different experiences: the
first in a grand estate straight from a European bike tour brochure; and the
second in a small family run vineyard producing wine for export to Switzerland. Aside from the mosquitoes, which rivaled
anything we had ever seen in Minnesota, we had a pleasant few days walking
among the vineyards and visiting an area very reminiscent of Napa.
Next as
we headed towards the Lake District in search of outdoor adventure, big
mountains and active volcanoes -- the rain hit.
We spent the next week in a mix of mist, monsoon rains, mud and a little
misery. After one rainy night at a
rundown hot springs hotel in a stunning canyon, we drove through the Conguillo
National Park, stopping to hike and see the "Mother Tree", an 1,800
year old Auracaria tree. The trip became
a 4x4 trail ride, although we stayed on the main road in our Nissan sedan
rental car. We forded more than a few
streams and tried to avoid oncoming traffic on the single-lane, rutted, muddy
roads. Great parks, marginal “roads”.
Pucon is
the summer vacation capital of Chile and we tried to explore the area in pouring
rain. Even our trip to the volcanic caves
turned out to be a rain day as the cave ceiling is porous and it pretty much “rains” in the caves. Finally on our
last full day in Pucon, the weather broke and we got a glimpse of why it is a
popular summer destination. The town was
bustling, the lake was inviting and we saw the huge, active volcano that looms
over the town for the first time!
After the numerous cultural experiences and the range of living conditions in Peru, Chile felt much more like a US summer vacation. The overall standard of living appears much higher and we mostly encountered domestic Chilean tourists on their own holidays. Up next – we fly to Punta Arenas, the most southern town in Chile, where we will board a ship for a four-night expedition to see whales and travel through the Patagonian fjords.
0 comments:
Post a Comment