Tierra del fuego, Ushuaia & the end of the earth!

I’d originally planned not to fly anywhere in South America until February when I’ll need to take a flight to the Galapagos islands, but the size of Argentina and Patagonia has somewhat defeated me and a deadline I have to make in Santiago just before Christmas. So I have had to book a few flights to link up my last few weeks down south. Flights on the whole are not cheap at all, but I lucked out with a very small cheap airline and I made a four hour flight to Ushuaia for the same price as a bus, (the bus would have been 28 hours!). The flight was fine, and I saw some beautiful landscapes flying. I arrived in Ushuaia to biting cold wind and I was very glad to have bought some warmer clobber in Bariolche!

Ushuaia is the most southern city in the world and was originally founded as a penal colony so that Argentina was able to lay claim over the land from Chile. It’s now the main port for expeditions to and tours to Antarctica. And as such it’s a pretty affluent small town and caters to the tourist with some cash. Hostels and everything in Patagonia are much more expensive then further north. And in my case my hostel in Ushuaia was not any better despite the high price! Really cramped dorms, only one person could move around the room at a time and no room for bags at all! I’m fast compiling my list of things I need/want in a hostel: Decent showers, strong wifi, lockers, comfortable bed, and an ok breakfast.

The other thing that was noticeably different was how long the daylight hours were, it got dark around 11.30 and was starting to get light about 4. My first day I took a catamaran tour up the Beagle Channel. The boat took us very near a few islands, with sea lions and cormorants. We then headed further out, passing the iconic lighthouse and to another island with a large penguin colony. We couldn’t get off the boat, but the catamaran could get so near to shore we were nearly as near them as if we had been on foot. They really are amusing creatures, and they weren’t shy at all. Guessing they are used to twenty odd boats rocking up to take photos everyday! Everyone else on my boat had huge cameras, and I was bit worried my photos from the point and shoot would not be great, but I’m pretty pleased!

The second day in the morning I wandered around, checked out the museum which is in the old prison. It’s actually about four museums in one, and aside from the flow not working very well on the audio guide it was interesting. It had sections on the cities history including the indigenous Yamana people, the prison, Antarctica, and the wildlife of the region. In the afternoon I took a late bus at three for a trek to a lake, I had thought I’d be on my own for this but a Dutch girl from my hostel was also doing the same trek. It was a really beautiful walk through some bogs, marshes, steep wood and up to a lake at the foot of some mountains. I felt like I was in the “Lord of the rings” with the marshes, woods and mountain. We’d deliberately done this trek late so that on our return we’d be walking past a beaver colony around six, which we had been told should give us a pretty decent chance of seeing them. When we got there we saw two straight away and then they disappeared. We sat patiently for twenty minutes and they returned and came really close to us even having a bit of play!

That night we went to a fish restaurant and tried the local king crab, no not a whole massive crab £££$$$$!!! It was a very good meal, and then we headed to the Dublin bar for a few drinks with some others from our hostel as it was Saturday night. I’m resigned to the fact that in these resort towns, the Irish bars are going to be my best night for some drinks and atmosphere. And in tourist destinations there is no getting away from tourists, so just accepting that off the bat and getting on with it is the best I can do.

Sunday I spent I the same way I would back home, recovering from a mild hangover and watched ten episodes of the American Office on Netflix. I do love my iPad!!!! I know it might seem a big wasteful to spend a day doing nothing but going and going all the time is really tiring, and you never really have unbroken sleep in hostels as someone is coming in later or getting up earlier. Also the amount of hiking I’ll be doing the next few weeks I needed it.

My final day I went to the national park. There is a small post office here which is the most southern post office in the world, and route 30 also ends in the park the most southern road. This was my first day when I did actually spend the whole day on my tod, and trekked for six hours. It’s was great! The first five miles are along the coast, and at times was pretty challenging, mainly due to the wet mud which made it pretty slippery, but it was also really steep in places. The trees in the park are being attacked by a bright orange fungus, and there were so many fallen trees everywhere. I saw a fox in my fist ten minutes which I was really chuffed with! And also quite a lot of birds. I know I sound like I’m getting very old and boring! At the furthest point south I could go I was on small cove on my own, just looking out knowing I’ll never be that far south again. My feet throbbed, but it was a really great day for me.

So I’m really glad I did make it all the way down to the land of fire at the end of the earth. Saw my first penguins, sea lions and beaver.

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Bariloche…come on the weather Gods!

I’d delayed my trip to Bariolche by a couple of weeks and reshuffled my itinerary a bit as the weather had taken a bit of a dive. Unfortunately it had taken another dip by the time I arrived. Bariolche is Argentinas main ski resort, and the town definitely has that ski resort feel. Its known in the summer as the lake district, and the mountain and lakes in the area are very picturesque. Bariloche itself is on huge beautiful lake even if the town itself is nothing to write home about it. There’s a very definite German vibe to the place, and a huge number of Chocolate cafes. I indulged on my first afternoon there and real fresh raspberries covered in white and milk chocolate, just a bit naughty!

On my first full day there I went on a five hour trek in a national park to the foot of a glacier. It was a lovely trek, but due to the rain at times the path was more like a stream! I discovered that none of my gear is remotely waterproof, even my hellyhanson rainproof jacket! As we we neared the glacier we heard a massive clap of thunder, or that’s what I thought it was, it was actually a chunks of the glacier breaking off and crashing down. And as we left the glacier we heard more crashes, it would have been amazing to see it break and fall! I had dinner in a Mexican restaurant on my own, and ending up chatting with two Mexican tourists at another table. Very nice people, and went for a few drinks after and it was good to practice some Spanish again. Especially down in these resort tourist towns which attract huge numbers of tourists, I’m finding it harder to practice Spanish as everyone is European or from the states. And even the people that work in the hostels speak very good English, I am trying when I can to speak Spanish when possible!

My second day there I had some logistics and planning to sort, and also bought some warmer gear which I’ll need heading further south. My last full day I climbed Cerros Catedral with a few others I’d met on the bus from town. Most people take a chair lift, it’s only 1km high, and a quick fifteen minute scramble saw us to the top. The views were spectacular, but on a clear day would be even more so! Myself and German girl then managed to get lost on the way down, somehow we came away from the track and ended up pushing through bushes and trees and ended up at the bottom nearly a kilometre from where we should have been. No idea how we managed that! We then hired mountain bikes for a circuit named “circuito chico”. I don’t really know why it’s called that as its 25km of up and downs that in my book was quite tough going! It was good fun, and its good to be doing some exercise. The scenery of the lakes was lovely, and the sun even peaked out at one point, and it didn’t rain so we couldn’t grumble. And I promise I wore a helmet for most of it Mum and Dad. It felt good to stumble in to bed shattered that night.

It’s a bit of a pity that I couldn’t spend a few more days here, as there was so much hiking and places to see and the weather was due to warm up a few days after I left but I had a cheap flight south that only went once a week so I couldn’t stay longer!

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Chiloe & Puerto Varas……grey skies!

After four perfect days of blue skies and sun in Pucòn the weather Gods reminded me of what I’m missing back home, namely wind, rain and cold! So the last four days have been pretty uneventful as I’ve dodged the rain staying inside a bit and not got up to an awful lot! The bus from
Pucòn took me to Puerto Montt. Its a pretty dour port town, and I only spent two hours here for a quick wonder to check the drunks out on the seafront, have lunch before getting a bus over to Isla Grande-Chiloe, which included a ferry connection. I arrived in Ancud, just before nightfall and went out for food, got back at eleven to a very quiet hostel. The average age of travellers on Chiloe was a little nearer sixty, as I think bird watching is probably one of the main attractions. And I do mean of the feathered variety. In the morning I woke to a pretty cold miserable weather, I also realised I’d slightly made a mistake with my itinerary for the next week and had lost a day. Apparently there are only thirty days in November..who knew?! That meant I only had two nights on Chiloe instead of three. I went for a walk out if the town a long the coast. I hardly saw another soul for a few hours. I headed back into town and checked out the fish market and had lunch at a fish market restaurant, the portion was ridiculous and I have no idea what it was, it was a white fish covered in a sauce of clams, muscles, urchins and other shellfish… But it was very tasty!

I took a bus later that afternoon to Castro which is the largest town on the island. If you google image Chiloe you’ll get lots of photos of colourful houses on stilts by the water, this is the place they all are. They are called Palafito houses, and my hostel was one such property. On a nice sunny evening it high tide it would have been pretty nice to sit on the terrace overlooking the estuary, but when I was there it was very grey and the tide was low so just mudflats! That evening I met up with a Dutch couple (thank you facebook) who I’d met previously in San Juan. They are travelling for one year in their BMW motorbikes from Miami, to Alaska, all down the West coast of America, through central and south, they will finish in Brazil in March. Pretty amazing trip!!! We had a very convivial dinner and it was really fun to meet up with them again.

The Friday morning I had planned to go for a hike but it didn’t stop lashing it down till gone midday. I had a few hours to wander round the town, market and port area in the afternoon. Lunch was very fresh salmon ceviche that was delicious! Caught and prepared on the dock. Chiloe is a very strange and different place to the rest of the places I’ve been to. There is a lot of mythology on the island of Chiloe of Trolls, whitches and mermaids. Unfortunately I didn’t really have the time to explore very much, but I was gutted I didn’t see a mermaid as November is high season for spotting them. I think the best viewing point was on the west coast.

I took the last bus out of Castro, and back to the mainland arriving in Puerto Varas late evening. After a couple of quiet days on Chiloe I fancied a bit of life, on asking the girl who was working at the hostel of any decent bars she told me that it was a really quiet and unfriendly town, and everyone keeps to themselves and it’s not very social. Filled with hope I set off to the little down town area and found a perfectly nice and friendly bar for a snack and a drink. It then transpired (thank you facebook) that a girl I’d hung out with in Pucòn was also in town so we had a few more drinks and agreed to hire bikes and go for a cycle along the lake the next day. The next day was even more miserable, rain and wind and bikes or anything outdoors was out of the question. It also transpired (thank you facebook) that the British guy I’d travelled a bit with in Cordoba and Mendoza was in town. So a bunch of us met up and took over the upstairs of a Pizza cafe to watch Wales loose and England do quite a bit better in the Rugby. That evening the British couple I’d been with the previous week arrived and we all went out for some final drinks. Getting up the next morning for my bus to Bariloche not so easy!

So a fairly uneventful couple of days, and I know I can’t complain about the weather as back home there has been flooding etc. But it was a bit of a shame that I wasn’t able to fully enjoy the places I’d visited. I still had a great time hanging out with friends, and it’s impossible to have an “amazing” time all the time!

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