Friday, May 14, 2010

Pickup Trucks and Pacific Sunsets



I've landed in Buenos Aires again, to take a bit of a rest after six weeks of travelling. It's been a beautiful week here in the city, with autumn-hued trees and sunny t-shirt weather days, but I can't shake the smothering discomfort of the big city. It's a feeling that's all too familiar from the last months of my time in New York, but which I'm feeling more acutely now that I'm returning from so many months in the country.

At the same time, it's been good to catch up with some friends here. I'm staying at the apartment of an Argentine friend I travelled with in the North back in January. It's been such a treat to enjoy some of the luxuries items I'd missed during the past several weeks, such running water and liquid milk.

I've also had some time to process my most recent adventure: ten days hitchhiking and camping around the incredible island of Chiloe (pronounced Chill-oh-AY), off the coast of southern Chile. I went with an Argentine boy I met at a mountain refugio near El Bolson, a native of Buenos Aires who had begun his travels at the southern end of the continent in December with the intention of making his way to Colombia, but who, like myself and so many others, had become "enganchado" (hooked) in El Bolson. We met one weekend when I took to the mountains on a solo overnight, and started a kind of casual, temporary romance based on the shared belief in following our own paths.

That said, at the time, my own path was headed towards a farm in northeast Argentina, but when Tobi told me he was thinking about hitchhiking to Chiloe and wanted to know if I would join him, my breath caught in my throat. Upon leaving Chile after studying abroad there in 2002, the island of Chiloe was the one place I regretted not going. Its reputation as a unique, beautiful place with a rich cultural history closely tied with fishing and agriculture had hooked me. Plus, the opportunity to travel in a completely different way than I would on my own, hitchhiking and camping and seeking out hidden, out-of-the-way places was just an irresisitible offer. It wasn't hard to decide to 'postpone' my original plans and set off for Chile with Tobi.

We set off from El Bolson on a Wednesday morning, dropping our packs in a bus shelter by the side of Route 40, the major route that runs from the bottom of Argentina to the top. After sticking his thumb out for about ten minutes, Tobi turned to me, telling me (jokingly?) that he only invited me because blonde gringas are more likely to get a ride than scruffy, bearded Argentines. I took a turn, and within five minutes we were sitting in the cab of a Volvo semi, en route to Osorno, Chile, a seven hour ride away, and within 100 kilometers of the ferry to Chiloe. Tobi's claims that it was "suerte del principiante" or beginners' luck, I've decided to believe that I'm just really good at hitchhiking.



The following day, and two more kind-hearted truck drivers later, we were on Chiloe. Despite its reputation for being rainy just about all year long, and especially during the colder months, the weather was crisp but the sky was blue, as it would be for a week of our ten-day stay. The Chilote gods were smiling on us, and we spent the next several days hopping about from one gorgeous, tranquil location to another.





Tobi had chosen spots on the map to go check out, some based on recommendations, and others chosen for their seemingly isolated or out-of-the-way locations. The tourists were gone but the locals were present, generous, and friendly. Our good fortune with weather and the fine folks we encountered carried on throughout the week. We met a band of rich young surfer boys from Vina del Mar who toted us in the back of their truck and onward, crossing a river, knee-deep-in-mud with our packs on to a deserted Pacific beach where we spent an all-too-short day and night.




A few days later, crossing from the main island to a much smaller one on a transport boat, we met Don Soto, 73 year-old native resident of that small island, Meulin, who, once we arrived on this tiny rural paradise, took us in the back of his truck to his daughter's house, where we stayed in her cozy guest cabin and ate her delicious gifts of fried congrio (white fish), homemade apple pie, and fresh eggs.







After waiting over an hour for a ride to Quellon, the southernmost city on the island, one chilly afternoon, we finally got a ride. After hoisting our packs into the bed of the pickup, we climbed into the cab and met Silvio, our 40-ish ex-hippie Chilean driver, whose first question was, "Why the hell do you want to go to Quellon?" to which Tobi replied, with a shrug, that it looked like someplace interesting and remote. Apparently, not so much. According to Silvio, it's "bastante feo," or ugly, with all of the riff raff from the rest of the island taking refuge down there at the end to escape from their various misdeeds. Okay, so where should we go instead? we wanted to know. "Queilen is much nicer," Silvio told us, "quiet, peaceful, and you can camp on the beach without a problem." Plus, it was where Silvio was headed. He drove us halfway out onto a mile-long beachy spit of land, from where we walked nearly to the end and set up camp, spending the next two days filling in the spaces between gorgeous sunrises and sunsets with beach yoga and fitful attempts at tackling The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test in Spanish (Ponche de Acido Lisergico).






In fact, that well sums up the ten days we spent on Chiloe--crisscrossing beautiful landscapes with picturesque ocean views, made even more spectacular by the technicolor skies created by the rising and falling of the sun. The island was everything I expected and more. After one day there, I was hooked, and we both knew that one week wouldn't be enough. Cow-dotted rolling green pastures, small towns with Pacific northwest-style bungalows stacked up along hills overlooking harbors filled with tiny yellow and blue fishing boats. Two hundred year-old weather beaten wooden churches in every plaza, tasty blocks of homemade, soft white cheese in every market, insanely cheap, just-off-the-boat mussels and varied shellfish I only know the names of in Spanish.





Around the eighth or ninth day, our good weather luck began to run out, and Chiloe started showing us its true colors. We spent the last couple of chilly, damp, but not unpleasant days holed up with a lively young pair of Germans in an abandoned refugio in a coastal national park on the southern Pacific coast (where Lili, our friendly Argentine park ranger, fed us seaweed streudel). By that point, it was time to begin the journey back to Buenos Aires, home for Tobi, a good rest stop for me. Chiloe had put on a captivating show for us, giving us daily opportunities for plenty of gasps and exclamations of wonder and appreciation. It may have taken me eight years to get to Chiloe, but it was more than worth the wait.


Here are more pics of my trip, plus some from other April adventures down south (El Chalten and a week in the woods of El Bolson),


or click here

3 comments:

  1. Am blown away by you kid. Wotta life! Hope (no, I know) your birthday was a good one. Keep on bloggin! -Hank

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  2. Girl, you really went for it and rocked this post! I love hearing all your details, and trains of thought. Also, those sunsets! I can't get enough. Not to mention the pic of you on the train, I mean, truck, I mean van. It's your magical traveling pic that will stay with you forever, with the memories. I loved talking on the phone the other day. Call me anytime, you know it. I love love love you! xoxoxo

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  3. yo tambien estoy enganchado. :)
    Mas mas mas.
    -d.

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