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Anza-Borrego May '07
Chile March '07
Coelemu February '07
Alaska July '06
New Zealand November '05
Hawai'i May '05
New Mexico October '04
Spain September '03
Hawai'i March '03
Chile April '02
Santa Fe November '01
Chile March '01
Australia Oct-Nov '00
RV Tour September '00
Cruce de Lagos February '98
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Back in February 1998, we had made the Cruce
de Lagos from Bariloche, Argentina to Puerto Varas, Chile, and decided
then that we would have to return to venture even farther south to see
the fjords, glaciers, and Laguna San Rafael National Park.
Accompanied by our regular travel companions, Gastón and Marta Bobillier,
we finally made the trip to "Chile Austral" (Chilean Patagonia)
in April 2002. With Gastón's help, we decided upon the package offered
by Patagonia
Connection, a company which focuses on small groups (around 50) and
lots of service.
April is at the end of the temporada alta (high season) in Patagonia.
This means smaller groups, lower airfares, and potentially "iffy"
weather. We also chose as our destination what is known as "flyover"
country in Patagonia. Rather than the more popular destination farther
south, the Torres
del Paine national park and its famous five-star Hotel
Explora, we settled on the less-visited but equally spectacular Puyuhuapi
Hot Springs and Laguna San Rafael, saving the remainder of Patagonia for
our next trip.
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Saturday, April 6
- Depart Santiago for Balmaceda, Coyhaique, and Termas de Puyuhuapi |
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Sunday, April 7
- Queulat, Puerto Puyuhuapi, Termas de Puyuhuapi |
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Monday, April 8
- Termas de Puyuhuapi, Laguna San Rafael National Park, Puerto Chacabuco |
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Tuesday, April 9
- Puerto Chacabuco and Coyhaique |
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Wednesday, April 10
- Coyhaique, Lago Elizalde, Villa Frei |
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Thursday, April 11
- Coyhaique, return to Santiago |
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Friday, April 12
- Santiago |
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Saturday, April 13
- Tito and Michu's Wedding, Santiago |
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Sunday, April 14
- Santiago, depart Santiago for San Diego |
Wednesday, April 3: Depart San Diego for Santiago
We used American Airlines, as it has a relatively short (just over nine
hours) non-stop red-eye from Dallas to Santiago. We arrived in Santiago
on the morning of the 4th, and rested and visited family on the 4th and
5th.
Saturday, April 6 : Depart Santiago for Balmaceda,
Coyhaique and Termas de Puyuhuapi 
We arise early Saturday, as we have over nearly twelve hours of air,
road, and boat travel ahead of us.
The airport serving the Patagonia region (Region de Aysén) is Balmaceda,
a converted military aerodrome just 3km from the Argentine border. Balmaceda
is a modern airport (with jetways!) built in the last decade, and lies
east of the cordillera (Andes Range), which places it
on the high pampas well beyond the rainforest, and less subject
to its weather.
In
Balmaceda, we are met by Cecilia, our Patagonia Connection guide, who
tags our bags with our hotel suite numbers, and we board a motor coach
for the 70km journey along the Carretera Austral (Austral Highway)
to Coyhaique,
the capital city of the Aysén region. We stop briefly in Coyhaique at
the Café Restaurant Historico Ricer (more about this restaurant and city
later) for a pisco
sour and hors d'oeuvres (our lunch will be very late this day) and
continue on to Puerto
Chacabuco, where we will board our catamaran.
En
route to Puerto Chacabuco along the Austral Road (which is not yet fully
paved at this point and at times precarious), our hour and a half trip
takes us across the cordillera into the rainforest climate, passing waterfalls,
mountains, gorges, and dense forests and ferns.
We arrive in Puerto Chacabuco, where we board the Patagonia
Express catamaran.
The
Patagonia Express is a small, luxurious catamaran, built in Chile
in 1991. It accommodates 70 (we were only 50) and has a crew of five,
so the service is intimate. We are served lunch (at 4pm due to the schedule)
as well as afternoon tea (at 7pm) en route through the fjords. The five-hour
trip goes through the Aysén Fjord, the Puyuhuapi Channel and the Seno
Ventisquero, and included a brief delay for the skipper to buy centollas
(king crabs) for the hotel from a local fisherman in a whaleboat.
We
finally arrive at our destination, the Termas
de Puyuhuapi Hotel & Spa, at 8:30pm. To make the arrival more
dramatic in the black Patagonian night, the hotel turned off its lights
until just before we arrived at the pier. With no other lights around
(not even stars or moonlight), the sudden illumination was quite dramatic.
As we disembarked, we were met by the entire hotel staff on the pier,
creating a sort of Fantasy Island experience. We were surprised not to
see Herve Villechaize and Ricardo Montalban in the reception line.
Aside
from our small catamaran group, there were only a few other guests at
the hotel, as this was the last excursion of the season. So we practically
had the entire hotel to ourselves. We were served welcoming pisco sours
and vainas
while the porters took our bags to our rooms. Then we were briefed on
the facilities, which include several indoor pools, Jacuzzi, fitness and
game rooms and a fully-equipped Thalassotherapy
Centre and invited to partake of the thermal baths before dining on
regional seafood and (naturally), excellent Chilean wine.
Sunday, April 7: Queulat, Puerto Puyuhuapi,
Termas de Puyuhuapi Hotel & Spa
After
breakfast, we board a launch for the short trip across the channel to
the village of Puerto
Puyuhuapi, where we board a van for the short road trip to the Queulat
National Park where we hike through the rain forest to view the Ventisquero
Colgante (Hanging Glacier).
We
return to the village and view the characteristic architecture of the
German settlers (following the pioneer Walter Hopperdietzel) and tour
the famous carpet factory Alfombras
de Puyuhuapi.
The
catamaran is waiting for us after we had seen all there is to see in the
tiny village, and we board it for the short trip back to the hotel, where
we have a leisurely lunch, and spend the rest of the day partaking of
the hotel's facilities. The rain is falling again, but gently, and we
have no trouble ambling from pool to pool, settling finally on the 38ºC
(100ºF) open air bath surrounded by giant ferns and nalca (giant
prehistoric rhubarb) plants, remaining until the bright stars appeared
in the sky. We have a drink in the cozy bar and dine again in the restaurant.
Monday, April 8: Termas de Puyuhuapi,
Laguna San Rafael, Puerto Chacabuco
 At
7:30am we check out of the hotel and set sail on the Patagonia Express
catamaran bound for the San Rafael Lagoon. The route takes us through
the Ventisquero Cove and along the Puyuhuapi, Moraleda and Costa Channels
into the Tres Cruces Gulf and the Elefantes Estuary. We finally enter
the San Rafael Lagoon about 2:00pm. At last, we see it: San Rafael Glacier.
Enormous mountains of 20,000 year old ice rise up and sparkle like turquoise-colored
jewels. We approach the bizarre ice sculptures in rubber rafts, and drink
cocktails chilled with a chunk
of ancient ice. Later
we begin the return trip and arrive in Puerto
Chacabuco about 10:00pm where we spend the night at Hotel
Loberías del Sur.
Tuesday, April 9: Puerto Chacabuco
and Coyhaique
After
breakfast, we board a coach for the 2½ hour trip along the banks of the
beautiful Simpson River, and into Coyhaique, where we part ways with the
rest of our group, who were headed on to Balmaceda and back to Santiago
by air. But we had decided in advance to spend an extra couple of days
in Coyhaique, the capital of the Aysén Region, and we check into the landmark
Hostería Coyhaique. We rent an SUV for our own independent excursions.
Coyhaique surprises us. Here, on the edge of the Patagonian pampas just
east of the cordillera, is a modern city of 40,000 inhabitants. It has
services of every sort, from a wide range of lodging choices to excellent
restaurants and taverns, banks, car rentals, shops, cybercafés, outfitters,
and coffee houses (cafeterías). And why not? Coyhaique is not
only the capital of the region, but the converging point for all trout
fishermen and outdoorsmen who come to Patagonia.
The central meeting point for all visitors to Coyhaique seemed to be
the Café Restaurant Historico Ricer, or simply the "Ricer."
It's a rustic, German-Chilean-style restaurant right off the unusual pentagon-shaped
town square or Plaza de Armas. It's so well located, and the
food and coffee is so cheap (and the service is good), that you can't
avoid not stopping there. We had more than a few café cortado
(the ubiquitous Chilean macchiato served in a glass) at the Ricer.
We
wanted to experience a Patagonian barbecue or asado patagón.
This is a lamb roasted over a fire pit and basted with an Argentine chimichurri
sauce (many of the settlers in this region came from Argentina). We find
one at El Comedor, a restaurant near the hotel, in a cabin at the rear
of the restaurant with its own gigantic hearth.
Wednesday, April 10 Coyhaique, Lago
Elizalde, Villa Frei
 We
do a "road trip" - to the nearest Patagonian lake, Lago Elizalde.
En route, we stop for lunch in Villa Frei, just as a busload of backpackers
disembark.
Thursday, April 11 on
to the Balmaceda Airport for our return to Puerto Montt and then back
to Santiago.
Friday, April 12
Santiago
Saturday,
April 13: Tito and Michu's Wedding 
Sunday, April 14 Lunch
at Pollo Cognac in Lo Barnechea. Depart Santiago for San Diego
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