Thursday, October 31, 2024

Pucón

We were at the travel agent’s office in the lakeside town of Pucón organizing car insurance for Argentina (six months coverage $120) and we incautiously told the very nice lady owner of the shop we liked the area so much we’d like to drop back in during the summer. The border is barely fifty miles away in the Andes.

A look of horror crossed her face. “Summer?” she said. “Oh no. Summers are awful here. The place is packed. This is the best possible time of year.” Which rang some bells for us as former residents of high traffic tourist destinations.

A spring day mid week in the little town of Pucón seemed quite pleasant to our tourist eyes. The street dogs are well fed and cared for sleeping in their thick fur coats in the flower beds. Our own formerly stray dog enjoyed strutting his leash around town enough that by dark he was laid out on his bed filling GANNET2 with deep long reverberating snores. 

I am told people come here to enjoy frozen water and cold mountain air in the winter, aberrations that we happily avoided in our working life by hiding in Key West but this alpine theme is visible everywhere around town. 

In summer water sports are the theme and there are outfitters everywhere selling high end name brand clothing and fashionable equipment that you would see anywhere in the most fashionable gathering spots in the world. 

Just in case you were wondering we got excellent fruits and vegetables and local cheeses on the street like you might in any South American street scene but Chile is clean tidy and orderly. And I like it. 

We checked out a liquor store with embarrassingly inexpensive Chilean wines, between $3 and $10 a bottle mostly and some “American cut” chips. Perhaps that means rippled. The US is still the trend setter I guess, speaking as someone who wouldn’t know a trend if it bit him in the backside. 

They also sell pickles in a bag. My Jewish wife pounced. 

The Chilean peso is about a thousand to one against the US dollar. 

I can see why European travelers are so keen to reach Peru and Bolivia as they come from a continent of strangulating order and conformity mirrored by these countries in the southern tip of South America. For them the dust and colorful chaos of poverty and indigenous costumes and street markets and stuff is exciting and exotic. For us, who have trudged in the opposite direction for more than a year the calm orderly cleanliness of Chile is a refreshing change, a breath of fresh clean air. We filled our tank yesterday with clean potable water from a hose. Imagine that…

You can see for yourselves why the lakes of Chile might put one in mind of Aspen or Switzerland. And we had a $100 lunch in a Spanish restaurant. Chile comes at a price. 

I am strongly reminded of Europe, various countries at various times and this site was Spain through and through. Chileans aren’t necessarily clothes horses or fashionistas  like you might imagine. In most countries the wearing of shorts by adults is frowned upon and reveals you to be a tourist. Here Chileans wear shorts and jeans and can be as scruffy as the scruffiest overlander even if their clothes labels may be high end for the discerning. Down here puffy jackets and boots are a kind of fashion accessory required by the climate so I expect their tastes run to expensive peasant wear. 

I am told the food is of interest. Here we shared an appetizer of shrimp and calamari rings with lemon garlic and parsley. It is a dish from Galicia we were told. 

Layne had lamb chops that she savaged and Rusty got the leftovers when we returned to GANNET2. I had a Spanish steak smothered in sweet red peppers and garlic. The potatoes are sliced thin, apparently a Spanish style and very good, crisp but not overly salty. Oh and sangria to wash it all down. 

And then we shared a dulce de leche mousse, a sea of it in a glass chalice fit to drown in.  Two coffees and we didn’t need dinner. 

A memorable meal before my birthday. 

We could have sat on the sidewalk but frankly it was a bit too brisk for us at 65 degrees on a partly cloudy afternoon. The fireplace was quite lovely and the heat it radiated was welcome for us tropically inclined people. 

Time to walk off some of lunch around town. 















We also discovered Jack Daniel’s and Coke in a can. I wanted to try one because advertising works. As you can see we park our 21 foot van most places and sticking out a bit isn’t the end of the world. Low garage roofs defeat and annoy us. 

Pick your favorite resort town anywhere and it might look like this: 

Lake Villarica: 

And on to our next lake through gorgeous Spring countryside. 

My sister called me from Italy for my birthday (67) and I asked how her grumpy husband was doing as they are ten years older than me. It turns out he thinks I live a life of luxury which isn’t the compliment it sounds like. Luxury could easily be interpreted as lazy, or not working. 

Either way he could be right. The biggest luxury of all is no regrets. 








Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Lago Villarica

Alvaro greeted us at the entrance to this gated community halfway between Villarica and Pucón on the south shore of Lake Villarica. His grandfather bought the land in the 1960s right down to the water’s edge where they still have homes but the family created the community and sold parcels reserving the grassy area of the campground and surrounding woods for themselves. And campers.

It happened a Colombian traveler who had lived in Miami and bought a camper to travel South America came here just as the Covid lockdowns began and during the three months of his confinement he worked with Slvaro and his brother Christian to build a full service campground in the field. And so they did with hot showers, sinks to wash dishes and 220 volt power plugs scattered around the field. Alvaro with the beard and his brother Christian under the cap. 

What’s weird about Chile is these people look totally American. You’ll see people wearing shorts which in most of Latin America only tourists like me wear in public. Chileans are of European ancestry, this family emigrated from Germany originally and the indigenous people of Chile and Argentina have been largely wiped out after the Spanish conquest. There are so far as I can tell no short black haired dark skinned Quechua people such as you will see in Peru and the countries further north.

The Lake District of Chile is an area we have barely started to explore but we plan to drive around several and take a side trip to Valdivia and the coast before we land in Puerto Montt where we want to take a four day ferry into the far south of Chile, penguin country.

Meanwhile the Lake District feels like a cross between the Pacific Northwest and Switzerland. Alvaro showed us the path to the lakeshore below the campground through his property. 





Technically the campground is closed but Alvaromlikes to welcome overlanders out of season so we had the beach to ourselves.

Imagine a windless 80 degree day and as you can see not a cloud in the sky. Just lovely. 











Rusty prefers freshwater to salt as not only do waves not attack him but he can also drink it. 







The chemtrail convinced us to go back to GANNET2 and seek cover. Or it would have did we believe that nonsense. Mind you if the government really does control the weather I’d like to send the person responsible a thank you note for this perfect weather we’ve been having. 

We wandered back up the hill admiring the empty summer homes that would not look out of place in the suburbs of Seattle. 











Home sweet home.