We left Pisagua on the coast under heavy cloud cover, so driving out of the village under the classic Pacific marine inversion layer it looked like a cold November day with hardly anyone around and those there were, all bundled up.
We ended Tuesday travel around lunchtime at 3300 feet in 95 degree heat mitigated by a slight breeze. Rusty took full advantage of it.
The reason for the hundred mile hop was Humberstone, a ghost town just off Highway 5, the PanAmerican, at the junction for Iquique, a city on the coast.
This was the fog up close coming out of Pisagua in 59 degrees.
This is the dark sky of the marine inversion layer. It’s a classic phenomenon all along the west coast of the Americas where cold air over the water meets hot air from inland and creates what Californians call fog. I hated it when I lived in California as I never got to see a sunset for months at a time but here it’s a cool relief from the Atacama Desert.
The 24 miles from Piasagua to the PanAmerican are beautifully paved and the white lines helped us late in the day as we tried to reach the village before dark.
The drive to the intersection with Iquique was flat and dull and I reveled in the cruise control that I haven’t used in ages.
This part of the world has made a living of sorts from mining and this historic site was founded in 1872 and mining ceased in the Great Depression in 1931. We paid 5,000 pesos ($5:50) each to get in, a thousand peso discount for old age pensioners thank you very much.
I’ll bet you don’t know that nitrate mining was big business in this part of Peru. Me neither and yes in 1872 this area was part of Peru while Antofagasta was Bolivia’s port on the Pacific. In 1879 Bolivia, supported by Peru declared war on Chile who thrashed the pants off them and took all this clump of desert as their winnings. Bolivia has been moaning ineffectually ever since and paying Chile for the privilege of shipping through Antofagasta.
Dogs on leash are welcomed d rusher on the property and you are allowed to wander at will. It’s up to you to use common sense and don’t be stupid. We managed to comply. Also as a side note picking up after your dog is normal in public in Chile. I am in heaven as I now manage to look normal with my plastic bag. I got yelled at in Peru for being an idiot as I picked up after Rusty.
The ghost town is as you might expect, filled with explanations of life in this closed community in the desert 150 years ago.
To save myself writing endless paragraphs here’s a summary from the Wiki folk:
Everything at these mines had to be imported or made of improvised. They built recreational facilities including a basketball court and an iron riveted swimming pool as well as having a hospital a print shop a bank and all the various shops and repair facilities you can imagine.
Hat pins apparently known in Spanish as “ monkey scratchers.”
It reminded me a bit of Tombstone in Arizona except this is the real thing.
Thirty miles from the Peruvian port city of Iquique (“eee-key-kay”) everything was desert out here. After the Pacific War this all became Chile.
I the former shift supervisor was curious how the mining shift supervisor lived:
Must have been a pigeon fancier:
Florian the railway mechanic in Germany was fascinated by the old steam engines.
The classrooms had desks with inkwells in them such as I used to use when I went to school in England in 1965.
Cora checking the bakery.
Darwin came here in 1835 and was not impressed by the isolation of Iquique. He hired miles at vast expense for a day trip to the saltpeter mines. European saltpeter of a higher grade was used in gunpowder but the stuff mined here was good for fertilizer until the Germans invented artificial fertilizer and put these mines out of business.
Chilean saltpeter:
Back on the road we found ourselves low on gas and when we saw the first gas station in 165 miles, since Arica we felt obliged to get in line and fill up. It was as well we did as the next gas according to the attendant is 200 miles down the PanAmerican near Famagusta.
We didn’t drive far as the campground is located less than an hour from Humberstone in the middle of the desert down a dirt track in the back of beyond. We have a kitchen so Cora the OR nurse can clean and re-cover Layne’s leg wound which is healing steadily if slowly. Florian baked a German cake and Layne made tortellini I brought back from Florida. The heat of the day gives way to desert chill after sunset so even here we have good sleeping weather. And the pool was very cold and refreshing so only I enjoyed it.
We get to use the kitchen and dining table and hot shower in the cabin and sleep in our vans for $12 each.
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