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Argentinean and Chilean Patagonia
Now: 2006-03-20
We are next to
the very large Perito Moreno Glacier. It is like a silent
frozen sea with waves and crevices of beautiful turquoise. Then we
hear creaking, distant rumbling and cracking sounds, then close by
an almighty thunderous roar as a large piece of the packed ice
explodes off the glacier and splashes into the milky green waters
of Lake Argentina. The glacier advances 2m a day and this causes
the breaking off from the 5km wide ice front.
These ice fields
are near the town of El Calafate. The "calafate" is also
the name of an edible wild berry. It is made into fruit juice,
mixed into cocktails and was used in cave paintings. (Wonder
whether nurseries have it back home - berberis buxifolia.)
Earlier:
2006-02-15
Buenos Aires
The only way to get a seat on a plane from SA was to take a one
week package tour with Malaysian Air. Apart from the accommodation
being included we were also treated to a superb tango show. We
then pounded the pavements of BA seeing the sights. Buenos Aires
was hot and humid. By day we survived on "Pritti Limon" cold drink
and in the evenings enjoyed the Brahma chopp draft with the
inevitable excellent Argentinean steak and "flan", their version
of creme caramel.
With our limited
Spanish we could not find out by telephone so it was with
trepidation that we walked all the way to the port and were
greatly relieved when we heard from the shipping agent that our
vehicle had arrived safely. (Unlike 25 years ago when we had
shipped to South America and our motorhome had been destroyed
during a storm at sea. In 1980 our daughters, Liesl (6) and Ingrid
(4) were with us).
The shipping line
suggested a clearing agent but Jan managed to get the paperwork
done without one and after two days we drove out of the port and
were delighted that customs had stamped the vehicle in for 8
months. (This meant that if in future we needed somewhere to leave
the vehicle while we went on "home leave", it could be done by
getting 8 months in Argentina).
Before heading
south, we took the 4 hour ferry across the Rio de la Plata to
Uruguay. In Montevideo we looked up where we stayed and
ate, when we had to spend a month there in 1980 to sort our
insurance claim. On the way back the Unipower (on board welding
system) controller played up and Jan had to bypass it in order to
get full charge current to the battery bank. For the return
passage we were put on standby at 4 in the morning, as the ferry
was overbooked due to a blockade of the bridges further North by
environmentalists protesting against a new paper factory. We just
made it.
Southward Ho!
Back in BA, we plunged into the rush hour traffic and headed
south; nearly 50km of dense traffic and concrete urban sprawl,
before the open plains started. We never stopped appreciating the
emptiness. We also had our first experience of the Pampas
winds.... A heavy rainstorm hit us at dusk and we both got wet
when the very strong wind blew rain like a fire hose through the
door joints into the cab.
At a supermarket
in Bahia Blanca we did our first big shopping and found
prices much cheaper than back home. There we met a young couple
who had driven from Argentina to Alaska in a 1928 Graham Paige
car.
The Valdes
Peninsula, a 300km side trip, has a fascinating Magellanic
penguin colony as well as some Elephant seals and Sea lions at
look outs. However, it was not the time for Whales and birds. For
the first time there and often thereafter we saw ostrich-teenager
like Rheas and also Guanacos (a smaller type Llama). We often saw
foxes and would call out: "Zorro!" their Spanish name.
Trelew
is a town founded by the Welsh. At the local museum we were amazed
at the number of intact dinosaur skeletons which had been found in
southern Argentina. In the glass domed entrance hall they have,
actually growing, examples of ancient plants: like ginka, cycads,
palms and magnolia.
Steering against
the constant side wind over the huge flat plains of the Patagonian
Steppe we continued on Ruta 3. Even when there were patches of
bushy scrubland the poor sheep seemed to have little to eat. There
were wild horses too.
In Commodoro
Rivadavia, with some help from the tourist info office, we
found our Afrikaans speaking Argentinean friends again. His
mother, as a child, had come with other Afrikaners by ship in
1902. They own a bakery where they produce a huge 12kg, 30x30x60cm
loaf of bread. It is sliced and distributed for sandwich making in
catering. Jan helped to repair the large dough mixer. Leone sipped
the traditional mate (herbal tea) with wife and family.
Tierra del Fuego
After 12 days´ driving we reach the island of Tierra del Fuego.
(Fireland) We were moving faster than we would have preferred, but
had to get there before the winter really set in. Suddenly we have
forests and lakes and snow clad mountains.
Ushuaia
is the southernmost city in the world. At a restaurant with a view
over the Beagle channel we enjoy the local king crab.
In Tierra de
Fuego National Park, Dipli is photographed next to the sign which
says Buenos Aires 3063km, Alaska 17848km... (we will check this!)
Then we drive
130km to the one man naval observation post at Moat, at the
end of a side road.
Located at S54
58,549 it is the furthest South on earth, reachable by wheeled
vehicle.
Estancia
Harberton, established in 1886, is the oldest farm in the
area. It is one of the many sheep farms of Patagonia and has an
area of 20 000 hectares.
Southern Chile
Darwin: "Looking due Southward. The distant channels between the
mountains appeared from the gloominess to lead beyond the confines
of this world..."
After we take the
short ferry back over the Straights of Magellan, we remain in
Chile and head for Punta Arenas.
Quest for the
furthest South. Jan wants to drive Dipli to the southernmost
end of the continent of South America. (The point mentioned
above having been on an island). Then the gravel road ends at a
river and becomes a track on the opposite bank. Leone´s protests
do not stop him. More streams to forge and some beach driving. The
wild fuchsia shrubs disguise the branch that cracks the mirror.
The loose gas bottle falls over, catches its valve handle on
something, opens and nearly poisons us. A rather thick tree, which
had fallen over from the forest, had to be sawn off as it was
overhanging the beach with not enough clearance for Dipli to pass
under. Eventually the track also terminates where rocks on the
shore adjoining dense forest make further progress impossible. We
are still 28km short of Cape Froward, but this would have
to do. Dipli is covered in mud, as if it has been sprayed on.
The next day we
find a grassy spot in the forest, out of the wind, to replace a
front spring main blade (which had been damaged before, but had
now broken off).
It is mid March
(Temperatures 1 - 12°C). We are 3000km South of Cape Town´s
latitude and it is time to head North.
We visit Parque
National Torres del Paine in Chile. It is a hiker´s
paradise with marked trails and huts. The beautiful mountain
scenery is of the snow clad rock "towers" with 1000m vertical
cliffs, green glacier-milk rivers and turquoise lakes. Lace
flowers grow wild.
A few hundred
km further north brings us back to El Calafate, ArgentinaOnto part 2 of
the South American journal
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