bariloche

Southern Explorer

15 days | Trip Code: SSR

Countries Visited

Alternative Dates 2009
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Highlights

Santiago, Puerto Varas, Bariloche, Buenos Aires, Iguassu Falls, Paraty, Rio de Janeiro.

Description

Sip wine in Santiago, learn to tango in Buenos Aires and live it up in beachside Rio. Experience diverse landscapes, from majestic mountain peaks to roaring waterfalls, including the greatest of them all, breathtaking Iguassu Falls.

Trip Details
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Map for SSR
  • StartFinish
  • Santiago to Rio de Janeiro
  • Combination
  • This trip combines our Southern Discovery SSB and Southern Highlights SBR tours.
  • What's Included
  • Winery tour, Osorno Volcano and Petrohue Falls Tour, Puerto Blest and Lago Frias Tour, Buenos Aires city tour, Visit to the Iguassu Falls, Traditional Brazilian barbecue with a local family in Paraty, Arrival transfer and breakfast daily.
  • Group Size Notes
  • Max 15, Avg 10
  • Reverse Itinerary
  • This trip also runs in reverse - see trip code SRS.
  • Group Leader
  • Tour leader throughout, local guides.
  • Meals Included
  • 14 Breakfasts, 1 Dinner.
  • Transport
  • First-class buses, Local flights, Private van.
  • Accommodation
  • Comfort hotels (14 nts).
  • Meal Budget
  • Allow USD550 for meals not included. For additional expenses, see Trip Details.

Day 1 Arrive Santiago

Arrive in Santiago at any time.

Day 2 Santiago (B)

Spend the day enjoying some great Chilean wine at different wineries across the Maipu Valley. Take in the history of the vineyards and learn about the art of wine making.

Day 3-4 Puerto Varas (2B)

Fly south to Puerto Varas and the beautiful Lake District of Chile, where you will be able to hike through the Petrohue region in the hills surrounding Osorno Volcano. Optional activities include an excursion to the lakeside villages of Frutillar.

Day 5-6 Bariloche (2B)

Cross the mountains of upper Patagonia and into Argentina, stopping at Bariloche. A popular resort town for Argentines, the spectacular surroundings of Bariloche offer a multitude of outdoor options. Enjoy a lake cruise as we visit the Blest "arm" or inlet of Lake Nahuel Huapi.

Day 7-9 Buenos Aires (2B)

Known as the ‘Paris of the Americas,’ Buenos Aires is a vibrant city full of life. Enjoy the city at your leisure and visit the districts of La Boca, Recoleta, and San Telmo or catch a tango show at one of the many famous tanguerías. Wander the pedestrian walkways and see some dancing in the streets in this most European of Latin cities.

Day 10-11 Iguassu Falls (2B)

Stunning Iguassu Falls spans 3km and is comprised of 275 separate waterfalls, with some over 80m in height. Spend two days exploring both the Argentine and Brazilian sides of the falls, with optional activities including an exhilarating boat trip at the base of the falls.

Day 12-13 Paraty (2B,D)

A travel day takes us to the Atlantic coast and the gorgeous coastal town of Paraty. Wander the cobblestone streets, take a boat trip to the nearby islands in the bay, or visit one of the many white sand beaches that make Brazil famous. We will enjoy a delicious traditional Brazilian barbecue with a local family during our time here to truly savour and experience the culture.

Day 14 Rio de Janeiro (B)

Follow the scent of sand and Caipirinha (a fantastic Brazilian cocktail) to the incomparable Rio de Janeiro, where the friendly Cariocas (Rio residents) will have you swaying to the ever-present samba rhythms. Enjoy some local food and drink, and don’t forget the beach at Copacabana, the perfect place to end your journey across the heart of South America.

Day 15 Depart Rio (B)


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  • Guaranteed Departure - Guaranteed departure
  • Discounted Departure - Departure has a discount
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You get to see such a wide variety of places on the tour from the lakes and mountains of northern Patagonia to the beaches of Brazil, from the steaks and tango dancing of Argentina to the Cachaca liquor and salsa in Brazil. I really felt like I had a good snapshot of the highlights of the region in the short time-frame I had. A must-do trip!

- Rebecca Anne E British

Overall, I had a great time on this trip.

- Francine F Canadian

We were very well looked after by our tour leader who went to a lot of effort to help us with everything, from ordering food in restaurants to finding cheap places to do our laundry to helping us use post offices. The tour was well organised and was a good introduction to the countries we visited.

- Samantha R British

We cannot fault any part of the tour we had a great time and will reccommend GAP to our friends. Have travelled with other travelling company but have found that the smaller groups are so much better you can get closer to the people and integrate better with them. Will definitely use GAP again.

- Giulia S Australian

Great trip. Lots of exciting things to see and do. Great variety travelling through 3 different countries.

- Ann B Australian

See the rest of the reviews for Southern Explorer

This guide content provides general destination information. Events and highlights mentioned may or may not be experienced on your tour. Refer to your Trip Details document for inclusions.

Places To See

Parque Nacional Lauca

Lauca is northern Chile's treasure. Within the huge park are herds of llama and alpaca, groups of vizcachas (related to the chinchilla) and over 100 bird species, including flamingos and Andean gulls, plus archaeological landmarks. An especially spectacular feature is Lago Chungará, one of the world's highest lakes, at the foot of the dormant twin Payachata volcanos.

Puerto Montt

Settled by German colonists in the mid-19th century, this is one of southern Chile's most important cities. It features middle-European architecture, with shingles, high-pitched roofs and ornate balconies. The redwood cathedral on the city's plaza is the city's oldest building, dating from 1856.

Puerto Montt is the transport hub and access point to the southern Lakes District, the island of Chiloé and Chilean Patagonia. The nearby port of Angelmó and the island of Tenglo offer a more relaxed atmosphere. Angelmó has an outstanding crafts market and fabulous seafood.

San Pedro de Atacama

This tiny colonial village has excellent access to the spectacular geysers, volcanoes, salt flats and lakes of the northern altiplano, and is one of Chile's most popular destinations. The town itself has an excellent archaeological museum and pretty 16th-century adobe buildings. Locals still farm terraces that are over a thousand years old.

San Pedro is the access point to the world's highest geyser field at El Tatio, Chile's largest salt flat, and a flamingo breeding ground. Numerous volcanoes and natural hot springs, pre-Columbian archaeological sites, and other-worldly landscapes such as the famous Valle de la Luna are located in the vicinity too. The village is also a gateway to Bolivia's dazzling salt flat, Uyuni.

Pre-Departure Information

When to go?

Chile always has a region or two ripe for exploration whatever the season. But if your heart is set on one part of the country, pick your trip dates carefully. Santiago and Middle Chile are best in the verdant spring (September through November) or during the fall harvest (late February into April), while Chile's southern charms, Parque Nacional del Paine in Magallanes and the lakes region are best in summer (December through March). The parched Atacama Desert can be explored year-round, although summer days sizzle and nights are bitterly cold at higher altitudes throughout the year. In the northern altiplano, summer is the rainy season, though this usually means only a brief afternoon downpour.

Chile in the winter can be a wonderland for skiers; the country's resorts attract hordes from July through September. Easter Island is cooler, slightly cheaper and much less crowded outside the summer months. The same is true of the Juan Fernández archipelago, which can be inaccessible if winter rains erode the dirt airstrip; March is an ideal time for a visit. Summer is high season.

Many of the country's best festivals, including Semana Musical, Fiesta de Candelario and Carnaval, are held in February, so consider this a good time to come if you want to hang out with the locals.

Travel Visa Overview

Citizens of the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and most Western European countries do not require a visa, although US citizens do pay a fairly hefty, cash-only 'reciprocity fee' (around 100.00). Canadians pay around 135.00 and Australians about 60.00, while there is no fee for EU or New Zealand residents. This fee is good for the life of the holder's passport. A 90-day entry permit, renewable for another 90 days, is received on entering the country and must be presented to officials on leaving.

Electricity

220V

50Hz

Electrical Plugs

European plug with two circular metal pins

Health Information

Hantavirus

The Hantavirus infection has recently come to the attention of the international health community, with several cases reported in Chile's summer of 2005-6. Precautions should be taken in Chile's lake district; specifically, when choosing camp sites, check for the presence of long-tailed mice, stay away from garbage and keep your own rubbish covered. Initial symptoms are similar to those of a flu. In such a case you should go to the nearest hospital and let them know you were hiking or camping in such an area. More information can be found in tourist offices and hospitals, especially in the south of Chile. Overall risks are small if precautions are taken.

Weather Information

Chile's mountainous geography spanning over 30° of latitude makes for some strange climatic variation. Summer and winter in Chile's north are quite restrained with temperatures in the 15-25°C (63-77°F) range throughout the year with only slight seasonal change. Rain is of no concern as this coast-to-desert landscape is one of the driest in the world, despite heavy cloud cover from April to December. Central Chile has far more pronounced seasonal change with average daily highs of 29°C (85°F) from December to February and dropping to around 14°C (58°F) in June. Rainfall is heaviest in the winter months but still only moderate and falling on a few days at this time. Down south rainfall increases dramatically, peaking in June with most days succumbing to the wet. Temperatures in this region are slightly cooler with low 20°C (around 70°F) summer highs and plunging into the single digits (around 42°F) in the middle of the year.

History and Culture

Pre-20th Centure History

Pre-Columbian Chile was peopled by a variety of ancient cultures, many of them politically subject to the Incas who they predated by many centuries. The country's varied topography governed the character of its population groups and the extent to which they were exposed to Incan aggression. Native groupings included Aymara farmers in the desert north, who cultivated maize and tended flocks of llamas and alpacas; fisherfolk in the coastal areas; Diaguita Indians in the mountainous interior; Araucarian Indians in the center and south, whose fishing and agricultural settlements were barely touched by Incan incursions; and numerous groups of archipelagic hunters and fishers in the remote south.

All territory west of Brazil was granted to Spain by the 1494 Spanish-Portuguese treaty. The Spanish assigned the task of conquering Chile to Pedro de Valdivia, whose expedition reached Chile's fertile Mapocho Valley in 1541. Santiago was founded in the same year, with the cities of La Serena, Valparaíso, Concepción, Valdivia and Villarrica following soon after. The Río Biobío marked the southern extent of Spanish incursions, where they were barred by the resistance of the fierce Mapuche tribes. Valdivia rewarded his followers with enormous land grants, which resembled the great feudal estates of his Spanish homeland. Although mining and business outstripped agriculture as Chile's merchant megaliths, it was the social structure of these estates that shaped colonial Chile. The native population was devastated by the unwitting introduction of infectious diseases, and the mestizo population, the offspring of Spanish and Indian unions, were used as tenant laborers on these huge estates, many of which were still intact in the 1960s.

By the 1820s, the cumbersome methods by which taxation was extracted by a stagnant and complacent Spain allowed a flowering pan-American identity to blossom into a push for full independence. Simón Bolívar and José de San Martín led armies of freedom fighters from Venezuela to Peru, and from Argentina into Chile. Bernardo O'Higgins, son of an Irish immigrant and erstwhile viceroy of Peru, became supreme director of the new Chilean republic. The newly independent Chile was a fraction of its eventual size, consisting of Santiago and Concepción, and had fuzzy borders with Bolivia and Argentina. The coming of the railways and military triumphs over Peru and Bolivia in the War of the Pacific (1879-83) incorporated the mineral-rich Atacama Desert to the north and the southern temperate territories. Chile quickly achieved political stability and relative democracy, enabling rapid agricultural development and the advancement of mining, industry and commerce. The now empowered working class and the nouveau riche both challenged the political power of the landowning oligarchy in a brief but bloody civil war in the 1890s.

Modern History

The first half of the 20th century saw the political climate swing between right and left. Infrastructure development was generally sluggish, leading to rural poverty, and urbanization through desperation. By the 1960s social reforms were instituted by the Christian Democrats, who targeted housing, education, health and social services. Chile's politics were becoming increasingly militant and polarized when Salvador Allende's leftist coalition crept to victory in 1970. Allende introduced sweeping economic reforms, including the state takeover of many private enterprises and the wholesale redistribution of income. The country was plunged into economic chaos.

General Augusto Pinochet seized power in a bloody coup on September 11, 1973. Allende died, apparently by his own hand, and thousands of his supporters were murdered. Dark days followed, with assassinations, purges and enforced exiles; up to 80,000 people were tortured or murdered. Rumors of CIA involvement in the coup were given credence by the US-instigated suspension of credit from international finance organizations, and the contemporaneous financial and moral support given to Allende's opponents.

Pinochet dissolved Congress, banned leftist parties and suspended all opposition. His monetarist economic policies brought stability and relative prosperity, but in a 1988 referendum to approve his presidency, voters rejected him. In the 1989 multiparty elections, Christian Democrat Patricio Aylwin beat Pinochet's candidate, Hernan Buchi, and power was peacefully transferred. Democracy returned to Chile, although many of the previous regime's power brokers wielded a lingering influence for many years.

Elected president in 1994, Eduardo Frei undertook the challenge of reconciling Chileans with their difficult past by accelerating human rights tribunals and inquiries into the fate of Chile's 3000 disappeared. Unfortunately, resistance from the political arm of the military machine severely hampered his efforts. Frei's economic reforms, however, did help alleviate crushing poverty to some degree.

Recent History

Pinochet has continued to dominate recent political history. He was arrested in London in 1998 and in March 2000 he returned to Chile, where a court stripped him of immunity from prosecution and formally charged him with kidnapping.

In July 2001, a Chilean court ruled that he was unfit to stand trial. This setback also meant that Pinochet could no longer hold on to his lifelong senatorial sinecure. Chileans then witnessed a string of yo-yoing court decisions - first stripping his immunity or declaring him fit for trial, then subsequently reversing the ruling. Revelations made in early 2005 about Pinochet's secret foreign bank accounts - holding more than 27,000000.00 - added to the charges. He died in 2006.

In 2006 Chile elected its first female president, Michelle Bachelet, marking the fourth consecutive term for the ruling Concertación coalition.


© 2009 Lonely Planet Publications Pty Ltd. All rights reserved.

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