Archive for November, 2006

made it, Santiago

Sunday, November 19th, 2006

We made it to Santiago. It was a very long flight. From 10 p.m. from Atlanta, arriving 9 a.m. Santiago. I slept reasonably well. All our luggage made it. We are staying at the teacher´s house from the school. We are immersed in Spanish and Chilean culture. We are learning Spanish naturally, meaning Fernando spent Friday afternoon with us telling us about Chilean history, industry and geography. Yesterday we went on an excursion with other students to the countryside. We traveled by bus, subway, taxi and highway bus. We got to meet artisans making pottery, baskets and chairs. We ate typical Chilean food at the restaurant run by a friend of our hostess.

We are staying in the middle of a city of 5 million people. The house has a courtyard full of fruit trees. Today the students from the school are coming here to go to the market and prepare a meal. The weather is very comfortable. The Andes glisten with some snow remaining from winter. People are friendly. The taxi driver thanked us for the privilege of being the first to drive us in South America. Our hosts are Boris and Liddian. The grandparents of Boris are Russian and German. People are diverse. we met a member of the church of Latter Day Saints. In a country with 16 million peple, there are 18 milion cellphone accounts..

Tommorrow we start Spanish school for six hours per day. We will take the bus and metro to get to school. Class is from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. My Spanish has kind of come back If someone speaks slowly to me, I can understand. I say a bunch of nouns and verbs and they understand me. We have students from States, Brazil, Australia and Iran.

Map: Fishing Zones

Wednesday, November 15th, 2006

We plan to visit each of the three major fishing zones in Patagonia. This region is generally regarded by fly fisherman as among the best in the world.

Ready or Not?

Wednesday, November 15th, 2006

Well, I packed today. Everything for two months rolled and folded, in two small bags. Fishing gear, clothes, fly tying kit, books, even laundry detergent. I am sure they won’t seem small when I have to lug them all through Chile and Argentina. It has taken an entire month to assemble everything and sift through and pare down, and now it is all ready. 48 hours before flight time. The focus has been on the getting ready. Now, fairly quickly, the energy is shifting to the excitement of the great adventure. It feels like being in the starting gate, all the preparation done, just waiting for the gun, ‘and they are off!’

Map: Travel Route

Tuesday, November 14th, 2006

Here are the major cities we plan to visit:
1. Santiago
2. Bariloche
3. Esquel
4. Puerto Montt
5. Puerto Natales
6. Punta Arenas
7. Rio Gallegos
8. Rio Grande
9. Ushuaia
The distance from Santiago to Ushuaia is about 1,500 miles. From Charleston to Santiago is about 5,100 miles.

Map: South America

Tuesday, November 14th, 2006

Here’s a map of South America. We are flying into Santiago and going south from there. The area we are going to is sometimes called the Lake District, Patagonia, and Tierra del Fuego; it’s collectively called the Southern Horn.