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Join us in Chile as we visit many of the country’s natural highlights. We explore the arid Atacama Desert, walk in the Moon Valley and visit vast salt lagoons – home to flocks of pink flamingos. From Puerto Varas – on the shores of Lake Llanquihue – we trek through Valdivian forests along the slopes of Osorno volcano. In Torres del Paine National Park we explore the landscape of glaciers, waterfalls, lakes, jagged mountain peaks and the famous ‘Torres’ – granite towers which stand over 1800m high. Along the way we tour the capital Santiago and visit the penguin colony at Magdalena Island. We end the tour on Easter Island visiting the impressive Moai stone sculptures, Crater Lake and the ceremonial village of Orongo.
Itinerary
[+] Detailed Itinerary
1
Join tour Santiago de Chile; PM city tour
Joining the tour in Santiago today, our intention this afternoon is to take an orientation tour of the city by bus and metro. One of the most scenic cities in South America, Santiago lies in the shadow of the Andes and the old part of the city, around the Alameda, contains a number of fine buildings, statues and gardens, including the impressive Presidential Palace and the monastery of San Francisco. The city is filled with museums to its colonial and pre- Columbian past and in the Bellavista district we can find the unusual house of the famous Chilean poet and Nobel Prize winner Pablo Neruda.
Overnight Standard Hotel
2
Free day in Santiago
Today has been left free to explore some more of the city, to wander its streets and parks, and perhaps visit the vineyards that lie on the outskirts of the city. The Maipo Valley is considered by many to be the best wine-growing region in the country. Certainly the oldest, it is renowned for its Cabernet Sauvignon and a tour of the vineyards, lying in the shadow of the magnificent Andes is the perfect combination of sensory delights. Alternatively there is the option of a trip to the nearby city of Valparaiso, Chile’s culture capital. Once a colonial port linking trade with neighbouring Peru, the city suffered numerous raids at the hands of pirates, including Sir Francis Drake. Reaching the height of its prosperity during the 19th century it finally fell into decline with the onset of the steam age and the opening of the Panama Canal. Much of its colonial past has been destroyed by a number of powerful earthquakes over the years, but the city still retains some of the grandeur of its halcyon days and its hills are dotted with the remnants of its glorious past. The city today is a major port and its surrounding hills, a natural amphitheatre covered in colourful houses and mansions, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Overnight Standard Hotel
Included meals: Breakfast
3
Fly Calama, then drive to San Pedro de Atacama; walking in Valle de la Luna
Flying to Calama this morning we transfer by private bus to the oasis town of San Pedro de Atacama, set high amongst the spectacular volcanoes of Los Andes Cordillera and our gateway to the dramatic landscapes of the Atacama Desert. Arriving later this morning there will be time to relax, or perhaps take an optional visit to the impressive archaeological museum containing the collection of artefacts assembled by Padre Gustave Paige, a Belgian missionary who spent some 25 years here during the later years of the last century. This afternoon we will take a walk amongst the dunes of the nearby Valle de la Luna (Moon Valley), a nature reserve to the west of the town, where the surreal landscape has been formed by the erosion of the salt mountains. We intend to watch the setting sun cast its golden glow across the spectacular landscape, before returning by bus back to San Pedro.
Overnight Standard Hotel
Included meals: Breakfast
4 to 5
In San Pedro
San Pedro was once the centre of the Atacama culture, before the arrival of the Spanish, and its dusty streets and evocative setting still exudes an air of times long past. Over the next two days we have the chance to explore in more depth this remarkable town and its fascinating cultural and natural diversity. Our first day sees us transferring out to Puritama to spend the day walking amongst the desert landscapes of the remarkable Atacama, one of the most barren and dramatic natural features in the entire country. We will walk through a terrain peppered with hot springs, with views back across to San Pedro and the vast expanse of the Salar de Atacama. Our second day has been left free, affording the chance to do some exploring on your own. You may like to take an early morning trip out to the El Tatio Hot Springs, a geothermal field of spouting geysers and steaming fumaroles surrounded by a vista of volcanic mountains. Watching these active geysers erupting in the light of the rising sun is an impressive sight, and it will leave your afternoon free to visit the extensive salt flats of the Salar de Atacama, at 300,000 hectares the third largest area of salt flats on the planet. Rich in minerals the lake is home to flocks of pink flamingos during the winter months and the air is so dry that the views across the Salar have to be seen to be believed.
Overnight Standard Hotel
Included meals: Breakfast
6
Fly to Puerto Montt and drive to Puerto Varas; walk at Llanquihue Lake
Today we fly to Puerto Montt, the most important port in the south of Chile and, in a very real sense, the spot where the developed or settled population of Chile comes to a full stop. This is the gateway to the wild and rugged regions to the south and from here we drive to Puerto Varas and our hotel, based beside the shores of lake Llanquihue. With some free time to explore we’ll take a stroll on the lake shore, the second largest in Chile and one of the shimmering jewels of Chile’s Lake District. Set against the backdrop of snow capped volcanoes, this is the third largest expanse of natural water on the South American continent and presents us with a quite breathtaking setting.
Overnight Standard Hotel
Included meals: Breakfast
7 to 8
In Puerto Varas
Our first full day here sees us hiking around the area dominated by the classic volcanic cone of Osorno (2,680m), an almost picture perfect representation of a snowy volcanic peak. Our walk takes us through the lush landscapes of the Valdivian Rain Forest, the slopes of the mountain sprinkled with Andean birch, providing a haven for chingue (Patagonian skunk), culpeo (Patagonian fox), weasels and puma, whilst the bird populations boast hummingbirds, woodpeckers and kestrel. Our second day has been left free for optional activities, perhaps trying your hand at mountain biking, rafting, or maybe doing some more trekking around the area. There is also the chance to take a full day excursion to Chiloe Island, the second largest in South America (after Tierra del Fuego) and a captivating place of verdant beauty and legend, whose people are amongst the friendliest anywhere in South America. The island’s rich colonial heritage has seen its capital, Castro, designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site and its vibrant mix of Catholic beliefs and native mythology, Jesuits churches and traditional stilted houses make it an absolute treasure to explore.
Overnight Standard Hotel
Included meals: Breakfast
9
Fly to Punta Arenas
Today we fly to Punta Arenas and transfer to our hotel after which the rest of the afternoon is free to explore at your leisure. Founded in the mid 19th century the city began life as a penal colony, growing rich on the facilities that it offered to shipping on the routes through the southern oceans, as well as its importance as a centre for sheep ranching. Many of the grandiose mansions that are dotted around the Plaza Muñoz Gamero date from this period and a visit to the Palacio Sara Braun affords an interesting insight into life during those heady days. The city is littered with memorials to its colonial past, whilst the cypress lined cemetery offers a fascinating perspective on the rich diversity of cultures and peoples that helped to build this city.
Overnight Standard Hotel
Included meals: Breakfast
10
Drive to Torres del Paine NP via Milodon Cave
Leaving Punta Arenas this morning we travel by public bus to Puerto Natales, where we meet our charter bus to resume the journey via Laguna Azul, Paine River Falls and Milodon cave to the Torres del Paine National Park. Later this afternoon we arrive in Torres del Paine National Park, arguably one of the world’s most beautiful national parks, described by Alberto de Agostini as “one of the most spectacular sights that the human imagination can conceive”. Blessed with an abundance of natural wonders the area was turned into a national park in 1959 and covers some 934 square miles of land. Taking its name from the Tehuelche Indian word payne, meaning pale blue, it is a landscape of rugged mountains, turquoise coloured glacial lakes and spectacular wildlife. The majestic vistas of Chilean Patagonia are one of the most scenic and environmentally diverse regions on the planet, home to a wide variety flora and fauna.
Overnight Standard Hostel
Included meals: Breakfast
11
In Torres del Paine National Park
Paine is little known outside Chile, lying amidst a region of ice-capped peaks, silent blue glacial lakes and wild hill country. Here it is not unusual to see large numbers of guanacos here, as well as black-necked swans, upland geese, pink flamingos and the odd grey fox snooping around the human food areas looking for an easy meal. We may even be fortunate enough to spot condors, or even the elusive puma, larger here than in any other place in the Andes. Our days here afford us an opportunity to take some walks in the surrounding lake country and have views of the ‘Torres’, imposing pinnacles of sharp granite that are surrounded by glacial lakes and craggy ranges that formed millions of years ago. Reaching over 2,600 metres these towers are just part of an impressive range of some 15 peaks rising above 200 metres, the highest of which is the Cerro Paine Grande, presenting us with one of the most beathtaking mountain vistas on the planet. This is a place to keep an eye out for condors, rheas and guanacos. The itinerary here is kept flexible so we can make the best choices depending on weather conditions as some walks may not be possible due to high winds.
Overnight Standard Hostel
Included meals: Breakfast
12
In Torres del Paine National Park; PM transfer to Puerto Natales
Today we may have the chance to experience the icebergs of Lago Grey, with an opportunity to take an optional boat trip out onto the waters of one of the largest lakes in the park, where icebergs calved from a huge glacier float down towards the beach to be transformed into bizarre formations of incredible blue-hued majesty by the wind and water. Alternatively we can do some shorter walks in the park today and soaking up the magnificent scenery before travelling by bus in the late afternoon to Peurto Natales; a good place to spend the evening relaxing and perhaps eating out at one of the many fish restaurants.
Overnight Standard Hotel
Included meals: Breakfast
13
Bus to Punta Arenas, fly to Santiago
This morning we transfer by public bus to Punta Arenas, from where we fly back this afternoon to Santiago. On arrival we will transfer to our hotel.
Overnight Standard Hotel
Included meals: Breakfast
14
Fly to Easter Island (unescorted)
This morning you will transfer to the airport for the flight out to Easter Island, arriving early afternoon. On arrival we transfer to the hotel, after which the rest of the day is free to relax and contemplate the days ahead.
Overnight Standard Hotel
Included meals: Breakfast
15 to 16
Exploring Easter Island
Isolated amidst the vast expanse of the Pacific Ocean, Easter Island has long held a sense of mystery and fascination for outsiders. Lying some 3,790 km to the west of Chile the island’s nearest neighbour is actually Pitcairn Island (a mere 2,075 km away) and its giant stone monoliths have been the subject of conjecture and speculation for centuries. Also known as Rapa Nui and the Isla de Pascua, it was discovered by the Dutch on Easter Sunday 1722 (hence its European name), but the original inhabitants of this remote and dramatic island called it Te Pito O Te Henua (the navel of the world). Today it remains one of the most remarkable archaeological sites on the planet, a factor that has seen it entered onto the UNESCO World Heritage listings. The island is renowned for the magnificent stone heads, or Moai, that dot its rugged coastline, magnificent and mysterious monoliths that once numbered some 800 in all and now lie as silent and broken sentinels, looking out across the deep waters of the Pacific. Over the next two days you will explore something more of this most majestic and unique setting and on the first day an excursion has been arranged to Anakena on the northern coast, site of the village of the island’s first monarch, Hotu Matua and the setting for an almost perfectly restored Moai, affording you an opportunity to get some idea of the sheer majesty and wonder that these incredible statues must have evoked. This is also the spot where Thor Heyerdahl landed in 1955 when conducting research into his eastern migration theory. The Moai were carved out of the porous tuff at the quarries at Rano Raraku and transported to their site of erection on wooden rollers, a practice that resulted in the eventual deforestation of the island and ultimately led to the barren landscapes that we see before us today. Our second day sees us visiting the village of Orongo on the southernmost tip of the island, one of the island’s most culturally important sites and the setting for the annual competitions that played such a vital factor in the ancient birdman cult. Each year chosen warriors from each of the tribes would dive into the waters and swim to the nearby island of Motu Nui in search of the first of the eggs laid by the manutara (sooty tern). The successful swimmer would win the right for his clan to control the distribution rights of the island’s resources for the coming year, making it not only a culturally important event, but also one that had far reaching implications for the entire population. The remains of a number of ruined buildings and petroglyphs are dotted about the site, offering a fascinating insight into the cult and its influences.
Overnight Standard Hotel
Included meals: Breakfast
17
Fly to Santiago
After a free morning you will transfer back to the airport for the return flight to Santiago and a final night in Chile.
Overnight Standard Hotel
Included meals: Breakfast
18
Tour ends Santiago
Included meals: Breakfast