Showing posts with label Ancud. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ancud. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 April 2015

Exploring Chiloé from Castro

Since leaving Ancud, we've been basing ourselves in Castro, Chiloé's capital, for exploring the rest of the Chiloé archipelago. The local minibuses here are perfect for getting around to the smaller towns and islands. They run regularly from the bus station here, but are also happy to stop anywhere you flag them down from. We've even seen them reverse back for someone's friend that was late.

The palafitos in Castro
We've splashed out a bit here by staying in a 'palafito' - one of the traditional Chilote houses built on wooden stilts over the estuary. We even have a bathtub, where we've been soaking our petrolly bags in kitchen cleaner each night. There are huge squid left behind in the estuary when the tide goes out, and the bay is particularly beautiful in the early morning mist. It's been great chatting with the owners here and getting recommendations for where to go and what to see that's a little off the beaten track. They're probably wondering why they find a new empty cleaning bottle every day in our room though.

One such less explored place is the 'Muelle de las Almas' (Pier of Souls). We got a lift from the nearby small village to a remote farmhouse where we were given a key for a gate halfway along a track by the cliffs. From there, a short walk took us to a wooden pontoon built on the cliff with magnificent views over the bays and surf below. The drive back to Castro alongside a lake shore was equally beautiful, now visible after an ash cloud from the volcano had lifted since the morning.

The Muelle de las Almas
Chiloé is also known for its unique UNESCO listed churches. Built during the 18th and 19th centuries by Jesuit missionaries, they're constructed entirely of wood from the islands and often painted on the outside. We took local buses to visit the ones in Castro, Achao, Dalcahue and Tenaún. The plain wooden interiors are a stark contrast to usual Catholic churches, and the pretty blue towers are unlike any church we've seen before.

The churches in Castro and Tenaún
Our next stop will probably be Puerto Varas, quite close to the volcano. We've heard that the wind has been blowing towards Argentina, so we're hoping that it isn't too ashy.

Saturday, 25 April 2015

Rural Chiloé and a Volcanic Eruption

Our original plan from Punta Arenas was to proceed back to Puerto Natales and then take a four day ferry up to Puerto Montt, significantly further north in Chile. However, the boat schedule turned out not to be in our favour and we were faced with the choice of a 32 hour bus journey or a two hour flight. It didn't take us too long to decide!

We were lucky to be able to get on a flight the very next morning and after landing in Puerto Montt headed straight to Ancud, in the north of the main island of Chiloé. Chiloé is an archipelago of islands off of the west coast of Chile, and was one of the last places remaining under Spanish rule before finally becoming part of independent Chile in 1826. It is famous for its fertile soil (and wet weather!), its folklore and its iconic wooden Jesuit churches.

The beach at Ancud, with the volcanoes of Osorno (left) and Calbuco (right, before it erupted) in the distance
We had a day exploring Ancud, which is a quiet town with a really beautiful seafront. The museum was all in Spanish but informative about Chiloé's history - plus it had a blue whale skeleton on display. We watched the sunset over the bay from Fort San Antonio, one of the last Spanish strongholds, looking over the sea with the mainland and surrounding islands in the distance.

Some of the sunken forest
We decided we'd like to see some more nature so spent a couple of days at a homestay in Chepu, a tiny settlement just north of the Chiloé national park. Chepu was very rural and a welcome change for us. It was really just a string of farms spread out along a couple of dirt roads, set in picturesque hilly scenery. We had a long walk one day to Playa Aulen beach on the west coast, where we watched huge waves rolling in from the Pacific Ocean. En route we saw a sunken forest. This surreal spectacle was created by the earthquake and tsunami here in 1960, which caused the ground to sink 2m.


The farmstay
The Chilote family we stayed with were incredibly friendly and welcoming; we felt like part of the family and were very well looked after. The home cooking was incredible - on the first day we were served a three course meal with fresh seafood soup, followed by roast ham (from the farm itself) with homegrown potatoes and tomatoes, and then creme caramel. The second night our portions of a meaty local fish, cooked beautifully with lemon and tomato, were so large that we could barely manage half each! We had the rest for lunch the next day. All this for incredibly cheap and we got a lot of practice with our Spanish as the family spoke no English.

The beach near Chepu The rolling hills around Chepu
During early evening on our first night at the homestay we went for a short walk and noticed a very dense looking cloud. Later on we discovered this was no normal cloud but the ash cloud from the eruption of Volcan Calbuco, near Puerto Montt. So far we have been lucky not to be affected by this but flights have been cancelled, nearby villages to the volcano have had to be evacuated as they are 50 cm deep in ash, and there is a strong chance the river might flood. We'll stay in Chiloé for now...

The volcanic cloud from Calbuco