Tag: writing

  • Chile #8: San Pedro, Part 1: Arrival and Departure

    Chile #8: San Pedro, Part 1: Arrival and Departure

    I’m going to preface this post by saying that I don’t know what I intended when I began to write about our trip to San Pedro de Atacama, but that the end result was a Word document of 24 single-spaced pages across a dozen or so anecdotes. I’ve struggled with how to best group them into a few (likely four) blog posts, and I don’t know if I’ve found the optimal solution or not. Perhaps that doesn’t matter. This opening post is an introductory one, the story of how we got to San Pedro, of our lunches, of the Airbnb, and of leaving at the very end. The next one will be focused on a coherent arc that took place in San Pedro, while the final two will be focused on the desert beyond the town. Please forgive the fractured chronology. Don’t worry; I’m not trying to be Christopher Nolan.

    Arrival:

    We all had slightly different plans for how to manage the 5am flight, from don’t sleep until the plane, to getting in bed at 8pm the night before, but the result was that we were all, once again, horribly sleep deprived. I was running on two to three hours as we reached the Santiago airport, well before any light did.

    We were flying to Calama, the closest big town to San Pedro de Atacama, a town in the north of Chile that served as the gateway to exploring the Atacama Desert. Our two-hour flight was relaxed, with nearly no other passengers, so we sprawled out and claimed our own rows. When flying north or south in Chile (the only possible directions to fly), since the country boasts the Andes as an eastern boundary, you will almost always have some utterly glorious mountain views. Though I wanted to sleep, my interest in witnessing the sun rise above the Andes, and in seeing beyond the first layer of the cordillera for the first time, superseded it. I was particularly eager for Aconcagua, the biggest mountain in the Americas. It ended up still being night as I beheld it all, making it seem even more wild and inaccessible, like the domain of some elevated species.

    The Andes make for one of the more definitive country borders I’ve ever seen. I hope I haven’t said that in an earlier post already.

    At some point I did drift off into sleep, but Mette woke me up just before we touched down in Calama. She pointed out the window, where I was treated to a very different view: the first light over the desert. We could have been landing on Mars.

    Or on Tatooine, for that matter.

    Once again, we had tried to book the rental car the day before, but this time we had run into some trouble. Nothing seemed to line up with what we needed: September 11 to 15, cardholder under 25, automatic, and cheap. Not even Fer’s connection in Calama (it seemed he had an amigo or a primo in every hamlet of Chile and half of the ones outside of it) bore fruit. Finally, we had gotten something, but despite our early arrival, we couldn’t pick it up until 11am.

    So again, we waited in a hotel, although it couldn’t have been more different from the one in Pucón; it felt like a casino, maybe because we were in the desert and I implicitly associated it with Vegas. We arrived a good two hours before the pickup, and there was plenty of time to sleep on the couches and hope that the staff wouldn’t kick us out for being vagrants. This time around, I had made the reservation, so I handled the interaction at the front desk and was largely competent, nodding, smiling, and occasionally asking questions about the policy (and not telling her that my friend Suditi would be arriving that night, putting us up to six people in the car).

    We stopped at Jumbo, which is like the Chilean Walmart (except maybe the ratio of food to not-food is switched, and the actual Walmart-owned brand in Chile is Lider, so what am I even talking about really) and loaded up on food, as there were no supermercados in San Pedro. From everything we had heard, it was an expensive town. In the pursuit of cost-effectiveness, I got bamboozled by the classic 64 pack of Kirkland granola bars in the Internacional section, telling my friends about how clutch and how good of a deal they were. As there was no price tag, we only found out at checkout that they ended up being over $20—which ended up being the cost of three to four lunches in San Pedro.

    Elena drove for the first leg, and I sat in shotgun, while I think everybody else passed out in the backseat. It was just under two more hours to get to San Pedro de Atacama, and we didn’t pass a single settlement the entire time, just the occasional roadside shrine with crosses and flowers. In the distance, 6,000-meter (20,000 feet!) volcanos loomed like fallen gods.

    I mean, like, holy shit.

    The Atacama is the driest desert in the world, because of the combination of the rain shadow of the Andes and the anti-cyclone off the coast of Northern Chile (which I had learned in my geography class two days prior). In some places it hasn’t rained in over 500 years, or at all. Looking out of the car window, it was impossible to even imagine rain here. I don’t think we had a single day with clouds, without the sun beating down on us—though because we were up at 2,500 meters of altitude it was never sweltering. In fact, it was quite cold at night. During the day, it would depend on how high up you were; it could be hot or cold, but always incredibly dry. Your clothes would dry out on the line in under two hours.

    At one point, as the road snaked left and right and winded up and down, we whizzed our way through a sort of chute, with walls of rock surrounding us—and as we emerged on the other side there was a llama waiting for us, standing tall on a little butte. It was crazy luck —but as it turned out, wildlife was common here; we would go on to see alpacas, vicuñas, and flamingos.  

    It’s a screenshot of a video (damn you WordPress Premium) so the quality isn’t great.

    The closer we got to San Pedro, the better the drive got; the road sloped further up and the volcanoes on the horizon were close enough that we could start to imagine they were real. By the time we were about ten minutes away, the rock formations had become simply outrageous (we were close to the Valle de la Luna, a famous part of the desert that we later explored, sort of), and there was no choice in the matter: we pulled over to a turnoff, stepped out of the car, and took a photoshoot like the tourists we were. That is, everybody but Hodei, who stayed asleep in the car.

    “Otherworldly” is so cliché when talking about the desert, but what else do you call this???
    I wish I knew the lore about this monument, but I don’t.

    At a certain point, two guys came up to us, asking to take a picture with Mette, Anna, and Elena. We weren’t entirely sure why, though it could have been because two of them were blonde, uncommon in Chile and doubly so in the north, which was phenotypically darker than the rest of the country. At any rate, we were obviously not from Chile, which probably drew interest. They were locals, from Calama, yet like us, it was their first time going to San Pedro de Atacama, despite the towns being two hours apart. Such were the economic realities for the area— Calama is a mining town, while San Pedro is a hub for tourists, more expensive than the rest of the region.

    I got in the photo too, which I don’t think they wanted, to be honest.

    Menu del Día:

    Though when we arrived in San Pedro, tired, hungry out of our minds, we stumbled onto possibly the best culinary deal across all my time in Chile (outside of going to a feria and getting a kilo of produce for $1). As we drove in on one of the town’s dirt roads, the directions to the Airbnb wound up taking us right past a soccer field, and next to the soccer field were a bunch of little restaurants with signs for “Menu del Dia.” We didn’t hesitate. The Menu del Dia turned out to be a large starter, an entrée, and two sides for $7. And the portions were large; the starters would be like a large bowl of cazuela (a flavorful soup) or ceviche. Yes, ceviche is still good in the desert somehow—the principle I grew to adopt in Chile was if there is ceviche on the menu, you must order it.

    Cazuela: so good, although the one my friend Montse’s mom made was better.
    Carne jugoso. This with the cazuela was $7, not a bad deal at all.

    We ended up going to the Menu del Dia three times for lunch on the trip, experimenting with different entrees and combos and occasionally throwing in a beverage, like the delicious honeydew juice. It was always a phenomenal experience: we would sink into the plastic chairs, exhausted from a day of exploring; make conversation until the food arrived (for some reason, usually something foul and raunchy that garnered us looks); and then the talking would be replaced by the noises of us inhaling our lunch. Dogs would come by to be pet—or really, for food, which was why the restaurant owners would shoo them away. One time, a man stopped by with a guitar, playing a song (badly, alas) that he said was typical to the region; it sounded a lot like “El Carretero”by Buena Vista Social Club.

    Dog, or cow?

    Airbnb:

    Our Airbnb was just three minutes away, a small, shared unit with the owners next door. To fit both our car and their car into the narrow driveway, we had to do some maneuvering. Usually when we came back, there would be a dog or a cat roaming, and sometimes their kids would be kicking a soccer ball.

    ¡Mishi!

    Inside, there was just enough space for six people to exist. A bunk room for Anna, Mette, and Elena; another room for me and Hodei to share a bed (he kept waking me up in the middle of the night with strange and hilarious noises that I wanted to record but that also perturbed me enough to remain still), and space on the couch for Suditi. The shower had excellent pressure and was perfect for enjoying a post-hike beer.

    We also got to enjoy this lovely patio.

    Over our stay, out of sheer bad luck, we broke three dishes. Every time it happened, we sent Hodei next door to talk to them because, as a literal Spaniard, he was the most fluent in Spanish. But the first time he did, our host gave him a blank look. We all thought this was hilarious; the meme in our house that he was impossible to understand because of his quick and low way of speaking, so this only added to the legacy.

    Fortunately, they were super chill about it, but we still felt bad, so one time when the kitchen sink got so clogged it just wouldn’t go down, instead of bothering them, we took the potentially disastrous course of action of trying to fix it ourselves. It was nearly overflowing; we called it a “tremendo poot caldo,” which was a combination of a few inside jokes. The main one was that poot was how Hodei pronounced “pool” for the first time in English—his English comprehension was C1 on the fluency scale, but his pronunciation couldn’t have been more than A2.

    Brief tangent here: we had a lot of inside jokes, as any friend group does, but perhaps more so because Spanish was a second or third language for most of us, and we were constantly making fun of each other’s speaking capabilities. For my first month, I couldn’t open my mouth without them making fun of my gringo accent(in Chile, gringo is specifically somebody from the U.S; it’s not race-based nor does it apply to any other nationality). Furthermore, because it wasn’t our primary language, I think that inside jokes were an easy way to achieve connection despite communication barriers.

    Poot, caldo, whatever you want to call it, we decided we would unclog it by unscrewing the bottom piping from the sink. The sludge that had built up below was truly unfathomable. I think I was the only one who even dared to touch it, collecting all the goop in a bucket while Mette took pots full of the upper water and dumped it into the road. It was mildly stressful but mainly hilarious doing it.

    Probably because we were drunk. After every single day of exploring, we would try a new artisanal beer, just one tallboy split among five wine glasses (Elena couldn’t, as she was celiac, a tough one in Chile) but since we were at 8,000 feet of altitude that would be enough for some tipsiness. Two would have you pretty lit, all things considered. I think that helped us, honestly, with the plumbing job, because we nailed it. Afterwards, I had to wash my hands a bunch of times over, but thankfully I had a functional sink to do it in.

    Beer (and Mette).

    I think that about tells the story of the Airbnb. We stayed five days; all in all, it was a lovely spot, it was mainly a home base. Most of the stories occurred outside of it, which I’ll get to in the next posts.

    Is there anything else to mention?

    Permit me two more moments. One time when everybody else was gone, Mette and I had a conversation about romance and study abroad. It seemed to us that every other exchange student we had met was either: A. In a serious relationship of several years, or B. Was leaving behind a new fling that had only just begun to crystallize. Somehow the former category seemed more active in pursuing romance than the latter. We reflected on the silliness of it all.

    The other thing wasn’t a moment, but rather something of note. Well, not even that, but I want to subject you to these details if you’ve made it this far. My hiking boots smelled so bad that I had to keep them far outside every day. Only later did I learn that I could take the insoles out to let them dry, which would have at least minimized the degree to which taking them off was an act of chemical warfare against the Geneva Convention.

    Departure:

    Of course, when we left San Pedro on the final day, we were behind schedule. Not me this time, though; I wouldn’t be flying back to Santiago with everybody else. From Calama, I would split off from my friends and go to the similarly named Caldera, a mere ten hours south of Calama by bus. I was going to visit my friends Raul and Montse to take part in some fiestas patrias activities, before taking another twelve-hour bus down to Santiago for dieciocho.

    My bus was at seven, so I wasn’t moving with too much haste in the hours before we had to go, exploring the markets one last time as I tried to find a small gift for Fer (his birthday was coming up soon). I also bought myself a nice hat and re-bought the bracelet that I had lost. As I was doing this, my friends found out that their plane was an hour (or perhaps a half-hour) earlier than they had realized, and suddenly we were in quite the rush.

    We had to drive two hours back to Calama and get gas and return the car and then get to the airport. Anna, of course, was our driver, as she had been for most of the trip. She’s Italian and drives like it, speeding by everything, ignoring the occasional stop sign or speed bump, and yelling cazzo, merda or va fan culo (I think I’m spelling those right) at the other drivers. She was undoubtedly a skilled driver, but I wasn’t always relaxed when she was behind the wheel.

    But she was born for today’s assignment. I’ve never seen any driver so locked in. I swear we didn’t go any less than one hundred seventy kilometers per hour the entirety of the stretch, which might be only a slight exaggeration. She was passing trucks and cars like nothing. While she pulled off a lot of maneuvers that were cutting it close, I knew she had faith in her abilities, so I wasn’t too terrified—except for one when she passed into a blind turn. Luck was on our side, but if it wasn’t, I wouldn’t be alive to write this right now.

    We also had six in the car, but that almost didn’t matter, because we were speeding anyway, so if there were carabineros, we were screwed regardless. We prayed they weren’t on the road and prayed we would make it and listened to Adele all the while as we hurtled back to Calama.

    Therapy, or driving this road at one hundred miles per hour?

    Thanks to Anna’s F1 abilities, we made it. They dropped me off at the hotel where it had all started. It was like Villarica all over again, with me hanging back to have my own little adventure—this time intentionally. I was excited. I love travelling with this group—we travel similarly, and nicely, together—but it’s so nice to also have your own moments to explore.

    First, though, I had to make my bus, which with my prior experience, was not a given. Especially in Calama, which was the least walkable town in Chile I visited. And while I felt completely safe, as I made it to the bus station, I felt eyes on me. People were watching; I stuck out as a gringo with two bags struggling to find the bus stop—I had to double-track myself on the sidewalk like four times.

    To be fair, it turned out to be a confusing situation: it was just an office, with a parking lot in the back and literally nowhere to sit. Everybody was sitting in the tiny room or on the sidewalk, so I decided I would wait somewhere better, as I had an hour and a half to kill. So I continued walking, passing a discoteca that was bumping even at six in the evening, and a rather suspect bar—no windows, with men at the outdoor tables being served by women in bikinis. Just further, though, was an ornately decorated Peruvian restaurant. I didn’t think twice.

    I was the only one there, and I decided to treat myself to some expensive ceviche—like the cost of three Menu del Días. It was divine. Peruvian ceviche is different, with a more spicy and complex flavor profile than Chilean ceviche. I wasn’t sure what else to do as I waited, so I called my friend Sofia from back home. She’s fluent in Spanish, and for the first time I was able to have a proper conversation with her in the language. Here it was: tangible proof that my skills had really increased.

    Notice the Inca Kola in the background.

    Though I think the servers at the restaurant thought it was funny—a gringo talking in choppy Spanish to someone back home.

    Finally, I went to go to my bus. Of course, it came late, and I had the sinking feeling that I was about to be stranded once again. But just after I had double-checked with another passenger that I was in the right place, it arrived. My seat was a comfy semi-cama in the front row of the top of the bus, the best seat in the house. We drove off—literally into the sunset. It was the perfect way to say goodbye to San Pedro.

    I was too tired to hold the camera still for more than a millisecond.

    Next up was Caldera—although you, dear reader, will have to first make it through three more posts about San Pedro.

  • Chile #6: Pucón, Part 3: Stranded

    Chile #6: Pucón, Part 3: Stranded

    After a photography post, you know I’ve got to follow it up with a long piece of writing. This is the story of how I was stranded in a small town ten hours south of Santiago—and also the story of how I almost got into trouble with the law.

    Our buses back to Santiago were at 9 and 9:30, and it was already dark as we were leaving Parque Nacional Huerquehue. We knew that it was going to be a bit of a scramble, though I was on the second bus, so I had less worries. Thankfully, we were able to clean the rental cars, fill them up with gas, and return them without a hitch. We even had some extra time to goof around with the car wash vaccuum.

    Time to spare to flick Silvia up in front of her store (spelling difference notwithstanding).

    As for getting back across the lake to Villarica, where our buses awaited, we were largely fine too. Elena, Carla, and Anna needed to take an Uber to the station, as they were running late for their 9pm bus; the rest of us—Hodei, Mette, Silvia, and I—were able to hop on a local bus from Pucón to make our 9:30. Our drive swerved like a man possessed, speeding past sedans and other buses on the highway to get us to Villarica.

    We were the first ones on the 9:30 bus. At last, we could collapse in our bus seats and theoretically, sleep the ten hours back to Santiago. I had even paid a little extra for a salon-cama, the one that reclines further. Luxury was on the menu.

    Or, maybe it wasn’t. My seat, next to Hodei, was a semi-cama—the first sign that something was up. I double-checked my ticket, saw that it was right, and accepted the minor L. I began to take out what I would want from my backpack for the journey.

    I was in the middle of changing into my pajamas (my things were sprawled all over the place, which I remember because I knew I had to be annoying Hodei) when somebody tapped me on my shoulder.

    “You’re in my seat.” It was a guy in probably his mid-forties, who did not look pleased.

    “Um… sorry, but this is my seat.”

    “No, look,” he said, showing his ticket, which read seat number 36, my seat.

    “That’s really weird, because mine is 36 too,” I said.

    He turned to get the conductor—at this point there was a line behind him of people who couldn’t pass—and then my heart sank as I noticed. My ticket was for seat number 36—but for the 9 pm bus. The one with Carla, Anna, and Elena. The one that had already left.

    I profusely apologized and scrambled to gather my strewn-about things, telling my friends that I would go down and talk to the conductor. Maybe there was a free seat for me to take. Silvia came with me; at this point in the semester her Spanish was way better than mine. To clarify, every one of my interactions in Chile, including those among my friends and I, took place in Spanish; throughout this first month, I was operating at a considerable deficit when it came to communication skills.

    I had hardly outlined the situation to the conductor when he shook his head. Todo lleno. The bus was completely full.

    It all happened in a blur. I think I said something to Silvia like, I’ll be fine, you guys get home, I’ll figure something out, see you back in Santiago. The only concrete detail I can place was the door closing; we looked at each other with the glass separating us before the bus drove off.

    I wandered into the station and explained my situation to the woman working behind the counter. It took a few tries to get every detail correct, but when I was done, she winced and told me that every ticket had been sold. The only hope was to ask conductors of any later buses if anybody had no-showed.

    There must have been six or seven buses that night, and every single one of them was filled. Turns out, nobody else made these kinds of mistakes. In fact, the only vacancy on any bus in Chile that night was probably the one that I had left on the 9pm bus.

    I had no clue what to do next, so I sat down and ate a bag of Takis from my backpack. Then I asked the woman if she knew of any hostel in the area where I could spend the night. She told me that she would call her friend, who might have a room available.

    Ten minutes later, the friend arrived, a man who did not look pleased to be there at 10:30 pm on a Sunday night. He beckoned me to follow him out of the terminal, so I did, stopping to thank the woman on my way out. I gave her a hug, which I remember she thought was funny.

    My new savior was named Leo and had just left from a lively asado (a barbecue), which explained his annoyance. I had thought that I would be sleeping in his family home or something, but it turned out that he owned a hostal, a guesthouse with a bunch of rooms, a slightly upgraded version of a hostel. It would be $30 for the night, which was a little steep for this level of accommodation in Chile, but I was in no position to negotiate considering he had just done me a massive solid.

    I also, of course, didn’t have any cash, which was decidedly not music to his ears. But after swearing a bit (weon) Leo let me know that he would come by in the morning and take me to the bank. With that, he left to return to the asado.

    The room turned out to be quite comfortable, with a kitchen, a TV, a bathroom, and a queen bed. I couldn’t fall asleep until 3AM; I drifted in and out of consciousness as a bizarre Chilean reality show played on the TV like a fever dream.

    That damned TV. The show was like a low-budget Beast Games or something. Comfy digs, though.

    I wish I could say that the next day, I got up early and explored a ton of Villarica, or that I was super productive and wrote a new blog post. The reality is that I was a little bit burnt out, and outside of the morning errand where Leo took me to the bank, I didn’t leave the room until the afternoon and largely just scrolled on my phone. Though I did get to drink a few cups of tea and eat empanadas, so it wasn’t all bad.

    Empanadas de pino (the classic Chilean empanada with ground beef, onion, egg, and usually a singular olive) on the tostador.

    What was bad, though, was that I had to email my professor that I would miss yet another section of his Monday class. For various reasons (various reasons will be my PR spin on my truancy) I had yet to attend his class, so now with my Villarica escapade, I was three weeks into the semester without even meeting my professor.

    What was worse, but fun in a Type 2 way, was the shower, which didn’t have soap or hot water.

    Shampooing with dish soap is rarely the vibe.

    At around 3, the realization that I’d never be here again overtook the laziness that had set in, so I decided to go out and look around. Villarica turned out to be a lovely town, lively with panaderías and people clutching bags of fruit and a street guitarist absolutely rocking a cover of “Come As You Are” by Nirvana.

    I tried my first Chilean burger, which was an utter disappointment, though probably my own fault for ordering one in the first place. However, I got to eat it lakeside, which was not terrible at all, and I soaked in yet another vista, this one more tranquil than glorious. I sat on a wall by the water, with only the geese and a couple lightsaber dueling with sticks on the grass to keep me company.

    I felt weird. It was my first time ever solo traveling, and it only had happened by accident, but after seeing so many Reels of solo travelers having a magical time and meeting tons of people, I wasn’t expecting the reality of exploring on your own: it’s great, but sometimes it can be lonely. You’re not magically going to strike up conversations with everybody you see unless you initiate them yourself.

    This lake was a combination of pretty and mildly desolate, perfect for contemplating the void.

    I figured I should try just that, but my first attempt, at a roadside stand with a mom and her son selling chocolate-filled churros that tragically appeared better than they tasted, was unsuccessful. After asking how their days had gone, the conversation sputtered and died, them not interested enough to continue, and me not confident enough in my Spanish to know what to say next.

    Leaving with a disappointment part gastronomical and part social, I wandered back up the street to the Centro Cultural Mapuche, which I had expected to be a big museum but turned out to be a preserved ruka, a traditional Mapuche dwelling. There was nobody there at all, so I strayed in but didn’t stay long, feeling vaguely like a trespasser. It was a small exhibit but beautiful, with wooden sculptures and a Mapuche flag hanging from a bamboo pole.

    Another block back, the guitar guy was now shredding “Beat It,” and I stopped in at the Unimarc to buy snacks, more out of feeling like I needed to do something than out of hunger. It was here in these aisles, as I selected an Inca Kola, a yellow Peruvian bubble-gum flavored soda, that a mission for the day found me in the form of a call from my friend Hodei.

    Here was the situation: Hodei had left his estuche, a personal bag with his toiletries, in the rental car. The office was in the hotel back on the other side of the lake in Pucón, thirty minutes away. Would I have time to get it? It was currently around 6; my bus was at 9:30, for real this time, and I had no intentions of missing it. I crunched the numbers and ordered an Uber.

    My driver was a friendly, overweight guy in his fifties named Hernán, a pastor who claimed to not speak English but could translate any word I needed when my Spanish was lacking. Naturally, we got to talking about God. I told him that I didn’t believe, not out of any anti-religion sentiment but because I had never felt the need to, and he told me that even if you don’t believe you can’t deny that there’s something out there, something that makes the world as beautiful as it is. He explained to me that he saw God in his son, who played some sort of musical instrument for the church, and in his daughter, who was just starting high school and had no idea what she wanted to do afterward, and that he was worried for her but was excited for the woman she was starting to become.

    I told him that I shared his love of family, and I told him about my parents and my siblings and that I wanted to be a writer.

    He asked me which state I was from—he knew I was a gringo from the moment I was in the car—and so I told him about Rhode Island. He replied that he had family in the U.S, and that he was supposed to visit them last February and go to Disneyland but that his tourist visa had gotten revoked last-minute.

    Not for the first time in Chile, I apologized for the new administration and for Trump.

    “Ah, no te preocupes,” he told me, laughing. “I actually think what Trump is doing with all the deportations is great.”

    A truly unexpected response. Yet it made sense. The dominant theme of the domestic election cycle that year was the presence of Venezuelan immigrants in Chile. It’s a complex issue, but suffice it to say for this post that they were unpopular. Sure enough, Hernán launched into a rant about delinquency and how nowhere in Santiago was safe anymore. Blissfully, we arrived at the hotel soon thereafter. I started to say goodbye, but he told me he would wait for me and take me back if I paid him cash. Somehow, I still didn’t have any efectivo on me, even after getting some that morning, but he said we could make a stop on the way back, so it was settled.

    I entered the familiar hotel lobby at 6:45. The rental car office was supposed to close at 7pm, so it was perfect timing. According to Google, anyway, but in la vida real the rental car desk greeted me only with a “Closed” sign.

    Well, a cerrado sign.

    Across the lobby, the hotel receptionist told me there was nothing that could be done. The rental car workers had left for the night, and I would have to come back tomorrow.

    I didn’t have tomorrow. The events of the last twenty-something hours replayed in my mind: I had missed my bus, I had laid around in bed all morning, and I had eaten a bad cheeseburger. Now I had come all the way across the lake for nothing, and suddenly, I resolved that there was no way I was leaving empty-handed.

    I called Hodei to let him know that I was about to try and find the estuche myself.

    Glancing over my shoulder to see if anybody was watching, I jumped over the desk and began to rifle through the drawers. Laughably, I found it in the very first drawer. It had been too easy, and as I sauntered out of the hotel I told Hodei over the phone that I had done it.

    And then behind me, I heard: “Qué estaí haciendo?” What are you doing.

    Oh shit. I turned and saw a security guard approaching me, mouth to his walkie-talkie.

    “Uhh.” I put down my phone. “I wanted to get my bag.

    He wasn’t buying it. “You need to wait here for the police,” he told me.

    My heart sank. I had made a huge mistake.

    Within thirty seconds, there were more security guards surrounding me, and they began to question me on who I was, and why I was robbing the hotel.

    The pressure of the situation flipped a switch in me, and pure adrenaline took over. For the first time in Chile, I was completely fluent in Spanish. In a flow state, I outlined the story: how we had rented a car the days before, that I had missed my bus, that my friend had left a bag behind, that I was retrieving it for him. That nobody was here, and I had made the probably foolish decision of trying to take it anyway. That I was really sorry but just frustrated that I couldn’t help Hodei out.

    Over the course of ten minutes, I continued being cross-examined, feeling terrible for Hernán out there waiting. The security guards were skeptical—they needed confirmation of the fact that it belonged to Hodei, and of course when I tried to get him back on the phone my WhatsApp wasn’t working. Finally, we reached a conclusion: I wouldn’t get to keep the estuche, but they would send it in the mail to Hodei when he confirmed it was his; more importantly, they wouldn’t call the police. Despite the end result being literally the same as if I had done nothing at all, I considered it a massive win.

    Back in the Uber, I told Hernán the story, and he thought it was hilarious and decided to buy me an empanada. We stopped at a grocery store on the way back, and I went to go get cash from the nearby ATM. For one heart-stopping moment (everything had a flair for the dramatic that evening) my debit card got swallowed up by the machine, and I very nearly rage-quit. Only after a minute’s delay did I get it back.

    Hernán was nowhere to found, and I had to wait another five minutes before he reappeared with an empanada. It turned out he had made a lengthy detour to the bathroom.

    We talked the whole half-hour back, and while I can’t remember the specifics of this conversation, the tantalizing feeling of joy at connecting with a stranger on a non-superficial level in Spanish remains.

    We arrived at the hostal at 8pm, where we bid each other farewell. I was greeted by Leo, and to my surprise, he too struck up a conversation with me, asking about my day. When I told him that I had seen a Mapuche ruka, he smiled. “I’m Mapuche,” he told me. “I have the flag in my kitchen, I want to show you it.”

    I waited as he went to retrieve it, but he returned empty-handed. “It’s too big,” he said. “I can show it to you before you leave. Stop by before you go.”

    I had no idea why this mattered, but with my current level of Spanish, I decided it was easier to accept it as fact than to question the specifics. But some twenty minutes later, when I knocked on his door on the way out, Leo was gone. It was a disappointment, but it seemed to fit with the vibe of my first official day of solo travel.

    I made my bus that night, though not without yet another near miss when I transferred in Temuco some hours later. Finally, I could relax in my semi-cama—that is, until my 8AM class the next morning.

    Finally.
  • Chile #4: Pucón, Part 2: Volcán Villarica

    Chile #4: Pucón, Part 2: Volcán Villarica

    August 17, 2025:

    My alarm went off at 4:30 AM. Recently, it’s been Cornfield Chase, the Interstellar soundtrack, so that I can wake up with the sheer thrill of fiery inspiration coursing through my veins, of course. Though with two other people in the small cabin bedroom, I only was able to hear the first few seconds before turning it off.

    I had managed six and a half precious hours of sleep. Was I ready to explore the far reaches of outer space? Probably not. But I was optimistic for the day’s mission: Volcán Villarica, a more realistic 9.5 thousand feet above sea level.

    Silvia, God bless her, drove me into town to the tour agency. I was the last person registered for the tour because of the Wi-Fi and data issues I had yesterday, and I knew nobody on it except for a French guy I had met in my Social History of Latin America class two days before. Small talk to get to know everybody, though, was very limited, likely because it was 5:30 in the morning.

    There’s also the question of which language to use when meeting other extranjeros: English or Spanish? I always go for Spanish, but some stick to the more comfortable common tongue of English. It turns out, the answer for this group was French, so I didn’t have much luck either way.

    We got fifteen minutes in the locker room to receive our backpack of gear and modify the packing arrangements how we saw fit. Everything included would theoretically be needed on the heavily glaciated active volcano: boots, crampons, ice axe, snowpants, down jacket, three pairs of gloves, ankle gaiters, helmet, sled, and gas mask.

    Yes, gas mask. It was necessary because apparently, the crater at the summit of the volcano—one of the most active in Chile—was toxic. Obviously, I was looking forward to this part.

    Now, when I travel, I’m usually not a “guided tours” person. I love to explore and figure things out on my own. But for a true mountaineering expedition like this, as much as I’d love to just say “fuck it, we ball” and throw myself out there, the simple fact of the matter is that I have no experience climbing glaciers, much less the gear; plus it’s not even legal to summit the volcano in winter without a guide.

    We piled into the bus, and off we went. I had packed five ham sandwiches and five protein bars, and I had two of each on the one-and-a-half-hour ride, in between trying to sleep and making forgettable conversation with the German couple in my row.

    After crossing the limits of Parque Nacional Villarica, the road became steeper and more laced with potholes as we approached the base of the volcano. The sun had risen, but the volcano was shrouded in clouds when we arrived. We were only able to see the very bottom layer, which was impossibly wide and just as impossibly steep. The top was somewhere way up high in the abyss of clouds, and soon, we would be too.

    The volcano was feeling shy this morning.

    It was much colder up here where we were starting, at 1200 meters, so I donned the big coat and put on some gloves for the first part of the trek, a largely horizontal stretch save for some rolling hills. As we winded through trees which felt straight out of the Lorax, I began to warm up and was profusely thankful for the fact that I had remembered to wear a bunch of layers. Layer management became a big theme of the trip as we ascended, and the temperatures descended below zero. I was surprisingly hot while walking but needed to put on another jacket and gloves at every break.

    Okay, maybe the trees weren’t that Lorax-esque, but I thought they were interesting.

    The plan that the guides laid out was in increments: an hour of walking, a ten-minute break. Rinse and repeat five or six or seven times; I honestly can’t remember how many were necessary to reach the top. It was a climb from 1200 meters to 2800 meters, which is pretty much exactly one mile of ascent, as my cross-country and track people might know.

    Soon we reached the part where terrain switched from level to inclined, and the abrupt difference was comical. At a certain point, the gentle path just becomes monstrously steep, and the higher you go, the worse it gets. For the first hour, on rock but with sections of snow, we were able to walk directly up. After that, we needed to zigzag to mitigate the slope.

    A beautiful view of the lesser mountains nearby, which didn’t quite reach the clouds.

    I’m in reasonably decent shape, so the going wasn’t brutal, but it was definitely a mental challenge. The scenery doesn’t change much, because we were already well above the tree line (the farther south you go, the lower it gets). You can’t make much conversation, because it’s windy as hell, you’re breathing hard, and you need to stay in single file behind the guide. It’s just up, up, up.

    For some of the guides, though, it was a literal walk in the park. One woman was on the phone with her family for most of it; I’m not sure how she even had data. Another man, who was about sixty, told us that he had been working here since the 90s and that he had summitted the volcano three thousand times.

    The second pass was more of the same, except the snow was much higher, and we had to put on our ankle gaiters so that none of it got in our boots. On the third pass, we were taught how to use our ice axes, which were basically another walking stick, but more importantly the only thing keeping you from sliding down the mountain if you fell. The idea was you would jam it into the slope as an anchor.

    Just a boy and his trusty ice axe.

    I had been hoping for better weather. The forecast had said that by mid-morning, the clouds would clear, but instead they seemed to thicken. We still couldn’t see the top half of the volcano, and once we entered the clouds, we couldn’t see anything at all.

    These conditions made the experience way more fun, in my opinion.

    It was surreal. Snow in the air whirled around us, the wind stung at the few parts of our face that were exposed, and everywhere was completely white. Looking around, it was impossible to differentiate sky from mountain beyond a few meters. Our expedition had split into two sections based on speed, and at times I couldn’t even make out the other group, who were a minute or two behind us.

    Soon (or maybe it wasn’t soon, but the time seemed to blur because of the same-ness of the ascent) we reached the glacier, somewhere in the vicinity of 2000 meters or so. Here we put on our crampons, which go over your boots and give you spikes to dig into the ice. Every step we took with them crunched in a satisfying way.

    Crampon-ed up.

    I’m not sure what the angle of the volcano was, but it had gotten steep. A part of me wants to say 45 degrees, which must be entirely outrageous, but seeing the volcano from afar, it doesn’t seem all that unreasonable. The best way to explain it was that it felt a whole lot steeper than the black diamond I had tried in Valle Nevado, a ski resort outside of Santiago. When I fell down that, I slid quite literally hundreds of feet down the slope, face first. Here, you didn’t want to fall. Especially the times when we walked right beside a slippery cliff face.

    The weather continued to worsen as we climbed, which gave me a bit of a thrill, as a person always seeking a proper quest. But by the time we reached 2600 meters, only 200 meters from the top, the winds were really blowing, and it was difficult to see anything. Our guides stopped us here and began to talk amongst themselves, then on walkie-talkies, then amongst themselves again.

    We had to wait here, they told us. It was too dangerous to keep going. There were sections in the glacier where snow disguised deep wells, and they would be impossible to see in these conditions.

    Here, on the side of the mountain, so close to the top, we waited. I ate another sandwich and another bar. Soon, without moving, I got so cold that I had to put on all three layers of gloves. But ten minutes passed without the weather changing. After twenty, it had only gotten worse.

    At thirty minutes, they delivered us the news: we wouldn’t be able to summit today.

    The highest point we reached on our expedition—clearly a remarkable spot.

    I was definitely disappointed. I was looking forward to donning the gas mask. Also, of course, because I wanted to conquer the damn thing. But as my classmate Corentin from history class put it, sometimes the mountain wins, and that’s okay.

    Actually, there’s something comforting in that.

    To be a total nerd and reference Brandon Sanderson, journey over destination.

    Besides, it wasn’t over yet. As we began descending, the storm picked up ever more. The guides’ demeanors changed from relaxed to urgent. Our group leader wasn’t even video calling her daughters. There was no dilly-dallying, no stopping to take pictures. They wanted us to get down the glacier, fast.

    Finally, ice turned to snow, and we were all able to take it easy again. More than that, in fact. Here, the fun began.

    Inside every single one of our backpacks was a small sled, so tiny there wasn’t even even enough space to cover your entire butt. But these thin pieces of plastic, which clipped to our jackets and backpacks and went in between your legs in a quite ingenious system, were enough to get us sliding down the mountain real fast. It was like during snow days when I was younger, and Mom would take me and Mick to Agawam golf course with our sleds. Except here, the hill was a hundred times higher, and you just kept going and going until you reached a bump that you either stopped at or went over to get some air.

    Sledding. The ice axe doubled as a brake, not that I used it.

    I will admit to becoming somewhat enraged the few times that I got stuck behind somebody slow (the German couple usually) and all the momentum that I had gained from not breaking was for naught. But despite this ire, and even though we hadn’t summitted, I was in a great mood. The combination of endorphins, the sky opening as we descended, and the fact that I was literally on the side of a volcano in Southern Chile was working wonders.

    Coming out of the clouds was pretty rad.

    That’s the thing about study abroad: it’s easy to let the “big picture” contextualize whatever happens, in a good way. Oh no, I got a bad grade on a homework assignment, or I missed my bus (foreshadowing) or something. At least I’m in Chile making lifelong memories.

    We finished the end of the hike quite rapidly, and when we returned to Pucón, there was a lovely cheese platter—and beer—waiting for us. After socializing with the group, with whom there were finally some conversational breakthroughs, and eating all the chips in the bowl in the most respectful and discreet way I possibly could, that was that. A quest that I had been looking forward to for months, and had envisioned as some massive venture, had been knocked out in my first few weeks of the program.

    What could possibly be next? The unknown of the future has always been something I’ve looked forward to (and dreaded, in terms of my career) but it never feels so incredible as after an adventure like Volcán Villarica.

    Of course, the day after had pristine conditions.

    Epilogue:

    For the very near future, the answer to that question was more beer. My friends were still out and about, and I had no clue what to do next. So, as any reasonable person would do in my situation, I went to the bar. After a few drinks and some joking around with the bartender (not to mention some Spanish issues on my part) I left to explore Pucón for the last hour or so of daylight.

    You honestly can’t beat wandering around small towns alone in Chile, especially when you’re slightly drunk. Unlike the small towns of the United States, they’re constructed on a grid system and are gloriously walkable. There are always people (and dogs) out and about, and a town square, or a cool church, or a pop-up concert awaits around every corner.

    I meandered my way to an artisanal market, where I lost in ping-pong at the table in its center to a kid that couldn’t have been more than fifteen. Not to generalize by nationality or anything, but I have found Chileans to be damn good at ping pong.

    Next was the Plaza of Armas—a much more peaceful, and clean, iteration than that of Santiago—where kids were out and about on giant tricycles and their parents watched them on benches with ice cream.

    I finally ended up at the hotel from the day before where we had rented the cars. As families strolled on the promenade and boys kicked a soccer ball around on the sand and couples got into it like they were in the comfort of their own home, I sat on the wall with a book and my journal, lazily reading and writing while the sun set. My friends were almost back in town, and we were going to get dinner soon, but for now, I enjoyed the perfect conclusion to my day.

    Sunset over Lago Villarica.

    8 responses to “Chile #4: Pucón, Part 2: Volcán Villarica”

    1. leahhetteberg Avatar
      leahhetteberg

      Mountaineering 4 laps around a track sounds like the work I would only expect from Sam Healey.

      Love the “sometimes the mountain wins” philosophy! You’ve got stories to tell and pictures to show and that’s what counts!

      As I’m struggling to compile a simple concert-review blog post for KCSB that I was contracted for I am becoming increasingly more admiring of the efforts of this project (not that I wasn’t already in extreme awe before).

      Also I just love how you write, Sam. It’s like reading a novel but the subtle one-liners and distinct voice are from your best friend. It’s so fun to read.

      Sledding sounds sick asf.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. dutifullyjolly61cbf073df Avatar
        dutifullyjolly61cbf073df

        “Lee-yah, Lee-yah!” 🫡💪🏼🔥

        Liked by 2 people

    2.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      Sounds a bit terrifying at times–which I know you loved. So glad to read this weeks after it happened–having FaceTimed with you since–knowing you are alive. Love, that lady who took tubing at Agawam

      Liked by 2 people

    3. dutifullyjolly61cbf073df Avatar
      dutifullyjolly61cbf073df

      A big experience, Chum — nicely conveyed! 🇨🇱🥇👍🏼

      Liked by 1 person

    4. Kristen Avatar

      Enjoyable to read and I can hear your voice in my head. Also, I love the word crampons.

      Liked by 1 person

    5.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      Love this, Sam. Sick that you got to sled down it, and unfortunately the mountain does win sometimes…

      Personally I steer clear of any hikes involving gas masks. But I say you go back and conquer it. Don’t let the mountain win again.

      Liked by 1 person

      1.  Avatar
        Anonymous

        Oh, this is turning amigo Julian btw

        Liked by 1 person

    6. Chile #5: Parque Nacional Huerquehue – Sam Healey Avatar

      […] from the Lord of the Rings soundtrack. Halfway up the hike, you get beautiful views of Volcán Villarica and the surrounding scenery. Not that I wasn’t ever before, but during Chile I really was […]

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