Dennis
Senior Insider
What an incredible experience!
We had an amazing 2 weeks in Chile, splitting our time between 2 nights in Santiago on the way down, 8 nights in Patagonia then 3 nights back in Santiago before heading home.
We flew UA from Austin to Houston then an overnight flight (thank you lie-flat seat!) to Santiago arriving at 9:30 local time (3 hours ahead of Austin).
We stayed at the W Santiago both times and were very happy with it. Nice residential neighborhood feel and close to restaurants.
The arrival day, we just chilled out walking around the area. Found a French Bistro for lunch and had a nice meal with the first of many, many many Chilean wines.
The next day, we had arranged a private driver to take us to Valparaiso and Vina del Mar on the coast, about 90 minutes away. We stopped at two wineries on the way.
We visited Matetic and Kingston Family vineyards. Kingston is a wine club only place and we loved the wine so much we joined the club. Already received the first case.
BTW, I had read that buying bottles of wine in Chile and shipping them home was worthless because unless it's a very special bottle not available here. Even the wine tour folks told us not to buy the wine at the end of the tour. Kingston ships from California.
On Tuesday the 26th, we had a 4:00 AM wake up for our 6:00 LAN flight to Puerto Arenas, way down south. After arriving there, the lodge picked us up for the 4 ½ hour drive to Patagonia. Not an easy place to get to!
Once we got close, the amazing mountains came into view and it was all worth the trouble!
It’s a cliché but pictures don’t do it justice.
We stayed at Explora Patagonia, right in the center of the Torres del Paine National Park. This place was amazing! The lodge faces the Cordillera del Paine, which I took about 500 pictures of.
The way the lodge works is there is a 4-night minimum and you must book in 4 night blocks. We stayed 2 “blocks” or 8 nights. Most of the other guests we met only stayed 4 nights but they we all coming from another South American location or heading to one after Patagonia.
The main focus here is hiking and horseback riding. I hiked or rode horses everyday.
The Cordillera del Paine is home to the famous “W” hike. A series of 3 hikes, one up the left side, one up the middle and one up the right side. I managed the left (Grey Glacier) with Lisa and middle hike (French Plateau) no Lisa. That one was a brute.
After the daily hike, all guests and guides (amazing kids!) would meet in the lounge, grab a cocktail and plan the next day’s hike. There are hundreds of possible hikes/rides and everyday they offer about 10-15 options.
All meals & liquor are included as are the hikes. You don’t spend a dime once you arrive.
The food was good, not great. The location makes it very difficult to have a “chef” worthy of the room rates but we were well fed and the wine pours never stopped.
The Grey Glacier hike culminates with a boat ride to within 50 feet of the Grey Glacier. That think is amazing up close and the shades of blue are unreal.
After 8 days, we were just at the ready to leave point. It was the perfect length for us.
We did a reverse drive and fly back to Santiago and stayed 3 more nights.
This time we hired another private driver to take us to the Colchagua valley and visited Casa Lapostolle, Montes Alpha and Viu Manent wineries.
All spectacularly beautiful.
We took an overnight flight Saturday night arriving in Houston at 5:00 AM. If you read my post last week, you know that was a difficult day that was.
This was truly an amazing journey and a memorable 50[SUP]th[/SUP] for Lisa. We plan to take more “active” vacations while we can. We can lie on a beach when we’re 90! That said, we are thinking of a beach getaway for later this year. We’ll see what the year brings.
Here’s a link to a few of the hundreds of pics I took.
I hope you enjoy and please ask any questions you may have.
https://chileld2016.shutterfly.com/
We had an amazing 2 weeks in Chile, splitting our time between 2 nights in Santiago on the way down, 8 nights in Patagonia then 3 nights back in Santiago before heading home.
We flew UA from Austin to Houston then an overnight flight (thank you lie-flat seat!) to Santiago arriving at 9:30 local time (3 hours ahead of Austin).
We stayed at the W Santiago both times and were very happy with it. Nice residential neighborhood feel and close to restaurants.
The arrival day, we just chilled out walking around the area. Found a French Bistro for lunch and had a nice meal with the first of many, many many Chilean wines.
The next day, we had arranged a private driver to take us to Valparaiso and Vina del Mar on the coast, about 90 minutes away. We stopped at two wineries on the way.
We visited Matetic and Kingston Family vineyards. Kingston is a wine club only place and we loved the wine so much we joined the club. Already received the first case.
BTW, I had read that buying bottles of wine in Chile and shipping them home was worthless because unless it's a very special bottle not available here. Even the wine tour folks told us not to buy the wine at the end of the tour. Kingston ships from California.
On Tuesday the 26th, we had a 4:00 AM wake up for our 6:00 LAN flight to Puerto Arenas, way down south. After arriving there, the lodge picked us up for the 4 ½ hour drive to Patagonia. Not an easy place to get to!
Once we got close, the amazing mountains came into view and it was all worth the trouble!
It’s a cliché but pictures don’t do it justice.
We stayed at Explora Patagonia, right in the center of the Torres del Paine National Park. This place was amazing! The lodge faces the Cordillera del Paine, which I took about 500 pictures of.
The way the lodge works is there is a 4-night minimum and you must book in 4 night blocks. We stayed 2 “blocks” or 8 nights. Most of the other guests we met only stayed 4 nights but they we all coming from another South American location or heading to one after Patagonia.
The main focus here is hiking and horseback riding. I hiked or rode horses everyday.
The Cordillera del Paine is home to the famous “W” hike. A series of 3 hikes, one up the left side, one up the middle and one up the right side. I managed the left (Grey Glacier) with Lisa and middle hike (French Plateau) no Lisa. That one was a brute.
After the daily hike, all guests and guides (amazing kids!) would meet in the lounge, grab a cocktail and plan the next day’s hike. There are hundreds of possible hikes/rides and everyday they offer about 10-15 options.
All meals & liquor are included as are the hikes. You don’t spend a dime once you arrive.
The food was good, not great. The location makes it very difficult to have a “chef” worthy of the room rates but we were well fed and the wine pours never stopped.
The Grey Glacier hike culminates with a boat ride to within 50 feet of the Grey Glacier. That think is amazing up close and the shades of blue are unreal.
After 8 days, we were just at the ready to leave point. It was the perfect length for us.
We did a reverse drive and fly back to Santiago and stayed 3 more nights.
This time we hired another private driver to take us to the Colchagua valley and visited Casa Lapostolle, Montes Alpha and Viu Manent wineries.
All spectacularly beautiful.
We took an overnight flight Saturday night arriving in Houston at 5:00 AM. If you read my post last week, you know that was a difficult day that was.
This was truly an amazing journey and a memorable 50[SUP]th[/SUP] for Lisa. We plan to take more “active” vacations while we can. We can lie on a beach when we’re 90! That said, we are thinking of a beach getaway for later this year. We’ll see what the year brings.
Here’s a link to a few of the hundreds of pics I took.
I hope you enjoy and please ask any questions you may have.
https://chileld2016.shutterfly.com/