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So High - Solo!
Hello stranger,
I'm not sure why you're here, but chances are you're about to
find what you were looking for. This is my travel journal from
a trip to Argentina, Uruguay, Antarctica, Chile and Peru,
which took place from January to April 2001.
The journal is mainly about my experiences and my own thoughts
about what I saw, but there are also a lot of recommendations
and facts to be found throughout the text. I had a lot of fun
traveling and I had a lot of fun writing about it. I hope
you'll enjoy reading about it, and if you have any more
questions, get in touch with me, and I'll see what more I can
do.
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1, in which I leave the
Winter Wonderland
Oslo, Norway, January 19, 2001
- Chapter 2, in which there are
many Argentinians
Buenos Aires, Argentina, January
20-23, 2001
- Chapter 3, in which there's a
capital with not much to it
Colonia del Sacramento and
Montevideo, Uruguay, January 23-28, 2001
- Chapter 4, in which there are
penguins
Peninsula Valdez and Rio Gallegos,
Argentina, January 29-31, 2001
- Chapter 5, in which I buy a
ticket
Punta Arenas, Chile and Ushuaia, Argentina,
February 1-6, 2001
- Chapter 6, in which there is
snow
Puerto Natales and Torres del Paine, Chile, and
El Calafate, Argentina, February 6-14, 2001
- Chapter 7, in which the seas are
rough and I visit Ukraine
Mainly Antarctica, February
15-26, 2001
- Chapter 8, in which I walk
on clouds
Puerto Montt, Chiloe and Pucon, Chile,
February 27 - March 6, 2001
- Chapter 9, in which I am in
the middle of a very, very long country
Santiago,
Vina del Mar, Valaparaiso and Antofagasta, Chile, March 7-14, 2001
- Chapter 10, in which it is
raining in the desert
Calama, Chuquicamata, San Pedro
de Atacama, Iquique and Arica, Chile, March 15-23, 2001
- Chapter 11, in which the
indians prefer to be called peasants
Tacna, Arequipa,
Colca Canyon, Puno and Titicaca, Chile, March 24-31, 2001
- Chapter 12, in which there are
no more Incas
Cuzco, Ollantaytambo, Machu Picchu and
Aguas Calientes, Peru, April 1-8, 2001
- Chapter 13, in which the
country almost decides on a new president
Camana,
Nazca, Ica and Lima, Peru, April 9-13, 2001
- Bonus Chapter! Spanish for
travelers
That should be everything you need to know to get started. Enjoy!
Here there were tygers:
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In case you're wondering how I traveled, let me give you a
short summary: What I did was fly to Buenos Aires, Argentina,
from where I got on the slow boat to Colonia de
Sacramento in Uruguay, from where I got on a bus to
Montevideo, then back to Buenos Aires again to the
largest bus station ever, which even offered rides
to halfway down the coast, to Puerto Madryn, from where
it was easy to find a way to see Peninsula Valdez, after
which I continued south and eventually crossed the
border to Chile to go to Punta Arenas, only to discover
I had to go back to Argentina and Fireland / Tierra del
Fuego to get a ticket to Antarctica, which was in a
couple of weeks, so I actually went back to Punta Arenas
again, got on a bus to get to the Torres del Paine
national park, after which I deserved a few lazy days in
El Calafate before jumping by plane back to Ushuaia on
Fireland just in time to catch the boat to the Antarctic
Peninsula, returning almost two weeks later having lost
quite a few kilos at sea, so that I was almost, but not
quite, too tired to get on the road between Ushuaia and
Punta Arenas again, where I discovered a cheap option
for flying to Puerto Montt, which was just a short bus
ride away from the island of Chiloe where severe floods
made me head for the mountains near
Villarica, where I
eventually felt ready for the big city again, and made
Santiago my next stop, albeit a brief one, because I
decided that small cities are better afterall, and
checked out Vina del Mar and Valparaiso, who both had
nice beaches but I needed more sand, and I found
infinite amounts of sand in Northern Chile, in places
like Antofagasta, Calama and San Pedro de Atacama, which
is the driest desert in the world, nevertheless being
very rainy while I visited, so that I went back to the coast, which
was much drier but just as sandy, and the sand continued even after
having crossed from Iquique into Peru, where I once again went for the
mountains, first near Arequipa, then near Puno on the shores of lake
Titicaca, which gave me a nice taste of Andes culture, a taste of what
was later to come in and near Cuzco and the Inca Trail, which I walked
from Kilometer 88 in three days, before returning to Cuzco and getting
my way to Lima via Arequipa, Nazca and Ica, from where I had a ticket
back to Oslo. I promise that was the worst and longest sentence on all
of these pages. (And by including it, I should lure
quite a few visitors here from various search tools on
the Internet. Clever me.)
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