Patagonia
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West of the Andes is another world. Here both the Central
Valley and the Coast Range have sunk into the Pacific; what were once
glacial valleys are now fjords, and what were once mountaintops are now
islands. Hotsprings lay revealed by coastal erosion, while great glaciers
further fragment the landscape, necessitating maritime or air travel.
Great forests cloak the Andes from the Pacific shoreline to the continental
divide, bisected by surging emerald rivers carrying glacial silt to the
sea and providing habitat for fearless trout and salmon.
This immense territory is best understood as two separate
regions, separated by the vast expanse of the Southern Patagonian Ice
Field.
Northern Patagonia is one of the world's last great expanses
of wilderness, accessed by a gravel highway known as the Carretera Austral,
completed in 1988. Even today, road access to the region is not complete,
and travelers on the Carretera Austral must hop ferries across the mouths
of the great fjords.
Here the port of Chaitén provides access to the
northernmost portions of the Carretera Austral, including truly world-class
rafting and flyfishing, and cruises to glaciers and island hotsprings.
Further south is the city of Coihaique, capital of the Aisén province
and an ideal base for flyfishing and overland trips on the southern Carretera
Austral, to lago General Carrera and the Northern and Southern Ice Fields.
Southern Patagonia, known as Magallanes, is a world apart,
where the broad expanses of the pampa meet with the glacially sculpted
spires of the Andes. Torres del Paine National Park and World Biosphere
Reserve is the most famous of the vast protected areas in Magallanes,
preserving habitat for guanacos, foxes, rheas and flamingos. South of
the park is Puerto Natales, terminal for southbound ferries from Puerto
Montt and operations base for hiking and horseback trips, glacier cruises,
and overland trips.
Punta Arenas is the capital of the Magallanes province.
Facing the Straits of Magellan and Tierra del Fuego, Punta Arenas is the
principal departure point for cruises and flights to Tierra del Fuego,
to the Canal Beagle, Isla Navarino, Cape Horn and Antarctica.
Visit-Chile.org has also provided
a photo
gallery of over 90 of the most stunning scenic photos
ever published anywhere. |
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