tierra del fuego – Rio to Rio Grande http://gregspurgin.net/rio-to-rio-grande Judy and Greg in South America Sat, 05 Mar 2016 19:22:39 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.8 It’s all north from here! http://gregspurgin.net/rio-to-rio-grande/index.php/2016/02/08/its-all-north-from-here/ http://gregspurgin.net/rio-to-rio-grande/index.php/2016/02/08/its-all-north-from-here/#comments Mon, 08 Feb 2016 14:39:11 +0000 http://gregspurgin.net/rio-to-rio-grande/?p=150 Continue reading It’s all north from here! ]]> We haven’t really done much while we’ve been in Ushuaia, but once I start writing it down, I might think differently. We didn’t go anywhere apart from walks around the town. The car has stayed parked outside the building we’re staying in. There is a national park not far from here, but it didn’t sound as interesting as some of the parks we’re planning on visiting as we travel north, so we decided to skip that.

We thought about eating out somewhere here, but all the Trip Advisor top-rated restaurants had fairly standard ‘international cuisine’ menus, and the more authentic Argentinian places had such terrible reviews that we weren’t confident about eating at any of them.  Also: dinner here is usually at around 10pm, which is a bit late for us. So instead we bought some rump steaks from the supermarket and cooked them ourselves … twice! Excellent meat, around $14 per kg. The other night I poached a double chicken breast on the bone, then cooked lentils in  the poaching liquid, sauted some onions and carrots and mixed it all with some Moroccan spice that I’d brought from home. I always travel with a few spices in little ziplock bags.

There were a lot of ships docked here yesterday – a couple of cruise ships, a couple of Antarctic vessels, a lovely 3-masted sailing ship and the National Geographic Explorer, which is now heading east past Puerto Williams. Greg found a great website for keeping track of what’s in port and where ships are located – Marine Traffic. I think if I lived near a shipping port, I could become whatever the maritime equivalent of a ‘train-spotter’ is.

We walked down to the dock, past lots of tourists and a few locals who had brought their folding chairs down to watch the goings-on. Then along the sea front for a while. We have been lucky with the weather in Ushiaia – sunny days, apart from some rain this morning, but it’s fine again now.

As we drove here, we saw a nice-looking camping area near a lake, so we’re planning on staying there tonight, then back into Chile tomorrow for a while. We had intended visiting Punta Arenas, which is a few hundred kms north and west of here, in Chile, but it seems to be just another shipping port, so we’ll give that one a miss and head straight to Puerto Natale, and national parks, mountains, glaciers.

See you in a day or so!

Looking up the street we are staying in with the Martial range behind
Looking up the street we are staying in with the Martial range behind
Another day another bunch of cruise ships
Another day another bunch of cruise ships
Walking around Ushiaia on Sunday
Walking around Ushiaia on Sunday
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Ushuaia – The End of the World http://gregspurgin.net/rio-to-rio-grande/index.php/2016/02/06/ushuaia-the-end-of-the-world/ http://gregspurgin.net/rio-to-rio-grande/index.php/2016/02/06/ushuaia-the-end-of-the-world/#comments Sat, 06 Feb 2016 14:35:43 +0000 http://gregspurgin.net/rio-to-rio-grande/?p=132 Continue reading Ushuaia – The End of the World ]]> We made it!

We drove into the world’s southern-most city yesterday afternoon. The city is built around Ushuaia Bay, which is magnificent. We’re staying in an Airbnb apartment for a few days. It’s in the middle of town, and a block away from the port. There’s a cruise ship in dock – the Costa Luminosa (sister ship of the Costa Concordia, which sank a few years ago) – we can see it from the apartment.

I’m still having to remind myself that we’re actually in Tierra del Fuego Land of Fire. That magical, mystical, legendary, other-worldly, out of reach place at the end of the world El Fin del Mundo. We’re here! Amazing.

After driving through flat steppe for days, the last hundred or so kms got interesting – mountains, lakes, a bit of snow on some mountaintops. We had to drive over a steep pass to get to Ushuaia, and it reminded me a bit of Yosemite National  Park.

Lovely weather here at the moment. Hardly any wind, sunshine, blue sky, calm sea, forecast maximum temp 19c today, with rain later in the week. Sunrise is at just after 6am, sunset is 9.30pm, so they have long days at this time of the year. Ushuaia is at 54°48′S, 68°18′S, which is almost as far south as you can get by car. There is an inhabited island, Isla Navarino, across the Beagle Strait to the south with 2 settlements, Puerto Williams and Puerto Navarino, but they can only be reached by sea.

We went to the local supermarket last night to get a couple of things. The place was packed, and all 12 cash registers were open, with long queues. We bought a litre of cheap white wine, a bottle of soft drink, 200g butter and some carrots. Total cost – AUD$6.  The quality of most of the fruit and veg was better than we’ve seen in a while. Stuff gets shipped or flown here.

A couple of interesting snippets about the Costa Luminosa – it was one of the 3 cruise ships we saw when we were in Rio, and we watched it sail south to Buenas Aires when we sat sipping cocktails on Copacabana Beach one evening. It’s heading to Chile, so we may see it again in Punta Arenas or Puerto Natales, but I think it will be faster than us, though. It’s due in Santiago around Feb 15th.

We don’t have to be back in Santiago until March 2nd, and plan on taking our time heading north. We zoomed straight down here and will stop and see some stuff on the way back.

On the Ruta del Fin Del Mundo - the road to the end of the world
On the Ruta del Fin Del Mundo – the road to the end of the world
Queuing for the ferry to cross the Magellan straits to Tierra del Fuego
Queuing for the ferry to cross the Magellan straits to Tierra del Fuego
Loading the Ferry with trucks
Loading the Ferry with trucks
Squeezed between the trucks on the ferry crossing the Magellan Straits
Squeezed between the trucks on the ferry crossing the Magellan Straits

Camped near the beach a few kilometres north of Rio Grande
Camped near the beach a few kilometres north of Rio Grande
At Rio Grande trout fishing meca
At Rio Grande trout fishing meca
Crossing the Martial Mountains north of Ushuaia
Crossing the Martial Mountains north of Ushuaia
How far south we are in relation to Australia
At Ushuaia how far south we are in relation to Australia, we are further south than Macquarie Island

 

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