By Brienne Walsh
Source: The New York Times
The boat slid across the teal waters of Lago Argentino, and soon we were 900 feet from the Perito Moreno Glacier. Through the morning rain, the glacier loomed above us — a jagged wonder glowing with colors: aquamarine, pure white, pale gray and an otherworldly, nearly fluorescent blue. Every few seconds there was a thunderous crack, and a chunk of ice, distant and unseen, went crashing into the ice field.
This was the end of a journey that had begun four days earlier in northwest Argentina. My friend Michael and I had arrived in the ski resort town of Bariloche laden with dreams of driving down Route 40 — the near-mythical highway that had been an escape route for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid more than 100 years ago — to the Perito Moreno Glacier, 50 miles west of the town of El Calafate.
I had just spent nearly two months in Buenos Aires and was tired of urban life, of nonstop human interaction. I wanted solitude and a dose of adventure before returning to my home in New York. Then it occurred to me: I would call Michael and we would go to Patagonia, the windswept frontier bequeathed with the earth’s few remaining glaciers. Adventure and solitude would surely be found there, I figured.
The agents at Hertz, where we rented our car, assured us the route hadn’t changed much since the days it was traversed by outlaws. Especially in winter, they said, it is covered with black ice and riddled with potholes. Hertz would rent us a car only if we promised not to take Route 40 the entire way.
So we mapped a new route, a 1,180-mile cruise along the paved highways that slashed across the lonely landscape of Argentinian Patagonia. It would take us east, to the coastline, and then south along the water, and then back west, to El Calafate, near the border of Chile.
We enlisted the help of our hotel porter the night before our departure. “The first afternoon, you’ll drive south to Esquel,” he told us, making notes on a piece of paper. Soon the page filled up with the names of sights: national parks, caves full of prehistoric paintings, estancias. He circled Sarmiento, the town where Bruce Chatwin, the travel writer, encountered amateur archaeologists collecting dinosaur bones from the banks of the Lake Colhué Huapi. He made a star next to Puerto San Julián, the harbor where Charles Darwin had gathered scientific data in 1834 as a member of Robert FitzRoy’s Beagle survey. If we made good time, the porter said, by the evening of the third day we would be in Río Gallegos, a hair’s breadth away from Tierra del Fuego. From there, we would make our way northwest to El Calafate.
Early the next afternoon Bariloche, with its tidal wave of tourists, slid behind us, and the Andes, black and speckled with snow, filled the horizon.
Patagonia is famous for being a magnet for wanderers. In 1977, Chatwin described the region as having “an effect on the imagination something like the Moon.” Occupying roughly 490,000 square miles, it extends from the Colorado River in the north to Tierra del Fuego in the south. On the western side, it is bordered by Chile; in the east, it meets the Argentine Sea, which feeds into the Atlantic.
But Patagonia today is a different land from the one that Chatwin explored 30 years ago. Stretches of emptiness still exist, but it’s impossible to drive more than a few hours without coming upon a town ripe with three-star hotels, satellite TV and restaurants that accept credit cards.
If anything about Patagonia is still otherworldly, it’s the colors embedded in the landscape — teal, mauve, mahogany, jonquil, periwinkle, azure, lavender.
We arrived in Esquel, 120 miles south of our starting point, as the sun was setting over the mountains. The town is the home of La Trochita, a steam train line relegated to the tourist trail with hourlong journeys through the Andean foothills. But we were in Esquel only to sleep, and left early the next morning.
As we drove, the thermometer on the dashboard dropped to the freezing point. Ahead lay the low, tiered steppes that cover most of southern Patagonia. By noon, we were at Gobernador Costa, a town that looked like a John Wayne movie set, sleepy and seething with boredom. It was here that Route 40 intersected with Route 20, which we took east toward the coast.
Occasionally, we’d be startled by something unexpected — the viridian and turquoise of Lake Musters, framed by ocher reeds; the stratified rock formations of Bosque Petrificado Sarmiento, which presided over an abandoned realm of petrified wood chips deposited by a river that had carved out the valley 65 million years ago.
By DANIELLE PERGAMENT
Source: The New York Times
THE first thing you notice is the scale of everything. The unending distance between towns, the unfathomable stretch of land between you and the horizon, the vast expanses of sky.
The next thing you notice is the landscape — or, more accurately, landscapes. In one spot, you’re surrounded by low, scrubby desert pocked with thorny bushes. And you think: this could be the Australian Outback, or maybe the American Southwest. But then you approach the ocean, the navy blue Atlantic with its frigid whitecaps and craggy coastline, and your mind calls up images of Nova Scotia or Ireland. Then from some point to the south: a flock of hot pink flamingos flies by, so close you could almost pet them. You picture South Florida, perhaps, or the Bahamas. But, in fact, you’re thousands of miles from any of those places.
This is Bahia Bustamante, a private sheep farm in Argentine Patagonia, sprawling over about 210,000 acres, owned by a soft-spoken man named Matias Soriano. Set right on the waters of the eastern coast, about 1,000 miles south of Buenos Aires, the farm is roughly the size of the Hawaiian island of Kauai. Mr. Soriano, 41, welcomes up to 18 guests at a time, from August through May. Bahia attracts a certain kind of visitor — the kind who’s more traveler than tourist, who prefers roughing it to room service, who is happy to spend days kayaking, hiking, horseback riding or investigating Mr. Soriano’s private 65-million-year-old petrified forest — and then collapse with a scratchy lamb’s-wool blanket when the electricity shuts off at 11 p.m. But above all, it’s a place for people who will travel across continents to see a breathtaking combination of hundreds of disparate species, all converging on a single point on the map. Ultimately, that’s what drew me this far from home: I’d seen “Planet Earth,” I’d gone to the Bronx Zoo, I’d even come nose to nose with a hippo in the Okavango Delta in Botswana. But I’d never had breakfast with a penguin.
“Welcome to nowhere,” said Astrid Perkins, our 40-year-old rosy-cheeked guide (and Mr. Soriano’s girlfriend), as we pulled into what the staff members and farmhands who live here call “town” — whitewashed houses and a smattering of bright red picnic tables lining a rough dirt road along the beach. Half of these houses were built 60 years ago for the farmhands and their families; the other half (the ones a few steps from the beach) were added recently for guests, like my friend Lisa and me, who were visiting the edge of the world for a few days.
“Here’s the welcoming committee,” Ms. Perkins said, pointing over the hood of the Jeep. A few feet ahead, a dozen ostriches were walking toward us, curious but keeping a safe distance. They looked like a cast of ballerinas, their long necks craning above the car. Their prehistoric faces cocked slightly, examining us for a moment before they turned and glided away, the haughtiest of high school girls.
We drove on to our lodgings — a very comfortable, simply decorated house that would be our lodgings for the next week. (Rooms are $215 a night, including three home-cooked meals a day and all the malbec you can throw back.) All the guest rooms have a similar setup: two bedrooms, a neatly appointed living room, a modest kitchen and a porch a few feet from the South Atlantic.
Lisa and I dropped our bags and set out to explore. As soon as we started walking toward the water, we glimpsed a family of hares dash away, as two great egrets came in for a landing on the beach.
With such natural diversity, comparisons are inevitable to that other South America destination famous for its isolated and unique ecosystem — but for Mr. Soriano, the Galápagos, the Ecuadorean islands, aren’t a model, they’re a cautionary tale. The Galápagos receive more than 100,000 visitors a year, while Bahia Bustamante receives only about 400 annually. “The Galápagos are being destroyed by the traffic, and I won’t let that happen here,” he said. “We can accommodate 18 people at a time. That’s it.”
Mr. Soriano can keep things at that scale because it’s his land. Two years ago, the government turned the coastline and outlying islands into a national park, but the land is Mr. Soriano’s; he controls access to the ocean. And he’s quite happy to keep it that way.
“It’s been a family farm for over 50 years,” he said, scratching his woolly brown beard.
We were in the communal dining room, a cavernous hall lined with pictures of Bahia Bustamante in the 1950s. It looked exactly the same back then, only with horse-drawn carriages in place of Jeeps, and workmen in suspenders instead of baseball caps. We were sitting down to a lunch of spaghetti in tomato sauce and warm, garlicky bread.
For Mr. Soriano, protecting the eye-opening diversity of life here is an integral part of his business. “The government couldn’t protect the animals and the environment better than we are right now,” he said, “because we are controlling how many people come here.”
In few places in the world does such a variety of species exist in such proximity. First there are the domesticated animals — the sheep, dogs, cats and horses that roam freely over Mr. Soriano’s land. But traverse some of the hundreds of miles of roads that crisscross the pastures, fields, desert, dunes, beach and canyons that make up the property, and you might also see ostriches, foxes, armadillos and the majestic llama-like guanacos, wild cousins of the African camel.
You can watch Southern right whales breaching a few hundred feet off the beach and then see dolphins in the same spot the next morning. Sea lions surround themselves with their harems on the rocky shore, and sea elephants, with their trunklike faces, roll their blubbery bodies on the same sun-splashed rocks. Depending on the time of year, you might encounter more marine life: orcas, octopus, starfish, etc. (The “etc.” really is necessary.)
And then there are the birds. Bahia Bustamante is one of the Holy Grail destinations for ornithologists. There are hundreds of species: egrets, gulls, vultures, falcons, red knots, hawks, albatrosses, eagles, skuas, red plovers and several species that don’t exist anywhere else in the world.
There are dozens of breeding grounds, including colonies of royal cormorants and rock cormorants. There are the giant petrels, which have six-foot wingspans and can fly 200 miles out to sea. And then there’s the steamer duck, which despite all physical evidence to the contrary, can’t take off and fly. I watched as they flapped their wings, got some momentum going — and for a second I thought, “maybe this time,” until they settled back down and quietly paddled away.
Although Bahia Bustamante isn’t an island, like the Galápagos or Madagascar, its isolated location means it essentially functions as one. “These animals have been left alone for generations without human intervention,” said Catherine Plume, a scientist with the World Wildlife Fund who has spent four years studying the species of southern South America. “And actually, they’re more closely related to animals from New Zealand and Australia than they are to other species in South America. When the continents broke off, these species were left here, blocked off by the ocean and the Andes.”
Bahia Bustamante has also been blessed with the sort of dramatic topography — points, capes, bays, all the pieces that make the coastline so jagged — that creates a safe place for animals to breed, according to Pablo Garcia Borboroglu, a biologist and researcher for the National Research Council of Argentina. Add to that the abundance of algae, seaweed and nutrient-rich water, he said, and you wind up with the perfect place for animals to live — or pass through, if you happen to be a right whale or a white-tufted grebe.
On our second evening, Lisa and I met up with our fellow guests — a conference of Patagonian sheep farmers, here to discuss sustainable and environmental methods of farming — in the dining room.
“It hasn’t changed much in half a century, and I plan to keep it that way,” said Mr. Soriano, pouring glasses of malbec from behind the bar. The room had turned dim and cozy, its huge windows overlooking the roiling Atlantic.
Mr. Soriano’s grandfather, Lorenzo Soriano, arrived on these shores in 1952 in search of seaweed. The young entrepreneur, who manufactured hair gel, needed it to make his products. Broke and desperate, the elder Mr. Soriano left his family behind in Buenos Aires to explore a place then known as Rotten Bay.
“When he got here, it was everything he dreamed,” the younger Mr. Soriano said with a laugh. “The shoreline was covered for miles with seaweed. Everyone thought he was crazy, but he saw the potential.” The rich find eventually led to what Mr. Soriano said was the world’s first seaweed farm, with 500 workers, houses for them and their families, a school for their children, and a thriving business. By 1968, the elder Mr. Soriano was doing so well he bought the two adjoining sheep farms, amassing a plot of over 200,000 acres.
Today, seaweed harvesting and sheep farming — not tourism — remain the primary sources of income for Bahia Bustamante. As far as Mr. Soriano is concerned, people who respect nature will always be welcome here — but the place is a farm first and foremost.
During our history lesson, dinner was served. Most of the food in Bahia Bustamante comes from within a mile of where we sat, including from the farm’s organic orchard and vegetable garden, which Ms. Perkins is expanding. All the flavors of our meals had the earthy taste of the land: warm lentil soup with hearty roasted vegetables; a green salad of bitter greens with sweet olive oil dressing; and platter upon platter of tender and salty fire-roasted lamb from animals that had been grazing outside only hours ago. We washed it all down with a few bottles of Patagonia beer. The place does have its high-end flourishes: the chef, who studied at the acclaimed Spanish restaurant El Bulli, also whipped up rich, creamy desserts each night to remind us of her provenance.
Since Bahia Bustamante doesn’t do any marketing of any kind — there’s a Web site, but the spot is not likely to be on a travel agency’s list, and you won’t be seeing a poster for it on a bus stop anytime soon — I was curious about how tourists ever found it. (I’d learned about it from Ms. Perkins, whom I’d met on a trip to Buenos Aires a few years ago.)
Recapitulando…
Nuestra visita a la región de lagos y montañas del norte patagónico en diciembre de 2009, fue memorable.
Imagenes, lugares y momentos de estos últimos días quedaron capturados en fotos y videos que segurantemente visitaremos de vez en cuando para re-vivirlos otra vez. (gentileza: Canon PowerShot SD940 IS Digital ELPH 12.1 MP)
Y de hacerse realidad, en una futura visita, creo que sería fácil justificar 2, 3 (y hasta 4) semanas para explorar varios lugares y actividades de aventura que quedaron pendientes.
San Carlos de Bariloche y alrededores:
- Puerto Blest y Cascada de los Cántaros – Lago Frías: Sale de Puerto Pañuelo navegando el principal brazo del lago Juan Blest. Luego de una hora se llega a Puerto Blest desde donde se continúa a Puerto Frías haciendo 3 km en autobus hasta Puerto Alegre, donde se embarca en otro catamarán para navegar durante 15-20 minutos un espectacular cuerpo de aguas verde esmeralda llamado Lago Frías a cuyo término se arriba a Puerto Frías. De regreso en Puerto Blest, se almuerza y se embarca nuevamente para cruzar Puerto Cántaros, donde se visita la Cascada y el Lago Cántaros, regresando a Bariloche mas tarde.
- Cerro Leones: En Parque Cerro Leones se encuentra una de las cavernas más importantes de la zona que tiene 30 metros de ancho y 130 de largo. Los senderos son aptos para la gran mayoría de la gente. La visita es guiada con una explicación de la historia, cultura y geología del lugar. Finalmente se accede a la cumbre para contemplar una imponente vista panorámica de la zona.
- Cerro Viejo: Ubicado solo a 10 cuadras del Centro Cívico, es un parque aventura para toda la familia donde hay aerosillas, senderos, bosques de arrayanes, una confitería en el mirador, hadas y duendes, un tobogán gigante, un restaurant, un paseo artesanal y el museo del esquiador.
- Refugio Neumeyer: A 18 km del centro de Bariloche, enmarcado en un bosque maravilloso, se llega en auto o excursión, a través del Valle del Chall Huaco, donde se puede apreciar la naturaleza circundante. Hay opciones variadas de trekking, la mejor cocina de refugio y en otoño, con los incomparables colores del bosque.
- Siete Lagos: Costa norte del lago Nahuel Huapi, Villa La Angostura, Lago Correntoso, Lago Espejo, Lago Villarino, Lago Falkner, Lago Hermoso, Lago Machónico, Lago Lacar, San Martín de los Andes, Lago Meliquina, Casa de Piedra, Paso del Córdoba, Confluencia, Valle Encantado.
- Circuito Grande: Río Limay, Anfiteatro, Valle Encantado, Confluencia/Traful, Río Minero, Lago Traful, Mirador del Traful, Villa Traful, El Portezuelo, Lago Correntoso, Lago Espejo, Lago Espejo Chico, Villa La Angostura, Cerro Bayo, Bahía Manzano, Brazo Huemul.
- Circuito Chico: Playa Bonita, Playa Serena, Paraje Laguna Fantasma (paraje natural donde se puede disfrutar el famoso cordero patagónico al asador en Rincón Patagónico), Cerro Campanario, Península San Pedro, Capilla San Eduardo, Puerto Pañuelo, Hotel Llao Llao, Villa Tacul, Lago Escondido, Bahía López, Arroyo López, Colonia Suiza, Lago Moreno, Punto Panorámico, Laguna El Trébol.
- Cerro Campanario: Situado por encima de todo, y en el Km 17.5 de la Avenida Bustillo, brinda una perspectiva única de todo el paisaje circundante. Solo con un viaje de 7 minutos en aerosilla conducen a la cima y a una de las mejores vistas del mundo. Allí, un resto-bar montañéz propone “acentuadas” emociones.
- Cerro Otto: Ingresando en el Km 1 de la Avenida de los Pioneros, se asciende por un camino levemente sinuoso hasta el Complejo Invernal Piedras Blancas. Más adelante se encuentran las pistas de esquí de fondo y el Refugio y Museo Berghof.
- Teleferico Cerro Otto: En transporte sin cargo desde Mitre y Villegas o en auto por la Avenida Pioneros hasta el Km 5 se llega a la estación inferior del Teleférico Cerro Otto que en góndolas cerradas te transporta hasta la Confitería Giratoria.
- Cerro Catedral: Supuestamente el centro invernal más importante de Sud América, ofrece además de una vista imponente, una amplia y variada infraestructura de servicios para practicar todas las modalidades de esquí y otros deportes invernales.
- Cerro Tronador y Cascada Los Alerces: Lago Gutierrez, Divisoria de aguas, Lago Mascardi, Villa Mascardi, Lago Los Moscos, Río Manso, Lago Hess, Cascada Los Alerces, Los Rápidos, Mirador Isla Corazón, Hotel Tronador, Pampa Linda, Los Ventisqueros, Confitería Los Ventisqueros. Alternativamente, se puede navegar el Lago Mascardi desde Villa Mascardi hasta el Hotel Tronador.
- El Bolsón y Lago Puelo: Se recorren o avistan los Lagos Gutiérrez, Mascardi, Guillelmo, y Cascada de la Virgen. Ya en el Bolsón se visita la tradicional Feria Artesanal, el Río Azul, la Cascada Escondida, el Parque Nacional Lago Puelo, El Hoyo, y chacras y plantaciones de Fruta Fina y fábricas de dulces regionales.
- El Bolsón y La Trochita: Desde El Bolsón uno se dirige hacia El Maitén donde se toma El Viejo Expreso Patagónico (la Trochita) haciendo el recorrido turístico. Además de la Estación El Maitén, se pueden visitar los talleres y el museo. El regreso es por via terrestre.
San Martín de los Andes y alrededores:
- Paso del Córdoba: Lago Meliquina, Lago Filo Hua Hum, Rápidos del Caleufú y Casa de Piedra
- Volcán Lanin: C.E.A.N., Puerto Canoa, Capilla Lago Paimún y cascada El Saltillo.
- Circuito Arrayan y Cerro Chapelco.
- Cascada Nivinco.
- Villa Traful, cascada Catarata y Mirador de los Vientos.
- Bosque de Araucarias, Lago Tromen, Cara Norte del Lanín.
- Pichi Traful y cascada Eruizos.
- Termas de Queñi.
- Pucará
- Rafting: Río Hua-Hum, Río Aluminé (diciembre a marzo)
- Parque de la Aventura
- Canopy, cabalgatas y buceo
Y si las circunstancias y condiciones físicas lo permitieran:
- Paseos por la Estepa: en vehículo 4×4 y cruzando el Río Limay en balsa, uno se interna en la estepa patagónica por sendas poco transitadas para visitar cuevas milenarias y pinturas rupestres, o para inciar un paseo a caballo en busca de nuevos e imponentes paisajes patagónicos.
- Canopy: una travesía entre las copas de los árboles a través del bosque, utilizando un sistema de transporte creado originalmente por biólogos y botánicos garantizando el mínimo impacto ambiental. Hay instructores altamente calificados, con entrenamiento específico.
- Cabalgatas: desde paseos de medio día hasta travesías de varios días, cubren lugares vírgenes al turismo, recorriendo valles con vistas panorámicas de Bariloche, la Cordillera y los lagos.
- Rafting: Se ofrecen distintos grados de dificultad 1, 2, o 3 (Manso inferior, superior y Manso a la frontera) y duran ½ día o día entero durante los meses de Octubre a Abril solamente.
Sugerencia: como suele suceder en tantos otros lugares del mundo, visitar ésta región de Argentina ofrece momentos superlativos de emoción y belleza, pero los caminos todavía carecen de una buena señalización y la condición de las rutas no pavimentadas varía bastante, por lo que un buen medio de transporte (camionetas altas o 4×4) es recomendable.
Para el que nunca visitó el norte de la patagonia argentina, mi sugerencia es que se aprovechen las excursiones guiadas por profesionales, donde se aprende y disfruta del lugar sin preocupaciones, maximizando el uso del tiempo y lugares recorridos.
Si la preferencia es alquilar un auto y viajar a solas parando a voluntad, unos buenos mapas y una detallada planificación de las excursiones de antemano, haciendo muchas preguntas a los locales sería, en mi humilde opinión, una buena estrategia.
Voilá!
Feliz veranito (o invierno)
Itinerario:
- Este viaje empezó así
- Ayer: Parque Nahuelito, Isla Victoria y Bosque Los Arrayanes



