We liked our activities in Talca, but once again we hit a few snags with the accommodations. Getting to the hippie hostel was a total pain in the ass. The hostel’s website told us that we had to call for a ride from the bus station in town then to take a bus out of town to a little bus stop, and they would pick us up there. We tried. . . and tried. . . and tried to call. It turns out that neither Kenneth nor I am smart enough to figure out how to use the payphones in Chile. Apparently, we are just not good problems solvers. You would think that it would be fairly intuitive, this whole “how to use a payphone system” thing. I would have thought that there would be a simple enough system going on with the public pay phones that your average simpleton would be able to figure out how to make them work. Well, I guess that the average simpleton is out of our league, because we simply could not figure out how to make a phone call. So we couldn’t call the people we needed to talk to. (Seriously, how frustrating is it to not be able to figure out stuff like that?) Finally Kenneth just got online and emailed them to tell them that we were on our way, and asked that whenever they got the message to please come pick us. So we go take the bus to where we are supposed to meet our ride (which was also stressful because we weren’t sure until the very end where we were supposed to get off) and went into the little bus station at our stop to see if anyone from the hostel was waiting (unlikely) or to see if there was a way to call this hostel and ask them to come get us. We got inside and, to our relief, they had put up directions on how to call the hostel. (Triumphant! Other people have had a hard time calling too! Phew, maybe we aren’t idiots. I guess confused foreigners come through that bus stand with enough regularity that they had to put up instructions. ) Even with the directions though, it took Kenneth and me and these 3 guys hanging out at the bus station to make the phone call the hostel. We kept pressing buttons and whacking the side of the phone to make it work. After all that, when it was finally dialing, one of the guys showed us how you have to press the deposit button at the right moment to make the phone accept your $ so that your call goes through. Ah, so mystery half solved. That explains why some of our tries didn’t work. (It didn’t explain, however, why the phone made angry beeping noises when we tried 2 of the 3 # given us by the hostel, but whatever.) When our ride came I was ready with a whole “here is what I think of your incompetence at not giving proper instructions regarding how to call and how to get here on your website ” speech ready to go, but then the ride gave us some candy and she was all nice, so I decided not to spoil the mood. I will save my complaints for my online review.
Speaking of buses, buses are privately owned in a lot of places here. They were only just recently switched to being a public service in up in Santiago. Allowing city buses to be run by private companies is a problem because it means drivers compete for fares. So they race each other down the street to get to the pile of passengers waiting at the corner. And sometimes they won’t stop for students because students pay a reduced fare. Fabulous system, right? Safe as mining.
The hostel was beautiful though, I will give it that. Gorgeous setting, pool, deck chairs to relax in, bucolic country roads, mints on the pillows and flowers on the towels. It was like Eden after our hot, dusty bus ride, like quenching our thirst in a desert. On the other hand, it was too expensive and they nickel and dimed us on some stuff. But on the original hand, the surrounding area was really fabulous. Absolutely beautiful, like we were at a resort.
Our hike the next day was beautiful too, in a less commercial way. Mountains and wilderness. It was good to go on a nice day hike, but it got me thinking about how much I am going to be hurting after 4 straight days of hiking down in Torres del Paine, one of our later stops. I was ok on the hike, but I wasn’t ready to go out and do another hike after that one.
We trekked (people say trek instead of hike here) with an Austrian woman from the hostel. She was funny and had lots of good stories about traveling. We also hiked with the park’s caretaker’s dog. He escorted us all the way up and all the way back, even after he realized we wouldn’t be feeding him any of our food. Nice little doggie. He kept running along with us, then he would get tired of our slow pace and run ahead, then stand there looking reproachfully at us for taking so long.
On our way back down we heard a cow and her calf in the woods wandering around, which I thought was really weird. I mean, when do you see a cow hiking? They must have gotten onto the trail from one of the farms adjoining the park. The dog was with us when we saw then; he jumped like 3 feet in the air when he heard them lowing to each other. Mroooooooo. The cows did a pretty good job hiking, they were heading up a pretty steep track when we saw them.
When we got back to the trail head we had to walk down the road a bit to get to where the town bus would pick us up. A group of people were hanging out, and one lady kindly told us that we might need to go down the road 20 meters, because sometimes the bus didn’t drive all the way to the end of the road. So we thanked her and walked down the road a bit. Oh, and it turns out she had a little shop 20m down the road and she had cold drinks for sale. When we were on the bus a little while later, cold drinks in our hands, we noticed that the only place there was room for the bus to turn around was at the end of the road where we had been standing originally. Oh well, good for her. Have to make a living.
The bus ride home was fine, it was interesting to see all the locals getting on and off the bus- school kids, people heading home from work, people heading into town for stuff. One guy was bringing his broken weed whacker to town. He pretended to threaten the bus driver with it as he was getting on, and we all had a good laugh. The bus driver and the weed whacker guy over their joke, Kenneth and I over the two of them messing around.
At one stop along the dirt road a sweet, grandmotherly old lady got on the bus with a young man who appeared to be her grandson. They sat behind us and chatted quietly until the next stop, where there were a few old guys waiting for the next bus(not our bus, the one after, I guess). As soon as our bus stopped in front of these guys, the little old lady behind us stood up in her seat and opened her window and started shouting what sounded like (from the tone of her voice) some of the filthiest, most lascivious epithets I have ever not been able to understand. The whole time the bus was there, she just kept hurling it out. Some of the old men at the bus stop sort of nonchalantly looked around, or stared at their feet, embarrassed. Some of them tried to ignore her and maintain a dignified poise, waiting there by the side of the road. One guy focused very hard on playing with his cell phone. I don’t know why they didn’t shout some stuff back, maybe they were thrown off guard by her taunts since down here it seems like the men do most of the shouting. Or maybe they knew her grandson and didn’t want to start anything. Or maybe they had traded insults with her before and knew not to get into it. I don’t know. Whatever the case, she had morphed back into a sweet little old lady by the time she got off the bus 20 minutes later, clutching her little basket and holding onto her grandson’s arm, nodding politely at people she knew as she walked down the aisle. That act didn’t fool me though, I made sure to get my shit out of her way while she was moving through the bus. I didn’t want to draw any of her fire.
The next day we toured 2 wineries with an Australian girl from the hostel. One was a very small, fourth generation family run operation, the other was owned by a corporation which was big enough to do contract brewing for other vineyards. We took a cab to them; they were both fairly close to the hostel but not walking distance. We were a little confused, because we thought from the information at the hostel that the two vineyards had tours running every day at 2pm and 3pm, so it would be no problem if we just showed up. When we showed up though, neither place seemed ready for us, and were confused as to why we were there. So I guess the hostel should have called ahead for us, but they either forgot to or didn’t know that they were supposed to either. Didn’t matter though, both places were very accommodating, and gave us tours anyway. The first place, the little family owned one, was able to give us a tasting even though they weren’t prepared for us, the bigger one couldn’t because they needed to do something with the wine first, prep it or whatever. So they gave us a free bottle. We drank our bottle back at the pretty hostel with the Australian girl, since we couldn’t carry it anyway. It was good that the second place gave us a bottle, because we were able to drink it slowly. At the first place, they gave us two big glasses of wine to try, but they didn’t give them to us until the end, and we had to sip them down relatively quickly. So we were glad to not have to toss back two more glasses of wine within the same 2 hour period.
That evening we took the bus back into town for a 12 hour overnight bus trip to Chiloe, an island that is just below the beautiful lakes region in Chile. The bus situation in Talca almost screwed us again. Hate bus. The bus took a different route through town on its way in than it did on the way out. So we didn’t know when were near the main bus terminal. So we rode the stupid bus all through town to the other end, and had to get back onto another one and go all the way back through town to get to the bus terminal. On the way back through we sat right in front and kept asking the bus driver when to get off, because it was getting perilously close to when we had to make our next connection. These little old ladies kept giving me dirty looks for not giving up my seat for them, but I figured that the little old ladies could go to hell. I didn’t want to miss the connection, and we hadn’t been sure were to get off before because we were in the back and couldn’t ask the bus driver anything. Finally, much to our relief, we got there and made next connection, barely.
Next: Chiloe!