Friday, May 26, 2006
The Lake District
So, what have we been up to in 'La region de los lagos'?
Well, we've been for some good walks through a variety of forests...
...sat in some trees...
...visited these great rapids
(Los Saltos)...
...kept an eye out for lots of wildlife...
...the sea lions live in the river of a city (Valdivia) and eat scraps from the fish market. They are grumpy, loud, smelly and pretty scary up close...
...seen a load of cool birds (here's one of the kingfishers we saw).
We leave this region tomorrow (27th) and have loved the countryside.
Thursday, May 25, 2006
Catch of the day!
The cool spiner thing pays dividends!! My investment of maybe 3 quid for a blue bait thing (like a spinner but not metal) and fishing line has helped me to my first catch along with providing some excuses to idle away good time by nice rivers and lakes. After the excitment of the first proper 'bite' last week I caught a nice brown trout from a boat in one of my favourite places so far. A tranquil, beautiful setting with a village of 12 houses on the river bank where it seems to rain almost constantly.idle
adj. idler, idlest
v. intr.
1 a. Pass time without working or while avoiding work.
1 b. Avoiding work or employment; lazy: shiftless, idle youth. (See Synonyms at lazy).
2 a. To move lazily and without purpose.
Sunday, May 21, 2006
Chiloe
The island of Chiloe was good fun. Real nice people, great seafood, lots of coast and plenty of rain but also sun....hence we saw loads of rainbows whilst there! There are also a load of legends and mythical creatures which were fun to learn about. Trauco is a bit of a Geezer. Good summary about him on wikipedia here.
We wanted a better view of the houses on stilts (Palafitos) and so I chatted to some guys who were unloading their boat and managed to borrow it (well, he wanted a couple of quid) for a bit. So I rowed us up the channel and got up close to the houses which was cool.
By the way, to everyone in England enjoying the beginning of summer, it's damn cold over here!
Links Added...
We met Michelle, a kiwi traveller, on Chiloe so just added a link to her blog on the right. Weird to see our names appear in another blog (16th & 17th May).Also linked Paula's Spanish lessons she does in Buenos Aires. We only had 1 day in the end but was cool to be given tasks and split up in such a crazy place.
Friday, May 19, 2006
Fodder: Salmon, seafood and those Alfajores!
Talking food. Our diet for the past 2-3 weeks or so has been made up of a fair bit of fish. It started of in south southern Chile, where we went through maybe 4 great Salmon dishes and also a quality HUGE smoked salmon which gave us a couple of great dinners and a few tasty lunches.Since working our way further north (including an epic period - the tale can wait - of about 4 days hitching through some purely stunning scenery of rivers, valleys, lakes, mountains and temperate rain forest) we started to try more seafood including a great sea bass.
Most of this has been very recently on the island of Chiloe where they have local dishes similar to soups, stews and paella full of mussels, clams, different fish, octopus, oysters and plenty of things we didn't recognise and also couldn't work out after asking. Pretty much all of it has been really quality. The only worry was the other day when my swordfish, which was amazingly thick, had an uncooked patch in the middle. There's only one thing worse than over cooked fish...uncooked fish. Although how does Sushi work?? Anyway, after I'd eaten a lot of it, it was re-cooked although I still left a tiny patch from the middle and so, technically, didn't polish off the plate which is very very unlike me.
Finally, a word on Alfajores. These are sweet things made in Argentina and consist of two layers sandwiched together with a filling of Dulce de Leche and usually finished off with coconut shavings. The 2 layers are usually like shortbread but vary from soft donut type stuff, to more cakey to simply hard bread layers.
The chileans sell them too but try as they may, they rarely make them as well. You also get some dodgy packaged ones but the only great ones are fresh from the bakery. This has been the basis of our snacking diet for ages now and they deserve a mention. Bananas (often not great quality) and chocolate milk have played a lesser role than expected.
By the way, Dulce de Leche is a thick, very sweet caramel type thing of marmite texture but somewhere between chocolate paste and treacle in flavour (that's round here anyway; the rest of South America have their own versions).
P.S. Had my first attempt at fishing with my newly purchased cool spinner thing in a river the other day and, although nothing caught, had a dramatic 'bite' when a fish followed the bate towards the surface but missed it when lunging and jumped out of the water!
Note: for only the 2nd time so far, I borrowed these pics on this entry.