Thursday, May 7, 2009

This one is for you...mom

Well its now been about four months since my last blog post and after the urging of a certain someone I have decided to get back into it. A lot of stuff has happened since January but I should probably begin by telling a little story about our time in Patagonia and a certain ferry ride in Chile Chico.

So this summer (January-February) Cole and I went down to the ranch in Patagonia, where we had been earlier in September. Everyone we were living with went down there to spend the summer vacation so we figured it would be fun to go down there again and work on the farm and then as long as we were so far south we might as well go even farther south afterwards, to the end of Chile (and South America too). So we bought two round trip tickets. One from Santiago to Balmaceda (the airport in the middle of nowhere, 1 hour from Coyhaique, the captial of the Aysen Region of Chile, and 6 hours by bus over dirt roads to the ranch the Manquehue Movement has on the shores of Lago General Carrera). The other round trip ticket was from Balmaceda to Punta Arenas (pretty much the farthest south you can fly). So the plan was to fly to Balmaceda, go to the ranch, work and hang out there for about two weeks, then fly down to Punta Arenas and travel around there, then fly back to Balmaceda, and then back to Santiago. However, since we are living in South America, things didnt turn out exactly the way we wanted them to.

Our time on the farm was great. We were living in the mens house with about 8 other guys. Cole and I and Esteban (an alumni of San Lorenzo who wandered/hitch-hiked his way down to the farm and has been there for the past 6 months or so) worked on the farm while we were there. Some of our tasks include: tossing hay bales onto a trailer and then storing them in a barn, cutting down a bunch of grass and shrubs and making stuff look nice, cleaning and organizing one of the barns, and burning garbage (I know, dont ask).

So anyway, during this time we needed to buy bus tickets to get back to the airport for our flight to Punta Arenas. So one day when we were in the small town nearby Rodrigo and I went around asking if there was a bus that left on a Saturday that was going to the airport (our flight was on a Saturday). Turns out there was no bus on Saturdays but we found out that instead of taking the 6 hour direct bus over dirt roads we could take a bus on Friday to Chile Chico (east of the farm) then get on a ferry across the lake and then take a bus to Coyhaique, stay the night there and then get to the airport the next day. It sounded great to me at the time. We could break the long 6 hours up into smaller pieces, we could see Coyhaique and we could take a ferry across the second largest lake in South America. So we bought two tickets to Chile Chico and we were also able to buy the ferry tickets from the bus company too. (This bus company was run out of a butcher shop so in addition to being able to buy a trip by minivan to the nearest town, you can also buy assorted groceries and cuts of meat).

So our flight to Punta Arenas was Saturday Feb 14, which meant our bus trip was Friday Feb 13. Yes, February the 13th. So right away we were off to a bad start. Plus I started to get sick on Thursday and I woke up on Friday feeling like crap. But anway, the bus to Chile Chico comes to get us at the farm and we get into town about 3 hours later, but still with plenty of time to get to the ferry by 2 pm, or whenever it was supposed to leave. Right away we realized that Chile Chico is probably the windiest city in the world. No joke. So we escaped from the wind in an internet cafe and checked our email that we hadnt seen in about 4 weeks. Then we headed over to the port to wait for the ferry. After waited for several hours in the office without seeing anything that looked like a ferry or hearing any official announcement we talked some woman who looked like she was in charge. (she was also wearing way too much make-up and clothes that were way too tight) She told us that the conditions on the lake were pretty bad because of the wind (No, really?) and that the ferry wouldnt be leaving from the other side until 4 pm. Then at 4 pm when the ferry still didnt show up she told us that it was not going to come to today, but it would definitely come tomorrow. So Cole and I were like crap, that sure does suck (we may have said something a little more profane) but hey, we can still catch the ferry tomorrow, take the bus to the airport and make the flight. So the lady told us to come back tomorrow at 6 am to catch the ferry. Really, I said, 6 am? Are you sure. Yes sir, 6 am. Whatever. So we went around Chile Chico looking for a place with two beds for the night. And that is what we got. A room with two beds, and nothing else. Ok, there was a light and a light switch. But there was a kitchen and a shower and the price was right - $5000 pesos (like $9).

So we woke up early the next morning and headed over to the port in the dark to catch the ferry (it was still really windy, and although it was no longer Friday the 13th but Valentines Day, our luck didnt look like it was changing). And of course on the door of the office is a sign that says the ferry will be leaving the OTHER side at 6 am and getting to Chile Chico around 8:30. Thank you so much ugly ferry office lady. So anyway, the ferry finally gets to Chile Chico at around 10 am (or something like that, I dont remember all the details because it wasnt a very memorable experience). So we are all relieved. Everyone else waiting for the ferry is relieved because although it was still windy, everyone said that if the ferry crosses to one side, it ALWAYS goes back to the other side, so we would DEFINITELY be going to the other side. And so Cole and I were relieved because we would still make our flight. So we are all ready to get onto the ferry when the captain stands in our way and says that he is not going back.
What?
Thats right, I have permission but I just dont want to risk it in this weather.
¿QuĂ©?
Yeah, I might go back over at like 2 pm, but who knows, I hope all you passengers dont have anywhere really important to go.
So Cole and I said to ourselves - well this is no good (%$&$#), but if this ferry DOES leave at 2 pm we can still just barely make the flight, I guess we will just have to wait around and put ourselves at the whim of mother nature and this captain guy. But here is where the plot thickens ( I hope you are still reading and/or paying attention). We called up the airline just to make sure that everything was the same with our flight and it turned out that our flight had been changed slightly and was now leaving 2 hours earlier. Darn ($#&*). Looks like even if this ferry does finally leave there is no way in hell we can get to our flight on time. I guess we better cancel that flight. So we did that and gloomily walked back to the ferry port realizing that our dream of seeing the end of the world, Parque Torres del Paine and above all some penguins, was ruined. At this point we figured we had few options
1. Hitchhike back to the farm and spend the rest of the time there then fly back to Santiago on our return flight
2. Wait around for the ferry and spend the rest of the time in and around Coyhaique and find something to do there.
We decided to wait around for the ferry. At this point I just wanted to get on that damn ferry and cross that stupid lake. I didnt care what was waiting on the other side. So we get back to the ferry office and hang out with the rest of the pissed off passengers. We start talking to these two Isreali guys about our age who had stayed in our hostel and we had talked to them before. They told us they had been in Chile Chico for about 5 days now waiting for the ferry and we told them about our problem and how we had to cancel our flight and miss our trip. They told us that we could still make it down to Punta Arenas if we went by bus, an idea that never occured to us. They said it was easy, although long. So we said, hell yeah, lets get the %&$& of Chile Chico! We walked down the street, just barely caught a bus across the Argentinian border to a town called Los Antiguos, and from there we just barely caught a bus to Perrito Moreno, a place we were told had a huge bus terminal with routes all over, including one to a town called El Calafate, which was also just a short bus ride to Puerto Natales, which was going to be our second destination after arriving in Punta Arenas. So we get into Perrito Moreno and ask one of the bus companies if there just happened to be a bus leaving anytime soon to El Calafate. Why yes of course there is a bus, that one right there leaves in 15 minutes. Awesome. We'll take it. How much? $170 Argentinian pesos or something. Uh oh, we dont have that much Argentinian money, let alone do we know what the exchange rate is! So we took off running into the center of town to hit up a cash machine. We got some pesos and took off running back towards the bus station, holding out our thumbs on the off chance that someone would pick us up, and sure enough a nice young man gave us a ride back to the bus station (our luck was finally changing). So we get back to the station and we are both sweating and I still feel kinda sick, just the kind of condition you want to be in when starting an 18 HOUR bus ride.

Before getting on the bus I asked the guy selling tickets if there was an easy way to get to either Coyhaique or the airport at Balmaceda from here. (Thinking about the trip back, because we were going to need to get back to Balmaceda for our flight to Santiago and we had cancelled our flights between Punta Arenas and Balmaceda because we didnt think we were going to go anymore.) So the guy tells me - There isnt really a way to go through Argentina but hey, you know what you can do, you can bus over to Chile Chico and then take a ferry across the lake and then bus to the airport.
HA!
No way in hell I am doing that!
So we get on the bus and it turns out it wasnt actually going to leave in 15 minutes (In Argentina, probably even more so that in Chile, things usually dont happen on time.) We left about 90 minutes later and began the trek down Route 40 thru Argentina. Which was sort of like driving on the moon. There was seriously nothing out there. It was a dirt road through barren pampas. At one point a saw a fence crossing the landscape and a few horses alongside the road but I had no idea where they were from because there was nothing but flat plains and mountains in the background as far as I could see. Anyway, the next day we finally got into El Calafate. From there we took a bus to Puerto Natales in Chile and were able to continue with the trip we had planned. We saw Torres del Paine (which was beautiful), went to a penguin colony in Punta Arenas and saw the southern-most brewery in the world, although those jerks wouldnt let us tour it, or even sell us a beer mug or t-shirt.

I will try to put some pics up at some point.

Well this has been way too long. I will try to write more about what else has been happening here in Chile. You know, stuff like what am I doing here, how is it going, etc, etc.

Peace

Thursday, January 15, 2009

January

Wow, almost an entire month has passed again since my last blog post. There is something about living here in Chile that makes time pass it a strange way. I dont know if it is the different seasons (southern hemisphere, its hot right now), being away from home, or the slower pace of life here. Its hard to believe that I have already been here for almost 5 months. Speaking of 5 months, I finally got my Cedula de Identidad Extranjeros (Chilean Identity Card for Foreigners) yesterday after many struggles with the local bureaucracy. I know what you are thinking, 'Charlie, you have been in Chile for 5 months and you are just know getting legal?'. Yes. I already had my one year visa coming in but upon arriving I needed to register with the international police here and get an ID card. It was quite a hassle (for me at least, Cole got his with no problems). Let me go back to the start and explain all the steps I needed to take in order to get a one year visa and ID card. (I hope I dont leave anything out)

Apply for a one year temporary resident visa to Chile – This requires sending a few things to the Chilean consulate in Chicago

A signed letter from my doctor stating that I am in good health
Results of an HIV blood test (negative)
FBI criminal background check – requiring the following

Fingerprints taken at Ramsey County Government Center (the first of many fingerprints)
$18 money order
Wait 3-4 weeks

3 passport sized photos
$131 money order
My passport
Application letter

Take a family trip to Chicago to pick up my visa in person and have my thumb print taken

Customs in Chile at the airport (duh)

Register within 30 days of arrival with the Chilean International Police

After registering, obtain an ID card from the communa where you will be living. This is where the fun starts and my memory gets a little hazy.

Applying for the ID card requires more fingerprints, photo, and about $6. Should take no more than 2 weeks

Go to Patagonia for 2 weeks, forget about the whole thing

Return to Santiago to find that the civil workers are on strike (this of course includes the people working on my ID)

Return after strike to pick up ID card only to find that it has been rejected. Apparently the last name on my visa – Sawyer III, because my full name is Charles Edmund Sawyer III – didn’t work in the computers so they rejected my application

Go to three different government buildings downtown to get the name on my visa changed to just Charles Edmund Sawyer

Return to the International Police to re-register

Return to the Vitacura community office to reapply for my ID card with my updated visa. More fingerprints

There was another civil workers strike in here somewhere

Discover that my card was rejected yet again

Return to the Vitacura office to find that they didn’t have my date of entry into Chile in my application, which they did have. The guy we talked to said my card would be ready in under a week

Celebrate Christmas and New Year’s with my sister here in Chile and forget about the whole thing.

Return on Jan 2 hoping to get my card. This time without Rodrigo, our contact guy, who talked to all the civil workers for me and was a real good sport about the whole thing.

Find out my card is not ready and go through the process of applying for an ID again – more fingerprints, another photo.

Return after a week and a half to the Vitacura office and finally get my ID, although it has the old photo and old ID number on it and says that it was issued on Dec 30. So my last visit was totally pointless.

But the point is, I have my ID card. Sorry if all that was confusing. This isnt meant to be a knock on the Chilean bureaucracy or government (well maybe a little), merely an observation or maybe a little venting.

But hey, on the bright side my sister Anne came to Chile between Christmas Eve and New Year's day and we had a great time together. Here's a few of the fun things we did.

  • Went to Valparaiso for three nights and explored the entire city - hills, beautiful colored houses, delicious food, hills, the ocean, great food, ascensors, hills, one of Pablo Neruda's houses.
  • While in Valparaiso we took a day trip to a nearby national park and climbed a nice hill (if it was in MN I would consider it a mountain, but since its in Chile its a hill) We didnt quite make it to the top but it was still great. Saw a huge spider
  • Checked out various sites in Santiago - the central market, my school, parks, Plaza de Armas, another one of Pablo Neruda's houses (that guy sure knew how to live)
  • Toured two vineyards (with tastings) just to the south of Santiago
  • Rode in the teleferico (sky ride) that offered great views of Santiago and my neighborhood in particular. Anne was terrified.
  • Spent New Year's (the rest of the nights in Santiago) in Bellavista, a hip, Bohemian part of town with great restaurants, bars and clubs.

After Anne left, Cole and I went to Trabajos (work missions) with about 30 of the high schoolers from San Lorenzo. We stayed in a school in Pabellon, a small town outside of Melipilla about an hour from Santiago. We slept on hard floors in the classrooms and had cold showers but we got to help the people in the area fix up their houses and we had a lot of fun with the students so it turned out great. I dont want to brag, but while we were there we played a few games and I won musical chairs, the dance contest, and the fun run (although one kid really pushed me and I was impressed with how fast he was, and also that all the kids ran and ran fairly fast. I couldnt help but think of how kids in America would react if they had to run 2-3 km, but these kids were all about it). We also hitch-hiked in Melipilla...twice...both Sundays we were there...to go to Mass! It was my first experience with hitch hiking but it went great. The people here in Chile are ridiculously friendly. Either someone would pick us up along the road, or the students would knock on the door of a house if they saw a truck in the driveway. And it worked!

Cole and I are leaving for Patagonia tomorrow. We are going on a work trip there with about 30 other kids our age who are involved with the Manquehue Movement and we will be in three different towns all close to the retreat center the Movement has in Patagonia. Not exactly sure what we will be doing. After that is over (about 2 weeks) we are planning on staying at the retreat center/farm for two weeks and hopefully working with some of the gauchos again. And then after that we are flying down to the end of Chile, Punta Arenas, and travelling around there for 8 days, including a few days in Torres del Paine, one of the best natioanl parks in Chile, if not anywhere, or so I have heard. Then by the time we come home in will almost be March and school will start again. Its a rough life down here. I guess I will probably miss the inaugruation and the Super Bowl too, but at least it isnt below zero.