Puerto Montt, Chile
66F
(19C) - Cruise day 36 -
Feb, 28. 2018
We
started off early; by 8 AM we took the tender to shore. While most people took
the excursion buses, Carol and I walked a little bit to find a ‘private tour’
to the next town named Varas. The town of Varas was supposed to be a German
town, full of Chilean Germans. Something I wanted to see. I even wanted to talk
to them.
Tenders To Pier |
We asked a taxi what his fare would be to Varas and he and others wanted US $100 for the trip to Puerto Varas.
Hmm,
not cheap!
So
we walked a little further (15 minutes) to the Bus Terminal. I found a bus that
would take us to Puerto Varas and we each paid the bus driver US $2.00. So for
$4 we went to Puerto Varas. (Round Trip = $8.00).
It
was a local bus which stopped wherever people wanted to get on or off. It took
us 40 minutes to ride the bus but it ultimately got us to Varas and dropped us
off near the Radisson Hotel. The bus driver showed us the stop where we could get
the bus later back to Puerto Mott and our Ship Terminal.
Since
we were dropped off near this fancy hotel I thought I would go and ask what
their prices would be if we would stay there a night. One-night rate was US $185.00.
A Radisson Hotel |
So
we started off walking into the casino of the Radisson Hotel but we had to have
our backpacks searched, be x-rayed, etc. just so we could use the restrooms;
lots of effort just to pee.
So
now that we arrived, let’s find the Germans in town, I really wanted to talk to
them. We walked to the main square, the Plaza. There is always a Plaza in any
town in Spanish speaking countries. No problem finding the Plaza, but I looked
around, tried to find those Germans. Well, I guess I listened to Humberto too
much. I did not find even one person in all of Puerto Varas that even remotely
spoke German. Puerto Varas is a tourist town. There were souvenir shops mainly
on Main Street. Carol tried to find something with Alpaca, since we are in the
Andes but no such luck. We listened to Humberto who named the town of Puerto
Varas a town of ‘Roses’.
Yes we found some rose bushes but to name the town with such exuberance is over the top. In my imagination, when you call a town a 'Town of Roses' makes me think of a Cinderella setting, like in Walt Disney movies. Well Puerto Varas is no such thing.
But the Ones We Saw Were Beautiful |
On the town Plaza were some local musicians who played some haunting tune with their pan flutes.
The
town has a somewhat ‘European’ look to it, but to my eyes it was not as clean
as Europe.
German Church |
We
visited the great looking Cathedral (in pictures) on top of a hill, but found
it a bit shabby and closed. I tried to sneak in through the side door and Carol
managed to get a few photos, but then the priest came and shooed us out.
Then from the courtyard of the Church, the fog partially cleared allowing us to see the Volcano Orsono.
Orsono Volcano |
Ah, South America… you never know what you will run into.
We tried to see the town but at every turn we ran into something dilapidated and not too clean, not too organized.
We
stepped out of the church yard and I saw a bus go by with the name Puerto Mott
written on the front… I stopped the bus, asked the driver if he went to Puerto
Mott and when he nodded, we gave him $4.00 dollars for our trip back.
It
was the ideal bus, he dropped us off exactly at the Ship Terminal, and we did
not even have to walk from the bus terminal back to the Ship. Yahoo!
Puerto
Montt is not as attractive as Puerto Varas. Puerto Montt reminded me of
Patterson, NJ. There is lots of room for improvement in Chile, despite Chile
being the more ‘advanced’ country in South America.
We
were back at the Ship Terminal by 2 PM and just caught sight of our Ship’s Captain,
Capt. Turo, leaving the Ship in civilian clothes. He had finished his contract in
Puerto Montt and from now on we have a new Captain on the Island Princess. Will
the ship operate differently with a ‘new’ Captain?
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