Friday, November 7, 2014

Llanos de Challe - Bahia Salado - Caldera



This has been a year of comebacks

September 2014. We decided to bike across Llanos the Challe in the Atacama Desert once again.
We take a comfortable night bus to Copiapó and got off 40 Km past the city of Vallenar.

6 AM and the morning is misty and cold with the usual "Camanchaca" fog that rolls in from the ocean.
After finishing off the night's leftovers (peanuts and scotch, a recommended staple in these long journeys), we assemble our bikes and begin the journey.


First stop, Canto del Agua. (song of the water), formerly just a couple of shaggy mud huts with few green spots in an otherwise desperately dry landscape. Nowadays a fast growing agricultural community based on olive production, anxiously awaiting the arrival of electricity that will get them hooked to modernity



A couple of hours later we reach the ruins of Carrizal Alto's mining facilities. Some structures are still visible.
The actual mining town is a few Kilometers uphill, but we decide to continue to the coast across Llanos de Challe National Park. The road is good, a mixture of salt and soil that is constantly watered, forming a hard, pavement-like surface.
Along the way, herds of guanacos, the males standing defiant as the females and young ones move for cover. They seem to have become shyer since our last visit.




It took us a relaxed 3-hour ride to get to the coast town of Carrizal Bajo, the mine's old port, just in time for lunch. After a 3-course marine feast that was little too abundant in protein and alcohol, as we would later find out, we take a delightful siesta at the beach. 


 
With still half the journey ahead, we continue north along the coast.  

The trip becomes harder; the landscape is overwhelming. Nobody speaks; the group breaks apart, everyone progressing at their own rhythm, immersed in their own personal thoughts.  



We pass the 100 Km mark with little water left and with the sun rushing fast into the horizon. Still 40 Km more to go and the road becomes an endless slope as it traverses inland across a large peninsula beyond which I keep hoping to spot the familiar hills near Bahia Salado, the day's goal.








The second day is a prize to our endurance: Mostly downwind and sloping into the Copiapo River, we make it in few hours at an incredible 35Km/h into the port of Caldera and the resort, Bahia Inglesa. Few times have I wished so hard not to arrive too soon.
 


 














Logistics: fresh clothes and supplies were previously shipped to Caldera by Bus.
Arrangements also made to get water and food at Bahia Salado.

Problems encountered: The salty solution used to consolidate the road gets in all moving parts of the bikes. Even after hosing them down with fresh water, chains start failing on second day. Back in Santiago had to be replaced completely.
Some protective liquid like WD-60 could have helped save the chains.















Award Ceremony was held at El Plateao in Bahia Inglesa.

KMZ day 1 
KMZ day 2

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