Pinot Noir and Pablo Neruda

This past weekend we took a week off from Skiing to drive out to the coast to make the most of the Friday holiday.  It is harder in Chile to do spur-of-the-moment trips because the most popular destinations are booked far in advance, which poses a challenge for non-planners like us.  So we decided to take a chance on an off-season trip to the coast.  

Agarrobo, a small beach town south of Valparaiso, is most famous for the world’s largest outdoor swimming pool within the sprawling condominium development called San Alfonso del Mar Resort.  We obviously did not chose Agarrobo for that reason.  Instead, we thought it would be a great location close to the Casablanca Wine Valley as well as Isla Negra, another small coastal town known for Poet Pablo Neruda’s seaside home.  

Exterior of La Mirage Hotel in Agarrobo

La Mirage Hotel

We found a small hotel, La Mirage Parador, located in-between Agarrobo and the Casablanca Valley off a small winding road.  The hotel was quaint and intimate with just five rooms and each one faced an outdoor courtyard full of flowers and plants.  It had a beautiful back patio where they served a lovely breakfast every morning. We were very pleasantly surprised.  Hotels in Chile are typically very expensive and lacking.  The only drawback here was that it still is winter and at night the rooms were very cold.  

Breakfast at La Mirage in Agarrobo

Breakfast at La Mirage

Thankfully the weather during the day was beautiful and we were excited to explore the Wineries.  Wine tourism here is still fairly underdeveloped in many areas.  Visiting the Casablanca Wine Valley is not like visiting Napa.  Our hotel had no information on the wineries less than 20 minutes away.  You need to make appointments in advance to visit a winery (and some don’t answer the phone when you call) and many of the smaller wineries are not even on the maps.  There is a central area along Route 68 where the heart of the tourism is but it still has a way to go.  

As far as I can tell, you can only visit about 6 wineries in Casablanca.  Some are worth a visit but others are mass producers who won’t prove very interesting for those who have visited other wine regions.  We do have a great restaurant we love called Casa Botha where the owner, David and his wife Carmen create a wonderful respite with thoughtfully prepared italian food with locally sourced Chilean ingredients.  My favorite part of visiting David is that he gets all the good boutique wines from the Casablanca Valley – the ones you can’t find anywhere else.  In fact, on most occasions, we find a winemaker at the restaurant, eager to share their passion about making wine on a small scale.  

Bar at Casa Botha with Wine from Casablanca Valley

Casa Botha Wine Options

After a day in Casablanca we headed to Isla Negra for a tour of the house of the the nobel-prize winning poet Pablo Neruda.  I wasn’t familiar with Pablo Neruda before coming to Chile but he really is a remarkable figure.  He is so essential to the history of this country as went on to have a long diplomatic career.  Neruda was a well-known communist and had to flee the country at one point with his family.  In fact, many speculated that his death was a conspiracy by the Pinochet regime given that he died just days after the military coup.  The theory gained so much traction that his body was exhumed and toxicology tests were conducted.  The results confirmed that Neruda’s death was from natural causes but the stories still persist.  Needless to say he is a very interesting character.

Sign pointing the way to Pablo Neruda's Isla Negra home 

Neruda has three houses in Chile.  One in Santiago, one in Valparaiso and a third in Isla Negra.  While all three are worth a visit, the Isla Negra house is perhaps the most beautiful because it sits on a cliff overlooking the ocean.  It also displays many of his famous collections including his seashell collection. 

We learned there would be a two-hour wait to enter so we took some time to explore the vendors situated on the path to the house.  We also found a marvelous beach cove with tons of rocks to climb.  The kids might have liked this as much as the museum.  

Jewelry Seller outside Pablo Nerudas House

Jewelry Vendor Outside Pablo Neruda’s House

Kids on rocks at Isla Negra

ocean at Isla Negra

When it came time for the tour, we all decided to take the spanish tour (except Jack who got his headset programmed for English).  Just more than two years since arriving in Chile, Madie is now part of the National program at her school which means she no longer takes Spanish as a second language.  John and I are relentless at efforts and finally gaining some comfort.  All that said, the three of us had a hard time understanding the tour.  I finally cheated and borrowed Jack’s headset for one of the rooms.  

We called our last-minute getaway a great success.  Chile is one of the most geographically beautiful places I have ever been.  The fact that we can ski in the Andes just an hour from our house and the next weekend be at the beach in 90 minutes  -with a visit to a wine region in-between – really sort of lovely.  

 

Rio!

One of the great benefits to moving to Santiago was the opportunity to explore a different part of the world.  Now that John is part of the “Latam” office he had a conference in Rio de Janeiro that happened to coincide with my birthday.  My mom came to stay with the kids and John and I headed to Rio for 4 days.

Rio was amazing.  I was expecting a very dirty city with lots of crime but instead found an amazing exotic place.  We were fortunate to stay in a fabulous hotel, the Fasano Hotel was located right on Ipanema Beach.  The spot was great.  Each morning you could take a run along the beach and join the most eclectic array of people and watch as all the vendors set up for a busy day at the beach.

View from the rooftop of our Hotel

While in Rio we got the chance to go to a samba school where they work all year in anticipation of Carnival.  We visited the famous Mangueira Samba School.  Two of the dancers gave us lessons in the dance and then we got to decorate a headdress and watch a performance.  I can honestly say I’ve never seen anything quite like it.

John, our instructor and Henry and Liz learning how to Samba

I took a tour of downtown Rio.  While the tour was interesting, I’d probably stick to the beach if I came to visit again.  Some of the architecture was really stunning and it was fascinating to hear the history of how this city came to be.  Unfortunately time has seen many great buildings fade and new “modern” architecture replace the old.

Downtown Rio

We did have some fabulous meals in Rio.  One night we had dinner at Roberta Sudbrack.  The chef (for whom the restaurant is named) was the former private chef of the Brazilian President.  She has been named the best chef in Rio many times and her restaurant is included in the list of the top fifty restaurants in the world.  It was one of the best meals I have ever had.  The dessert was amazing (and I don’t even like dessert!).  With such great meals, my one regret is not being able to find the hole-in-the-wall place with great beans and rice.  Next time.

The highlight of the trip without a doubt was a trip to Christ the Redeemer.  I was nervous that it might be one of those iconic tourist destinations that can be incredibly disappointing.  It was the opposite.  One of the amazing things they do is make every visitor (even if you are in a tour group) take a sponsored bus to the top where the statue is located.  This prevents all the cheap souvenir salesman from overwhelming the place.  Instead, it is this stoic, peaceful place at the top of the largest urban rainforest in the world.  It was truly spectacular.

Under the statue is this area to walk out with 180 degree views of Rio.

Before we left Rio, we spent the morning on the beach.  There is an entire industry surrounding the beach in Rio.  Vendors of all kinds, bathing suits, food, suntan oil, etc create this background noise and a constant hum to the experience.

Oh, and it is not a stereotype that Brazilian beaches are filled with scantally-clad people.  If you were 99 or 19 you were wearing a string bikini and most suits didn’t appropriately over all the right spots. Even the men revealed as much as possible.  It made me smile when I think of how older women in the states move on to a swim suit with a skirt 🙂  Brazilians must look at Americans and think we have serious issues.

I am anxious to go back to Rio.  It is really a magical place.  That said, in talking with people, they have done a ton very recently to clean up the city and decrease crime.  The very poor areas of Rio, the favelas, can been seen from anywhere.  According to Wikipedia, nearly 12 million people live in favelas in Brazil.  With Brazil hosting the 2012 World Cup and the 2016 Summer Olympic Games, more work is being done by the government to improve these areas.  I’m sure you could hear different perspectives on how successful the efforts have been, but the majority of residents told me things have improved dramatically.  I found a very interesting article about this in National Geographic Magazine.  A complicated issue for sure.

Bohemian Lemonade?

We went downtown to Barrio Bellavista to have lunch on Sunday. Barrio Bellevista is a wonderful Bohemian neighborhood with lots of restaurants, shops and seems to always be a buzz with people. The energy comes from a number of colleges around the area creating an artistic and intellectual energy. The neighborhood has demonstrated this character since poet Pablo Neruda was a student and his house is a famous landmark in the area. I also understand this is one of the fun areas to go out at night if you are still young 🙂

A smaller enclave of Barrio Bellavista is Patio Bellavista which is a more touristy group of shops and restaurants. In fact, like many “bohemian” areas in big cities, Patio Bellavista seems to cross over into the more unauthentic tourist trap, but as tourists, we really love it.

Madie in the central square at Patio Bellavista

The tourist factor has probably also lead to an increase in security in the area. Our friends have warned me that I need to always be careful with my purse. While I’m always careful, I was surprised to see how far they take it at Patio Bellavista. I first thought these giant lanyards might be for college kids to carry an oversized cocktail around their neck. I learned that they are actually used to strap your purse around the table, preventing a thief from running away with it.

Straps provided at restaurants at Patio Bellavista to secure your handbag to the table.

As for dining out, We continue to struggle with translating an average menu to figure out what the kids will eat. Everything is just a bit different, no matter how similar if appears to be at first glance. Our latest example of this was our order of lemonade by Jack. We were so pleased when the waiter acknowledged that they had lemonade…until we received it.

Turns out what we ordered translated to a shot glass full of lemon juice and two packets of sugar. We all had a great laugh! And, in the spirit of “going with it” we asked for a glass of ice and managed to create our own lemonade.

Lemonade Santiago-style