🇨🇱TORRES DEL PAINE Es Un ROBO? 😱👀 ¿CARO o BARATO? | Sudamérica En Moto (T2-E17)
Scenographically perfect eh it goes along the lake no I’m not at a birthday party eh my eyes are at a birthday party right now a friend tells me here in Torre del Paine and if I continue on horseback what do you say here I meet up with Marisa who gave me lodging here shelter in her garden back there they are just doing the shearing and they give them the injection when they are shearing 34,000 quite [Music] expensive good morning good morning family how are you here waking up next to route nine in a warriors’ shelter yesterday it was about to get dark and before the sun went down I said I’ll take advantage of going here since well my lantern doesn’t shine much it lights up the sky more than the earth and it was a pretty cool night but luckily the shelter helped me get through it and now well we continue on our way towards Torres del Paine to Torres del Paine park to explore a bit of that beauty of Chilean Patagonia that’s a bit of the plan for today to get to Torre del Paine discover the park together and well let’s see what surprises us [Music] while the sun rises and melts the frost of the night we enjoy these views of the burning steppe [Music] now we are leaving our shelter behind and we continue on our way here are the ganscitos from the estancia look how cute they are bye bye here we have the little horses good morning good morning good morning they are curious eh here we have the Bondy sentry box that I don’t know if it will be used or not because it is half vandalized but I love them they are very very picturesque and we arrive again at route nine let’s continue on our journey we have to be careful with the road anyway because it got a little dark last night I saw it before that the seat is a little frozen there but well you can’t get too confident that’s why it also took me a while to get out for the sun to come up so that I could give it a go on the road it’s 9 in the morning and we are 123 km from Puerto Natales yes I estimate about two hours more or less we will be arriving today luckily we do not have the company of the unmentionable like yesterday and I love it seeing the grasses like this in the morning, how they are painted like gold by the sunrise or when the sun goes down it also gives a very pretty touch to this place, these shady parts that the sun has not yet hit are where you have to be most careful because the ice has not thawed yet, you can see that there is ice, in other words, what shines like this, half wet, is ice. You have to try to slow down a little, don’t make sudden changes so that the wheel doesn’t skid and on the curves, don’t take them too fast, don’t force the turn there because otherwise you will slip. This hill, family, how it comes out of nowhere, we have a whole steppe, this steppe and this hill appears here, Morro del Teeb they call it, it has like an antenna and well, it seems that people live there, you can start to see the mountains and they have quite a bit of snow, eh, the snow is quite low down, mm I don’t know what it’s like around Torre del Paine, eh, it must be quite cool in that area, I was looking forward to camping there, it seems to me that I don’t know, I don’t see it here, I think it looks much better, family, what I told you about the snow, do you see all that little hill over there in front that’s not quite a mountain like the ones over there, well that little hill already has snow it’s all white and it’s very close to the towns so I don’t know what the road will be like to go to Torres del Paine we arrive in Puerto Natales and I’m going to be loading up a little bit of fuel because I’m back in reserve again and I think the jerry can too eh because I don’t know if I’ll have a place to load up later until Calafate it seems not so I’m going to take advantage of how cold well now yes a full tank we have the little jerry can too and now we just need to fill up because I’m getting hungry now yes we’re ready I’ve got some energy back it’s 1 o’clock the ground is really high up everything has melted and I have my friend here who is going to take me for a run for sure the truth is that to be in front of the sea and everything quite cheap eh a coffee 4000 and something I thought it was going to be more but it wasn’t good anyway no it’s not cheap but all in all well [ __ ] are you going to run with me or not slowly don’t run with me don’t run with me don’t get mad don’t get angry bye [ __ ] don’t be surprised we left the Gulf Almirante Mont behind and continued on route nine to turn off towards Torres del [Music] Paine and this is where the pavement ends and the gravel begins. I tell you, you don’t even realize it. This gravel road must be very well maintained for tourism because people come here from all over the world. Just like in Chaltén, they have the same type of tourism. Lake Sofia accompanies us from afar and the forest is beginning to have more [Music] presence. It’s incredible how the forest here is still quite green, nothing like Usuaya. It’s crazy how you go down a little and autumn comes early but you come here and some leaves are just beginning to appear but in general everything looks very, very green. [Music] Wow, look at this little path, I love it. We are embraced by two giant rock walls where water falls. Wow, this path is entertaining, I love it. And the trail is good, the only thing it has are some little holes, but it’s okay. It’s not complicated to come here by motorcycle or car or anything. They have it very well maintained in that sense. And over there, what you see there are the towers, nothing more than they are covered by the clouds the same thing happens as in the pan they are areas of a lot of cloud so seeing the towers without clouds is a lottery there you can see a little but the highest ones are not visible let’s see move the clouds a little so people can see the Torres del Paine well look at what a tremendous lake family that is Lake Toro over there it has the shape of a bull from the air or find a bull swimming in that lake but that’s what it’s called La Toro I jokingly asked for the clouds to clear up eh that they would clear them up for me but look they are clearing them up eh every time more and more rocks are going up there tremendous we continue passing incredible rocks tremendous how they come eh they are all like very pretty slices and they protect us whether I like it or not from the winds too which is really good here I’m going more to the opposite side because it’s full of cerrucho let’s see over here the middle there it goes there it goes there it goes ah look at the view we have here family all the lakes there it looks like a glacier in the background before I [Music] turn off tremendous wow we are at the Mirador Grey and what a view huh look how the sun plays with the lake there the contrasts with the clouds aren’t they amazing and of different colors look there there are dark blue sky how amazing this lake is huh and there the towers here in front thanks to the particles of rock flour that come off from glacial erosion Lake Grey gives us this turquoise blue color [Music] Hi how are you doing is everything okay do you want to come in yeah it’s just for a little while then I’m going to take shelter back for the night because tomorrow I continue to Calafat huh do you want to take me into the park huh I have no idea what it’s like you had to buy it with the totem there oh okay and how much is it 34000 pes [ __ ] and I didn’t say it anyway everything is cheaper here for a foreigner than a Chilean there because I have a friend who is from Chile that we met in Atacama and we met in Chaltén we made a route together to Calafate and in Perito Moreno when he wanted to enter 45000 [Music] we crossed the Grey River and the horns of Paine begin to shine in the light of the sunset [Music] It may seem expensive or not to get there but this place is worth it all it is one of the most important protected wilderness areas in Chile located in the Torres del Paine region and in the province of Ultima Esperanza and was created in 1959 it has been around for a while and is located between the Patagonian steppe which is a bit of a place there are guanaquitos between the main steppe and the Andes mountain range where there are always or almost always clouds a park that has approximately 227,300 hectares it’s crazy we crossed the river to Butardas and we got to hear the waves of Lake [Music] Grey I am on the beach of Lake Grey which is the one over there behind it a milky color obviously glacial and in 1978 this whole place was recognized as a biosphere reserve by UNESCO and in 2013 it was recognized As the eighth wonder of the world, this whole area was previously inhabited by the Aoniquenk or Tehuelche people who, well, at the end of the 19th century were expelled by colonization in this place and from 1900 onwards they began to exploit this whole area a lot with cattle raising, which is why it began to be affected and the same inhabitants created the first protected area in this place which later expanded and ended up being what it is, a park. national giant that luckily managed to recover several of those areas that had been affected by livestock activity welcome now to Lake Grey family Wow the water is cool huh it doesn’t feel so much I think it’s because my hand is frozen but nice huh and over there in the background I think it looks like an iceberg an iceberg and we have the horns there in sight [Music] [Applause] I’m going back because it’s getting a little cloudy but look how beautiful it’s totally clear and you can see the different colors in the rock no no tremendous and well so that you can see a little of the park no no I couldn’t pass by and not go in it has so much, so much to see so much tracking to do like coming for several days to charge the GoPro in front of this group of horses and this one came up to me hello what’s up funny hello are you big huh it seemed small from afar but and the Pain towers are pretty Yeah they’re not clear hello [ __ ] be careful cars are coming don’t get scared with the cars, okay little one, cars are coming, be careful , okay, okay, well, aren’t you scared? Are you used to cars? Well, we’re both staying here looking at the Torres del Paine. A friend of mine tells me here in Torre del Paine, what do you say? We’re still riding in the Andes. Can I call you? Paine. How’s everything going? He came up to me when I was changing horses. The Battery of Croix, the battery, and he came. He wants a ride on a motorcycle. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, don’t get scared, okay? See you friend. Bye, what a big horse, really, he was a juvenile, he was small, you could tell, but he was tall, okay? He let himself be petted. Some tourists gave him an apple. These horses look kind of wild, okay? That one was tame, he came up to me as if nothing had happened. He’s prettier, like I was saying before. This is a park to come to for many days. It’s ideal for tracking. They have the W circuit, so you can do it for several days and it’s very good because it also helps the entire population of Chile with tourism. of the income and also of the jobs because around the park there are a lot of people from the nearby towns and cities who come and work here right so that’s very good and now it’s 4:30 the sun is going to set around 7 so I have to try to leave the park before 7 and find a shelter like I did yesterday if it’s going to the border so much the better I just asked there in the tourist information of the park what would be better for me, to go back the way I came or continue this way which is all difficult and they told me that it’s better for me to go this way because it’s less kilometers and it’s what I’m looking for a little less mileage and it goes to Cerro Castillo all through Laguna Amarga it’s almost 100 km and it’s 4:47 so I estimate that it’s going to take me an hour and a half I’ll be arriving with light and very close to the border to continue to Calafat we’ll see how the Torres del Paine park continues to surprise us which are still hidden there eh but at any moment it could clear up crossing the Weer Bridge we can see Lake Toro and Lake Pegüé that accompanies us for a large part of the [Music] path look up there family there on the rock I don’t know if you can see it on camera it’s full of hanging glaciers oh the towers are clearing up it seems to me eh at least there or is it just my desire I think it’s more my desire wow look how imposing it is to see that massif so close eh is it not graphically perfect eh it goes along the lake there with the massif of the towers no how awesome look at the space that is created between the two towers how beautiful how perfect that time wow and the little sun at sunset there hitting those rocks the perfect moment of the day eh how beautiful please how beautiful and here the machine working so that the road is in perfect condition how great wow we are next to it eh how beautiful it is please here the path gets a little wilder it seems and look at the view here uh wow The glorious arrival here must be where everyone takes pictures, right? Look, everyone is taking pictures here. Wow, how amazing! Look at what this is. I won’t tire of saying it, but this is pure magic, huh? and here they cross over there and that must be a restaurant or some kind of inn, right? Something that costs a lot of money. I mean, I guess staying there can’t be cheap at all. If it is a hotel, I don’t know, it looks like something like that. No, no, I’m at a birthday party. My eyes are on a birthday party. Right now, we continue bordering Lake Pegué and that place was their inn where the night is 243,100 Chilean pesos according to Google Maps. Thanks to this route, the I-150, we are crossing the entire Torres del Pai National Park. For now, it seems that the gravel is gone and we’re left with the asphalt. We’ll see how long it lasts. The patch of gravel returns to asphalt. It’s pretty new, from the looks of it, but it’s kind of weird, it’s kind of rough, it seems, I don’t know, it has like a lot of lines. The first time I’ve driven on a fault is like that, huh? Oh, how immense, huh? How immense? Please look at what this is, what a beautiful curve, God, the snow up there. No, no, no, this place is impeccable. We are entering the Patagonian steppe again, I think. which is noticeable by the landscape and the unmentionable is starting to hit eh little by little it is increasing well family and just like that with the horse there as a sculpture with the mountain behind it giving it a divine light we arrived at Cerro Castillo mission for the day more than accomplished but we still have one little detail left which is where I can sleep there I see grills and like a place to put up a tent but I don’t know we woke up in Cerro Castillo which with 120 inhabitants is the gateway to the eighth wonder of the [Music] world its history has always been linked to livestock and we can still find the shearing shed built in 1906 by the Tierra del Fuego Exploration Society and rebuilt in the 40s here I meet Marisa who gave me lodging here shelter in her garden today I arrived there almost at dusk and well she is making some bread here she welcomed me here with good coffee and everything and she does everything there by hand well it’s going to be done and with this you also make pizza yeah and how long have you been doing like this to receive let’s say tourists ah I don’t know now I’m like 2015 people come from all over the world uh from all over the world right in front of the post office where the place is like the hospital here it’s a little blue house well in front the little house in front is there and well the truth is that all the good vibes are receiving me here like a chili pepper no more so you know if you pass by Cerro Castillo someday on the way to Torre del Paine stop [Music] Good morning good morning family from Cerro Castillo I’m walking towards the shed that’s back there the one you can see back there in the background where they’re shearing the sheep Marisa’s husband Raúl and well other people there are doing that task which is quite complex and they have like 5,000 sheep so you can imagine and look I want to show you this little pond so you can see my ice pure ice that’s how the night was it was quite cool you could feel the cold in the tent but well I was able to sleep a bit to recover my energy and now let’s see what it’s like [Music] shearing process they shear the eyes and the tail preparing the sheep for the mating in May where the ewes are joined with the rams for mating where from tip especially here to inject animals to work for a day when it is full one puts it here and the liquid begins to fall through the hose and you inject with this that gives a dose hopefully it would be 2 ml but usually this has 2.5 and one injects it eh subcutaneously to the sheep between the leather and meat where the shoulders or between the legs and that serves as an antiparasitic and has vitamins the same for the sheep sheep that are thin or have this ticks all those things to avoid that they are injected there behind they are doing exactly the shearing and they give them the injection when they are shearing and here after they leave all the wool that passes it through that press that is there behind and after that press all the bales of wool are made here that are transported in trucks Raúl Cárdenas I was born and raised I was 4 years old when I arrived in Castillo 54 years ago, my family lives here, the livestock generally functioned for wool the price of wool was very good and today coarse wool has a price but at a very low price on the other hand meat lamb meat has remained more or less stable the price until last year we had a chain in Natales a refrigerator was sold in Natales that shipped to Holland this year we sold to the Patagonia refrigerator of Porvenir what is it like to live here in Cerro Castillo for you from your childhood now how do you see the place Cerro Castillo was a ranch this was not subdivided Cerro Castillo was subdivided in the year 77 and it was a large ranch here more than 100 people worked in the school issue there are fewer students who are from the village than those of us who studied here we were always 25 30 students Castillo well it had an evolution when it became common to Torres del Paine created the municipality and is seated here here in the village I hope Castillo doesn’t grow Castillo continues to be Castillo one never knows what can happen in life but always linked to the field well me I’m coming from Marisa’s, you know if you come to Cerro Castillo here you have a home like a refuge. Bye Marisa and well we continue our trip towards Calafate. We’ll see if we can cross the border. I think so. And this place is a very key point because you stay very close to Torres del Paine . So if it gets dark so you don’t have to be on the road and you can really enjoy the park the next day, it’s great to stay. And if you want to know a little more about the history or how they work in the fields, there with Raúl. Everything is close in this town, so it’s great. That’s when we arrived, family. We’ll see about getting the paperwork done here and see if we can cross. Very well, we did everything perfectly and now it’s time for Argentina and for them to lift the barrier so we can leave. Does it open or not? It’s okay. Let’s continue heading home and we’ll cross Argentina. See you there. Some friends here who go on excursions in a van tell me. And well, now let’s take it to Calafate. Let’s see how the road is with the snow. Look at the little fox. Oh, we almost hit it. The little fox run, run, run, it’s here. Little remancito, it happens that people are going to eat him, he’s fat , guacho, well, let’s hope that the road is clear of snow and we can get to El Calafate, for today I’m going to leave this video here, we achieved the objective of seeing the Torres del Paine, of crossing again home and we’re going to get back on the old ones when we’re about to cross to Chile Chico to take the southern highway towards Puertoont, so thank you very much for accompanying me here, family, for enjoying the Patagonian steppe with me and the Andes mountain range once again, see you on the good roads, ciao ciao [Music]
Torres del Paine es un robo? 😱👀Sudamérica en moto
🏍️💨 Proyecto Andes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vq4HkXXfPO4&list=PL0Ubs5innNH40rsDK1acy2yAGwK7tkCRC&index=6
#motos #viajar #chile
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14件のコメント
Primero…😉👍
Es caro para el que no puede y barato para el que si puede….si haces el circuito por tu cuenta…sin utilizar insfraestructura o guía.. no te sale nada.!!!
Hola gasti buenisimo todo tu contenido gracias por tanto desde dolores bs as
Hola gasti!!!!!!!mega abracitooo!!!!!!!!🫂
gracias gasty por este paseo abrazo
todo es caro aca, con el tiempo dejas de preocuparte y pagas.
aun mas caro si andas en lados de turismo xD
Espero que disfrutes y tengas buenas experiencias en nuestro país
Estimados. si quieren en esos lugares atencion y servicios como en Dallas. ,, Houston o Berlin Paris. ,, No vengan y si vienen ,,PAGUEN. Porque en Dallas son 250 dollares el dia. y el servicio regular y sin desayuno… mejor no vengan. no necesitamos turistas. en nuestro pais que lo quieran todo casi gratis. NO VENGAN.
Si es pobre vayase a la a la pocilga de donde vino
Áreas protegidas en Magallanes todas esas platas alguien está ganando ,??????
Investiguen todas las platas que llegan a la protección ,investiguen ,y verán algo grande
Como siempre espectacular. Que paisajes. Que rutas. El paisaje con tomas epicas…
Que lindo el caballito 😊 seguir a caballo 😂. Muy lindo el viaje… cada capítulo espectacular Gasti, un lujo. Buenas rutas hermano
Minuto 5:47 se me vino a la mente el meme, corre peshra corre jajaja un loquillo ese perrito 😂
Ese caballito casi se come a la andes jajaja