Jan 30: CH-7 & X-83

Jan 30: CH-7 & X-83

Jan 30 2020

I left Coyhaique about 9 am. First a fill up of petrol, a coffee and one of the rather bland sandwiches they seem to like here. The first part of the road was a bit cold, and for the first time I had the liners in my trousers and a down jacket under my riding jacket. Heated grips on too. As usual, the scenery was stunning. About 40km later, I took a wrong turning. I realised after about 20km and turned round in a town called Balmaceda, not far from the Argentinian border.  I headed back into a howling wind, which I hadn’t noticed until then, as it had been directly behind me.  The wind continued all the way back to where I had taken a wrong turning, and carried on for the next two hours. I’d heard stories of Patagonian wind, but thought it was worse in Argentina. Rain threatened, but there were only a few odd patches. The wind was so strong it was blowing the bike around, and I had to slow down for a while. Mountains, valleys, rivers…it just kept on coming. Later I stopped at a viewpoint, where an improbable series of perfect hairpins snaked down into a valley.  I say improbable, because, although the slope evidently required a few corners, this looked like a biker had just drawn them onto the hillside for fun. While there, I chatted for a couple of minutes to a couple on an Africa Twin, on their way back from O’Higgins. 

Hairpins for the hell of it

 

About 15km later, just after Villa Cerro Castillo, the continuous dirt started. I knew I had to reach there before 1pm, as the road is closed for work every day from 1-5pm. It would be dirt the rest of the way. I arrived at the major road works at the start of the dirt section just after midday. Initially, the road was quite sketchy loose gravel. Then there were miles and miles of roadworks: apparently they are planning to tar the whole route. I felt very glad I came here before they did. Although tarmac is obviously easier to ride, and of course is faster, it’s far less personal. It’s much more fun to have to find a line, rather than it being obvious.  After the roadworks, it was back to the normal ripio, and the road was quite good, enabling a good turn of speed on stretches. A few steep twisty mountain passes, views of rivers, lakes and trees.. I’d let a bit of air out of the tyres earlier, when a short stretch of dirt had deceived me into thinking I’d already finished with tarmac. The dirt road was almost hemispherical in places, the sides dropping off very steeply, which made it virtually impossible to park anywhere to take pictures.

A couple of times, I stopped and took a picture while sitting on the bike. However, one bonus of the incredible camber was, right hand corners were great, as you can use the slope as a berm, helping you round the corner. On left hand corners, it meant I was riding on adverse camber on a very loose surface, unable to stay in the centre in case of oncoming traffic. After a while the road turned to a hard clay-like surface, which was grippy and fast. Then back to the gravel, deep in places, nice ruts fee of stones to follow in others.

Cerro Castillo

 

There were a lot of bikes parked up at the gas station when I pulled into Puerto Rio Tranquilo, and, after filling up, I met an English guy, Pete Leach, working for a motorcycle tour company. We chatted for a while, and he told me of a shipping company they used to bring bikes from the UK. They sounded cheaper than James Cargo, who I had used to ship the bike out, so I resolved to contact them on my return to Argentina.

Puerto  Rio Tranquilo is a on a bright turquoise lake,  and not on a river as it’s name implies, and seems to be the turning round point for a lot of the bikers. I spoke to a group of guys from Chile on BMW GS’s, and was surprised they weren’t going any further. Lots of bikers were, however, joining the throngs being disgorged by buses, who had come to see the famous marble caves. These caves were a short boat trip away., and getting on the boats seemed to involve queueing and being hassled by touts. Not really my thing. As I had done many times previously on the trip, I denied myself the opportunity of “seeing the sights”. I just couldn’t get excited about joining hordes of people.  The longer the trip went on, the more I realised how much I enjoyed being on my own. More than anything, I wanted to get some food, but at the gas station shop they wouldn’t let me into the building, as they were filling up the ATM. Several security guards were inside, and one stood, arms folded, stopping anyone from entering. I also really wanted some water, so decided to wait. The bike was parked up next to the security companies 4×4, and it chose this moment to perform it’s great trick of falling over for no apparent reason. It fell into the security companies vehicle. The guard at the  shop door, intent on his job of protecting a gas station in the middle of nowhere from being robbed by bikers in a small town with only one way in or out, didn’t even seem to notice, despite being only a few feet away. My handlebars had left a huge gouge in the door of the truck, but the guard saw it happen, and he didn’t seem at all bothered. So I decided I wouldn’t be, either. Eventually, they finished loading the ATM, and I went inside and bought some water and a typically crap sandwich. I also decided to top up my cash reserves since the ATM was now full of shiny new notes. After pouring some water over my head, as it had now got quite warm, I set off.  I only saw one more biker the rest of the day.

 

The cyclists were still going, though. I nearly hit one who suddenly veered into my path. They were everywhere. Many of them would stick to the best bit of road, whatever was coming, and hope that vehicles with more traction would swerve round them.  I realised most of them couldn’t hear me, as they were listening to music, when a guy I had hooted at still didn’t move, and very nearly crashed as I swerved round him at the last moment. I decided then that cycling long distance probably required a very fatalistic approach to be successful.  A bit further on, I stopped and waited for the cyclist I’d nearly hit.  For some reason, I was really curious what he was listening to as he rode.  When he puled up next to me, he pulled out his white earbuds and introduced himself. His name was Marco, he looked about 30, with scraggly long blonde hair and a goatee, he had lycra pants and a string vest on, and he was Swiss. He’d been on the road for 3 years. I asked him what he’d been listening to when I nearly hit him. 

“I’m listening to Bach”, he told me, before gulping down some water.  “It works well here. In the deserts, where it’s more dangerous, I prefer Wagner”.  

About 40km from Cochrane, there is an amazing little cafe beside the road. Hector, the owner, was well aware of just how lucky he is to live in such an incredibly beautiful area. His house/cafe is next to a turquoise river running through a tree-lined valley. I had a coffee and some raspberry cheesecake while chatting to Hector about the region. He recommended I camp at the Patagonian National Reserve campsite, 11km off the Carretera Austral, up a mountain road in the Parque Nacional Patagonia.

Hector’s cafe

 

 

Chilean Patagonia

After setting off again, it didn’t take much time to reach the turnoff, and I followed a tiny road into the hills to the campsite. Guanacos grazed beside the road, a hawk circled above me, and I thought to myself, “Shit, I really like this long distance motorcycling lark”.

Guanaco

The only slight drawback at the campsite was that I couldn’t park the bike next to the tent, and had to carry all my gear across a meadow. However, it’s a beautiful campsite, with wooden huts near each pitch where you can cook. I chatted for a while with an English couple touring the region by motor-home, then cooked my staple of pasta and tomato sauce before turning in for the night. I was really glad I had abandoned Ruta 40. This place was magnificent. The only thing that could improve things would be Jackie being here. I miss her.

Camp site

325km today, not including the 20km in the wrong direction.  Tomorrow I will continue to Villa O’Higgins, the end of the road.

I hope my air mattress is fixed.

Jan 28: CH-7

Jan 28: CH-7

Jan 28 2020

So not such a good sleep as I was expecting at my riverside beach. My air mattress still leaked. I woke up about 5 times during the night to blow it up again. Around 7:30 I gave up, and got up. After making myself a sausage sandwich, I had another go at fixing the mattress, this time glueing a patch from the tent repair kit onto the mattress. We will see if it works. The night before I had given up on dry clothes, so left them hanging in the rain for a rinse so they don’t get smelly. After packing the bike I realised that my wallet was in the tent, so I had to unpack it again. Camping on a beach is nice, but sand gets everywhere.

Eventually packed, I set off heading for Coyhaique. The scenery is simply stunning on the Carreterra Austral, all the time. Even though it was raining continuously, I still enjoyed the views. The first bit of dirt (apart from several short sections), about 20km, started off with loose rutted gravel, which then gave way to more compact stuff, and the rain actually seemed to improve the road. Then lots more tarmac, wending it’s way through some of the most spectacular scenery I have ever seen. I ran into a couple from Canada on identical Suzuki DR 650’s with large fuel tanks, and stopped for a quick chat. 

Matching bikers

Here a quick word in the bike: the side-stand is the one serious design flaw on the Himalayan. It is too long, with too small a footprint. On tarmac, but especially on dirt, there have been many times that I wanted to stop and get off the bike, but couldn’t due to camber on the road or a soft surface. Why I didn’t get it modified by the welder in Salta is a continuous source of self admonishment. For anyone contemplating a long trip on a Himalayan do yourself a favour, chop a couple of centimetres off the side-stand, and fit a bigger foot.

Back to the trip. Did I mention the scenery? Mountains, glens, forests, farms, bigger mountains, the road a ribbon following the contours as it makes it’s way south. Temperature varied between 13 and 18 degrees. I had the heated grips on most of the day.

The second stretch of gravel, about 30km, makes it’s way up and over a steep pass. There were a lot of huge trucks, but I managed to get past most of them as they laboured round hairpin bends. The road surface, though very wet, was actually pretty grippy, though the hairpins were generally chewed up messes of rock, sand and gravel and required a lot of care to negotiate. Some sections also had a lot of potholes. Near the start of the pass, I met a group of Chilean bikers, one of whose chain had come off. They asked to borrow tools, but by the time I got them out the guy had managed to get his chain back on. I carried on, the rain now what they call in Ireland “soft”, ie, small droplets, almost like a mist. At the top I was in cloud briefly, then started down the other side.

At the end of the pass, just before the road became tarmac again, I found a hotdog stand and bought a Chilean specialty called a “completo”, which is a hotdog with guacamole and sour cream. As the temperature has been dropping my appetite has increased, and I really enjoyed the hotdog and a cup of coffee. A short while later the rain stopped. A long stretch of tarmac followed, and, once again, the scenery was just amazing. The road here follows the Cisnes River for a while, passing over the Viaducto Piedra Del Gato, which has a viewpoint looking out over the river. I found myself exclaiming aloud rounding every corner. The last 45 km to Coyhaique was gravel, a bit gnarly, very loose and quite deep in places. You can’t take your eyes off the road to admire the scenery too long without regretting it. The scenery, however, was still epic. I would rate this as the most beautiful road I have ever ridden on.

 

 

Last stretch

I arrived in Coyhaique about 5:30pm, and the weather and fatigue decided I would find a hostel. A quick look on iOverlander led me to the Puesto Patagonia. It is a lovely hostel in someone’s home, and, even though I slept in a dorm for the first time since school, I had a great sleep. The crazy old lady who ran it made me feel I was staying with an eccentric aunt. After a Shower, I called Jackie, and it only took minor prompting to make me decide to take a day off, do some washing, a bit of bike maintenance, buy some socks and food, and have a generally lazy day. It looks like it will take another two days to reach the end of the Carretera Austral.

 

Coyhaique

 

Jan 27: CH-7

Jan 27: CH-7

Waking up at 5:30 am due to another mattress deflation, I realised I hadn’t heard my alarm, Which I had set for 5am in order to make the early morning ferry. Cesar, who’s tent was on the pitch next to mine, hadn’t woken up either. A mad dash ensued to pack up in the dark and get to the ferry, which departed at 7am. We all made it, though  it looked like touch and go for a while for  Joaquin and Anna, who arrived shortly before the ferry cast off.  We grabbed coffee and cakes, and stood on the deck watching the scenery for a while. 

Sunrise on the ferry

The ferry trip was great, the scenery spectacular. The ferry arrived into Galeto Gonzalo at 11:45 am. I said goodbye to the cyclists. I’m really impressed with all the cyclists I have met so far. Every single one of them have been really cheerful, in contrast to a few grumpy motorcyclists I have met. It takes a level of commitment, never mind fitness, way beyond what a long distance motorcyclist needs. Then it was 42 km of very loose gravel, so I dropped the pressure in the tyres to 25 on the back and 22 on the front. After joining tarmac, with only about 30km to go, I took the lazy option, riding a bit slower, and using a pump at a gas station in Chailten instead of my foot pump, bought to replace the totally crap Motopressor unit that packed up after three uses (Marcello, the guy who serviced my bike, pulled it to bits and said sand had wrecked it).

Lake beside the Carretera Austral
Carretera Austral

I actually thought the majority of the Carreterra Austral was dirt, but in fact it’s mostly paved in the north. There were a few more dirt bits today, but it was mostly tarmac, through some of the most spectacular mountain scenery I have ever seen. Being a bit knackered, due to the early start, and knowing it was most likely to rain in the late afternoon, I decided I would stop early.  I also wanted to try and fix my leaking air mattress. I had a place in mind mentioned on iOverlander, but a stop at a particularly scenic spot next to a river for a photo led to another option. A cyclist, Pablo, and his girlfriend Francesca, cycling north up the road, saw my bike and pulled in to say hello, as did a polish woman, Alexandra. Pablo told me that the previous night they had camped on a beach next to a river on a farmers land. He told me how to find it and said ask for Carlos.. So I did, and found Carlos herding cows. He showed me to the riverside spot, said feel free to make a fire, and wished me a good stay.

Camping in the rain

After putting up my tent, finding the hole in my mattress and repairing it with JB Weld, which was the only method available, it and started raining and carried on for several hours. No point waiting for it to stop, I thought, so I got a fire going, starting it with cotton pads covered in Vaseline, cooked a meal, tried to dry my clothes. It’s nearly 10pm, and just getting dark. And it’s been a pretty amazing day, even though I only covered 249km.

 

 

 

Jan26: CH-7

Jan26: CH-7

26th Jan 2020

Well, maybe I should do a bit more research sometimes….I will come back to that in a minute.

I left the particularly bad campsite in Puerto Montt at about 9 this morning. I actually slept ok, but the campsite looked far worse in the morning than it had the evening before. No one asked me for money, and I didn’t look for anyone, so it ended up being a free night at least. After packing up the bike, I headed into town to fill up and look for an ATM. I eventually found an ATM at the cruise ship terminal. Quite why Perto Montt is a place for cruise ships to stop is a bit of a mystery: Peurto Montt is an absolute shithole of a place. It was the first time on the trip that I had the feeling I was somewhere unsafe. The first ATM didn’t work, the second one did. After a quick sandwich, I set off on the Carreterra Austral. It was a great ride to the first ferry, at Caleta la Arena, which was just about to leave when I rocked up.

Ferry

The ferry took about 30 minutes to cross, then it was a fairly short ride to Hornopiren, where I needed to catch another ferry. I got held up at some roadworks for 20 minutes, but otherwise it was a nice ride on smooth tarmac, the road going through some low hills near the coast. I arrived at about 2:30pm, to find out that the next ferry to Vodudahue isn’t until 11pm tonight. That would mean continuing in the dark, so I think I will stay here for the night., and catch the 7am ferry in the morning. It is a very beautiful little town here on the Pacific coast, so there could be worst places to be stuck. While at the ferry terminal, I met a group of cyclists, Joaquin, Anna, and Cesar, who were also waiting for the morning ferry. First we had to get tickets, which meant waiting until 4pm at the ticket office. After that, we all headed to the same campsite. After putting up the drone for a bit, we had a shared dinner of It was a very nice evening, sharing a bottle of wine and cooking a communal meal. They are all off to Villa O’Higgins too, but it will take them ten days longer than me.

Joaquin, Anna, and Cesar

Joaquin and Anna work in shipping, Cesar is an electronics engineer. All are Chilean and they all speak good English. I also washed some clothes, but too late for them to dry. We only went to sleep around midnight, and my air mattress kept deflating, so I didn’t get the best sleep. More from the Carretera Austral tomorrow.  

Sunset at Hornopiren

 

Jan 25:CH-215 & Ch-5

Jan 25:CH-215 & Ch-5

Jan 25th 2020

Today I woke up at 9am, after 10 hours sleep. Yesterday, I had been suffering from a stomach bug all day, and the day had been spent mostly lying on the grass outside the tent, after dropping the bike off for a service. I’d also bought more food supplies, and a new phone. Although the one I bought last week supposedly has the specs to work with my drone, it didn’t. An unwanted expense, but I am not going back to Chicelito to change it. I picked up the bike from Marcello last night.

 Marcello the mechanic

After packing up, with some rearranging necessary now that I had less spares and more food, I set off for the Chile border, which was only about 25 km away. Now, it’s time to hit the road, towards Chile and the Carreterra Austral. The forecast is for rain, but I will see how it goes. I planned a route on Google that takes me on the main road to Asorno, then cuts through the countryside to Puerto Montt, and the start of CH-7, the Carreterra Austral.

Marcello, has done a very thorough job. Steering, which had a bit of shimmy at low speeds, has been tightened, as have several engine casing bolts which had worked loose. Valves checked, oil changed, new brake pads (which I’d brought with me), and the bike is now cleaner than it has been since the start of the trip. Marcello couldn’t fix the speedo, no spares, so I am still using Google Maps for my speed.  He also had a go at fixing my Motopressor pump, but couldn’t get it working. I bought a cheap foot-pump in town. My air filter turned out to be the wrong one, so I’ve been carrying it around for nothing. Luckily, Marcello still had Itchy Boots’ old air filter, from when she got her bike serviced by Marcello. It was in much better condition than mine, so it’s now on my bike. I took it fairly easy to the border, to give the new brake pads time to bed in. The border is only 42km from Villa la Angostura, so it only took me 40 minutes or so.

At the Chile border there was a huge queue. I thought of filtering to the front, but other bikes in the queue indicated this might not be acceptable. I did jump past one car, and pulled up next to another biker. His name was Jorge, from Cordoba, riding what looked like a brand new Benelli 502, with a huge knobbly tyre perched on top of his luggage. Jorge was also heading for the Carreterra Austral. It took us about twenty minutes to get to the car park at the border, park our bikes, and make our way to immigration. He helped me through the paperwork, and an hour after arriving we departed on the 32km ride to the Chile side of the border. It was a great bit of road, lots of twisty bits winding through wet hills. It was raining, but not enough to need to put the waterproofs on. Just as I was thinking this, the bag attached to my right engine guard, containing said waterproofs, announced its departure by hitting my right foot before tumbling down the road. It had survived hundreds of kilometres on dirt but, having been taken off by Marcello for the service, was evidently not as well installed. I went back to get it and a few minutes later Jorge came back looking for me. Just as he pulled up, the side-stand on my bike sunk into the road, and bike toppled over. Jorge parked up and helped me lift the bike.

At the Chile side, once again there was a huge queue. It seemed I was missing a bit of paper the Argentine customs should have given me. Jorge smoothed things over with lots of Spanish and gesticulations. At this point, we decided to ride to Puerto Montt together. Initially, it was exactly like England on a summers day, with a threat of rain. The road flattened out, passing through fertile farmland. At Entre Lagos, my phone told me to go left, but Jorge continued straight on, and I followed him. I thought about just shooting off to the left, but after Jorge’s help with the bike and at the border, it felt a bit churlish to suddenly veer off and leave him. We then spent over an hour negotiating roadworks, with long delays at traffic signals waiting for oncoming traffic to pass. The road dried out, and huge clouds of dust covered us as traffic passed. Eventually we reached Osorno, and then joined a massive motorway for 70 miles. Jorge showed no inclination to take a break. I was by now regretting my decision not to abandon him. It rained a bit, but the traffic wasn’t too bad. Jorge’s bike was afster than mine, and a few times he pulled way ahead, then would slow down to let me catch up. On reaching Puerto Montt, Jorge showed me a hostel up a scruffy looking side street. It looked a bit dilapidated. Puerto Montt has a seedy port atmosphere about it, and I had no desire to stay there. I told Jorge I would find a campsite. He was staying with relatives. I found a campsite on iOverlander. Jorge was staying with relatives. Tomorrow he is getting the huge rear knobbly he has been carrying fitted, ready for the Carreterra Austral. My first days riding with someone else on the trip had not been much fun, and I was pissed off I had missed the interesting looking back-roads to get to Puerto Montt. Maybe we will run into each other again in the next few days. But having ridden alone for the whole trip, it works for me, and I like it.

The campsite I found is next to a fast food shack, 3 mile’s down the coast from Puerto Montt, with a great view of the Pacific. I bought a couple of beers, was interrogated by two dodgy looking guys for a while, then, after setting up my tent, cooked a dinner of pasta with tomato sauce. Tomorrow, after getting fuel and some local currency, it’s off south into Chilean Patagonia.

The whole day, I hadn’t taken any pictures. That’s what comes with riding with someone else, I guess. I did shoot some video, but that won’t be edited until I am home.

Jan 8: RP9

Jan 8: RP9

8th Jan 2020

I only left Villa Maria about 11:30, after going into town to buy a sim card. Plus it’s taking me ages packing…..packing has never been my strong point. Nor has getting going early. I’d dumped a few clothes and other items at the B&B in BA. I would pick it up gain on the way back. I had too much stuff. My sleeping bag and tent are nearly the volume of a pannier. On the flight over, I had only brought hand luggage, the rest of the stuff was shipped with the bike. But my hand luggage consisted of three cameras, 4 lenses, 2 video cameras, a drone, batteries for everything, and a tablet computer. redistributing it on the bike had taken me over an hour before I’d left Buenos Aires.

First 160 km was motorway. Then the motorway was finally done with, and it looked promising, for a while. Green hills, trees, winding road. Then it all flattened out and I saw about 4 corners in 200 miles. And it got hot. The thermometer on my USB port said 43 degrees. The bike said 50, but the Himalayan is known to over -read. On the flatlands, with no shade, it was just too hot to stop. I went through 3 Camelbacks of water, and still polished off 2 litres when I got to the campsite. The bike ran really well though: it seems to like 67 mph, which surprised me. Takes a while to get there, but then it holds it’s speed on hills better than at 55.  I can cope with boredom, and I got used to heat on rides around Qatar with Jackie and Wataweet. But boredom and heat together? Not recommended. I soaked the Hypetkewl vest today, and it sort of worked. I had been having to drink a litre an hour, and another litre at stops. Last night I drank two litres in a couple of minutes while eating chips frosted with salt.

pump.jpg
Wrong fuel

In Rayo Cortado, I pulled into a station with 2 identical pumps. A young girl working there happily filled my bike with diesel, after I had asked for “Gasolina”. Luckily I was just topping it off.  This was when I discovered that, in Argentina, the colour of a fuel pump’s hose bears no relevance to the liquid it is conveying.  The pump was green, the hose was green, and next to it was a black pump. After realising she had filled my bike with the wrong fuel, she ran into the building, and her dad then turned up, syphoned the tank, and filled it up with petrol. he apologised, and din’t charge me. Strange thing is, it seemed to run better afterwards.
At the next fuel stop, I filled one of the cans, which was just as well. With 65 miles to go to the next gas station, it was on reserve.  I pulled off on a long straight through some salt flats to empty hte can into the tank. I’d carry extra fuel now until a week before the end of the trip. I arrived in Santiago del Estero just before sunset. After cruising along the river I found Camping Las Casuarinas.  It was a very scruffy campsite with a few hippy vans parked in it. I put up the tent, took a quick shower in the filthy shower block near my tent, then locked my expensive gear in the Pacsafe, locked that to the bike inside my scruffiest bag, and walked into town. Stalls line dthe road, selling Milansesas, hotdogs and other junk food. It all looked very dirty, so I ate two portion of chips. Time for bed. The temperature was forecast to hit 40 degrees the next day. I needed to get north quickly: it was currently only 12 degrees in La Quica.

The campsite in Santiago del Estoro was a  total disaster. As soon as I got back to the tent, I knew it just wasn’t going to work. 31 degrees, 90% humidity, and a campsite that is the locals favourite place to party. So at one in the morning, I went on Booking dot thingy and booked a hotel, the highly recommended Coventry Hotel. I got there at 3 in the morning. It was adequate, and the same price as the campsite I’d slept at the night before.
Total miles today, 355. I think another 2 days to get to La Quica.

Jan 23: RP 23 & RN40

Jan 23: RP 23 & RN40

23rd Jan 2020

Today turned out to be the best days riding of the whole trip. It started with leaving the spot where I had the best nights sleep; I slept for about 9 hours solid. I felt refreshed, and ready for a bit of dirt. I made some mate tea while I packed up, then set off. The road started off as gravel, a bit loose in places, interspersed with stretches where it was so well packed it was almost like tarmac. I flew along, feeling  very confident in the bike, knowing it was getting serviced in the next few days. It had been thrashed a bit up north, and the oil definitely needed changing. I crossed a few short sandy bits, standing up,  and leaning slightly forward,  giving it plenty of throttle. The rear fish-tailed a bit, but I had by now regained the confidence I’d had thirty years earlier, tempered with a bit more common sense. I found I was enjoying it. In Botswana, where most of the roads where I grew up were sand,  my old XR500 had fishtailed far more than the Himalayan. I then passed a few km of brand new asphalt, with piles of dirt showing that work was obviously just about to start resurfacing the entire road,  sad signs of yet another great road being flattened and sanitised for the masses. But not quite yet. On it’s way past Aluminé and Pilolil, Ruta Provincial (RP) 23 follows the Aluminé River southwards. Interesting rock formations, a few steep hairpins, but mostly following the river valley, the road makes it’s way south to join RN40 at Justin de los Andes. 

Alumine River, hairpins in the distance

Beautiful scenery

The weather was great, the scenery sublime, the road not too difficult, but hard enough to be interesting, though there were some large trucks chucking up huge amounts of dust on one stretch. Further south a few homesteads and small farms started appearing. 

I rejoined Ruta 40 at Justin de los Andes. Initially my plan had been to stop here for lunch, but the sight of hordes of tourists put me off.  What I saw of the town looked very pretty, in a twee Swiss-chalet sort of way.  Since I’d started the trip, I had felt a complete antipathy to crowds, noise, traffic; civilisation in general.  In fact, this antipathy had started before I left home. The whole point of the trip was to get out in the wilds, see some scenery, push the envelope a bit; to see if I could actually do it, after years of thinking about it and imagining myself out there.  And I’d found out I could, and that civilisation held no interest any more, at least, not on this trip. I could go to a coffee shop or a nice restaurant any time I liked, but I only had two months for this.

After Justin de los Andes, I rode on the the best bit of Ruta 40 so far, excluding the 700km of dirt up north. Sweeping curves through a landscape that looks like all the best bits of Scotland with a bit of northern Italy thrown in, the smell of pine in the air on a sunny summer’s day (temperature was 23 degrees). The road passes many lakes. I videoed some of it, but didn’t stop to take many photos, partly because I knew I would be exploring this area with Jackie in 3 weeks, and also because I wanted to get the bike serviced in Villa la Angostura, and wanted to get there for the evening business hours. I knew Itchy Boots had got her bike serviced in Villa la Angostura, but she never answered my message asking exactly where. I had already discovered that there was a place you could rent Royal Enfields, so that seemed the obvious place to start. Just before Villa la Angostura, I pulled over at one of the scenic viewpoints by the lake. I chatted to a couple on a BMW, who offered me some mate tea. It looked like Scotland on steroids. The lake was huge, and the mountains round it fitted the scale.  Then I set off for Villa la Angostura. First stop was the campsite, Unquehué camping y Dormis, which was conveniently situated next to a supermarket. It was, however, quite full. My worries about noise were somewhat allayed when I was told that they had a strict noise curfew at midnight. The price, at ARS700, was the same as I’d spent on a hostel in La Quiaca, so I knew I was in a tourist hot-spot.

Lago Espejo Grande, RN40

Lago Nahuel Huapi, just north of Villa la Angostura

While putting up the tent, I snapped a pole. On the ground on the next pitch, I could see a couple of broken fibreglass tent poles, so I asked the occupants, two young guys from Buenos Aires, if I could have one of the broken poles. They said they were from a previous occupant. Luckily, the metal collar on one end of the poles, used to fit another section into, was exactly the right size, so the repair was quick and simple. While I was putting the tent up, the sun was getting in my eyes, so I put my Boca Juniors baseball cap on. “No, no….” the guys both moaned, and I realised they were River Plate supporters. They ribbed me about my hat for the rest of the evening, until they both collapsed from drinking too much wine.

After putting up the tent, I headed to town. With the help of a local biker, I found the shop that rented out Royal Enfields. Termi, who works there, told me that a guy called Marcello serviced all their bikes. He jumped on his little dirt bike and showed me the way. It is actually an approved RE service centre. Marcello asked a few questions: how many miles, how much had I been abusing the bike, how much oil was it using. He seemed impressed it had only used a litre of oil after being thrashed down desert highways in high heat for days on end. I arranged to drop the bike off the next morning at 10am. Marcello told me it would be ready by 1800, so I was committed to another night in this campsite that cost as much as some decent hostels in more remote parts of the country. I headed back to the campsite, picked up some shopping, and cooked spaghetti bolognaise. They sell bolognaise sauce in small Tetrapaks here in Argentina, and it was about to become my staple for the rest of the trip. I had a few drinks with my neighbours, who were getting thoroughly pissed, extolling the virtues of Argentinian red wine before eventually collapsing. The whole campsite seemed to partying hard, with music blaring from different directions. Drunks staggered around tripping over guy ropes, shouting at each other. I was wondering if I would get any sleep when, exactly at midnight, all the noise suddenly stopped. 

Mileage today 197 miles, about 60 on dirt

 

Jan 22: RN40 & RP23

Jan 22: RN40 & RP23

22nd January 2020

I left Chos Malal around 9am, an early start for me; I was finding it very difficult on this trip to get going early. Of course, in a campsite it’s a bit easier, as you get woken by the sun, noise etc fairly early. Fabian was up before me, and by 8am was heading off for some fishing, his little bike packed with his massive bag containing all his gear perched on the back. I packed up, and rode down Ruta 40 to La Lajas. The road was starting to look more interesting, with hills on both sides of the road. After about 40km, I came across another shrine beside the road. This looked far neater and better built than the shrines I had been seeing for Gauchito Gil, so I decided to investigate. It turned out to be a shrine to Difunta Correa (Deceased Correa) , another semi-pagan saint-like figure. According to legend, in 1840 a woman tried to reach her sick husband, who had been abandoned by the Montenaras (partisans) in the deserts of San Juan, north of Mendoza. She died when her supplies ran out. A few days later, some gauchos came across her dead body. Feeding from her still full breasts was a baby. The gauchos took the baby with them. Some time later, they erected a shrine to the deceased mother, Deolinda Correa. The shrine to her in Vallecito is still visited by pilgrims. Her devout followers believe her to perform miracles and intercede for the living. They leave offerings of water, which can be seen in the photo. The Catholic Church refused Deolinda Correa sainthood, as she only performed one miracle, and the Vatican requires two.

I left Ruta 40 at Las Lajas, heading on RN 242 towards Pino Hachacdo, on the border with Chile. Just before Pino Hachado, I turned off onto RP23, the road Matias from the Chill Inn in Mendoza had recommended to me. I could immediately tell why he liked it so much. The road follows the Rio Latran, heading south. It’s a dirt road, not in great condition, with ruts and rocks, but it’s one of those roads you don’t want to rush anyway. The scenery was fantastic, hills on my left, the river meandering along on my right. Araucaria trees commonly known as monkey puzzle trees, decorated both sides of the road, and there was absolutely no traffic. I liked it so much that I decided to stop early and enjoy the scenery. iOverlander mentioned a track leading down to the river to a nice place to camp, so I kept my eye out for it. I’m not sure if it was the track mentioned, but after about 20km, a small track led down to a ford in the river. In the distance on the far side I could see a small farm. I didn’t cross the river, instead turning right and following the river for about a km until I found a beautiful spot to camp, under some arauacaria trees.

 

Camp

After stripping off my bike gear, and setting up camp, I walked down to the river. It was by now about 2pm, and pretty hot, so I found a pool, stripped off, and went for a swim. Absolute bliss! The water, which I presume is glacial melt, was freezing, but very invigorating. I washed some dirty clothes and lazed around inthe sun by the river for a while. I spent the rest of the afternoon wandering around, taking pics, drinking tea, and did a bit of work on the bike.

There was no phone signal, so I sent a few messages to Jackie on the Garmin InReach. I then got out my Lixada wood stove, for he first time on the trip. I found that the cones from araucaria trees made the perfect fuel for the stove, so spent a while collecting them. Soon, the kettle was on the go, and I made some mate tea. The Lixada stove is a brilliant bit of kit. It cost me £12 from eBay, and will burn twigs, pine cones etc.

Cooking dinner

As it started getting dark, I cooked a meal on the fire of pilchards with pasta. It was actually pretty disgusting. I cleansed my palate with a small bottle of cheap whisky, and sat by the fire until my cones ran out. It was quiet save for the sound of the river, some strange bird calls, and the inevitable occasional  dog bark in the distance. I sat in the starlight thinking about what I wanted from the trip. The original plan of riding Ruta 40 end to end was now not really an option, unless I backtracked to Las Lajas. And, of course, I’d missed about 30km of Ruta 40 on the very first day, when I had taken an unnumbered road after leaving the start of RN40 at La Quica. And for a week, Ruta 40 had been a bit of a drag most of the time. Endless tarmac straights, intense heat, long boring plains, with the Andes just a movie in my peripheral vision, way off on the right. South of Gobernador Costa, I knew from cyclists I had met that it would once again be miles and miles of boring tarmac. I wanted more dirt. Of course, I was now getting into the cooler areas, but, as far as I knew, I had only another 80km or so of tarmac on the rest of Ruta 40. And what is Ruta 40 anyway, beyond the myth? It’s a road that was conceived by a bureuacrat in an office in 1936. It’s exact route is constantly in flux, as they tarmac it and deviate it to feed new mining towns. In the end, it’s just a number. And my lucky number has. always been 7

It didn’t take me long to convince myself. Fuck RN 40. I’m off to Chile to ride CH-7- Otherwise known as the Carreterra Austral.

Jan 21

Jan 21

21st january 2020

I left El Sosneado about 10 am, after a decent sleep interrupted by trucks and dogs barking at 6am. The road was ok, quite a few twisties, great scenery, different types of rocks: mostly desert with the occassional green oasis-like village. A vast improvement over the past few days. The temperature had dropped considerably, and for the first time in a week I wasn’t sweating almost quicker than I could drink water.

Then, after passing Barancas, I hit an unexpected bit of dirt. My excitement at a bit of change was tempered by the fact that, initially, it was the worst bit of road I had been on yet. Deep rutted gravel which tended to grab the front wheel. It was like riding on a bed of marbles, the bike sliding around, getting caught in ruts that would peter out into thick gravel, with the occasional pothole thrown in for good measure.  After 20km or so of appallingly bad gravel, it turned into a harder surface, with heavy corrugations. When I could get some speed up, it wasn’t too bad, but in areas where the road had been churned up into a mess of ruts where the road had been wet recently, I had to slow down. For the first time on the trip. I found that in some stretches, the bike was taking such a battering that it seemed the very act of shaking itself to bits was using all the engine power, and in places I struggled to accelerate. I saw very little traffic, save for one guy who pulled over when I had stopped for a break after over an hour of battering, to see if I was still ok. He told me I had another 60km of dirt before I would hit tarmac near

Rio Colorado 

I ran into two Scandinavian cyclists just finishing their lunch and stopped and chatted with them for a while. They had been riding around the world for 18 months. If some bikers think they are hardcore, believe me, they have nothing on many of the cyclists I met during the trip. These people don’t have the luxury of reaching a town every night. If the weather turns, they either have to set up camp wherever they are, or just keep peddling. Most of them can cover 80-100km a day, on any surface, some of them even more. I met one guy later on in Chile who was averaging 120km a day.

One of the cyclists (apologies, I have forgotten their names) saw me taking some snus (Swedish chewing tobacco) out of my pocket, and became quite animated. He hadn’t seen any snus since they had been in Thailand. I gave him a full tin, took a pic, and then it started raining.

Cyclists

I now had about 40km of dirt left. It started pelting down. At first it just hardened the road a bit and kept the dust from other vehicles down. But it wasn’t long before it got slippery, and the rain was so hard that I could hardly see where I was going. I had to slow down to about 30kph, as aprt from the road being very slippery, I could hardly see. Rain had got inside my visor, and I could feel my crotch getting wet. I stupidly put on my waterproof over-tousers before leaving the cyclists. I started getting cold, and put the heated grips on. For the second day in a row, a vehicle that had caught me up from behind slowed and kept station behind me. The last 20 or so kilometres seemed to take forever, Just as the rain stopped, I hit tarmac again, and the car overtook me with a honk and a wave.

Temperature had been dropping steadily all day from 32 when I set off to 19 in the storm. When I arrived in Chos Malal I had to join a queue to get fuel, and the temperature had gone back up to 33. These queues for fuel are a regular fixture in Argentina. Although I was now sweating again, I wanted to camp, so I headed for the municipal campsite, which turned out to be much cooler than the town. After cooking some pasta with tuna, Fabian turned up. He is a 63 year old dude who goes fly fishing by motorcycle. On his little 250cc Chinese Skua 250 dirt bike, he goes fishing all over the Andes. On his bike, in addition to his fishing and camping gear, he carries wine and a huge cooler full of ice, plus a soda syphon.

Chos Malal campsite

Fabian

We spent the evening communicating using Google Translate, becoming far more fluent as the evening progressed. Fabian would put some red wine in our glasses, then fill them with the soda syphon, the trick being to down it before the froth subsided. I contributed a cheap half-bottle of whisky. Fabian gave me a Boca Juniors baseball cap, which caused endless amusement for the rest of my trip when I ran into River Plate supporters. It was around 1am before we went to bed.  It was a great end to an interesting day; 384km, of which about 110km were dirt.

 

 

Jan 20

Jan 20

20th January 2020

Today I only left Mendoza at 12:15. I bought a foot-pump to replace the highly rated but good for only two inflations Motopressor pump. In fact I feel a bit guilty for the Swiss guys tyre woes a few days ago, as my pump probably didn’t help matters.. So I bought a small foot-pump from a motorcycle dealers this morning.
As it was late, and was forecast to be 40 degrees today, I decided to keep it a fairly short day. Plus I spent an hour talking to Matias, proprietor of the Chill Inn where I stayed last night. Our chat just confirmed something that, to be honest, I have been thinking about for a few days.

First, though, today’s ride. The first bit was motorway. And very hot, 40 degrees, as advertised. I really needed to get further south, to better climes. My new phone kept shutting down due to overheating. But I could see a thunderstorm on the horizon, and, although I didn’t hit any rain, a cooling blast cooled me and the bike down for a while. Temperature dropped to 33. Then it got hot again. The bike seemed to prefer 5000 rpm instead of it’s normal 5200, so I let it cruise how it wanted. I guess around 55mph? All the while, for 80km or so, a car kept station behind me.

Another straight 80km or so through a scrubland landscape, and then I could see 2 huge storms ahead.

A long way to nowhere-after the storm

At first I though I would go between them, but then the road veered 30 degrees and I was heading straight into blackness. I got hit with really hard rain just as I approached the most interesting scenery for miles (not forgetting the constant movie of the Andes on the right). It was the Rio Diamante, and lots of very wet curves, the first curves I had seen since leaving Mendoza. The rain was so hard it stung through my riding suit. And then, back up onto the plain, and back into sunshine. .A few minutes later, the car behind me whooshed past and shrunk into the vanishing point, with a wave from both of us. I had had the feeling this car was acting as some sort of shepherd, and him accelerating past me after the storms confirmed this in my mind. Thanks dude, whoever you are!

I decided to stay at El Sosneado, renting a cabin at Cabina Veronica, recommended by a traveller on iOverlander. It is a wonderful little place. It’s run by a farmer and his wife. The guy was in full Gaucho dress, working on a battered truck in the front garden. They couldn’t speak any English, but by now I was getting pretty fluent with Google Translate, ie, I could type fast, and then hand my phone over for  reply. They showed me to the cabin, which was pretty basic, but had a bed, a stove and a shower. I took a walk into the village to buy some supplies from the only shop, chatting briefly with some climbers on their way to climb something. For the first time on the trip, I cooked my own dinner.

Cabin Veronica

KM 3000

Back to the trip. The bike is suffering, I think. As mentioned earlier, cruising revs have dropped. She is using a fair bit of oil: I put half a litre in her this evening, almost finishing the litre I picked up in Buenos Aires. I don’t think this bike is built for thrashing at constant high revs, day in, day out. Twice today I pulled over in rare shade to let her cool down. I am not sure I am built for it either, tbh. To finish Ruta 40 and get back to Bariloche, where Jackie is meeting me on the 12th of next month, was perhaps asking too much. If I could cruise at 85mph it would be a different matter. I have only taken maybe 50 photos on the trip; most days seem to be about making miles, or running from weather.  While I can and have ground out miles, I had started by this stage to wonder what I was doing. Why did I need to finish Ruta 40? For a tick in a box? As far as I knew, thee was only another 70km of dirt left.  Apparently it is very tough dirt, but most of the trip will be spent with the throttle pinned, on tarmac, with the Andes movie playing on the right. This bike likes dirt, and so do I. So I am heading for Las Lajas  tomorrow, still on Ruta 40, but then I am bailing out.  Since I have been in Argentina, and people asked where I was going, all the local bikers have told me of is of great detours to explore along it’s length. I’ve missed several already, driven by a ticking clock. Their eyes glaze over when talk of going the entire road is mentioned. In the end, I guess Ruta 40 is just a line drawn on a map by a road planner in 1936; it is just a number, albeit one that has acquired an almost mythical status. But the fridge magnet shops are here already, and the majority of it has already been paved. Most of the tarmac I have been on today is brand new. Sosneado  has a huge tat shop, just because it is 3000km up Ruta 40. I just bought my second fridge magnet of the trip. The northen, dirt end of Ruta 40 was completely unspoiled, challenging, a true adventure. The long desert tarmac stretches were actually very intimidating, so quite an adventure too., in it’s own way. Ruta 40 must have been very challenging when it was nearly all dirt; the northern part certainly was.  But this is a once in a lifetime trip, so I want the most from it.

Matias summed it up best by saying Ruta 40 is the best road in the world to take you into close proximity to some of the best roads in the world. So that is where I am headed. Back to the dirt. No more need for 10 hour days every day; time to enjoy the landscape, take some pics, camp in some beautiful spots. The Carreterra Austral beckons, another great road, albeit without as much history (General Peron, the famous Eva’s husband, commissioned it).

I guess I would have been the first person to do the length of Ruta 40 on a Himalayan. I will leave that to someone else. Las Lajas will not actually be the end of Ruta 40 for me though. I will still have to visit it periodically on my revised plan. I just will not be tied to it anymore.