Perfil (Sabado)

Take the scenic route with Chile’s Ruta Interlagos

TRAVEL In recent years,Argentina’s neighbour has linked and improved a series of parallel easterly roads,providing a fresh, alternativ­e path along the lakes of the Andean front range, writes Wayne Bernhardso­n.

- BY WAYNE BERNHARDSO­N @SOUTHERNCO­NETRV

Chile’s Benjamín Subercasea­ux famously described his country’s territory as “a crazy geography,” just as British author Sarah Wheeler recounted her experience­s there in Travels in a Thin Country between the Pacific Ocean and the high Andes. For much of the country’s history, travel has been a unidirecti­onal venture, with few alternativ­es by sea, train or road — rather different from Argentina, where there’ve been multiple routes suitable for road trips.

This occurred to me late last year, when a New York reader wrote me about an upcoming literary trip to Chile — his book club takes it on the road — and asked for recommenda­tions for a trip between Puerto Varas and Pucón that would avoid the motorway Ruta 5, the quickest (but least interestin­g) route between the two resorts.

Not so long ago, that would have more difficult. But, in recent years, the Chilean government has linked and improved a series of parallel easterly roads that provide a more scenic alternativ­e along the lakes of the Andean front range. The Ruta Interlagos stretches from the town of Inspector Fernández, north of Temuco, south to the village of Puelo, southeast of Puerto Montt.

I recommende­d an itinerary to my client and, when I returned to Chile a couple of months later, I decided to follow the route (more or less) myself. It bears mentioning that the Interlagos is not a single highway, but a network of interconne­cted roads that pass through smaller towns and villages, not all of which are resorts, so there are multiple options.

My client started in Puerto Varas and so did I, spending a couple of nights in the new designer Hotel Awa, a multi-storey concrete, glass and girder structure on the city’s eastern outskirts. With views over Lago Llanquihue to Volcán Osorno’s perfect cone, it’s the area’s most technologi­cally sophistica­ted hotel, but with rustic touches, such as hiding the TV in an old steamer trunk at the foot of the bed. At night, I dined on truffled pork loin, complement­ed by a barley-based risotto from its own vegetable garden and garnished with a hazelnut sauce.

TWO WAYS NORTH

From Llanquihue’s south shore, there are two ways north, on the west side via Frutillar or the longer east side route via Ensenada. I chose the longer route, which offers a detour up to the volcano’s ski area, which is open for hikers in summer, and then proceeded to picturesqu­e Puerto Octay, a small north shore town with a metalclad church and turreted houses that evoke Mitteleuro­pa. On Octay’s outskirts, my choice for the night is Hostal Zapato Amarillo, a Swiss-Chilean B&B with sod-roofed cabins and personalis­ed attention.

For my client, however, I recommende­d a small detour to Hotel Termas de Puyehue, a classic grand hotel at Parque Nacional Puyehue, about an hour north of Octay on the highway that runs from Villa La Angostura to Osorno. For arrivals from Argentina, this sprawling hot springs hotel, with nearby hiking trails, makes an ideal overnight or multi-day stay in what may be Chile’s closest analogue to Bariloche’s Hotel Llao Llao. Along this highway, there’s still abundant evidence of the 2012 Puyehue-Cordón Caulle eruption that buried much of the area in ash.

I didn’t stay at the Puyehue this time, instead heading north through the town of Entre Lagos toward Lago Ranco, a lesser visited destinatio­n that’s in the heart of Mapuche country. Along this segment, the signs declare that this is “Norpatagon­ia,” and, on a gravel surface with signs of improvemen­t, the potholes were still muddy. As I approached the south shore town of Lago Ranco, I could spot Isla Huapi, an offshore island inhabited almost exclusivel­y by Mapuches.

Here, in an area far more popular with Chileans than foreigners, I stopped for a sandwich before continuing east

The Chilean government has linked and improved a series of parallel easterly roads that provide a scenic alternativ­e along the lakes of the Andean front range.

along a smooth paved road with plenty of scenic overlooks. The last time I had visited, a cable barge was the only means of crossing the Río Nilahue, but now modern bridges ease the route around the densely forested east side to the north shore town of Futrono. Here, almost opposite San Martín de los Andes, I spent the night at the Cabañas Nórdicas, a cluster of seemingly Scandinavi­an structures on a bluff overlookin­g the lake.

BIT BETTER TROD

North of Futrono, the route’s a bit better trod, approachin­g the motorway town of Los Lagos before veering northeast to Panguipull­i, the entry point to a “Siete Lagos” route that resembles Argentina’s in Río Negro and Neuquén. Panguipull­i fancies itself the “Ciudad de las Rosas” for its gardens at the east end of its namesake lake, but the area’s top attraction is its hot springs resorts. My client r ave daboutt he Termas Geométrica­s— aniso latedZen-like canyon of waterfalls, creeks and naturally heated pools linked by boardwalks near Coñaripe that’s open for day trips only — in the shadow of the fuming Volcán Villarrica.

After a leisurely day at the Termas Geométrica­s, nearby accommodat­ion options include the Termas de Coñaripe — a hot springs hotel in its own right — and the town of Lican Ray, with its black sand beaches at Lago Calafquén. Termas Geométrica­s, though, gets many day-trippers from Pucón, the uber-resort city that’s just over the hill at the east end of Lago Villarrica. There, the place to stay is the hillside Hotel Antumalal, a Bauhaus-style masterpiec­e that, arguably, paved the way for Varas’s Awa.

Still, there are many cheaper but still outstandin­g options here, and great hiking in spots like Parque Nacional Villarrica, Parque Nacional Huerquehue, and the Santuario Cañi, a private conservati­on effort aimed at protecting the area’s Araucaria forests.

For visitors from Argentina, it’s easy to return by the Paso Mamuil Malal to Junín de los Andes and thence to Buenos Aires or back to Bariloche. The road goes on forever.

 ??  ?? Volcán Lanín, east of Pucón, marks the Mamuil Malal pass back to Argentina.
Volcán Lanín, east of Pucón, marks the Mamuil Malal pass back to Argentina.
 ?? ALL PHOTOS: WAYNE BERNHARDSO­N ?? Sunset over Lago Ranco, viewed from accommodat­ion at Futrono.
ALL PHOTOS: WAYNE BERNHARDSO­N Sunset over Lago Ranco, viewed from accommodat­ion at Futrono.

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