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Chile tours to see the wonders of Chile

 

Chiloe Island

 
  Highlights
  2nd island South America
Chiloe archipelago
Jesuit churches
Palafito (stilt) houses
Gastronomy
Chiloe National Park
 

All those who visit Chiloé are charmed by its beauty. This is a place where an exuberant nature goes hand-in-hand with a friendly people, the creators of a fantastic mythology, a particular gastronomy and whose assets include 150 churches and chapels built by Jesuit miss during the 18-19th centuries. Today they have applied to the UNESCO for recognition as a World Heritage.

Chiloé is the second largest island in South America - after Tierra del Fuego - measuring 112 miles from north to south. The coastal mountains cross its entire length, creating two completely different environments: toward the Pacific, the coast receives constant damp winds from the ocean and heavy rainfalls, so there is abundant vegetation. Facing the continent, the island's microclimate allows for human life with all its folklore and varied mythology its gastronomy - such as the typical curanto and all the necessary agricultural crops. With their maritime tradition, these people built most of their homes on palafitos -pillars of wood that hold the house above the water - which are one of the island's emblems, together with its characteristic wool handicrafts.

In the inner sea, between the island and the continent, there are a number of small is lands separated by channels that can be reached by boat or kayak. Some are so close together that, in the ebb tide, it is possible to walk from one island to another. The island's main urban centers are Castro, Ancud and Quellón where Chiloe's delicious cuisine can be enjoyed. Also, they are the starting point for tours to the surrounding areas, adventure excursions, bicycle tours, to the surrounding areas, adventure excursions, bicycle tours, fishing trips, maritime crossings, observation of the flora and fauna, etc.

Attractions
History
Long inhabited by Cunco, Chonos, and Mapuche Indians, Chiloé Island entered the history of the Spanish conquest around 1567, with the founding of Castro. When the Mapuche insurrection of 1599 destroyed Spanish settlements in the south, the islands' inhabitants ended up completely isolated from the rest of the Spanish Chile, a situation that was to last for over 200 years. With luck, a ship from Lima arrived once a year to unload much-needed provisions and buy up the islanders' production of wool, wood and gold; over time, Spanish culture mixed with native culture, lives were lived with a minimum of resources, and a unique rural tradition came into being. The Jesuit order made this corner of the world their special responsibility, leaving their mark in over 150 wooden churches and the country's highest literacy rate.

Folklore
Formed by the fusion of native and Catholic belief systems, Chiloé mythology is populated with strange figures including the troil-like Trauco, magical sea creatures, and ghost ships crewed by fishermen lost at sea.

Gastronomy
Chiloé cuisine springs directly from the cornucopia of locally-produced seafood and agricultural products. The most representative dish in the islands is curanto, a hearty catch-all stew traditionally cooked in a hole in the earth. A gastronomic festival is held once a year in Castro.

Activities
Sea kayaking

The protected Castro Fjord and Chauques islands make for safe, enjoyable paddling in the archipelago's most traditional sector, where many inhabitants live without motors or electricity, abiding by the rhythms of the tides and the changing seasons.

Navigation
Boat trips in the islands provide a more relaxing alternative to sea kayak trips, allowing visitors to cruise in style along the island's northern and eastern coast, visiting Spanish forts, fishing villages, and other attractions.

Observation of flora and fauna
Wildlife lovers will be drawn to Chiloe's wild Pacific coast, where Chiloé National Park protects miles upon miles of beaches and temperate rainforest, including habitat for a wide variety of birds, foxes and pygmy deer, among other species.

   
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