This past weekend I went to a town in the South of Chile called Pucón. It is in the Andes and it´s called ¨the adventure capital of Chile.¨ It turned out that I was not the only one from my school that was interested in going down to go rafting and climb the volcano, Volcán Villarica. (Despite the 10.5 hour bus ride there and back). I ended up going with 3 Brazilian girls and a girl from New York City. It was a great mix of people. --I even learned a few words in Portuguese.

After an uneventful bus ride down on Friday night we arrived in Pucón Saturday Morning exhausted at our hostel. It turned out that the hostel did not write down our reservation and was not going to give us the room we had reserved. They wanted us to pay more for 3 separate rooms. We thought this was unfair since we were having to pay for their mistake. We tried to come to a compromise- offering to pay slightly less than they wanted and more than we had originally thought. Sounds fair right? Wrong. A big mistake in Chile... Never try to bargain with Chileans, apparently it´s offensive to them. It ended up in a big fight between Christina (the New Yorker) and the owner of the hostel. There was yelling, racial slurs being thrown around, and names being called. All very awkward. We were actually thrown out of the hostel. But, since it was the last weekend of the Chilean summer break and all the other hostels were booked we had no where else to go. So, Christina ended up apologising, paying the higher price, and feeling really uncomfortable. Lesson learned.

After that we booked a river rafting trip for that afternoon and a hike up the volcán and a trip to the ¨rustic hot springs¨ for Sunday. The rafting trip was a lot of fun, even more fun that the one I went on the weekend before. Everyone was energetic, the guide was silly, the scenery was beautiful, and I fell into the river and had to be rescued by a rescue kayaker. We even did a bit of cliff diving from about 30 feet. Not too high, but high enough for me. Here´s some before and after pictures of us from the rafting trip. I have to say that I loved this tour company for many reasons, but one of them was that they served beers after every tour. How great is that!? If you´re ever in the area, use
Politur.
On Sunday we got up at 6:30am to hike up the Volcán Villarica. I didn´t get any good pictures of it but here are some that google images has to offer.
http://images.google.cl/images?svnum=10&um=1&hl=es&q=volc%C3%A1n+Villaricasvnum=10&um=1&hl=es&q=volc%C3%
A1n+Villarica The hike is over 1,500 meters up through volcanic rock and snow. It was pretty scary at points because it is very steep and slippery,

but it´s worth it. It is the second most active volcano in Chile and it belches smoke, and lava. We didn´t get to see any lava when we got to the top, because it became very windy and cloudy in 5 min, but you get to see the mountains surrounding you while you´re sitting on top of a lake of clouds. Going down is A LOT easier since most of the way you slide down on your butt using your ice axe as

a break. It took us about 5 hours to hike to the top and about 2 hours to get back down. We came across a huge deer beetle on the hike up and named him Pevere. One of the Guides hiked Pevere up to the top of the volcano in his sleeve. At first the bug was giving me the creeps but by the end of the hike, he had become a beloved mascot. In the end we set him free to go back home to his friends and brag about climbing to the top of the volcano.

Finally we made it back, had our post-tour beers and hired a Politur driver to take four of us (the Brazilians and me) to the local hot springs to relax after the hike. Christina had to work and ended up staying behind in Pucón. The hot springs were anything but rustic. They were crowded and built up with houses that had stairs into the water, showers, and bathrooms. It felt good to be in the hot water, but I mostly felt like I was taking a bath with 100 Chileans. We left around 8pm to catch our 9:40 bus back to Santiago.
On the way to the hot springs the drive was 30 min, but coming back we got suck in a ¨taco¨ or traffic jam. We were only about 2km away from the bus station and we weren´t moving. We started to think we were going to miss the bus. The bus company does not reschedule tickets or give refunds so we were nervous. It was the last bus of the day, we had to get to class in the morning, AND Christina was at the bus station waiting for us to arrive. We were getting really stressed about missing the bus and our bags were at the tour company. So we told the van driver-- he called the company and had them drive the bags over and put them on the bus. They also talked to the bus driver to see if they could delay the bus by 10 min to wait for us-- this is unheard of in South America. So, our bags are on the bus, Christina is waiting for us and we are stuck in traffic. The tour company was trying so hard to delay the bus and get us there on time. We got out of the bus and ran down the street, but by this time the traffic had loosened up and our van had caught up with us. So we hopped back in the van and drove to the bus station to watch the bus pull away without us- with our bags on the bus. Crap. By some miracle, the tour operator was able to call the bus and tell the driver we were four cars behind them. He stopped, we ran onto the bus and made it. Whew!
All in all it was an amazing and lucky trip. Things worked out for us even though at times it seemed like we were screwed. I am one lucky Gringa.