Thursday, January 22, 2015

Valparaíso, Chile: walking tour and wall art


Valparaiso rooftop view
We traveled by subway and bus from Santiago to Valparaíso, which was a quick, easy and pleasant journey.  Valparaíso sits on the coast and has been called "Little San Francisco" and "The Jewel of the Pacific" during its heyday.  In 2003, the historic quarter of Valparaíso was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.  Valpo, as it is often called, is not a small town; it is the third largest metropolitan area in Chile.  We were excited to come here in part because Nik's sister and her family live in Valparaiso, Indiana.  The city in Indiana was named after this city in honor of US naval officer David Porter's participation in a battle near Valparaíso in the War of 1812.   Porter County in Indiana is named for him, and Valparaiso, IN, was originally named Porterville, but the name was changed a year later, in 1837.

Boys enjoy the front row, top level views from the bus on the way to Valparaíso.
The adults enjoyed the views of the vineyards from the bus.  We are eager to visit.

Our first impression of Valpo was "gritty," as we walked the short distance from the bus station to the building where we were renting an apartment.  We walked through a park, Plaza O'Higgins, in and around which many people were selling used clothing and all manner of other things laid out on blankets on the ground.  While the area of the city where we arrived (which is not the historic or touristy part) seemed a bit down at the mouth, the apartment building is sparkly new.  It apparently was just completed in December.  The building has a twin tower that is not yet completed.  We found the apartment through Airbnb, only a few days before we arrived.  Nik would be going back to Oregon to work and the kids and I would camp out here for the three weeks he'll be gone, so we were looking for a comfortable place in a good location with great wifi, so that the kids could concentrate on their online home schooling.  We were happy with our find, although the internet was not quite as promised for the first week.  We did survive!

City view from the roof of our apartment building
View from our 11th floor apartment. The modern building on the left is the national congress building.  Even though Santiago is the capital of Chile, the congress has met here in Valpo since 1990.  You can't tell from this photo, but it has a cut out in the middle, shaped like an upside down U.

Pretty church outside our window.  We are treated to church bell music at various times of day.

Sully dines on our balcony with the hills beyond
We did some exploring, including a seafood dinner in the upper level of Mercado Cardonal, a walk to the busy port (muelle) and a metro ride to Viña del Mar to check out the nearby beaches.

Plaza Simon Bolivar
Our first dinner in Valpo was at an informal seafood restaurant in the Mercado Cardonal.
Spicy shrimp, among other things.  A cat came to beg at our table.

Apples arriving at the market.  The apples we had seen in the grocery
were imported from the US, but Chile produces a lot of apples too.
The busy port in Valparaiso.  This is the main base of the navy; naval ships are seen in the background.
Viña del Mar, just up the coast from Valparaiso

The day before Nik had to leave to go back to Oregon for work, we decided to take a walking tour of Valparaiso that we discovered through Keteka (keteka.com), the community-based adventure travel company through which we had arranged our excellent GeoTour in Peru.  We were looking to get to know Valparaiso and appreciate its beauty and history.  This is exactly what we got, and we had a great time along the way.  Our guide, Cristian, introduced us to the various forms of public transportation, including 1950's vintage trolleys, buses, funiculars and colectivos (taxis that follow set routes).  He took us to some beautiful locations popular with tourists and plenty of off-the-beaten-track places as well.  We enjoyed learning the history and personality of Valpo.  We stopped at a homemade candy shop, sun print photography studio and met one of Valparaiso's wall artists whose work we got to see around town.  We toured Pablo Neruda's house as well, which we enjoyed very much.  

Our walking tour guide, Cristian, from Ruta Valparaiso 

Among the many things we learned about Valpo on our tour: the opening of the Panama Canal in 1914 was the end of Valpo’s golden age, because most ship traffic stopped passing by here, no longer having to travel around the southern tip of South America.  Before the canal opened, there were many European expats in Valpo and a lot of wealth.

There was a devastating earthquake here on August 16, 1906, only 4 months after the famous San Francisco earthquake (April 18, 1906).  Most buildings were ruined.  Before the earthquake, rich immigrants from Europe had built mansions along the bay in the flat part of Valpo.  The Viña del Mar area just up the coast from Valpo had just been vineyards, no houses there.  After the earthquake the enterprising owner of the land there marketed it to the rich Europeans as a better place to rebuild.  That was the beginning of Viña del Mar, a flashier, more upscale resort town.  The rebuilding in Valpo was mainly done by the less affluent, so cheap building materials had to be used: adobe brick and wood, covered by corrugated metal to protect the structures from rain.  Now many buildings still have the corrugated metal exteriors, many painted bright colors.

The origin of the brightly colored houses may have been homeowners wanting to be able to see their houses from the bay, but also the paint from ships was used to paint houses.  When a ship was being painted, homeowners would go to the port and ask to have some of the leftover paint.  So depending on what color paint was being used on the ships, newly painted houses would be the same color.

Cristian told us that people in Valpo are used to having to rebuild, thanks to the fairly frequent earthquakes.  The last biggie was in 2010, 8.8 on the Richter; 525 people died in all of Chile.   A wildfire blazed through Valpo in April, 2014, destroying 2500 houses and leaving 11,000 homeless.  Cristian pointed out that Porteños (as people living in Valpo are called) don't see their houses and belongings as permanent.  I guess it is a good lesson to value what is most important and be able to let go of impermanent things like houses and "stuff".


Lots going on in the port!
The funicular (ascensorArtilleria.  One of 15 in Valpo, though only half are currently running.  
Also a precariously placed Victorian house.

El Peral funicular
In addition to the trademark brightly painted houses covering the crowded hills of Valpo, wall art is extremely common and gorgeous.  The artwork is a big draw for tourists coming to Valpo, and we enjoyed seeing and photographing a lot if it.






Some spectacular wall art
Self portrait wall art; we later met this artist, who also worked on the wall above.
White ants painted on the sidewalk lead to this artisan candy shop.  
Our kids had to try some of these handmade suckers after we got to watch some being made.

Very cool sun print photographs at Hiperfocal studio; negatives are placed on
photo-sensitive paper in the sun to create these artful images.

During our tour, we enjoyed visiting the house of Chile's Nobel-winning poet, Pablo Neruda.  He also had a house in Santiago, and one south on the coast on Isla Negra, both of which are also museums.  Pablo Neruda was quite a character and really liked to collect interesting objects and paintings.  He had a wooden carousel horse from Paris in his living room, near the fireplace he designed, a very modern work of art.  He bought a painting of a queen with a ruffled collar, then bought another painting of a nobleman wearing a similar collar and placed it across the room from the queen so she would feel more comfortable and they could gaze into each others eyes.  The house has four floors and lovely views of Valparaiso throughout.  Pablo Neruda loved watching the ships come and go in the bay below, and his house's decor has a nautical feel to it.  

In addition to being an amazing poet, he held many diplomatic positions, including in Argentina, Spain and Mexico, and was elected as a Chilean senator in 1945 (Communist party).  He was exiled in 1949 for political reasons and lived in Paris, protected by friends there including Picasso.  He was able to return to Chile after 3 years when the political climate had shifted back.  He was appointed by President Allende as ambassador to France in 1969.  He received the Nobel Prize for literature in 1971.  He might have been exiled once again after the 1973 coup that launched the Pinochet dictatorship, however Neruda was in the hospital with prostate cancer at the time.  He died only 12 days after the coup, and many suspected foul play; there were reports of him receiving a suspicious injection.  It may not be a poetic coincidence that Chile's great poet died so soon after Chile's freedom disappeared and a dark era began.  Amazingly Neruda's body was exhumed in 2013 by court order to test for poison that may have killed him.  None was detected.  Quite a life and quite a story!

Pablo Neruda's house, La Sebastiana.

Back in 1997 we chose one of Pablo Neruda's many love poems (Sonnet XVII) to be read at our wedding.  Here it is:


I do not love you as if you were salt-rose, or topaz,
or the arrow of carnations the fire shoots off.
I love you as certain dark things are to be loved,
in secret, between the shadow and the soul.

I love you as the plant that never blooms
but carries in itself the light of hidden flowers;
thanks to your love a certain solid fragrance,
risen from the earth, lives darkly in my body.

I love you without knowing how, or when, or from where.
I love you straightforwardly, without complexities or pride;
so I love you because I know no other way

than this: where I does not exist, nor you,
so close that your hand on my chest is my hand,
so close that your eyes close as I fall asleep.

(Translated by Stephen Tapscott)










We learned from Cristian that the best way to get to know Valpo is to wander, and always try to take the route that makes the least sense.  One is more likely to find interesting things that way.  Kind of like life.



We see many dogs on the streets in Valpo, usually completely sacked out.  Cristian says that they are more lively at night.  He says that these are not all homeless dogs.  Many have owners or are fed cooperatively by neighbors, but often the dogs just hang out outside and do their own thing.  When walking around here, one must keep an eye out for surprises on the sidewalk.


We saw a fair number of cats hanging around too.
Even more wall art...








This appears to depict why there are so many dogs in Valpo.  Not sure about the demon-eyed guy.





After our generous half-day tour that lasted from 9:30 until after 3, Cristian left us off for a late lunch at J Cruz (pronounced "hota" cruz), for the popular chorrillana: a pile of fries topped with steak and onions.  We enjoyed the very eclectic decor there, as well as the live music from a charismatic singer/guitarist.  We sat at one end of a long table, and our young Chilean table mates requested a photo of us all.  

The uniquely decorated J Cruz, original home of chorrillana.  Reminded us of Capp's Corner in San Francisco.
We shared a chorrillana plate for 3.
J Cruz table selfie.
It was a great day getting to know Valparaiso.  We appreciate its personality and charm much more after the tour.  It was time and money well spent!



I like this one.

In case you'd like to see yet more photos from our walking tour, follow this link to photos taken by our guide:  Walking tour photos


Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Santiago, Chile: museums and history


Santiago!
We were surprised to discover that our red-eye flight from Lima to Santiago was only three hours, thanks to the 2-hour time difference.  It was not much of a night's sleep, so we were thrilled to be able to check into our hotel early (at 6am) and go back to sleep.  Afterward we tracked down some lunch and coffee near our hotel in the downtown Las Condes business district and explored the neighborhood a bit.  There is a 6-floor mall in the Gran Torre Santiago,  the tallest building in Latin America.  Nik read that there is an observation deck, and we were excited to check out the view, but alas, the mirador will not open until March, we learned.  We were able to secure SIM cards for our phones and visit the huge grocery store in the mall.  We were giddy at the sight of all the (cheap) Chilean wine!

Tree-lined high-rise view from our hotel, the Versalles Suites.  Reminded us of downtown Portland.
Bike share?  Check.  A sign of a cool city!
A little smoggy and no snow in the mountains this time of year.  It's summer!
Santiago sits in the central valley between the Andes and the coast range.

Plaza/ park near our hotel

We had one full day in Santiago (not counting our arrival day, half of which we slept through), so we took the metro to the Parque Quinta Normal that had been recommended for it museums.  Founded in 1842, this was apparently the first pubic park in Chile and in South America.

Riding on the metro... 
Museo National de Historia Natural
This was a Sunday, and we found the natural history museum, one of three national museums in Chile, to be free on Sundays.  We really enjoyed the main exhibit showing the diverse "biogeography" of Chile.  This was the perfect introduction to Chile for us.  It surely felt like we were in a foreign country on a foreign continent seeing all of the strange and wonderful things found here. From the Atacama Desert in the north (driest non-polar desert on Earth) to Antarctica in the south; we learned that Chile is one of seven countries that claims a slice of Antarctica as a territory.

Chile is 2600 miles long and only 110 miles wide on average.  It extends from 17 to 56 degrees in latitude, or all the way to the south pole if you consider the Antarctica territory.   Accordingly a broad selection of the Earth's climates are found here.  

Nik and the relics
Cute gorilla pair
"Goodwill" moon rock and the Chilean flag that traveled to the moon on the Apollo 17 mission.  These were presented to each country in the world in March, 1973, by President Nixon.

After enjoying the museum and our picnic lunch in the park, we visited the outdoor railway museum (Museo Ferroviario), another of a handful of great museums in Quinta Normal park.  For Charlie and any other train buffs who might be reading, here is a web page that has pictures and info of all of the locomotives!   http://www.lcgb.org.uk/html/santiagomuseum.htm

 Apparently there are two art museums in the park as well, but our kids were not interested.  We'll have to save those for another visit.

Enjoying some park time
Museo Arte Lein
Sully under the steam engine in the Museo Ferroviario


Lagoon with paddle boats and swimmers!


Next to the park is a beautiful and heartbreaking museum, Museo de la Memoria y los Derechos Humanos (Museum of Memory and Human Rights).  The museum commemorates the victims of human rights violations during the military regime lead by Augusto Pinochet from 1973 to 1990. I heard of the museum and wanted to visit it to learn more about this time in the history of Chile.  The museum was inaugurated in 2010 by then-president of Chile, Michelle Bachelet, who had herself been a victim of torture during the Pinochet dictatorship.

The museum shows the timeline of Pinochet's dictatorship, including the September 11, 1973 coup, during which the president of Chile at the time, Salvador Allende, died (apparently by suicide), in the presidential palace that was bombed that day.  Chile has its own September 11. The exhibits, which are beautifully (yet painfully) presented, show the human rights violations committed by the Pinochet regime.  According to the Commission of Truth and Reconciliation, 28,000 people (suspected leftists) were tortured, 2,279 were executed and around 1,248 continued as Disappeared.  In addition about 200,000 people were exiled from Chile and went to live in many different countries.  The worst violence occurred in the first three months after the coup, but as of 1975 there were apparently still close to 4000 prisoners being held in the National Stadium in Santiago.

The museum houses memorabilia of torture devices used during the dictatorship, letters to family members by prisoners in detention centers, newspaper clippings and testimony from survivors.  [A few days later we heard from our tour guide, Cristian, in Valparaiso that his aunt was tortured, and that she is one of a few women who's testimony we heard in a video at the museum.  The video was very hard to listen to, and then it felt chilling that we met her nephew a few days later.  Cristian expressed his amazement that women were tortured during this time; if the idea was to prevent terrorism, why were women being tortured?]  Why were any Chilean citizens tortured, killed, disappeared and exiled?  This time in history has to be a part of the Chilean psyche, and hard for us to understand, not having lived through it, or even having been aware of it at the time.

Nik and I were reminded of the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC.  Unimaginable and painful history, but so worth the time to learn and remember and share with our kids.

No photography was allowed inside the museum.
Plaza outside the museum

At the risk of overloading our readers with too much history and quoting info I learned from Wikipedia... I also found it quite interesting that the United States, being in the midst of the Cold War at the time and seeking to fight Allende's Marxism, backed the overthrow of Chile's government in 1973.  Nixon authorized $10 million to unseat Allende, and the CIA encouraged Chilean military officers to carry out a coup and also provided cash and weapons.  "A CIA and White House cover-up obscured American involvement, despite Congressional investigative efforts."  This all puts that "goodwill" moon rock Nixon sent to Chile just 6 months before the coup in a new light.   Henry Kissinger (Secretary of State at the time) explained Nixon’s morality: “I don't see why we need to stand by and watch a country go communist due to the irresponsibility of its people. The issues are much too important for the Chilean voters to be left to decide for themselves.”  History is pretty fascinating, I think, often not in an inspiring way however. 

Visiting the museum reminded me of Sting's song, "They Dance Alone," from his 1987 album, "Nothing Like the Sun."  I knew vaguely what this song was about, and Google clarified it for me: women dancing the Cueca, Chile's national dance, alone because their husbands/ sons/ fathers were killed or disappeared under Pinochet.  They danced with photos of their loved ones.  Here is a video with the song, that I have always liked, but now brings tears to my eyes, knowing the terribly sad details:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tqPdJ20Bsfo

Here is a short video in which Sting talks about the meaning of the song and performing it in Chile, with mothers of the disappeared: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rh9Fwj2CBE8

Here is Sting's original music video for the song, which I find a little strange, but still beautiful and interesting:



“Peace cannot be kept by force. It can only be achieved by understanding. You cannot subjugate a nation forcibly unless you wipe out every man, woman, and child. Unless you wish to use such drastic measures, you must find a way of settling your disputes without resort to arms.” -Albert Einstein
“Peace is not solely a matter of military or technical problems– it is primarily a problem of politics and people. And unless man can match his strides in weaponry and technology with equal strides in social and political development, our great strength, like that of the dinosaur, will become incapable of proper control– and like the dinosaur vanish from the earth.” -John F. Kennedy
“If you want to make peace with your enemy, you have to work with your enemy. Then he becomes your partner.” -Nelson Mandela
“The day the power of love overrules the love of power, the world will know peace.” -Mahatma Ghandi