![]() |
1.800.344.6118 { contact us } |
||||||||||||||||||
Central Chile |
|||||||||||||||||||
| Home · Testimonials · In the News · Tour Index · About Us · Lodging · Discounts · Journals · My Trip Planner · Holiday Departures | |||||||||||||||||||
South America Amazon Tours Argentina Tours Bolivia Tours Chile Tours Ecuador Tours Falkland Islands Tours Galapagos Tours Patagonia Tours Peru Tours Central America Belize Tours Costa Rica Tours Guatemala Tours Panama Tours Antarctica Antarctica Tours Worldwide Expedition CruisesQuestions about a tour? Contact us with your questions. Technical Problem? Contact the webmaster for assistance. Are you a Travel Agent? Click here to Contact us.
Adventure Life
800-344-6118 (Toll-free) 406-541-2677 (International) 406-541-2676 (Fax) E-mail us 1655 S 3rd St. W, Ste 1 Missoula MT, 59801 USA |
HOME » Articles » Central Chile Central Chile
Santiago, the capital, is a focal point of Latin American commerce and the point of entry for nearly all international arrivals. Clean and modern, Santiago sits in a basin between the Coast Range to the west and the Andes to the east. World-class ski areas in the central Andes lie only forty-five minutes away, up steep switchbacks which climb over 7,500 feet in twenty-six miles. Numerous vineyards surround the capital; hotsprings, seventeenth-century colonial haciendas, and national parks in both the Andes and the Coast Range, all make easy day trips. At night, visitors may choose from a variety of restaurants serving all types of regional and ethnic cuisines, and excellent hotels assure a good night's sleep for business or pleasure. To the west, modern highways connect with the coastal cities of Viņa del Mar, Valparaiso, and San Antonio. Like Santiago, the central coast enjoys a Mediterranean climate, with short, mild winters and a sunny summer season lasting over eight months. Here a chain of white-sand beaches and coastal resorts offers something for every taste, from luxury hotels to secluded cabaņas, picnics on the beach to fresh seafood in an open-air restaurant.
To the east, the Andes are an unforgettable presence, cloaked in white in winter and spring, storing meltwater for the rivers which irrigate Chile's heartland. Beyond that first line of peaks, visible from anywhere in the Central Valley and from many places along the coast, lies a wilderness of glacially sculpted canyons, glaciers and microclimate forests, alpine lakes and thundering rivers. Lateral roads lead into the cordillera, providing access to numerous national parks and truly endless opportunities for visiting, skiing, hiking and mountaineering, mountain biking, horseback riding and rafting. Thanks to the Tourism Promotion Corporation of Chile : 202-530-4109
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||