Posts Tagged chimu adventures hotel reviews

A recent testimonial – Review for Chimu Adventures

I thought I would share a recent testimonial from a very happy client who recently took a trip with Chimu Adventures in Argentina. Great work Gavin!. Visit www.chimuadventures.com for more reviews and good news!

Dear Gavin,

We wanted to thank you for your most excellent organisation of our trip to Argentina. We enjoyed ourselves immensely and everything worked out just as planned. The variety of transport and guides was absolutely great.

Hotel Reindo del Plata in Buenos Aires was ideally centrally situated and H & T Argentina coped perfectly with us leaving some baggage behind and transferring it to Hotel 248Finisterra when we returned from Igazu and the Valdes  Peninsular. The latter hotel was also ideal for us, located in a safe and popular district with access to wonderful parks which were a great wind down for us  after all the travelling.

The tango evening at La Ventana was magnificent and we would recommend it to anyone.  Iguazu was fantastic. There were some advantages in staying at the Sheraton, but as you suggested, it was not essential although for us it was ideal.  We took the optional boat trip which was a great adventure and thoroughly appreciated seeing the falls from both the Brazilian side and the close up walkways on the Argentinean side

The arrangements for the Valdes Peninsular part of the tour were the most complex but all worked very well. It transpired to be really worthwhile staying at the Faro Punta Delgado hotel for two nights. Because we were not part of a tour we got individual attention along with just a few others. So to two of us, or perhaps a group of four, were taken right down onto the beaches  just feet away from the Elephant seals; had a sunset  wildlife observation trip in a 4 x 4 and, in a larger group, we sat on the beach with the Elephant seals and watched the moon rise! We had thought that we would have time to fill there, but the hotel staff were brilliant and, at no extra cost, took us all around, even to some secluded bays where the main tour groups never go. We would thoroughly recommend to anyone to spend a couple of days there rather than simply pass by on a very long day trip from Puerto Madryn which seemed to be the only alternative.  The optional whale watching boat trip from Punta Piramides was  also very worthwhile and very successful in terms of getting close up to the whales – something we had not expected.

The guide who took just us from Punta Delgado back to Puerto Madryn via Punta Norte for Penguins and lunch, was absolutely excellent. His English was the best (all the tour guides spoke excellent English although some were heavily accented. The pickup drivers to and from the airports often had little English but our Spanish sufficed, Interestingly, although having learned quite a bit of Latin American Spanish, whilst we were always understood, understanding the responses was often quite difficult!) and he took time out to identify and show us lots of local wildlife.  The tour to Punta Tombo might be excluded if Punta Norte has been visited since the Penguin situation is similar if more extensive. The visit to Gaiman and the Welsh on the way back was a bonus though. Trelew did not appeal, but we were not there for long. Puerto Madryn was a great place, particularly for souvenir shopping at competitive prices.

It was a great trip. Spanish was essential at some points, but even then the local variations caused some hilarity. Seeking to order chips in a restaurant in Las Canitas back in Buenos Aires, we requested patatas frittas but was offered batatas or patas. We plumped for batatas since patas did not appear in the phrase book -  to end up with sweet potato chips. Patas appears to be the local word for traditional potato. Otherwise we got on fine!

We wish to return! The plan is to undertake a trip to take in Buenos Aires (or  possibly Montevideo if that were an option); and three locations out of Salta, Mendoza, the Lake District and El Calafate (or possibly El Chalten)  for the glacier boat trip, in March 2011, something like 15-31 March 2011.

Could you let us know if this is something you would be able to arrange for us if we send you more details? The other thing we are interested in is considering some legs by long distance bus rather than flying in and out of Buenos Aires. We met others this trip who used the buses and said they were very good, particularly if travelling first class. Our ace guide mentioned above also recommended travelling on a bit of Route 40, so could you suggest how this could be fitted in?

Very many thanks for an excellent holiday and first class administration,

Regards,

John & Jan Lamidey

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Yacutinga Lodge – Iguacu Falls

Yacutinga lodge is one of Chimu Adventures’ most popular in South America. Close to the magnificent Iguacu falls on the Argentina/ Paraguay and Brazil borders it is one of the worlds most impressive waterfalls..

In the jungles of Argentina’s north-east province of Misiones, rare species of stingless bees toil away in 300-strong communities for a year, just to produce a single litre of honey. Stingless bees are a prudish lot. Living in highly structured social groups and rejecting all attempts at cross-breeding, they never stray far from their hives, made in the cavities of hollow trees.

They cannot, however, survive outside a rainforest environment and, in Argentina, with less than 1 per cent of land now classified as sub-tropical jungle, this makes the bees the entomological equivalent of disenfranchised tenants on very short-term leases. Stingless bees don’t have a lot of friends.

That’s where Yacutinga Lodge comes in. Set on a finger-like peninsula within Argentina’s most biologically diverse region, with Brazil on one side and Paraguay on the other, Yacutinga’s 570 hectares of virgin rainforest will teach you about the fragility of the jungle, help you see what is being done to preserve it, and allow you the opportunity to meet Yacutinga’s creator, Carlos Sandoval: architect, environmentalist, mountain climber and the visionary driving force behind the Yacutinga Project.

The main lodge is set among a thriving stand of endangered Palmetto palms, its architecture an eclectic mix of curved exteriors, irregular interior spaces, load-bearing tree trunks and coloured glass that echoes the fanciful designs of Antonio Gaudi and the dreamscapes of the painter Salvador Dali. It is an architecture of exuberance, bravado and hope.

Accommodation is provided in independent modules, dispersed far enough from one another to ensure privacy and each only metres from a spookily encroaching wall of jungle. Rooms have porches, simple beds with fine linen and chic bathrooms. Superb meals with locally-sourced ingredients and no sparing the beef, thank you, are prepared in the main lodge and cooked in a traditional stone oven. Getting to Yacutinga Lodge takes effort. From Buenos Aires, you board a flight to Puerto Iguazu, then take an air-conditioned minibus for a 90-minute drive to a remote staging post not far from the Brazilian border, past orchards of mate shrubs and vast tracts of secondary forest.

Finally, an old open truck, with rows of wooden seats bolted to its tray, bounces you the final 10 kilometres into one of the most remote and least understood parcels of land in Argentina.

No more than 12 guests are permitted at the lodge at any one time, an ecologically and socially sound concept. The truck will be back for you in three days, unless it busts an axle. Yacutinga Lodge is akin to a university for grown-ups, a place where you’re free to attend as many or as few lectures as you please.

Continuing projects at the lodge include a study on the ecology of the peninsula’s hummingbirds, an inventory of its medicinal plants and a reforestation project in which guests plant a tree. Mine was a local hardwood, a Guatambu blanco.

After planting it, I received a certificate entitled Programa de Regeneracion de Selva Misionara. So far, eight hectares of previously degraded jungle have been brought back to life. I had made a difference.

If butterflies are your thing, you’ll be in heaven. In 2002, Yacutinga began an inventory of diurnal butterflies and have so far catalogued more than 520 species, including those the local Guarani call the “invisible ones”, whose wings are so transparent you can barely see them.

There are upside-down monarchs and rare snout butterflies that lay their eggs on the leaves of hackberry trees. One species attracted entomologists from Germany because they refused to believe its wings could make clicking sounds. It’s impossible to ignore the butterflies. They land on your bags, swirl in clouds around your feet, and perch on your shoulders at breakfast.

Activities include taking a canoe ride down the upper Iguazu River with Guarani scouts, where you can go toucan-spotting and see first-hand how logging upstream has resulted in large quantities of silt entering the river – which is why you’ll be lucky to see the river’s remaining resident giant otters. Back on dry land, you can go on walks to identify and track footprints that may include those of puma and jaguar. Days are not overly structured and if you have an interest in orchids, bromeliads or medicinal plants, guided walks can be arranged.

The jungle here is impenetrable. On one walk, although we heard the unmistakable screech of howler monkeys just metres away, unless one jumped on to your head you wouldn’t have a hope of spotting it.

Happily, the lodge itself is the place for howler monkey-spotting, where elevated walkways can put you on an equal footing with these elusive canopy dwellers.

Yacutinga isn’t all work and walks, though – some time after midnight one night a heated discussion on Latin American politics around an outdoor fire pit took on a life of its own and, for me, the true spirit of Yacutinga shone through. I mean, let’s face it, when was the last time you talked politics until 2am with the owner and chief executive of a prestige retreat, debating the merits of issues such as Venezuela’s offer to construct a trans-South American pipeline? Or hearing the owner’s theory that Argentina’s disparate regions and resultant lack of a national identity were as much to blame as coups and dictatorships for the country’s failure to achieve the standard of living its abundant resources suggest it should have?

No one was in a hurry to go to sleep that night. Sandoval was busy rewriting the hospitality handbook, involving himself with his guests, and dismantling the insincere if not trite gestures that too often pass for “guest relations” these days. Oh, how I hoped that old truck would bust an axle.

Visit Iguacu falls and Yacutinga lodge with Chimu Adventures

Source: The age www.theage.com.au

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