Saturday 18 February 2012

Crazy or Inspired? Part 2. Locura o inspiración?

If you haven’t read the first part of this story, please scroll down to the bottom to read Part 1.

To recap: I'm on my way to Patagonia in search of a turquoise lake and a certain mystical mountain. I've just left a town called Talca in a dilapidated bus , and am heading for Casa Verde, which promises to be a charming Bed and Breakfast 'cabin' in middle of a eucalyptus forest.



“Santa Blanca” the bus conductor breathes in my ear, as if saying
‘Meet me at midnight, Gorgeous.’
Or was it,
‘Be very careful Granny?’

I’m the only passenger to alight. The bus leaves, creating a shower of fine beige dust.

It’s 4.30 in the afternoon.
The scent of pine is strong.

But what’s this screeching and droning? Sounds like heavy machinery.

Where am I?

I watch the bus disappear.
Is there a parada ( bus stop) on the other side of the road?
No.

Is this a saw mill, or... a detention camp?
There’s a lot of barbed wire, and a high perimeter fence.

What now?

I’m momentarily disorientated and fearful.

A guard wearing a black uniform and a peaked cap mans a sentry box on the other side of the double iron gates. He takes no notice of me standing by the roadside with Shamus, my old suitcase on wheels.

Then, as if somebody’s read my thoughts, the ten foot high iron gates swing open automatically.

But where’s my contact?

A few moments later, Alejandro, the 25-year-old son of the millionaire sawmill owner , walks towards me, talking on his mobile. His was the shy voice on the phone two days ago.

He wears designer jeans and a short sleeved turquoise shirt, walks like a prince, and could be a model for expensive after shave.

Why is he so shy?

I’m greeted with a reserved but beautiful smile. He opens the passenger door of his new white truck, and with a bashful grin and a small head jerk, instructs me to climb aboard.

‘ Vamos!’ he says. (Let’s go!)

I gradually learn he’s passionate about football, his family, and climbing mountains in Patagonia. There’s a half full bottle of water lying on the ledge between us.
I can’t bring myself to ask for it.

This quiet young man speaks at a leisurely pace and divulges little.

Soon we leave the highway and begin to drive slowly along a narrow, dirt road. We’re heading towards Casa Verde, at last.
We’ve entered the magical forest; so far the brochure is spot on.

The track winds between ancient eucalyptus trees. In places, the drop down to the river on my side is about a hundred feet.

Swaying in and out of deep ruts suddenly we round a corner and hit an oncoming truck. We do a sort of dance with it.

We end up facing the wrong directing. The other truck faces where it’s appeared from.

“Get out” Alejandro shouts at me in Spanish.
“Get out... get into the other truck”.

What’s going on?

Is this a hijack?

If the other driver’s face had not been female, I might have hesitated more.

Alejandro , being a man of very few words, hasn’t manage to explain that the driver of the other vehicle is his beloved housekeeper Verne, the rich family’s faithful servant.

She will now take me the rest of the journey in her truck. This meeting had been pre-arranged, but not in this way. Verna’s only recently leaned to drive.

During the second part of this adventure, we sway and lurch over more deep ruts, and splash through shallow yellow green rivers. Shafts of sunlight piece the track.



With her nose close to the windscreen, forty-five year old Verne grips the steering wheel, grins and chatters. She fills me in on the family history, what’s for supper, and what an adorable child Alejandro always was. Casa Verde was built 35 years ago as a summerhouse-love nest for his prosperous parents.

‘I’m his nanny!’ she says, ‘but don’t tell him I told you.’

‘Where are you from?’ she then asks me, taking her eyes for off the track for a little too long.

‘Spain,’ I say quickly.
‘But I’m Irish.’
‘Oh. And what do you do for a living?’
‘I’m an artist.’

‘Ah!’ she says putting her attention back to the pot holes and ruts.
I breath again.

‘What do you paint?’
‘Well...’
I momentarily rack my brains for the Spanish words for... figurative... layered.... metaphysical.. stories within stories, and give up.

I’m a little too fazed after our head on encounter to think, or take in much except the kind tone of Verne’s voice, some glimpses of beautiful scenery, and the feeling that we are about to turn turtle again at any moment.


After the long journey from Spain I nest, yes nest for four days in Casa Verde, the enchanted log cabin in the middle of a bird filled forest.

Close to the house, beside the barn, there's an aviary rising to a neck cricking height. It’s the size of a two-story building. Soli, Alejandro’s wife has designed it. It’s a hospital and a hospice for sick birds Verne informs me.



A splendid peacock patrols the inner perimeter. His dreary little brown wife potters around in the background blending in with the dirt colored soil.


Talkative Verne is middle aged and of native origin.
She’s lived for twenty one years in the diminutive Casa Roja, opposite Casa Verde. This is where her children were born and raised. She wears a blue apron over her full skirt and she cleans constantly, joyfully.

Casa Roja, is a dolls house of a little red wooden cabin.
It’s fenced- in garden is crammed with wild and cultivated flowers sharing the fertile earth with a lush vegetables. A row of six foot sunflowers bows westwards towards the afternoon sun.

Verna’s home looks like a South American version of Little Red Riding Hood’s Grandmothers house.

Where’s the wolf?
No cruel wolf in this family story.

How different my childhood would have been had Verna been our fairy grandmother-housekeeper.

Meeting this kind woman warms my heart with the confirmation that forgiveness is indeed, extremely sweet.

Below the two houses, a wide shallow emerald green river snakes silently in the wrong direction towards the ocean.

In my jet lagged haze it takes four days to believe west is west and south is south.

Every evening around nine o’clock, when Alejandro comes home from the sawmill, he comes over to wherever I’m sitting, and smiling, kisses me tenderly on the cheek. Just one cheek.

“Hola” is all he ever says.
Then he and Soli sit down to the meal Verne has prepared for them.

Alejandro's mother is an artist.
He's shown me all her paintings.
He’s massively proud of her artwork.
It’s displayed on every wall of the house, including the bathroom.

Street wise Soli, accompanied everywhere by her four ‘guard’ dogs, is a different story.




“There is nothing in a caterpillar that tells you it's going to be a butterfly.”
Richard Buckminster Fuller






Crazy or Inspired. Part 1.


Santiago, the capitol of Chile, is a vast colorful polluted city with many fascinating secret corners and as many pickpockets. I guard my Visa card more neurotically than I ever guarded my babies.

Forty-eight hours after arriving, a surprisingly luxurious train takes me to Talca, a city founded in 1692 then destroyed twice by earthquakes.

This is the first leg of a solo, two month 'pilgrimage' to southern Patagonia, my first visit to South America.



My mission is to find a certain mysterious mountain and a certain turquoise lake.

Why?

Because in 2003, in a discarded newspaper, I found a color photograph.

The image showed a 'kingdom of the spirit' kind of Himalayan paradise.
It triggered a profound feeling of deja vu.

The mountain had the shape of a humped-backed monk.
The turquoise lake cast its spell.
The turquoise water was the same color I'd been painting for many years. It's my 'trademark,' my passion, my color.

In metaphysical language:

'Turquoise helps to ground the wandering spirit, while keeping connection to the infinite open.'
Turquoise, a truth stone, symbolizes 'a time to be honest with yourself.'


I pinned the photo onto my studio wall, tearing away all the writing, and gazed at it every day for the next twenty four months.

Gradually, finding out where it was became a quest.
The answer came easily.

My mountain is situated in a world famous National Park in southern Chilean Patagonia.

El Parque Nacional Torres del Paine covers 181,000 hectares . It encompasses mountains, a glacier, a lake,(my turquoise lake), and opal colored rivers.
It has three entry gates.

Then, without warning, the quest became a kind of love affair.



Finally, it felt like my dying wish.
No obstacle is going to stop me getting there. I have to get there. I have to meet my mountain.

And I have to see and touch and maybe swim in pure turquoise water.

I can't explain why.


****

Chile is a country where extreme injustice has been rife for years and years, but now, apparently, all is well.
Is all well?
Have I done enough homework?
Is it safe?
Am I in danger of being kidnapped, or shot or imprisoned?

I don’t dwell on these thoughts, my mission is too strong, but they’re scuttling about in my heart.

I’ve read thousands of innocent people died or disappeared during Pinochet’s reign. Thousands and thousands.

They’re seldom referred to in tourist brochures. My Footprints guidebook gives me the bare bones of the historical facts, but they don’t hit home till I come face to face with Pedro, in the prison.

Deep down, I have a strong desire to bypass Chile’s people and cities, and head straight for the pure turquoise of its southern Patagonian lakes.

But the opposite happens.


'Turquoise helps to ground the wandering spirit, while keeping connection to the infinite open.'
Turquoise, a truth stone, symbolizes 'a time to be honest with yourself.'






Crazy or inspired?


During the train journey from Santiago to Talca, I get my first sight of the snow-capped Andes. I’m on my way to Alejandro’s and Soli’s Casa Verde Guest House. I’ve read the blurb. It’s a rustic log cabin in the middle of a eucalyptus forest. Casa Verde (The Green House) promises enchantment, peace, and relaxation.

Just what I need after the twelve hour flight from Madrid.

Getting to Talca is easy, but finding the way to Talca bus depot is not.


Leaving the newly painted railway depot, I turn a corner and find myself engulfed in multicolored chaos. Immediately, everything becomes unfamiliar. I walk gingerly into a kind of surreal tented city of market stalls.
In my jet lagged haze, I seem to be walking slow motion into the beginning of a very foreign movie.

It’s hot and I’m parched. Nobody’s selling bottled water. The dangling canvas awnings slap my forehead. Buckets and boxes bump my shins. Cooking smells fill the air, cilantro, cumin, bread, hot oil. My silly suitcase on wheels keeps falling over itself. There comes a point when I have to admit I’m lost.

What now?
Just as I realise this, I find the bus depot.

The tattooed bus to the village of Constitution is about to leave. The engine is running and the bus is almost full.

'Vamos, rapido,' the driver yells at me jerking his head , adding a few theatrical facial grimaces.

I quickly buy my ticket, no time to put the suitcase in the hold. Where’s the hold? No hold!
I find a seat and rub thick brown dust off the window.

“ Santa Blanca Sawmill near Constitution. Tell the driver to drop you off there."

That’s it.
These are my instructions to get to Casa Verde Guest House.

"We’re five kilometers from the Pacific Ocean."
A shy young male voice has told me this over the phone, two days ago.

Will the bus driver remember to stop in an hour and a half?


We hurtle through dusty countryside past fields of maze. Small semi derelict villages punctuate the land. Most of the passengers are teenagers in dark red uniforms, brown faced, black haired returning home from secondary school.

This is my first close up of real Chile, my first glimpse of its indigenous people. We’re heading towards the ocean. Gradually the land begins to flatten. Pine forests surround us.

The smell of sweet sweat scents the bus.

Exactly and hour and a half later, in the middle of nowhere, we arrive at the gates of a sawmill.

“Santa Blanca” the bus conductor breathes into my ear as if saying
'Meet me at midnight. Gorgeous.'

Or was it,
'Be very careful Auntie!'



This is the first part of a new travel memoir. The next chapter will come soon !!
Feedback always, always welcome.


Locura o inspiración?



Santiago, la capital de Chile, es una gran ciudad llena de color con muchos rincones secretos y fascinantes, y con muchos carteristas. Guardo mi tarjeta Visa más neuróticamente de lo que jamás vigilado mis bebés.

Cuarenta y ocho horas después de llegar, un tren de lujo me lleva a Talca, ciudad fundada en 1692, luego destruida dos veces por terremotos, por primera vez en 1692 y luego en 1742.
Esta es la primera etapa de una sola peregrinación del sur de la Patagonia, mi primera visita a América del Sur.



Mi misión es encontrar una cierta montaña misteriosa y una laguna de color turquesa

¿Por qué?
Porque hace dos años me encontré una foto de esta escena. Me convertí en hipnotizado por su belleza. Fijé la foto en la pared de mi estudio. La he mirado con una pasión todos los días, por veinte quatro meses.
Poco a poco, se convirtió en una búsqueda urgente. ¿Donde esta mi montaña? La respuesta llegó con facilidad.
Mi montaña mística se encuentra en un Parque Nacional llamado Torres del Paine, en la Patagonia.
La búsqueda se convirtió en una especie de desconcertante historia de amor.
Por último, se siente como mi ultima deseo de mi vida. Tengo que llegar hasta allí. Tengo que cumplir con mi montaña.
No puedo explicar por qué.

*****

Chile es un país donde la injusticia extrema ha sido plagado por años y años, pero ahora, al parecer, todo está bien.
¿Está todo bien?
¿He hecho los deberes suficiente?
¿Es seguro?
¿Estoy en peligro de ser secuestrados, o fusilados o encarcelados?

No me detengo en estos pensamientos, mi misión es demasiado fuerte, pero están hundir acerca de mi corazón.
He leído miles de personas inocentes murieron o desaparecieron durante el reinado de Pinochet. Miles y miles. Son pocas veces mencionado en los folletos turísticos. Mi Libro/guía Footprints me da el esqueleto de los hechos históricos, pero no dan en el blanco hasta que yo venga cara a cara con Pedro, en la cárcel.
En el fondo, tengo un fuerte deseo de pasar por alto la gente de Chile y las ciudades, y dirigirse directamente a las aguas turquesas de sus lagos de la Patagonia sur. Pero ocurre lo contrario. Tengo encuentros con ángeles en las ciudades y pueblos, y también tengo roces con el peligro. Mi historia de amor me lleva a un desafío entre los témpanos de hielo que sacude mi autoestima y me lleva a una nueva forma de ver el mundo, y a mismo como artista.



Durante el viaje en tren desde Santiago a Talca, hice mi primera vista de los Andes nevados. Voy al hostal de Alejandro y Soli, la Casa Verde. He leído la propaganda. Es una cabaña rústica en medio de un bosque de eucaliptos. Casa Verde promete encanto, paz y relajación. Justo lo que necesito después del vuelo de doce horas desde Madrid.

Cómo llegar a Talca es fácil, pero encontrar el camino a Talca Bus Depot no lo es.

Esta es la primera parte de un libro de memorias de mi viaje a Chile en 2005. El siguiente capítulo vendrá pronto!
Comentarios siempre, siempre son bienvenidos.

2 comments:

  1. Gently pulling in...setting the scene. Beautifully written. Inviting the reader to ponder your questions which are really all of our own questions...I love the line 'silly suitcase...falling over itself' which kind of seems like a metaphor for us human beings falling over the treasure we can't see, that is under our feet. Yes Meg I like the gentle meanderings, while asking the deeper questions. x Much Love with your continued writing x

    ReplyDelete
  2. You write clearly, authentically, and paint distinct pictures with your words. I want to read more and more! x

    ReplyDelete

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