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-   -   Best SA places Average Daily Distances (https://www.horizonsunlimited.com/hubb/south-america/best-sa-places-average-daily-67676)

s445203 3 Dec 2012 17:41

Best SA places Average Daily Distances
 
I'm looking at flying to Buenos Aires in Mid Jan with my wee v-strom and trying to decide on an itinerary for a 3-4 month trip. I'd love some help with some questions.

Right now, the places which pique my interest are the southern loop BA->Ushuaia->Santiago (5500km)

And then a Northern Loop: Santiago->Cusco->BA (5500km)

Unfortunately I have zero gravel experience and will not be in a position to pick this up before I go, so I want to keep gravel down to a minimum.

So my questions are:
1. What is a reasonable daily km for these loops? I figure each of them can be done in 40 days or so at a reasonable (i.e. not relaxed, not hardcore) pace. Does that sound about right?

2. It looks like the right order is to do the south loop in Jan and then the north loop after - to help with Peru wet weather. Does that sound about right?

3. Given my background on gravel, is going to Ushuaia nuts?

4. Is the Ushuaia loop worth it? A small voice at the back of my head is going "this whole southernmost city thing is just a silly box ticking exercise". Or to ask it another way, I'm really going for the best ride scenery. Will Patagonia disapoint? I've heard some comments saying BA to Ushuaia is unremarkable.

Thanks in advance!

El Forko 11 Dec 2012 20:24

I rode Route 3 from BA to Ushuaia a month beck and am now heading north along Route 40 / Carretera Austral. Knowing what I know now (and if you have a spare US$500 or so), I would recommend:

BA to Mendoza; south along Route 40 to Bariloche; cross into Chile to Puerto Montt; take the Navimag ferry to Puerto Natales (about 3 days): then north up the 40 back to Bariloche (with the option of driving the Carretera Austral); and then back into Chile and to Santiago. It's effectively a figure of 8 loop, so you don't cover the same ground twice - and you get to ride a lot of Route 40 as well as heading up the Chilean side between Puerto Montt and Santiago.

This route has 2 big advantages: you avoid a very boring and long drive down Route 3 (flat, straight, nothing really to visit except Puerto Madryn); and the ferry ride down through the hundreds of islands is meant to be awesome - if the weather isn't foggy. The downside is the ferry isn't cheap.

IMHO Ushuaia isn't really worth the extra mileage.

Bits of the 40 are still gravel and dirt, but learning to ride on it will be part of the adventure; I dropped my bike about 10 times one day when Route 40 turned to mud and ended up hitching a ride in the back of a 4X4 pickup when the road became impassable - and it was the most fun day of the trip so far! And to get the most out of this part of the world, you need to ride some gravel. (The Carretera Austral is a wonderful road but most of it dirt.) I suspect this applies up north too.

Patagonia will NOT disappoint - but be prepared for the touristy bits like Torres Del Paine, Calefate, El Chalten.

Can't comment on the northern loop - haven't got there yet!

Hope this helps.


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