Once done admiring the views, we attempted to start the car again, but no luck. We decided to walk the remaining kilometer to where there were a couple short hiking trails (and for backpackers the trail to a refuge higher up the mountain) and see if the car felt more cooperative later. The road goes through more forest, often with an understory of the native bamboo (see photo). At the trailhead is a snack bar that also serves what looked to be pretty good cakes and streudel, but we resisted. We took a short trail up to the base of a waterfall (see photo) and watched smaller waterfalls occasionally turn to mist when a wind blew through.
When we got back to the car it still wouldn't start despite our best efforts and innovative tool use (Jake tried a couple flat rocks for leverage on the key and then some helpful drivers provided various multi-use tools to try. Nothing worked though and a couple from Buenos Aires offered us a ride back to Bariloche in their old 10 passenger van (several benches had been removed from the center to provide storage space). They ended up giving another woman a ride too at the request of the police stationed at the beginning of the one way road. She had been staying at the refuge where her boyfriend teaches climbing.
The road back seemed long and very dusty, but it started raining about half way through. Unfortunately it was still raining when we got to town, and we got wet and cold the few blocks to the car rental place. We got a temporary replacement car which seems to be pretty rickety but got us back to our hosteria with its abundance of very hot water. Jake felt sorry for the car rental guy because he plans to go retrieve our original car tonight after 7 pm when the road is open two ways and bring it back to us fixed in the morning.
1 comment:
Wow. Wow. Wow. The pictures are spectacular. I am impressed you stuck with it with all the transportation challenges.
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