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Chile’s charming countryside dairy farm

The allure of Chile goes way beyond its stunning scenery, dramatic volcanoes and pristine natural wonders; there’s cheese too! Words by Georgia Rickard.

Getting away from it all: it’s hard to do in this world. And out of this world, come to think of it: people are planning the colonisation of Mars, after all.

Even that last great bastion of the charm of travel – the long-lashed, olive-skinned men of Europe – now seem to all speak English with disappointing flawlessness.

Yet there still remain pockets of properly foreign places, where Australians aren’t as thickly spread as elsewhere, and I’d put it to you that none is so delightfully hot right now as Chile.

And why not? The country is at least as varied and exciting as any in Europe, filled with stunning cities, breathtaking landscapes and good-looking men; even the geography seems to place ‘getting away from it all’ as a priority of highest billing, stretched as it is down the very edge of the continent and buttressed by soaring mountains and vast national parks from neighbouring Argentina.

And if all of these reasons aren’t enough to draw you in, there is also one very particular, very lovely wilderness lodge here that might just seal the deal.

Of course there are plenty of luxury hotels about the world, but this one happens to be set on an artisan dairy farm, where high thread counts and brie are seen as priorities of equal standing.

Like all good stories, Hacienda Hotel Vira Vira started once upon a time when a young boy – a Swiss-German named Michael Paravicini – arrived on a family vacation to the area in 1976.

Shortly thereafter he would embark on a high-pressure banking career, the kind that saw him resting his head in the world’s most luxurious places and raking in annual frequent flier points by the millions.

But even then, he found he could not stop his longing to return to Chile.

Indeed the country’s Lake District – an area of snowcapped volcanoes and pale green lakes, of clear, sunny summers and glacier-crisp winters – is charmingly fairy tale-like, so much so that Chilean presidents current and former maintain houses here.

So it was that after an early retirement (aged 49, thank you very much), Michael and his wife Claudia eagerly relocated to the area with their three teenage children, and dedicated three solid years to constructing the ultimate Chilean luxury lodge, set among paddocks and mountains on a sustainable farm and dairy.

To approach this place is an experience in itself.

The main building – all avantgarde angles and sexy edges – looks rather improbable among the lush countryside, surrounded by misty-eyed mountaintops and pastures of happy yellows and greens, but it’s almost immediately clear that this was no monument to self-aggrandisement.

You can practically see the number of hours Michael and Claudia spent daydreaming about creating this place, which have manifested in flashes of inspiration like placing wooden hot tubs in unlikely locations all over the property, so people can sit in steaming hot water and look up at a glacial sky!

And let’s be honest, only someone with a daydreamer’s heart (Swiss banker or not) would sink such time and money into an offering where the economies of scale are tipped so vastly in favour of the very select number of guests they host.

Just 21 rooms make up the property’s accommodation; six guest rooms in the chic main building, 12 split-level villas sprawled along a river’s edge, and three rooms in a separate hacienda.

The lot has been fashioned from Lenga, a native blonde timber that lends chalet-style warmth to the high-ceilinged buildings, with interiors that manage to be universally chic but utterly Chilean, complete with bespoke locally designed furniture, modern telares (hanging textured artworks of wood and wool) and, in one bathroom, a two-and-a-half-tonne slab of local granite fashioned into a sink.

Such a sight is Hacienda Hotel Vira Vira to behold on arrival that, despite having been awake for some 24 hours on our journey from Sydney, my compadres and I all suddenly feel well enough to manage a small dinner of just three courses and several glasses of fabulous Chilean merlot, with which we toast repeatedly to our good health.

But the real surprise is in waking the following morning, when the glory of the landscape reveals itself with startling clarity.

Thickly forested mountains flank an inky turquoise river that wends through the property; Swiss-gabled cottages dot the distant landscape at intervals that might have been placed by the hand of an artist.

Directly in front of my splitlevel villa is a resplendently bucolic scene complete with grazing horses and clouds that puff past the looming mountain peaks; you could not have engineered a more luxuriously peaceful scene.

Despite its striking appearance, the hotel does little to detract from this atmosphere. Designed to be as harmonious with the surrounds as feasible, the staff farms turkeys, chickens, ducks, geese, wild boar, cows, sheep and goats on the property, using traditional husbandry methods.

Later, I learn that there is a second property nearby, which grows wheat, oats, rye and potatoes for both guests and animals, but in those first hours I am content to wander the enormous organic veggie patches and observe the scenery, which reveals itself during an activity that every guest must take part in.

Vira Vira is located on a parcel of land in the middle of a complicated, crisscrossed river network, where you can hop into a raft and let the tides carry you for an hour and a half before somehow ending up virtually back where you started from.

This exercise – which the staff rather charmingly call ‘floating’ – proves not just an excellent means of orienting yourself with the area, but an enormously pleasurable pursuit.

As you float sedately in the water, the picture-book surrounds are breathtaking; you can see why our banker fell in love with the place.

Indeed, while life revolves around the main lodge – it’s where you’ll find the restaurant, bar and library, as well as multiple crackling fireplaces in the wintery months – it’s the scenery that guests tend to find themselves spending most time in.

A regular program of activities is on offer, which varies by day and season (and, one suspects, by the whimsy of program manager Eddie Songer, an outdoors type with ruddy cheeks and broad shoulders) but staff at the activities desk can also help you plan any number of pursuits.

And so it is that we discuss fly fishing on the river and yoga on the outdoor deck before deciding to hike around Tinquilco Lake, a tranquil place of handmade wooden jetties and lovely colourful dinghies placed just so, with all manner of birds singing out to each other, hopping and waddling and flitting about in the cheery sunlight.

Then it’s on to El Claro, a nearby waterfall some 300 metres high.

On another afternoon we trek to Lake Escondida, a landscape of such wonder that it genuinely looks to belong in another world with its endemic ‘monkey puzzle’ trees, before retreating back to the lodge, where we sit in a steaming outdoor hot tub, swishing full glasses of merlot as fat rain droplets splash on our heads.

And we eat. Molecular gastronomy is not the style at Vira Vira. The emphasis here is on good, honest food (albeit served degustation style, usually in four courses, with Chilean wines paired to each course).

Every meal is presented with at least one form of cheese, as if the staff has made it their personal mission to ensure that despite the fresh air, the vigorous hiking tracks, the daily yoga, and the many gorgeous salads, each guest leaves having inched their belt up at least one notch.

One morning we are lucky enough to be shown through the immaculate dairy; Michael himself leads the tour.

He shows us behind two of three doors – door one and two hold a roomful of Grana Padano and gruyère each – but he cannot risk opening door three, he tells us gravely, lest we disrupt the temperature of his most precious child: brie.

Something suspiciously un-Swiss zings across his face: la pasión, I believe they call it. Chile seems to have rubbed off on him. Indeed it rubs off on me too.

During my visit I am fortunate enough to watch as Villarrica – one of Chile’s many volcanoes – spits and sputters bursts of steam and lava, resulting in a terribly pretty display.

The volcanoes of this area are highly active but – as only Chilean volcanoes can be – the lava oozes as slowly as sloths. After silently watching the scene a while, I realise it’s nearly dark.

How does one become so intimately engaged with the art of doing something, when that something is sitting still, doing nothing at all? It is, perhaps, the most delicious part of Chile.

And when you’re comparing that to the cheese, that’s really saying something.

 

The details: The Hacienda Hotel Vira Vira, Pucón, Chile

Getting there: LATAM Airlines flies direct from Sydney to Santiago; from there, it’s an 80-minute flight to Temuco, followed by a 100-kilometre drive to Pucon. Vira Vira is 15 minutes from the centre of town.

Staying there: Rates at Hacienda Hotel Vira Vira start from roughly $500 per person per night, including breakfast and dinner. The hotel also offers complete packages, including all meals, a wide selection of alcohol, airport transfers and daily excursions, from $1700 per person for two nights.

 

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8 grand journeys across Latin America

    From camping along alpine meadows in Patagonia to cruising the Amazon, these are the best Latin America journeys to tick off your bucket list.

    1. The Q Circuit in Patagonia

    Travelling with: Emma Ventura

    the Torres del Paine mountains in Patagonia, Chile
    A turquoise lake surrounded by snow-capped peaks at Patagonia’s Torres del Paine National Park. (Image: Getty/ MBPROJEKT_Maciej_Bledowski)

    Tolkienian peaks, pristine lakes and snow-bloated rivers are highlights for most visitors spending a couple of days in Chile’s Torres del Paine National Park. But for the more intrepid, the real rewards come from a 10-day solo circumnavigation of the Q Circuit, camping along tracks that become more sparsely trodden the further you head into the park’s astonishingly diverse landscape – think glacial passes and granite spires, alpine meadows and forest paths. Five-star lodges might provide a break from Patagonia’s infamously feisty weather, but there’s nothing like carrying your own kit, a chance encounter with an elusive puma, and a crackling wood stove in a remote refugio for delivering the kind of fulfilment that money just can’t buy.

    2. The jungles of Central America

    Travelling with: Megan Arkinstall

    women traversing the Mistico Hanging Bridges in La Fortuna, Costa Rica
    The Mistico Hanging Bridges in La Fortuna are perched above the forest floor.

    Emerging from the seas millions of years ago, the isthmus that is Central America is a tropical sanctuary of jungle-clad volcanoes, thunderous waterfalls and mist-shrouded rainforests, fringed by coral reefs. At its heart, Costa Rica is the land of pura vida (pure life), a tiny country that is home to six per cent of the world’s biodiversity – think toucans, macaws, anteaters, tapirs, jaguars, sloths – with verdant rainforest carpeting more than half the country. It’s a land to explore on two feet, two wheels and with two paddles. Do all three on Intrepid Travel’s eight-day Costa Rica: Hike, Bike & Raft tour and G Adventures’ 16-day Costa Rica Adventure.

    a toucan in the rainforest of Costa Rica
    A rainbow-billed toucan in the rainforest of Costa Rica. (Image: Getty/Freder)

    3. Dance across Latin America

    Travelling with: Elizabeth Whitehead

    samba dancing in the street, Brazil
    Put on your dancing shoes in Latin America. (Image: Getty/Pollyana Ventura)

    Don your tassels and get flirty cha cha-ing in Havana. Feel the heat dancing Argentine tango at a milonga in Buenos Aires. Hear the pulse of percussion as you samba in Rio. In Latin America, movement is an expression of culture, celebration and passion. You don’t have to be a professional to partake, and there are plenty of dance schools where foreigners can learn the basics. It’s easy as one-step, two-step, cha-cha-cha.

    4. Hike to Colombia’s Lost City

    Travelling with: Sarah Reid

    the terraces of Lost City, Colombia
    The Lost City is Colombia’s best-kept secret. (Image: Getty/Charly Boillot)

    Reaching the ancient ciudad perdida (‘Lost City’) of Teyuna hidden within the steamy jungles of northern Colombia is a surreal moment, amplified by the challenging three-to-five-day return trek to get there. Built by the Indigenous Tairona People around 800 CE, this labyrinthine complex of stone staircases and circular platforms has only been partly excavated since treasure looters stumbled upon it in 1972. Limited tourism infrastructure adds to the Indiana Jones vibe. Intrepid Travel’s new Lost City Trekking in Colombia tour includes a respectful visit to a Wiwa community to learn more about their Tairona Ancestors and traditional way of life.

    5. The Galápagos Islands

    Travelling with: Carla Grossetti

    the Observation Lounge at the top of the Silversea ship
    Visit the remote Galápagos Islands on a Silversea cruise.

    Expect the brackish air around the Galápagos Islands to be mixed with the gritty odour of bird droppings and pungent tang of sea lion BO. Twist your binoculars until the black eye of the giant Galápagos tortoise fills the other end, and you might imagine yourself to be quite the adventurer centuries after the inhabitants of these islands inspired Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution. Get onboard a cruise with operators like Silversea, HX Expeditions, Celebrity Cruises and Metropolitan Touring to see the remote archipelago of 19 islands loom into view just 900 kilometres off the coast of mainland Ecuador.

    a blue-footed booby on the Galapagos Islands
    A blue-footed booby on the Galapagos Islands. (Image: Getty/Bruce Campos)

    6. Pantanal, Brazil

    Travelling with: Carla Grossetti

    a Jaguar walking on the banks of a river, South Pantanal, Brazil
    Spot a jaguar in the world’s largest tropical wetland. (Image: Getty/ Dgwildlife)

    Brazil’s Pantanal, the world’s largest tropical wetland and a UNESCO World Heritage site, is reportedly one of the best places on Earth to spot jaguars. This vast landscape of flooded plains and savannahs also shelters more than 650 species of birds (such as the toucan and hyacinth macaw) as well as various reptiles including the yellow anaconda and cold-blooded caiman (a type of crocodilian). Add capybaras, giant anteaters, maned wolves, giant river otters and South American tapirs to your wildlife bingo card, too. And find a tour that includes piranha fishing, if you dare.

    7. Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia

    Travelling with: Carla Grossetti

    the salt flats in Bolivia
    Immerse yourself in the world’s largest salt flats. (Image: Getty/ Olga Gavrilova)

    Bolivia’s Salar de Uyuni covers more than 10,500 square kilometres, making it the world’s largest salt flats. The salt flats of Uyuni were formed more than 40,000 years ago when several prehistoric lakes dried up and left a bed of rich minerals behind. Stay at Luna Salada, where the walls and furnishings are made from dense bricks of packed salt, so you can immerse yourself in this ethereal landscape. Visit southern Bolivia during the dry season when the salt crystallises into mesmerising shapes and patterns.

    8. The iconic sites of Peru

    Travelling with: Megan Arkinstall

    scarlet macaws at a cliff in the Amazon
    The Amazon is home to diverse birdlife such as wild scarlet macaws.

    Hiking the Andes. Cruising the Amazon. It’s the stuff of legends. From the vast expanses of Lake Titicaca to the archaeological wonder of Machu Picchu to the Amazon Basin, one of the greatest remaining wildernesses on Earth, you can stitch Peru’s epic sites together on tour with andBeyond or Abercrombie & Kent. To sweeten the experience, both luxury operators are launching new state-of-the-art vessels on the Amazon River in September 2025 and July respectively.

    the superior suite onboard andBeyond Amazon Explorer
    Stay in a superior suite onboard andBeyond Amazon Explorer.