Santiago Sidetrip: Cajón del Maipo

11/20/09  Print This Post Print This Post    3 Comments      Written by David Miller
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Cajón del Maipo is a massive Andean canyon with hot springs, alpine shelters, a ski area, and dozens of miles of whitewater all within 2 hours of downtown Santiago.
Cascada de las Ánimas

Photo: pviojo

I’m floating in a muddy spring called Baños Morales while looking at the walls of Cajón del Maipo and talking to Jorge about Lil Wayne. Jorge is around 12. He wants to know who are the best “cantantes of hip hop.”

For some reason none of this seems improbable in South America.

“What’s this song saying?” He has a little mp3 player with built-in speaker.

He plays the first 5 seconds of that commercial hip hop track that goes “I see you winding and grinding up on the floor. . .”

He hits pause.

“Te veo bailando,” I say. He starts laughing. Then gets serious and presses play again.

Cajón del Maipo is less than 2 hours from downtown Santiago. My friend Gustavo, Lau, Layla, and I rented a car and headed up here yesterday.

If we’d had more time, we would’ve taken the bus [from estación de Metro Bellavista la Florida (Línea 5) -- take the Metrobus 72 towards Plaza de Armas de San José de Maipo] and camped somewhere.

But as it was, renting a car for three days in Chile wasn’t that expensive (about $120 US), especially for a legitimate ’sedan’, the minimal sized vehicle I’d advise for driving caminos de ripio in the Andes.

The road follows the Rio Maipo upstream passing several small villages, each with little restaurants, lodging, horseback riding, and some incredibly cheap and good local fruit preserves, bread, nuts, olives, honey. You don’t really need to waste time buying food in Santiago on your way up here.

Basically, you just follow the G-25 the whole way along the river, although to explore the numerous side roads you should download and print out this map.

Activities
Glacier hike, Cajon del Maipo, Chile

Photo: mabahamo

paddle

The whole time I was passing by the river I was wishing I had a kayak with me. The commercially rafted section of the Maipo is a S. American classic. You can set up trips via Chile Rafting.

There were some really gnarly looking creek runs flowing into the Maipo and steep sections in the headwaters for expert boaters. A lot of what I saw reminded me of Clear Creek in Colorado, only much bigger.

snow

It was out of season when we went, but the Centro de Ski Lagunillas looked like it had amazing potential. Check the prices too, it’s super cheap to ski in Chile.

backcountry

I jealously watched a van drop off a bunch of dudes with mountaineering gear in Baños Morales. From here you can access various climbing and mountaineering routes that go off in all directions as far as you can see.

It’s hard to believe this isn’t a national park, but simply a small chunk of Andean cordillera that you’re looking at right from downtown Santiago.

***

Creek in Cajon del Maipo

Photo: Naturaleza

Later, after getting out of the springs, Jorge and I stand looking at the river. It’s a heinous-looking and at the same time very runnable stretch of whitewater.

“You think anyone will ever run that in a kayak?” I ask him.

Jorge looks at the flow. “No.”

“Never?”

“Maybe someday.”

Community Connection

Make sure not to miss Take Me to the River: 8 Simple Steps for Getting into Whitewater Paddling.


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3 Comments... join the discussion!

  • arbrableon replied on November 20, 2009

    When I lived in Santiago, the Cajon del Maipo was my weekend escape! Thanks for taking me back.

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  • Candice replied on November 20, 2009

    Dammit, I can see why all the editors keep flocking south.

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  • eileen replied on November 20, 2009

    I’m also a big fan of Cajón de Maipo, and you can actually pedal out there pretty easily, out Vicuña McKenna to La Florida and just kind of hang a left, pass Las Vizcachas and there you are (insert a couple hours of pedal time). Ciruelillos (plum trees) are the first to bloom in the springtime, and add a gorgeous powdery pink to the right side of the river bank which is cultivated.

    There’s also an important spot on the way there where people often leave flowers for the five people killed in an attempt on Augusto Pinochet’s life as he returned from Santiago to his house in El Melocotón (also across the river) in 1986, three years before the dictatorship ended. Details/video here: http://www.museodeprensa.cl/node/93 (in Spanish). Anyone know the exact km marker?

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