Photo of the Day (3.30.10)

This stunning Photo of the Day comes from the heights of Chile’s Vulcão Villarica, in the city of Pucón. Villarrica is one of Chile’s most active volcanoes – and at 9,340ft, is classified as a stratovolcano. Hikers that dare to summit in the summer months can peer into the volcano crater’s active lava lake – a rarity since Villarrica is one of only four volcanos in the world that has an active lava lake.

Check out tripAconcagua’s photostream for more great photos of South America, and if you have a picture from an exotic place that you’d like to submit – send it in to our Gadling Flickr Pool! It might just be our next Photo of the Day!

Four Seasons hotels support earthquake relief efforts with wine sales

What’s the one thing you can do to help a country heal after a natural disaster? Support that country’s local economy. With that in mind, the Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts have launched a “Cheers for Chile” campaign, allowing visitors and guests to contribute to the Chile earthquake relief efforts just by ordering a class of wine. Here’s the news, straight from the hotel’s Web site:

“Now through April 18, 2010, Four Seasons will donate a portion of the proceeds from sales of Chilean wines from Veramonte Winery at participating properties in North America to the Chilean Red Cross. Donations of $10.00 USD for each bottle and $2.50 USD for each glass sold will be made.”

Choose from the 2008 Cabernet Sauvignon Reserva, a 2009 Sauvignon Blanc Reserva and 2008 Chardonnay Reserva. Ordered by the glass or the bottle, your sip will directly benefit the rebuilding efforts in Chile.

Click here for a list of participating hotels.

Isabel Allende: Report from Chile

Renowned author and humanitarian Isabel Allende is one of Chile’s most acclaimed and beloved writers. Currently a resident of California, she flew to Chile last Friday to witness firsthand the effects of the devastating earthquake and tsunami on her homeland and to raise funds for the country’s rebuilding. I interviewed her by email on Sunday night. Here is her report.

Don George: Where are you in Chile now, and why have you traveled there?

Isabel Allende: I am in Santiago. I came to participate in a 24-hour television fundraiser “Chile Ayuda a Chile” (Chile Helps Chile) hosted by Don Francisco, the celebrity host of Univision. The goal was to raise the equivalent of $30 million. Amazingly, they were able to raise $59 million in an incredible effort that joined the whole country. Everybody is participating in the reconstruction and emergency effort. Kids in schools collect food, blankets, diapers, clothes, etc. They package them and then big trucks distribute the donations where they are most needed. Banks are open day and night to receive cash donations. Volunteers collect in the streets. Everybody is cooperating. The devastation in the south is impossible to describe. Images on TV can’t really give an accurate idea of the suffering. Whole fishing villages were wiped out by the tsunami. Hospitals, schools, bridges, and roads were destroyed, not to mention houses.

DG: What is the mood in Santiago and in the country as a whole?

IA: Chileans are stoic people; they live in the most beautiful country in the world, but it’s also a land of earthquakes, tsunamis, floods, and droughts. In 1960 Chile suffered the worst earthquake in history: 9.5 on the Richter scale. The recent tragedy left people stunned and horrified, but soon the mood changed. Solidarity is the word that best defines the mood. People want to help.There is also a sense of shame for the looting that happened in some southern cities. Shame because most of the looting was not for food or water; angry mobs stole electronics, assaulted cars and houses, and even started fires. The government was able to control the situation rapidly, the police and the military were in the streets and a strict curfew was enforced where needed. Two days later the looters started to return the things they had taken either because the police raided their houses or because they were shamed by the public outcry.

The earthquake showed that in Chile social inequality is still appalling. Chile’s sustained economic growth has placed it among developed nations, but its distribution of wealth is one of the worst in the world.

DG
: Can you describe what you have seen and heard since you arrived in Chile? What is the condition of the affected regions?

IA: What we have seen on TV is a fraction of reality. The destruction in the south — Concepcion, Talca, Chillan — is horrific, but considering the damage, there are fewer casualties than could be expected. In the coastal villages most people ran to the hills as soon as the earthquake began; they knew a tsunami could happen. Chile has strict building codes, so most of the buildings that collapsed were either old or the code had not been properly enforced.

In the affected regions there was no electricity, phones, communications, and water for several days, but slowly things are coming back to normal. The government, the military, the police, churches from all denominations and hundreds of thousands of volunteers are working to help the victims. There is order. As soon as looting was controlled, people started to feel safe. They know that help is there or on its way.

DG: What is the country’s and people’s greatest need at this point?

IA: We need to rebuild hospitals, schools, bridges, roads, houses and much, much more. The winter is starting soon and thousands of Chileans are homeless. The organizations that are building emergency housing are, among others, Un Techo para Chile, Hogar de Cristo, and Fundación para la Superacion de la Pobreza.

DG: What have been the most moving scenes you have witnessed or stories you have heard since arriving?

IA: How could I list the most moving scenes? There are thousands, from the mother who was taken by the tsunami with two children in her arms and later she was rescued, but the sea took her babies, to teenagers gathering food and driving to the disaster zones to feed hot dogs and apples to the hungry, to a seven-year-old girl who survived under her bed when the house collapsed, or a man who cried for his young grandson on the rubble of his house, to a family that lost everything and has organized communal meals for all the neighbors where their house used to be, or a group of seniors on vacation who were taken by the tsunami, or the pets left behind that are starving, and on and on. It’s a never-ending story of grief and loss, but also of courage, patience, solidarity, generosity and even humor.

DG: What are you feeling now?

IA: When I arrived in Chile I was heartbroken and depressed, but now I am hopeful. Chileans are at their best in times of need; we rise to the occasion every time. All our pettiness and arrogance disappear in a crisis, but soon we forget and go back to our old ways. I know that Chile will recover from the material loss. I hope that this tragedy will force us to focus on the moral fabric of our society and that we will remain as generous and united as we feel today.

DG: How long will you stay?

IA: I am leaving tomorrow. I will try to do some fundraising in the States.

DG: What message would you like to give to Americans reading these words?

IA: There is no safety in the world, as anyone who is not a spoiled idiot knows. Relax. You are not in control. Bad things happen. Good things happen. We can lose everything material in an instant but we can always start again from scratch. Human resilience is astounding. Fear is useless; an open heart works much better. Breathe, love, give, rejoice, share, know your neighbor, and don’t waste time in pettiness. Sorry, I sound like a preacher, but this is the lesson I am learning this week in my devastated and beloved country.

Adventure Tourism Development Index rates top adventure destinations

The Adventure Tourism Development Index is a study put together by the Adventure Travel Trade Association, in conjunction with George Washington University and Xola Consulting. The joint effort examines 192 countries and ranks them based on their commitment to sustainable adventure tourism, as well as a number of other factors that influence their ability to host an adventure travel market and offer unique experience to travelers.

The ATDI uses what it calls the “10 Pillars of Adventure Tourism Market Competitiveness” to determine its rankings. Those pillars include Sustainable Development Policy, Safety and Security, Tourism Infrastructure, Natural Resources, Cultural Resources, Adventure Activity Resources, Entrepreneurship, Humanitarian, Health, and Image.

The study used a combination of surveys, gathered from top adventure travel specialists from around the planet, and quantifiable data from each of the countries to establish a list of the top adventure destinations in both the developed and developing world.

The results of the research are quite interesting, offering up some destinations that might not have seemed like viable options in the past. The top ten developing countries are as follows:

1. Slovak Republic
2. Israel
3. Czech Republic
4. Estonia
5. Slovenia
6. Chile
7. Bulgaria
8. Latvia
9. Botswana
10. Lithuania

And the top ten developed countries are:1. Iceland
2. Switzerland
3. New Zealand
4. United Kingdom
5. Australia
6. Luxembourg
7. Denmark
8. Ireland
9. Germany
10. Spain

A quick look at both lists offers some perennial favorites, especially on the rankings of the developed countries. For instance, Iceland, New Zealand, and Australia have long been top destinations for adventure travelers. The list of developing countries is far more interesting however, with long time favorites Chile and Botswana making the list. But even more important is the emergence of the Eastern European countries as increasingly viable options. That region is quickly gaining a reputation for great hiking, backpacking, and paddling destinations, with amazing scenery and fantastic cultures to explore. It doesn’t hurt that they travel in the region is very affordable and not yet over run with tourists too.

To download and read the full ATDI report, click here.

Polar explorers complete first unassisted traverse of Antarctica

Late last week, American Ryan Waters and Norwegian Cecilie Skog became the first team to make an unsupported/unassisted traverse of the Antarctic continent, covering more than 840 miles beginning at Berkner Island and ending at the Ross Ice Shelf, with a stop at the South Pole along the way.

The pair set off on their journey back on November 13 of last year and reached their final destination 70 days later on January 21. Over the course of those many days out on the ice, they frequently had to deal with high winds, whiteout conditions, and bitter cold, sometimes dropping as low as -40º F. As if dealing with the weather wasn’t challenging enough, they also had to endure the altitude (Antarctica is the highest continent on Earth) and massive sastrugi, hard waves of drifting snow that form on top of the ice.

Ryan and Cecilie made the journey on skies, while dragging all of their supplies and gear behind them in specially designed sleds. In order for this expedition to be classified as “unsupported” they had to make the journey without ever receiving a supply drop along the way, and to earn the distinction as “unassisted”, they had to finish the trip completely under their own power. Previous traverses of Antarctic were done through the use of dog sled teams or by using massive kites to pull the explorers across the snow.

The duo spent about a day and a half at their final destination along the Ross Ice Shelf before being picked up by a specially designed aircraft. They’ve now returned to Punta Arenas, Chile where they are enjoying fine food and warm beds for the first time in two months.%Gallery-79934%

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