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In Tasmania Day 3 Junction Creek to Watershed Camp 20 km

Published by Hugh on January 25, 2020

In Tasmania Day 3 Junction Creek to Watershed Camp 20 km Solitude! A full 24 hours and a long walk without seeing a single human (or mammal for that matter). My misanthropy rejoiced; my knees and feet did not. Today was a quintessential bog hike, slogging through shoe sucking ankle deep muck mile after mile. […]

Posted in In Tasmania | Tagged Hugh crawford, port Davey track, south coast track, T. Hugh Crawford
In Tasmania Day 2  Huon Campground to Junction Creek

In Tasmania Day 2 Huon Campground to Junction Creek

Published by Hugh on January 25, 2020

Day 2 Jan 15 Huon Campground to Junction Creek Becoming reacquainted with real sweat. Today’s trek was short but hot and in the mud. The swamps teem with insects. I sit here writing this in a cloud of huge buzzing flies. They don’t bite, don’t even land much, just buzz around my head. I could […]

Posted in In Tasmania | Tagged port Davey track, south coast track, Tasmania
In Tasmania  Day 1

In Tasmania Day 1

Published by Hugh on January 14, 2020

Day 1 Jan 14 Woke to cool overcast skies, stark difference from yesterday’s bright shocking Tasmanian heat—the transition from Seattle weather was abrupt as well. After many visits to Wellington NZ, Hobart has a familiar feel. A harbor stocked with boats—wooden sail and fiberglass glitz—ringed by old trade buildings: stone warehouses near the water now […]

Posted in In Tasmania | Tagged Hobart, Tasmania, trekking
In Patagonia Day 44

In Patagonia Day 44

Published by Hugh on April 3, 2018

In Patagonia Day 44 Valparaiso Tomorrow ends another extended wander as I begin that long slow passage via bus, plane, and train back to the place my passport calls home. My final, non-airport evening demanded a visit to Altamira, a fine brewpub down the hill from my hostel. Just like my favorite Castro pub, it […]

Posted in In Patagonia | Tagged Altamira, Cinzano, eurocup, Hugh crawford, Valparaiso
In Patagonia Day 43

In Patagonia Day 43

Published by Hugh on April 1, 2018

In Patagonia Day 43 Valparaiso In Valparaiso, the first time in a city for six weeks. Wandering Patagonia took me through a litany of fascinating but small towns—Punta Arenas, Puerto Natales, El Calafate, El Chaltén, Castro, Puerto Varas, Pucón. Valparaiso is a true port, touched by the Beagle on its cruise with Darwin and visited […]

Posted in In Patagonia | Tagged amasa Delano, benito cereno, Darwin, Ezra Pound, melville, Valparaiso
In Patagonia Day 42

In Patagonia Day 42

Published by Hugh on March 31, 2018

In Patagonia Day 42 Valparaiso: La Sebastiana, Pablo Neruda’s house There were no seashells, there in Neruda’s house. Maps, boats, and bottles, but no shells. Pablo, where did you leave them? And why is there no trace, except a mother-of-pearl inlaid table which I’m sure didn’t come from your beachcombing? They said you thought water […]

Posted in In Patagonia | Tagged Hugh crawford, joe namath, pablo neruda, Wallace Stevens, Walt Whitman, William Carlos Williams
In Patagonia Day 41

In Patagonia Day 41

Published by Hugh on March 31, 2018

In Patagonia Day 41 Pucón—Valparaiso (this one gets a little academic, sorry) Good Friday in Chile is a Catholic holiday where mass seems to be held on the street with everyone crowding sidewalks and restaurants enjoying food, drink, and sun. What I love most is how all the young children are part of the parade, […]

Posted in In Patagonia | Tagged Animal Studies, biopolitics, ecology of a Cracker childhood, Hugh crawford, jannice ray, Luce Irigaray, Michael Marder, Plant Studies, plant-thinking, Pucon, villarrica
In Patagonia Day 40

In Patagonia Day 40

Published by Hugh on March 30, 2018

In Patagonia Day 40 Pucón—Villarrica—Pucón Over the years I’ve made innumerable hikes—day hikes, long weekends, or multi-month treks—and used a lot of different equipment, but never have I had to carry a gas mask until today. Pucón is a tourist town, with hot springs and winter skiing, but the main attraction is Villarica, an active […]

Posted in In Patagonia | Tagged Hugh crawford, humboldt, villarrica, volcano
In Patagonia Day 39

In Patagonia Day 39

Published by Hugh on March 29, 2018

In Patagonia Day 39 Pucón A rainy day in Pucón. Annie, a woman from Frankfurt I met in Valdivia and then ended with on a bus to the National Park (such meetings between us wanderers is common—I talked a long time to a French couple today who I first met in Puerto Natales) recommended a […]

Posted in In Patagonia | Tagged completo, confederacy of dunces, Ignatius Reilly, John Kennedy Toole, Madd goat, parilla, Pucon, Sopaipilla
In Patagonia Day 38

In Patagonia Day 38

Published by Hugh on March 28, 2018

In Patagonia Day 38 Pucon—Huerquehue National Park—Pucon Some years ago I spent a year living with my family in Maastricht, Netherlands. While walking Umbro the dog around the neighborhood, I always stopped to puzzle over a tree that was strange to me—contorted branches covered with thick green scaly leaves. On the one hand, it resembled […]

Posted in In Patagonia | Tagged Huerquehue, Hugh crawford, Maastricht, Monkey Puzzle Trees, nothafagus
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