| URUGUAY
EMERALD COAST RIDE: LATE OCTOBER
TO APRIL WINTER SUN RIDE! Lots of wildlife including
WHALE watching on horseback (November & December) miles
of pristine, deserted BEACHES and much more!
“… South America's
undiscovered country, its best kept secret… the ultimate
coastal ride…” URUGUAY ride featured
in Observer newspaper, 22nd march 2009
Set date departures & also private rides,
see below for itinerary details, see newspage for available
dates on set date departures and see guests’ comments
on the FAQ page.
Very varied scenery and pace: riding along deserted sandy
beaches, through wetlands, passing rice fields, across huge
expanses of pasturelands, between sand dunes and into pine
forests, around fresh water lagoons, and through palm groves.
Staying at idyllic settings with gourmet food: traditional
estancias, beachside hotels and working farms (complete with
swimming pools). Accompanied by skilled gauchos and seeing
a large variety of wildlife along the way - A RIDE FULL OF
UNEXPECTED VARIATION IN A COUNTRY MADE FOR RIDING!
Full details below concerning the set date departure, do please
request options for private groups.
“Thank you for a FABULOUS
holiday. I loved it ...Real highlights were definitely your
horses, riding through the wetlands, those long, long canters
on the beach.” HJ, Oct 08. Uruguay.
EMERALD
COAST RIDING TOUR, URUGUAY 2009
Estancias, Beaches & Lagoons. 9 day tour.
URUGUAY: ‘South America’s
best kept secret’ Time Out guides.
A country the size of England and Wales with a population
of only 3 million charming, warm, friendly ‘horse people’,
an ideal non-tropical riding climate, unexpectedly diverse
landscapes – a little-known destination made
for riding!
Riding along deserted sandy beaches, between sand dunes and
into pine forests, around fresh water lagoons, through palm
groves and across grasslands, we arrive at idyllic settings
for gourmet lunches then journey on the comfort of traditional
estancias and working farms. We are accompanied by skilled
gauchos, seeing a large variety of wildlife along the way
as we pass through an unexpected mix of landscapes.
“I really enjoyed our trip
…very entertaining and I hadn't laughed so much for
ages. When people here ask what was the best bit of the whole
trip I seem to be remembering all our fun beach rides and
lunches and the laughter.
And thanks to Sally for finding excellent horses for me -
you will have noticed I bonded closely! And also thanks for
the organisation that went into the trip. I found everyone
I met in Uruguay very friendly and liked the feel of the country,
and in particular all the people you are working with are
very special. It was a treat to be with people who so willingly
shared their knowledge of the history and wildlife. …definitely
be planning a return trip - perhaps next year...”
Chris.
“…Uruguay is an absolute
gem. The lure of galloping along deserted sandy beaches caught
my imagination and the reality was just as good. As well as
glorious beaches, the ride takes in a variety of landscapes
and activities, making no two days the same.
Horses are well schooled and adept whatever the terrain. They
are expertly matched to each guest and certainly all the horses
I rode had character and sparkle, giving a responsive and
fun ride. The charming Gauchos that accompanied us were fascinating,
steeped in tradition and skilled in their work.
The accommodation and food were superb. It was a special touch
to stay at a working estancia as guests of the owners. I have
wonderful memories of humorous banter and smooth wine, as
we dined with them around the family table. All the local
people we met were unfailingly friendly and welcoming.
Clearly this ride has been meticulously planned and was run
most efficiently, yet the atmosphere was relaxed and we had
lots of fun. It was a great team that looked after us, taking
care of every aspect and with nothing being too much trouble.”
Stephanie.
‘…thank you for the
great organisation of the Uruguay trip… I had never
enjoyed riding as much as I did during our trip.’
Francisco.
SIGHTED WHILE RIDING ON THE LAST
TRIPS: Franca whales, dolphins, turtles, sea lions, capybaras
(largest rodent in the world and very cute!), armadillos, rheas
(South America’s ostrich), black-necked swans, roseate
spoonbills, Maguari stork (a huge bird) and many species of
herons and ibis… possible to see well over 100 species
of birds during the tour.
ITINERARY:
Pre/post tour extensions in Uruguay and Buenos Aires/Argentina
available. Please ask for details.
DAY 1: MONTEVIDEO: THE
FAMOUS RAMBLA. INTRODUCTION TO URUGUAY.
Guests are collected from the airport and have a chance to
relax in the very easy-going capital of Uruguay: Montevideo
before being taken to lunch and on a private city tour. Guests
might also like to wander along the unique ‘Rambla’
– a very pleasant, wide boulevard with beaches, along
the river estuary - soaking up the sun, there is also the
gaucho museum, galleries and shops with local crafts and tack
and also getting acquainted with one of Uruguay’s best
kept secrets: the excellent wines. The city is very safe and
guests can explore at their own pace before the city tour
arranged for them during the afternoon.
Overnight: comfortable hotel in Montevideo’s centre.
L.
DAY 2: NATIONAL PARK, 18TH
CENTURY FORTRESS SAN MIGUEL – BRAZILIAN BORDER
After an early breakfast, we will be driven north-east to
Rocha, the most beautiful province in Uruguay with its pristine
beaches, emerald shores and network of lagoons. We are right
on the Brazilian border and, just before our arrival at the
country hotel, we pass through Chuy where the official boundary
between Uruguay and Brazil runs down the middle of the main
street. The locals speak a strange mix of Spanish and Portuguese,
on one side of the street the shops have signs in Spanish
and on the other in Portuguese!
We arrive at the country hotel, built in the same stone as
the nearby Portuguese fortress, in time for lunch (4-5hrs).
From the hotel, we can admire the views out across a huge
stretch of water - one of the largest fresh water reserves
of South America, the "Merin Lagoon". Once inside
the imposing walls of the hotel, guests will appreciate the
comfortable rooms and enjoy the delicious food, a far cry
from the austere life in the nearby fortress! In the afternoon,
we will meet our horses and ride around the rocky hills of
San Miguel Reserve (3hrs) enjoying a wonderful panoramic view
of the area from the top of the boulder-covered ‘Cerro
Picudo’. This area is home to a wide variety of birds
including several species of vultures that, rather unnervingly,
soar overhead in large numbers. The park is a very important
flora and fauna reserve now protected from the effects of
modern agriculture and is also home to pure Cimarron cattle
and Uruguayan criollo horses, giving us a chance to see this
wonderful native breed of horse and its gorgeous colourings.
We also ride to the granite fortress built in 1734 by the
Spaniards, and rebuilt after its destruction by the Portuguese
in 1737.
We will stay at "Fortín de San Miguel" where
guests can enjoy the pool, the gardens and visit the ‘pulperia’
- the traditional meeting point for the gauchos from miles
around. AB, L, D.
DAY 3: CHUY BEACH –
INTO BRAZIL, ALONG A PRISTINE BEACH & INTO THE OCEAN.
In the morning we ride out of the hotel, through the customs
post and along the Uruguay-Brazil border, riding for several
kilometers in Brazil! Then we turn south along a track and
cross the wide, flat expanse of the arid pasturelands. There
are opportunities for long canters across the flatlands and
we often pass a horse and cart heading into town for weekly
supplies. We pass fields covered with bizarre conical shaped
mounds, the result of very industrious termites. Rheas graze
in the fields and we occasionally spot their enormous eggs;
birds of prey hover overhead as they hunt. The burrowing owls
sit watching us on their earth mounds, field flickers and
woodpeckers are busy drumming holes in the trees while oven
birds build mud nests atop the fence posts.
Lunch is a delicious picnic under the shady trees at a large
estancia then, after a siesta, we ride on to the beach for
an incredible ride along the wonderful, isolated shores of
the Atlantic Ocean (7hrs riding). Visitors seldom reach this
beach so we can enjoy a long, exhilarating canter with no
signs of habitation as we ride along the pure, firm sands
at the waters edge. Guests can ride into the sea. We arrive
12km (8 miles) further south at "La Coronilla",
normally riding right to the ocean front hotel.
Overnight at Parque Oceanico, situated next to the beach.
Indoor and outdoor swimming pools. AB, L, D.
DAY 4: SANTA TERESA NATIONAL
PARK, DOLPHINS & SHIPWRECKS.
Today we ride our horses along another beautiful part of the
coastline to Santa Teresa Fort. Crossing the forested Santa
Teresa National Park we arrive at the imposing restored fort
which is the centre piece of the park - started in 1762 by
the Portuguese to defend the edge of their territories then
completed by the Spaniards who took it by assault just a year
later. This was just the start of a succession of conquering,
losing and re-conquering the fort; it was not until 1825 that
the newly formed ‘Uruguayan nation’ finally captured
and held the fort. The fort is surrounded by 3000 hectares
of forest containing over 2 million trees, the majority introduced
from other parts of the world and, after lunch in the open
air, we will enjoy riding along the forest trails down to
the beach.
We pass a shipwreck buried in the sand – one of many
along this treacherous coast. Indeed, Polonio, where we ride
to later in the week, is named after a Spanish galleon that
went down just off the point. Luckily ‘Beagle’
with Charles Darwin aboard did not succumb to this fate and
Darwin spent quite some time in Uruguay collecting species
and most likely starting to formulate his theories of evolution.
Most days there is the wonderful sight of dolphins feeding
in the bay. (5-6 hrs riding).
We leave the horses and are driven (10 minutes) back to our
hotel located next to the beach for barbequed fresh fish,
Uruguayan wine and a second pleasant overnight by the ocean,
drifting to sleep with the sound of waves. AB, L, D.
DAY 5: DON BOSCO –
TROPICAL PALM GROVES, STRANGLER FIGS & INTO LAGUNA NEGRA.
After an early breakfast, we will be driven a short way towards
the famous "Laguna Negra" and later in the day,
before enjoying a wonderful barbeque at the lakeside, riders
can go into the lake, bareback if they wish. We meet the horses
and set off through an area of palm tree forests and to the
lakeshore, passing bird-filled wetlands on the way - we will
surely see black-necked swans, spoonbills, ibis, herons, egrets,
storks and a legion of other birds (migratory birds arrive
here from as far as Alaska and the Falkland Islands). (4hr
ride). Despite a number of stories, no one knows how the palm
trees got here - some 300 years old; they are not native but
the band of palms gives the landscape a very unique look.
During the trip we will pass roadside stalls selling the palm
fruit and the less innocent ‘hooch’ brewed from
the palm nuts. The cloudy, sticky liquid is so potent that
if you leave the cap off the old bottles it is sold in, the
liquor evaporates in a flash! After a typical lunch on the
lagoon shores, we ride on into a dense forest of strangler
figs, as sinister looking as their name suggests, through
a protected area of native vegetation and into the Don Bosco
hills from where we will be able to enjoy an incredible view
of the unique expanse of palm groves and Laguna Negra (2hrs).
We meet the vehicle and head to a wonderful working estancia
a little further inland (40 minute drive). Overnight at Estancia
El Sauce. AB, L, tea. D.
DAY 6: AUTHENTIC ESTANCIA
WITH CATTLE & RICE FARMING – ‘MATE’
TEA & THE GAUCHO LIFE
El Sauce is a working estancia run by its owners who are also
our very hospitable hosts. We will be enjoying a full day’s
riding (6-7hrs), with plenty of chances of fast paced riding
for those who wish, around the farm seeing the rice fields
and other crops on the property. Once again in very distinct
scenery, we cross creeks and flatlands and ride past the various
crops and to the herds of cattle. The owner often joins us
as he checks the land and his animals in the company of the
gauchos that work with him. The estancia, built in 1920, is
very comfortable – it is not a hotel but the family
house in which we have been invited to stay as guests of the
owners, offering us an incredible experience and a very special
insight into the life in the country.
For example, guests can sample the ‘mate’ sipped
hot out of a dry gourd. The gauchos and their ‘mate’
are inseparable and a very sociable ceremony has developed
around drinking ‘mate’. In addition to the cattle
grasslands this estancia has a large area of marshlands which,
along with the rice crops, create habitats teeming with bird
life (nearly 500 species in this area). This gives us another
chance to see the graceful black-necked swan (largest population
in the world found here), the rare white goose and many ducks
and other birds such as the largest bird in South America
- the ‘ostrich-like’ nañdu (Rhea). Otters,
coypus and capybaras inhabit the marshlands and streams. At
several points on the trip we should see the roseate spoonbill
with very bright pink pigment which, although rare in the
world, is quite common in Uruguay.
Overnight at this authentic working estancia. Swimming pool.
AB, L, tea, D.
DAY 7: CABO POLONIO –
BEACHES, SAND DUNES & A PICTURESQUE FISHING VILLAGE.
Today we ride along the beach and into the desert! (5hrs riding)
Having visited an excellent local store selling wonderful
leatherwork (including tack and riding boots), gaucho’s
clothing and crafts, we meet our horses and ride to the coast
through the grass covered dunes and across rocks close to
the roaring sea. We canter along the firmer beaches and ride
along in the water to Cabo Polonio, an enchanting fishing
village which can only be reached by horse or four wheeled
drive vehicles. Guests can walk round to the lighthouse and
view the huge colony of sea lions sunning themselves on the
rocks. They make up one of the largest populations of sea
lions in the world. While riding along the beautiful sandy
beaches occasionally we spot a migrating Franca whale (October-November
rides).
After a swim in the sea and a delicious lunch at a restaurant
in an idyllic location right on the waters edge, we ride on
into the dramatic landscape of the sand dunes. After one last
canter, we leave the beach, pass between huge sand dunes and
ride through an area which has been declared a Biosphere Natural
Reserve by UNESCO. The sand dunes and daunting sand walls
are quite an unexpected sight. Reaching a picturesque estuary
we turn and ride through the pine forest.
We say goodbye to these horses and are driven south to a wonderful
working estancia ‘ El Charabon’ in the rolling
hills, set back a little way from the coast. A very comfortable
overnight. AB, L, tea, D.
DAY 8: EUCALYPTUS WOODLANDS,
OPEN PASTURES & ROLLING HILLS
The day starts with a breakfast out on the veranda with homemade
bread, jams and cakes, admiring the views out across the hills.
Guests can take a close look at the rheas, the estancia has
some of these native South American birds as pets. The armadillos
often pop up out of holes ruining Jorge’s (the owner)
beautifully manicured lawns.
The ride today takes us through the scenic estancia lands
traversing the eucalyptus forests and grasslands then across
the huge fields of the neighbouring estancias, towards the
coast. A chance of some long canters as we ride across the
flatlands. Riders enjoy the glorious blue skies and tranquility
as we gallop across the pastures, often sighting the abundant
wildlife. A game of armadillo jumping often inadvertently
gets underway as the little armour-plated animals make a dash
for their holes as the horses approach.
After a picnic lunch, guests can return to the estancia on
horseback and relax around the pool or take the minibus to
the nearby beach for a late afternoon swim in the sea, sunbathe
or stroll along by the ocean returning to the estancia for
tea or drinks in a prime location to admire the sunset over
the surrounding hills and then gaze in awe at the star-filled
southern hemisphere sky. (4-6hrs riding).
Another delicious dinner with our delightful hosts. Overnight
at the estancia. AB, L, tea, D.
DAY 9: CATTLE & SHEEP
WORK WITH THE GAUCHOS ON THE ESTANCIA.
A morning spent working alongside the gauchos and their trusty
dogs as they tend to the cattle and sheep on this 1200 hectare
(2900 acre) ranch (4hrs riding). The work varies depending
on the time of the year, but the gauchos always welcome a
bit of help checking and moving the stock or putting animals
in the corrals. Sometimes a lame animal has to be caught and
tended to. The wonderful, friendly gauchos with their berets,
‘bombachas’ (riding trousers) and with their knives
tucked into their colourful belts all seem to have been born
on a horse and it is a delight to be riding with them. Their
dogs are very much work animals and it is an amazing sight
to see four dogs working in unison moving a herd of cattle.
The dogs unfortunately cannot count and that gets very tricky
for us, especially with the sheep, a recount often being required!
After a final swim in the estancia pool and a wonderful home-cooked
lunch we say goodbye to the horses and head back to Montevideo
– to the airport or the city, or to start an extension
tour. AB, L.
END OF TOUR
2009 TOUR DATES: 28th February-8th
March, 14th-22nd March, 28th March-5th April, 11th-19th April,
17th-25th October, 31stOctober-8th November, 14th-22nd November,
28th November-6th December.
New dates often added, please consult with us.
Private tours of any length possible from October to April.
Shorter tours available.
Including: riding on 8
days, all services as mentioned in itinerary (all transport
including to/from Montevideo, horses, guides and grooms, accommodation
and meals (from breakfast day 2 to lunch day 9).
Excluding: flights to Uruguay,
departure taxes, personal expenditure (souvenirs, laundry,
bar bills, telephone calls etc.), gratuities.
NOTES:
Climate: warm/hot non-tropical
climate – very pleasant riding. No malaria carrying
mosquitoes.
Horses: there will normally
be at least two changes of horses during the ride. As always,
one or more spare horses will accompany us. The horses are
English, quarter horse and other breeds crossed with the local
Uruguayan criollo: ideally suited to the terrain. Riding times
given are approximate.
Tack: local, South American
type saddle, with thick sheepskin seats. Saddlebags provided.
Riding style: Neck reining
(western ‘one-hand´/ ‘indirect’).
Help will be given in adjusting to this tack which is very
suitable for long days in the saddle. The narrow metal stirrups
mean that smooth soled riding boots (paddock/jodhpur boot
style) are strongly advisable rather than footwear with treads.
Travel notes, including
recommended clothing list, will be available on confirmation
of booking.
EXTENSIONS IN URUGUAY
& ARGENTINA: we have a great
variety of extension options available.
Visit the VINEYARDS, go BIRD WATCHING, relaxing in one of
the estancias close to PUNTA DEL ESTE or in ROCHA.
ARGENTINA: Buenos Aires city tour & tango show, IGUAZU
Falls, POLO lessons, FISHING, riding in PATAGONIA, and HIKING
are some of the options available.
IMPORTANT NOTES
Paramo Places/Ride Andes terms and conditions apply. Guests
are strongly advised to bring and use their own riding helmets.
A booking is confirmed only upon receipt of the corresponding
deposit.
We reserve the right to alter the itinerary due to circumstances
beyond our control.
Appropriate medical insurance is mandatory and the responsibility
of each guest/booking agent.
It is the responsibility of the individual guest/booking agent
to ensure that participants have the necessary riding skills
to take part in the tour chosen.
Guests will be required to sign a responsibility release before
starting a tour.
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