Puerto Williams in Chilean Tierra del Fuego

On Isla Navarino’s north shore, across the Beagle Channel from Argentine Tierra del Fuego, Puerto Williams is the so-called “Capital of Antarctica” and gateway to the rugged Dientes de Navarino backcountry circuit, a five-day slog through soggy mountainous terrain. Local residents look forward to a permanent ferry link to nearby Argentina, but there is political opposition across the channel because myopic Ushuaia impresarios fear losing business to tiny Williams, however unlikely that possibility.

Founded in the 1950s, formerly known as Puerto Luisa, the town (pop. 2,000) has paved sidewalks but gravel streets. Most residents are Chilean naval personnel living in relatively stylish prefabs. There are also some 60 remaining Yámana descendants, only a few of whom speak the language—now a hybrid including many Spanish and English words—among themselves.

Southernmost city in the world, Puerto Williams cityscape in Chile, taken from Beagle channel. ©Davide Guidolin, Dreamstime.

Sights

Overlooking the harbor is the Proa del Escampavía Yelcho, the prow of the cutter that, under Luis Pardo Villalón, rescued British explorer Ernest Shackleton’s crew from Elephant Island on the Antarctic Peninsula in 1916. A national monument, the bow survived collisions with icebergs to reach its destination. Returning to Punta Arenas, the entire ship makes a cameo appearance in original newsreel footage in British director George Butler’s Endurance, an extraordinary documentary of Shackleton’s adventure.

Very professional for a small-town museum, Williams’s Museo Martin Gusinde (Aragay 1, tel. 061/621043, 9:30am-1pm and 3pm-6pm Mon.-Thurs., 2:30pm-6:30pm Sat.-Sun., free) has exhibits on geology, plants, and taxidermy, a marker for the former post office, and a sign for the coal mine at Caleta Banner, on nearby Isla Picton, which provisioned the Yelcho on its rescue mission. Nearby is the Parque Botánico Omora, an organized selection of native plants.

Built in Germany for operations on the Rhine, the MV Micalvi shipped supplies between remote ranches and other settlements before sinking in Puerto Williams’s inner harbor in 1962. The upper deck and bridge remain as the yacht club’s bar-restaurant.

Getting There and Around

Aerovías DAP (tel. 061/621051), at the Centro Comercial, flies 20-seat Twin Otters to Punta Arenas (US$112) Monday and Wednesday- Saturday April-October. Flights leave Monday-Saturday the rest of the year. DAP flights are often heavily booked, so make reservations well in advance.

Regular connections between Puerto Williams and Ushuaia, on Argentine Tierra del Fuego, take place Friday, Saturday, and Sunday with the Argentine ferry Almanza Supply (US$125). The crossing takes 1.5 hours. There are occasional crossings from Puerto Navarino, 54 kilometers west, with the Ushuaia Boating Club; contact the Gobernación Marítima (tel. 061/621090), the Club de Yates (tel. 061/621041, ext. 4250), or Sim Expeditions (tel. 061/621150). There are occasional charter flights as well.

In summer, the ferry Bahía Azul (US$210 for a bunk, US$175 for a reclining seat) sails to Punta Arenas (34 hours) at 10pm Saturday. Nearly all services are concentrated around the Centro Comercial, a cluster of storefronts just uphill from the Muelle Guardián Brito, the main passenger pier. These include the post office, several telephone offices, Banco de Chile, the Cema-Chile crafts shop, and Manualidades, which rents mountain bikes.

Map of Southern Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego
Southern Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego

Wayne Bernhardson

About the Author

Wayne Bernhardson first traveled to Patagonia in 1979, visiting both Chile and Argentina as far as Tierra del Fuego, “the uttermost part of the earth,” and has returned to the region almost every year since 1990. He also spent a year walking, sailing, and flying around the Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas) and had the pleasure of revisiting them to research this book. He owns an apartment in Buenos Aires, near the Palermo botanical gardens, and spends four to five months in the “Southern Cone” countries every year.

Wayne earned his PhD in geography at the University of California, Berkeley, but abandoned academia for a perpetual Latin American road trip that many university faculty envy. He is the author of Moon guides to Argentina and Chile, and has written for magazines and newspapers including Trips, the San Francisco Chronicle, the American Geographical Society’s Focus, Business Traveler, Dupont Registry Tampa Bay, Postcards, National Geographic Traveler, Latin Trade, and Travel Holiday. He often gives lectures on destinations he covers in his books.

When not in South America, Wayne resides in Oakland, California, with his wife, María Laura Massolo, their daughter, Clio Bernhardson-Massolo, and their Alaskan malamute, Malbec (named for Argentina’s signature red wine).

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