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Riding holidays in Chile
give a completely different perspective to this amazing
country. Chile riding holidays take place throughout the
country but the two best areas are the Lake District and
southern Patagonia around Torres del Paine. In Southern Patagonia
between November and March there are trail rides through
the spectacular
Torres del Paine national park,
whilst in the northern Lake
District
the season is slightly longer and there are both
trail rides
and centre based rides to choose from.
The riding in Patagonia
is varied, with steep, mountain riding where you will
marvel at your horses’ mountain-goat abilities and vast,
open pampas grass which offer plenty of opportunities
for fast and long canters. There are rivers to cross,
valleys carved by glaciers, lakes of cobalt blue and
always with the impressive Torres themselves on the
horizon.
In the Lake District you can choose to base yourself at
the riding centre and take lessons or hacks in the
surrounding countryside, or join a trail ride journeying
high into the Andes or down onto the Pacific Coast. The
pace can be slow in the mountains but the ever-changing
landscape takes your breath away. At the Pacific coast
there are empty beaches for long, comfortable canters.
Whilst the trail rides are for intermediate riders
upwards, comfortable in all paces on a well-trained
horse, the centre based ride will take any level of
rider, from the complete beginner to the experienced
rider looking for a relaxed riding holiday in a stunning
location.
The
Glacier View
ride is a camping based trip through the Torres del
Paine park.
The Torres Vista ride
and
Journey to the Towers rides
are in the same area but on these trips you stay in
guesthouses and estancias (farmhouses).
The Chilean Criollo is quite a small horse, standing up
to around 15.2hh, however they are sure-footed and
sturdy enough to carry 14 or 15 stone. They have
wonderful calm temperaments and are honest and fun to
ride. Most are trained to neck-rein so you ride with the
reins in one hand, similar to Western riding. They often
have quite strong bits but are very responsive so you
ride with a very loose rein at all paces and they will
stop in an instant when asked.
Chilean saddles are wooden framed
with layers of padding and sheepskin over the top. You
ride with a longer leg than in an English saddle and sit
deeper in the saddle, even when cantering. The stirrups
are often closed at the toe and look a little like
clogs!
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