📍 Torres del Paine, Chile & Argentina
Welcome to Patagonia
The wild edge of the world
At the southern tip of South America, where the Andes crumble into the sea and the wind howls across endless steppe, lies Patagonia — a region so vast and so empty that early European explorers called it 'the uttermost part of the Earth.'
Patagonia covers more than 400,000 square miles across Chile and Argentina, yet fewer than 2 million people live here. That means there are more guanacos (wild relatives of llamas) than humans. The landscape is staggering: glaciers the size of cities, granite spires older than the Andes themselves, and coastlines where 1.7 million pairs of Magellanic penguins nest each year.
The weather is legendarily fierce — winds regularly exceed 120 km/h (75 mph), and locals say you can experience four seasons in a single day. Let's explore this untamed frontier.