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  Chile : National Parks Guide : Pumalin

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Pumalin Park
   
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Entrance road to the park

Before Douglas Tompkins purchased the estate, the Reñihue property was nothing more than a field of acres destined for raising cattle, a landing strip due to its isolation, and almost 7,000 hectares (16,800 acres) covered with native forests. Some time later, Tompkins discovered that an anonymous organization was trying to sell a piece of land of approximately 185,000 hectares (444,000 acres), known as Pumalin, and which neighbored as much of the north as the south of the Reñihue Estate. Said property was found totally abandoned but the large majority of its surface area is made up of native forests without any commercial value, tall peaks, rivers, and fjords. It was here that the interest in creating a grand Ecological Park was born, and was named Pumalin.

Of the total surface area, approximately 95% was acquired by the Land Trust Conservation Foundation, known before as Pumalin Forest Foundation, a nonprofit public corporation constituted and presently abiding by the state laws of California, United States. In the foreseeable future, the property that makes up the Pumalin Project will be donated to a Chilean Foundation through an actual constitutional process before the Ministry of Justice.

Since then the land has been designated Pumalin Park and its fate is to be declared a Santuario de la Naturaleza (Sanctuary of Nature) by the Ministry of Education of the Government of Chile. Its main focus would be on the planning of land ordinances maintaining its perspective, in the long run, to attempt to organize the territory in a way that allows the preservation of natural resources which will generate conditions to maximize the quality of life for the local and global population.

 

Pumalin Park covers an extensive area of the Palena Province territory, essentially made up of farmland and properties. The predominant types of terrain are the elevated slopes, thin ground settled over rocks and covered with beautiful forests that offer solid protection. Without this vegetation covering the ground, it would degrade quickly and intensively.

Hanging glacier and lagoon

The landscape of the Pumalin Park could be considered having been almost completely formed by glaciation. You can observe large rocky formations, with deeply carved cliffs cut by ice. Some valleys appear to have been formed in marshy areas where sandy, fine material has been deposited. In the middle sector of the mountains large hanging valleys and glacial valleys open up to the highest sector. The glaciers and lakes that are contained in these valleys form rivers that flow through the territory in a northwest direction until emptying out into the sea.

There are two main zones. The Coastal Sector, distinguished for the development of narrow and extensive beaches, bordered towards the east by a soft rolling terrain. In the fjords, the coastline is bordered by abrupt hills that form peaks of up to 1500 m (4,920 ft) above sea level. The beaches are very narrow and scarce in these regions. The depth of the sea in the fjords surpasses 300 m (984 ft). In general, the sea floor is very flat, which provokes tides spectacular in development and magnitude. This sector holds the Pumalin inlets and the Huequi peninsula.

The Elevated Mountainous Sector is characterized by its powerful terrain with sharply formed peaks and vertical summits. The region's most distinguished peaks are the Michinmahuida Volcano (2,404 m/7,885 ft) and the Chaiten Volcano (962 m/3,155 ft). The Michinmahuida Volcano makes up one of the three large snow caps or glacial plateaus of this sector of the continent. The snow is present beginning at 1700 m (5,576 ft) and is practically a permanent facet to the volcano. Surrounding this snowcapped massif are countless glacial spits that slide down towards the foot of it, at some 700 m (2296 ft) above sea level.

Reñihué Fjord

In relation to the hydrography of the zone, the main basins are those of the Puelo River to the north and the Yelcho River to the south. There are 12 other hydrographic basins of different sizes and importance among these. From north to south they are: Mariquita River, Ventisquero Stream, Cholgo River, Panquen River, Quintupeu River, Cahuelmo Estuary, Vodudahue River, River Negro (Black), Pillan River, Reñihue River, Gonzalo Estuary, and Rayas or White River.

The environmental diversity due to the climatic conditions, causes the park to possess different types of habitats for the animal wildlife. The most common mammals are the mountain monkey, coupu (beaver), zorro culpeo (Chilean large fox), ferret, wild cat, puma, river otter, guemul, Chilean mountain goat. As far as birds go, it is possible to see penguins, cormorants, herons, storks, swans, condors and hawks among others. There are a total of 39 registered families.

 

HISTORICAL OR CULTURAL PATRIMONY

 

The territory that currently makes up Pumalin Park corresponds to Continental Chiloe, the zone that encompasses the region from the city of Hornopiren to the city of Chaiten. The first settlers of Chiloe, indigenous people that came to the island in search of wood, shells, and fish, came to the region known as "sea border", the land that is found between the hills and the sea. Presumably, the Huilliches, Payos or Poyas, Cuncos, and Chonos were among the natives that arrived. It is believed that all these people developed friendships and that there were family connections among them. However, they never established themselves fully on the coastal border due to the good quality of climate on Chiloe Island.

With the Spanish settlement on Chiloe Island and later the founding of
Calbuco in 1602, people began visiting the sea border of continental Chiloe
more frequently. Among other reasons, an important one was that the forests
on the island were becoming scarce, and they were the main source of
commerce between the natives and the Spanish. They went looking for wood,
particularly larch, in the continental region to commercialize it in
Calbuco.

During the period of Chile's independence, the situation did not change much
and the zone was preserved as a place scarcely visited and removed from the
concern of the new authorities.

The first sign of interest from the Chilean government to know and explore the coastal region of continental Chiloe came at the root of the colonization of the Llanquihue Province, initiated by Bernardo Philippi and Vicente Perez Rosales in the year 1840.

The colonization of this territory, seemed spontaneous and disorganized, since laws were not carried out and there did not even exist a political willingness to want to populate the region. What took place throughout the years was that some families from the Island of Chiloe and Calbuco began to emigrate in search of new land and opportunities.

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