Bed & Breakfast Casa Daroch Santiago
Tomás Andrews No. 059 Santiago, Chile
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Travel Blogs by Travelers Who Stayed at this B&BBed & Breakfast Casa Daroch Santiago
A really great place!
We arrived in Santiago not quite knowing what to expect as a result of the earthquake. We had very nearly cancelled our Santiago leg, but our travel agent said it was safe and would be a pity not to have spent some time in the city. So we went.
Flying into Santiago our first impressions were of a city craddled by …
Santiago Prose/Santiago Center
Hello All, I just arrived in Buenos Aires, Argentina today. Itīs raining cats & dogs out here and freezing cold. I canīt wait to get to warmer weather and out of the big city. But for now, this will have to do. I leave you with my five days in Santiago, Valparaiso, and Viņa del Mar. Santiago Prose The architecture, colonial. The walls, full of …
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Another "Experience"
... city has plenty of green space which certainly adds to its attractiveness and our ability to find shade. We take the funicular up Cerro San Cristobal (San Cristobal Hill) only to find that the majority of people at the top of the hill have ridden their bicycles up the two kilometer roadway. To show them, we walk up the steps to the Immaculate Conception's Sanctuary. Hardly a sanctuary as it is overrun by ...
Arriving in South America and Santiago
... can think of, it was also seriously busy due to it being a public holiday. After wandering around for half an hour following a series of miss leading signs we finally realised that the bus station was on the second floor (of course). Trying to book tickets with our broken Spanish has made us feel we need to practise more but we muddled through and booked coach tickets for 9:45 the next day. Feeling a bit more confident that we have achieved something we decided ...
Wine, wine and more wine
... He soon figured out that some of the locals were coming into the cellar and stealing his wine at night. In an effort to stop them from stealing his wine, the owner began to tell the townspeople that the devil was living in his wine cellar and even went as far as to dress up as the devil one night to scare the thieves. From that point on, the wine that was found in that cellar was called “Casillero del Diablo” (or “The ...


