CHILE 



said before, don't miss the dove shooting. A 20-gauge gun 

 is all you have to take along and shells are to be had in Chile. 

 Try the tocazza, the wood pigeon that is shot in Cuba and is 

 found here in August. It's easy enough to combine your salt- 

 water fishing with shooting and skiing— and if you are here 

 in February, March or April you can also take trout. 



The snipe are wonderful and you should by all means 

 sample some of the shore bird shooting south of Valparaiso. 

 Golden plover are found in great numbers as well as the 

 curlew, willct, greater yellowlegs and black-breasted plover. 

 And there is no law against shooting any of them. There are 

 no decoys used in duck shooting in Chile— it is all pass 

 shooting. 



When in Santiago, stay at the Hotel Carrerra. Tony 

 Vaughn, the manager, will give you terrific service. It's a 

 fine modern hotel, convenient to everything in Santiago. Ray 

 Grassidy, who runs the Travel Bureau downstairs, will make 

 all your arrangements for hunting in the vicinity. 



You don't have to know anybody to enjoy yourself in 

 Chile. Even without considering its swordfish and trout it is 

 truly a sportsman's paradise. Never will you find people 

 more sifnpatico— 2nd I use their expression picho-caluga, 

 which means a well-done caramel, to express this tender qual- 

 ity. For the trout fishermen going to the south of Chile I'm 

 listing a few English-Spanish words which I trust may be 

 helpful. 



