Far-Flung Postcards is a weekly sequence during which NPR’s worldwide group shares moments from their lives and work around the globe.
The tides transfer so rapidly on the island of Chiloé that they’re a part of the native lore.
That is an island simply north of Patagonia, recognized for its altering climate and tales of witches.
I seen many shops bought photos of witches, so I requested a good friend, Chilean anthropologist Alejandra Leighton, to elucidate why. The story she informed jogged my memory of this image displaying low tide outdoors our resort within the city of Castro.
A Spanish cartographer, José de Moraleda y Montero, challenged an area sorceress named Chillpila to a duel within the 18th century. Chillpila received by making the tide recede so rapidly that Moraleda’s ship ran aground — and for that feat, she received a guide of sorcery. Alejandra says the legend even got here up in a well-known Chiloé witch trial in 1880.
It is magical right now to observe the tides move out and in beneath the colourful homes on stilts. The one witches it’s possible you’ll discover are in reward retailers and books — although Alejandra could know just a few actual ones on the island.
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