Key Takeaways
- Traveling from Chile to Brazil’s Amazon via São Paulo? Be ready for a baggage recheck hassle.
- GRU Airport’s transit baggage drop-off is poorly signed, forcing inventive escalator moves.
- A video plea finally saved the day—proving persistence pays off in Latin American airports.
The drive from San Pedro de Atacama to Calama Airport is a scenic stunner. Volcanic peaks, vast deserts, and even a copper mine from above. But the real adventure began after we boarded a flight to São Paulo.
A Sky-High Spectacle
Aboard the Santiago-bound flight, we followed a golden rule: book a window seat on the left. The view of Aconcagua at sunset alone justified the turbulence warnings.
"The flight crosses the Andes, and turbulence up there can really toss the plane around." No kidding. They keep everyone buckled up for 30–40 minutes, sometimes an hour. So board stone-cold sober—skip the pre-flight beer.
But oh, the colors! Volcanic rock outcrops in hues of red, orange, and purple. Dry Argentine landscapes stretching endlessly. It’s a geography lover’s dream.
The GRU Gauntlet
Then came São Paulo’s Guarulhos Airport (GRU). Our itinerary: Santiago (international) → São Paulo (connection) → Manaus (domestic). Simple? Not quite.
The first blow: Two immigration officers processing a whole A321. By the time we cleared, our buffer had evaporated.
The baggage game: They told us to collect our bags, recheck them for Manaus. But the elevator was a no-go—endless line. So we improvised. We sent someone upstairs, then
- Fed bags onto the escalator one by one
- The upstairs team grabbed them
- Found carts up top
Hooray? No. Staff pointed us to a transit baggage drop-off—hidden behind a pharmacy, past three turns, with zero signs. No wonder the counter staff had no clue.
The Final Standoff
At the drop-off, they announced our duffel bags (no wheels) wouldn’t go on the belt. Instead, they’d sit in a cart, to be taken "later." Given Latin America’s track record, we knew this meant risk of lost luggage for days—our boat in Manaus wouldn’t wait.
What worked? A video recording. I asked DZ to film me pleading. Within minutes, a handler appeared and wheeled our bags away.
We boarded just in time. The women in our group had grabbed single-malt Scotch for nerve-soothing shots from plastic cups. Cheers to that.
Why Not Charter a Private Jet?
Some readers might ask: why not just fly privately from Santiago to Manaus? Because we’ve been burned by that before—low odds of actually taking off. Commercial flights are less comfortable but more reliable.
Final Thought
We made it to Manaus, where a white boat awaited on the Rio Negro. But that’s tomorrow’s story. Today, a reminder: persistence pays off, especially when your bags are headed to the Amazon without you.
