Windsurfing at Cuesta del Viento

Cuesta del Viento mingles the aridity of a lunar scenery with the turquoise transparency of a water mirror. The best spot in the country for the practice of windsurfing.

Any disoriented traveler might reach Cuesta del Viento and think that he is before the famous Valle de la Luna (valley of the moon) which has been invaded by a huge flood. The tops of the highest peaks hardly outstand through the water, looking like colorful islets lost amidst a sea of turquoise waters. But in fact, this is an artificial lake in the district of Iglesia, created ten years ago by the construction of the Cuesta del Viento dam, which as a result of human intervention, became of the most amazing and unknown sceneries in our country: Cuesta del Viento.

When Cuesta del Viento is reached from San Juan along Route 150, the radiant immensity of a strange valley that combines the aridity of a lunar scenery with the Caribbean transparency of its waters appears before the visitors’ eyes. Inside the lake, surrounded by mountains that reach up to 6,250 meters of height and that reflect a soft violet color on their slopes, solitary islets whose straight walls resemble a submerged fortress stand out. Some of them have strange spiral shapes and others show evidence of a great landslide on one side, caused by the action of the wind and the water.

From a distance, it looks as if this was the ruins of a real Atlantis hiding beneath those spring waters coming down from the mountain heights. And in the background, on the other side of the lake, some reddish gales of sand rise to the sky with their threatening whirlwinds.

  • An adventure travel

    An adventure travel

  • The best site for the practice of windsurfing

    The best site for the practice of windsurfing

  • The mirror of water that governs the panorama

    The mirror of water that governs the panorama

  • The weather is sunny 98% of the days

    The weather is sunny 98% of the days


Windy, Very Windy

The name Cuesta del Viento applies perfectly to this place as you can literally leave the ground there. It is windless up to midday, but afterwards, in certain spots, if we do not force our body forwards, we can fall to the ground to everyone’s laughter. At times, the wind shakes the truck stopped by the road, while in the lake there are waves and water gusts rising several meters over the surface in the form of dew. The cause of so much wind is a kind of funnel that is formed right in the spot where the air currents enter the valley. As the pass gets narrower, the wind increases its speed up to eighty kilometers per hour. Logically, the dam is one of the best sites in the world for the practice of windsurfing. In the fall, temperatures range between 5 and 25 degrees centigrade during the day. The weather is sunny 98% of the days and it rains only five times a year.

Autor Julián Varsavsky Fotografo Gentileza Losandes.com.ar

How to get hereHow to get here: From the city of San Juan, go along Route 40 until you reach Jachal and then take Route 150 up to Rodeo (164 kilometers up to Jachal and then 44 kilometers more up to Rodeo). Cuesta del Viento starts there. If it is a one-day visit from San Juan, we recommend that you go back through Talacasto (Route 436) in order to see other sceneries.

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