1. Fiat Ducato
In really good nick, 1.9l diesel engine which means it'll be good on fuel (and diesel is cheaper than petrol here), Mario said its engine is in good shape, while the whole van has been really well looked after.
Mario offering his advice on the engine! He's been amazing! Paul took us all for a test drive in it. We really like it and got a good vibe from the vendor Salvatore (not like Carlos the joker we saw last week!)
Salvatore was also selling another motorhome. Ultimately it's too big for us, but we had a nose around anyway.
2. Peugeot Euromovil
After seeing Salvatore, we headed to a place south west of Santiago which had loads of motorhomes!
There were three in our price range.3. Ford 'Fiesta'
And it even had a bath. But ultimately we discounted this one because it's got a 3.5l petrol engine, so will be costly to run, and it's also automatic which will be expensive to fix if there are problems.
4. Toyota thingamajig (no idea what)
It had an oven as well as a gas hob, which was a plus.
But there were wobbly things that gave away its age. And it had a big petrol engine too, so that was this one out of the running.
Final van of the day:
5. Toyota Dolphin
Clean, well kept bathroom.
But it had a problem with water leaking in and it emits too many emissions to be allowed in to Santiago City (it's only got paperwork allowing it on Santiago's highways). So we wouldn't be able to drive it in the city proper and it would be impossible to sell in Santiago when we get back.
So, we really like the first one we saw, the Fiat. But, of course, it's over budget! Decisions, decisions.
Here are some food pictures to help us decide:
Mixed ceviche from Puerto Esmerelda, a really nice Peruvian restaurant about 5 minutes from our apartment.
























