In 1952, a 23-year-old medical student named Ernesto "Che" Guevara climbed onto a Norton 500 and rode across South America. He wrote a book about it. It changed his life. It changed the world. He called it The Motorcycle Diaries.

This project carries that name for a reason. Not because I agree with his politics — but because I understand the pull. The pull of the road. The pull of a continent so vast that it rewires your brain. And South America's ultimate motorcycle road is at the very bottom: Patagonia.

"I knew that when the great guiding spirit cleaves humanity into two antagonistic halves, I would be with the people." — Che Guevara, The Motorcycle Diaries. I'm with the people too. The people who ride.

Mountain road stretching into the distance

The road to Ushuaia — where the world ends and the ride begins.

The Route Plan

Planned Route — South to North

Camping adventure with mountain backdrop

Carretera Austral. Gravel, glaciers, and condors overhead.

Why Patagonia Is The Ultimate Ride

Patagonia doesn't care about you. The wind will try to push you off the road at 100 km/h. The gravel on Ruta 40 will test every ounce of your off-road skill. The distances between fuel stations can be 300+ km. The weather changes four times in an hour.

But — you'll ride past glaciers that are thousands of years old. You'll see condors circling above Torres del Paine. You'll cross on ferries through fjords that look like they belong in Norway. You'll camp next to lakes where you're the only human for 50 km in any direction.

That's the trade. Suffering for transcendence. Every adventure rider I've talked to says the same thing: Patagonia ruined them for any other ride.

The Carretera Austral — The Crown Jewel

Chile's Carretera Austral (Route 7) is the highlight of this plan. Built between 1976 and 2000 through some of the most remote terrain in the Americas, it connects isolated communities along Chile's Pacific coast. Large sections are unpaved. Ferry crossings are required at multiple points. Weather can shut the road for days.

It's the kind of road that separates riders who talk about adventure from riders who live it.

Preparation Checklist

The Che Connection

Che Guevara's original motorcycle journey in 1952 covered 8,000 km from Buenos Aires to Venezuela. His route didn't include Patagonia — he went north. But his spirit is why this project exists. The idea that a motorcycle can change how you see the world. That the road itself is the destination.

$MOTO — Motorcycle Diaries — carries that torch. Not literally (we're not starting revolutions), but philosophically. The open road doesn't care about your budget, your background, or your portfolio. It only asks one question: are you brave enough to ride?

Sources & Inspiration