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La Pampa is a sparsely populated province in the Pampas region of Argentina.

Cities

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Map
Map of La Pampa
  • 1 Santa Rosa — an important agricultural center with a few attractions for visitors
  • 2 General Pico General Pico on Wikipedia — a mid-sized city of 50.000 inhabitants in the northern part of the province
  • 3 25 de Mayo Veinticinco de Mayo, La Pampa on Wikipedia — the only significant city in the south-west, at the Colorado river
  • 4 Victorica Victorica on Wikipedia — old quiet town in the north
  • 5 General Acha General Acha on Wikipedia — third city of the province, located in the Valle Argentino area with nice rolling hills
  • 6 Casa de Piedra Casa de Piedra, La Pampa on Wikipedia — small town at the shores of a large reservoir, at the limit to Río Negro province, founded in 2004

Other destinations

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  • 1 Luro Prairie Preserve Originally a hunting ground, this reserve protects the Espinal bushlands. South of Santa Rosa.
  • 2 Lihué Calel National Park Lihué Calel National Park on Wikipedia Also sometimes spelled Lihuel Calel. A small rocky mountain range with plenty of wildlife (Guanacos, foxes etc.) located in the south-east of the province.

Understand

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Caldén tree in Lihué Calel national park

La Pampa is one of the lesser visited provinces of Argentina. It is a mostly agricultural province, with little industry or mining. The most important activity is cattle ranching, but there is also avdairy sector, and cultivation of wheat and other cereals.

For tourists, the most interesting areas are in the south and the west, where the flat agriculture lands slowly make place to rolling hills and dry bush- and woodlands, with the Caldén tree being one of the symbols of the province. There are several saltwater lakes in this area, some of them with good beaches. Hunting tourism is also popular in some areas.

Climate

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Being located in the Pampas, the province is dominated by two different types of climates: a temperate one in the east and a semi-arid one in the west. Precipitation generally decreases from east to west and from north to south. Summers can be very hot, with average daytime temperatures of around 30 to 35 degrees Celsius, 40 degrees not being uncommon. Winters are cool to cold, with temperatures between 10 and 15 degrees Celsius and frequent frosts at night.

Get in

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The most important routes to enter the province are RN 5, coming from Buenos Aires (613 km to the provincial capital, Santa Rosa), and RN 35, coming from Córdoba (611 km) in the north and Bahía Blanca (327 km) in the south. On both highways there are several buses per day, reaching as far north as San Salvador de Jujuy and as far south as Río Gallegos.

Passenger trains used to connect General Pico, Realicó and Santa Rosa with Buenos Aires. They were suspended in 2015 due to an organizational problem, but are maybe likely to return in the mid-term.

Get around

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The main highways are paved. Buses connect the smaller towns with Santa Rosa and General Pico.

See

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Do

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Eat

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Go next

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This region travel guide to La Pampa is an outline and may need more content. It has a template, but there is not enough information present. If there are Cities and Other destinations listed, they may not all be at usable status or there may not be a valid regional structure and a "Get in" section describing all of the typical ways to get here. Please plunge forward and help it grow!