A British women who was among five foreign tourists killed in a blizzard at a nature reserve in southern Chile was named as Victoria Bond
The visitors to Torres del Paine nature reserve, Chile’s most visited foreign tourist spot, were caught off guard Monday while exploring the Patagonian park famed for its granite peaks, glaciers and wildlife, which is 1,740 miles south of Chile’s capital Santiago.
Two Mexicans and two Germans also died in the tragedy yesterday in the Torres del Paine reserve in Patagonia amid heavy rainfall and winds of up to 120mph.
Cornwall-based PR worker Victoria, believed to be 30, had posted a video taken by another British member of their group of their progress before the tragedy.
It showed footage of her and the other trekkers crossing raging rivers under drizzle and grey skies.
The Brit, who posts on Instagram as thegingerbreadfox and referenced Victoria in his post with the initials VB: wrote: ‘Day 1 of the Patagonia O-Trek: also known as 15km of why the f**k did I fly 8,000 when I could’ve walked round Bodmin Moor in a light drizzle?
‘It pissed it down from the first step, the trail rebranded itself as an Amazon tributary, and at one point I’m fairly certain I saw a trout overtake me. Five river crossings and only one bloody bridge. Should’ve brought a canoe and a priest.
‘Morale at an all-time low… and THEN the skies suddenly cleared, the valley cracked open like a tin of peaches, and we stumbled into camp with trench foot.
Cornwall-based PR worker Victoria, believed to be 30, had posted a video taken by another British member of their group
The five dead were visiting the Patagonian Torres del Paine nature reserve, Chile’s most visited foreign tourist spot (File image)
‘Dinner was gourmet – rehydrated slop in a pouch while VB — or very own Patagonia Princess — dined on first-class full board because she paid POUNDS 900 not to carry a bag.
‘We’re also raising money for Movember, for men’s mental health and suicide prevention.’
More than 20 people were involved in a search for the victims who were understood to have been part of a group of nine people who went missing.
The alarm was raised on Monday night through a ‘Please Help’ message published in a Facebook group used by foreign visitors to the area where an English-speaking tourist said others who were doing the demanding Circuit O or Patagonia O-Trek had become trapped by bad weather.
Local media reported that that much of the country currently is facing heavy snow, wind and rain.
Chilean president Gabriel Boric said in a post on X: ‘To the families, friends and loved ones of the five people of Mexican, German and British nationality who regrettably died in the tragedy that occurred in Torres del Paine, I send my most sincere condolences.
‘Know that they can rely on the full collaboration of the Chilean authorities and institutions in these difficult moments.’
The two Mexicans who died have been identified as Cristina Calvillo Tovar and Julian Garcia Pimentel and the two Germans as Nadine Lichey and Andreas Von Pein.
Initially reporting two dead and seven missing, regional government official Jose Antonio Ruiz updated the toll to five later in the day, made up of one Brit, two Mexicans and two Germans.
Four people were rescued alive, but Ruiz did not specify their nationalities or their health status.
Ruiz added: ‘Talks have already begun with the relevant consuls regarding the repatriation of bodies. The Prosecutor’s Office has also authorised the movement of bodies, so we are now entering a phase of evacuation, prioritising air transport’.
Soldiers and police joined the search effort in the park designated a biosphere reserve by UNESCO in 1978.
Authorities also closed off the zone during the search. As many as 24 were involved in the search.
In 2024, more than 367,000 tourists visited the reserve and its hiking trails, according to the latest available figures from the Conaf national forestry body.
The weather forecast for Torres del Paine has been for sleet and strong winds, which diminishes visibility for hikers who may stray from the park’s dedicated trails as a result, Juan Carlos Andrades of the Senapred emergency response unit told AFP.
Chilean President Gabriel Boric, in a message on X, offered his condolences to the loved ones of the five who died in what he described as a ‘tragedy.’
An FCDO spokesperson told the Daily Mail: ‘We are in contact with the local authorities following an incident in Chile.’

