This is the fourth and final in a series of plunderin’ ghost ships. To catch up, go to The Octavius, The Flying Dutchman, and Ghost Ship of the Northumberland Strait.
The Caleuche
She’s been called a ship of magic, a phantom ship, and a gatherer of the dead. Some say she’s not a ship at all, but rather a shapeshifting creature; she and her crew have allegedly presented themselves in various forms, living and not. Other witnesses report that she’s a ship full of music and celebration where the living can board her and revel with the crew. She can even bestow good fortune if you dare to make a pact with her. This ghost ship legend originates from Chile where she allegedly sails the Chiloe Archipelago. She is called the Caleuche.

Witnesses report a strong sense of foreboding before the ship actually appears. She is fast, amazingly fast, as she sails the Chilean waters. Many see her as white and ghost-like with sounds of laughter and music echoing around. When she encounters other ships or if humans approach, she slips through them and then fades from view.

Some believe that the Caleuche was created by a sea god, el Millalobo, as a gift for his children. Two of the god’s daughters would search the sea and bring dead sailors aboard. The Caleuche would then somehow breathe life back into these dead. The resurrected sailors became part of the crew and joined in an endless celebration.
A darker legend has the ship as being a tool of an evil sorcerer from Chilote mythology, Brujo Chilote. Brujo’s ship is a predator that scours the sea and shores for the purpose of luring humans to an eternity of damnation as a member of the cursed crew. Crew members become Invunche; grotesque humanoid creatures with a leg growing out of their spine. Understandably,(I mean, BLIMEY! Eeeek! I’m creeped out just from writing this!), the locals were and are terrified of seeing the ship sailing nearby. To not be seen, the trick is to hide behind a wineberry or olvillo tree.
(I wasn’t planning to visit Chile, but after plunderin’ this legend, I think it’s definitely OFF the vacation destination list. Anyway…)
A less frightening version of this legend has the Caleuche being sailed by a group of sorcerers who use the voyages to replenish their magic. The sorcerers will make arrangements, “deals” if you will, with humans that grant fame or wealth, but also come with a cost.
Whatever the Caleuche may be, ship or ethereal spirit, she’s one of the spookiest ghost ships that I’ve run across in my plunderin’. It might just be time to go and plunder something a wee bit less terrifying than ghosts and phantoms.

Next time…Pyrate Grub!
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