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Saturday, April 11, 2015

Puerto Natales & Torres del Paine – A place where anything after Rio Turbio is a bonus...?

Puerto Natales (Chile) – Parque Nacional Torres del Paine (Chile)
11 April – 14 April 2015
When you think of famous drives you think of Route 66 in the US, the Panamerican Highway and the Sturt Highway in Australia, but equally as impressive as those and one that has remained on my bucket list for some time is National Route (40), or simply Ruta 40 in Argentina. This run is one of the longest rides in the world and virtually traverses the length of the Andes on the Argentinian side. This was had always been a bucket list item for me, to cruise Ruta 40 in Patagonia, to take a ride in an area that seemed like the end of the world.
 
Ruta 40 - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
Heading out of El Calafate and climbing up onto the expansive Patagonian steppe I had my right hand side drive style under control. The topography here was mostly flat, the impressive Andes fencing off the Western side of a vast plain that was desolate and monotonous. Pastoral lands rolled on endlessly under broad skies as the kilometres clicked over with hypnotic regularity. Making a short stop for fuel (and a random police check) in Esperanza, we joined back up onto Ruta 40 as it made a straight run for the Andes. Winding roads flowing over rolling terrain with the Andes rising under skies of blue, if ever a road had mythical attraction about it then this would have to be it.
.
For all the romantic notions of the open road there was a place of wretchedness at the end of the world where all things of beauty and wonder I believe went to die without a trace. The mining town of Rio Turbio acts like an apocalyptic centre, a place where your escape is never assured and a place where the dire images of infinite grey burn themselves upon your cerebral cortex. Is there a reason to come to Rio Turbio? Yes, if you’re in the mining game then this place exists for all those that enjoy the game of metallic extraction, but if you’re a tourist it gives you every reason to put the foot down and make a break for Chile, and 10 mins later we were in fact at the border crossing of Cerro Dorotea and making an entrance.
Puerto Natales - Patagonia - Chile
 
Pisco Sours in Puerto Natales - not bad, not bad at all
Chile in Chilli! 'Ya get it? Do 'ya punk?
 
Puerto Natales - Patagonia - Chile
Reaching the shores of Seno Última Esperanza we also reached what would be our base for the next few days, Puerto Natales, a town of some 20,000 inhabitants whose purpose in life I think is to come to the realisation that its future dreams will be built on the endeavours of tourists like us. Slightly ramshackled and derelict in part, the colourful single floor tin roof shacks that make up parts of the town are interesting and make it photogenic. The town itself is surrounding by physical beauty, stark, wind beaten mountains in its immediate vicinity whilst stunning snow-capped peaks rest across the fjord as fishing boats move slowly across this Patagonian stage. As a town it’s nice, cozy and was interesting enough to hold our attention long enough to offer up a few places for drinks and dinner (El Asador Patagonica was very good).
 
Puerto Natales - Patagonia - Chile
 
Puerto Natales - Patagonia - Chile
 
Puerto Natales wasn’t our destination for this section of travel however but it did act as our launching pad for being able to make our way into the other worldy Torres del Paine National Park and to witness in person the famous towers of blue. The only unfortunate thing was from a timing perspective that we had only been able to dedicate 2 days to this glorious corner of the world. Most trekkers come to Torres del Paine to do either the ‘O’ trek or the far more recognised ‘W’ trek, understood to be one of the top 10 treks in the world. Still, you take what you’re given and I know that we were ready to make the most of the two days that we had.
 
Heading out of our hostel before the sun had peaked through the clouds and from behind the mountains, we were sent on our way into a morning that was shrouded by early morning mist and steady drizzle. However, as became common place for us during the whole time we were away, the sun rose up off the deck like a beaten Rocky rising to shine once more (like Rocky in every Rocky movie in fact), it was almost as if our collective will always drew out the sunshine at the right time. Drawing closer to the mountains and national park was like a signal that sun should make an appearance NOW.
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
The journey to the national park was not far in terms of kilometres needing to be covered and the drive itself was perhaps only in the 2-2.5 hr range, but turning off the main road to get into the national park was the point in time we encountered 40kms of gravel road followed by dirt road that wound and turned sharply in, out and over hills. Needless to say, even from a distance we could already see how these mountains and this environment was such a draw card. Rising high from lakes of blue, these jagged, chiselled granite blocks were majestic and has an imposing presence.
Arriving at the north-eastern entrance of TDP (Torres Del Paine – for those that are going to wonder), we signed in at park administration, received our debrief and were waved away into the wild. Not having researched a copious amount regarding the day walks in the region both Inga and I figured that actually seeing the towers was the primary reason that we were here and that a 20km walk in one day was more than an achievable outcome for us. So with that in mind we drove another 15kms or so to the Hotel Las Torres Patagonia which acted as the starting point for the Circuito Torres del Paine.
 
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Show that tree some love...
 
The backyard to the Hotel Las Torres were the mountains of Torres del Paine, snow-capped, towering peaks. Standing there at the Hotel and eyeing off the trail you knew a few things in advance of walking. One, that when getting back to the hotel you’d be exhausted, two, the scenery was going to be mesmerising and that three, the only way the track was going from here would be ‘up’. Indeed it didn’t take long to verify point three as two minutes into the hike we saw the trail heading skyward above our very heads. Certainly with our experience of Mont Fitz Roy behind us there was already the expectation that this would happen and thus it somehow made the idea of acquiring elevation less daunting mentally. It was also at this point that I witnessed the most ‘mental’ and severely deluded person that I saw on the whole trip! Now, just to quickly set the scene, this is Patagonia, its wild terrain and when you hike you’d imagine that you’d need to make yourself as comfortable as possible as the distances you need to cover for any real return on your time investment are usually quite far but bugger me if I didn’t see a girl making her way up the mountain side wearing high heels!!! SERIOUSLY!!! Did this girl fail to take her medication today or did the Dream Police just take over her mind the night before?
 
The first few kilometres of the walk headed up what looked and felt like an old river bed. Not treacherous as such but a nuisance in part for the boulders and ‘hand & foot’ climbing needed to be done in part. This section gave way to a rolling hillside walk up into the valley. As we slowly rose up the mountainside the view back down the hill was stunning. Deep blue skies with heavy clouds casting shadows over the patchwork coloured landscape. Continuing up the hill we followed a river line formed by the melting glacial ice from the glacier above. By this time in our walk the sun was well and truly up and the weather was perfect, so we had nothing but good reviews for mother nature on this day.
 
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
As the walk continued higher we cut through lush forest which had beautifully coloured beech trees and pine. This section was quite pleasant until the point that the trail took a violent turn and headed in the ‘upward’ direction once again. This time the trail called for boulder climbing and general mobility. We climbed in this manner for near 45 mins or so until we encountered a brutal section of  moraine and scree. This section, essentially loose smaller rocks and sometimes large rock debris, made going in some parts a little treacherous. Indeed some of the boulders were quite exposed and as we followed the orange markers and painted orange dots which indicated that we were still on the right trail we questioned whether in fact this part of the hike was actually in the ‘easy does it status’. It was a hell of a lot of fun in any case. As we topped out the climb we were finally rewarded with our introduction to Los Torres del Paine themselves! There they were, the three of them standing tall and proud above a lake of sapphire blue . Towering blocks of granite surrounded by walls of bare, exposed rock, an absolutely stunning sight.
 
Los Torres - Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Los Torres - Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Inga and I stayed there for what may have been 35-45 mins, admiring the surroundings and sitting there kind of in awe of our ability and may I say good fortune to have been able to place ourselves in such a spectacular setting. Indeed we would have stayed longer but what the photos won’t show and what the sun didn’t assist with at the time was the biting cold that existed at that altitude. A glacial lake exists for a reason ladies and gentlemen and ‘general cold’ has a lot to do with it.
 
The walk back down was challenging in part as the ‘boulder dash’ made movement an operation of logistics and sometimes good fortune. What I do remember from the journey way down was a poor lady that was hopping on one leg. Now I don’t know exactly where she damaged her foot but either way, in the kind of form she was in and the awkwardness of her movement, she was going to have an extremely long day!
 
Los Torres - Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Los Torres - Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Arriving back at the hotel Hotel Las Torres Patagonia we were disappointed to find the bar in the hotel closed for some ‘special’ event. Ah, damn you Las Torres! I had been imagining the taste of that first Pisco Sour from high up in the valley, and this is how you repay me for dreaming! Still, Day 1 of TDP had been absolutely brilliant and I had captured enough images in my mind that I’m sure will last me a lifetime or at least until the next time I come here.
Now if Day 1 was all about hiking then Day 2 was, to borrow a line founded in El Calafate, ‘All about the view’. Driving out of Puerto Natales early once again we encountered the same type of winding, biting gravel and dirt rounds for most of the journey into the park. This time we entered through the more southerly entrance and I have to say the more impressive when it came to overall scenery. Each rounding of a hill brought scenery and views that literally made us stop in our tracks.
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Our intention this day was to take a ferry across Lake Pehoe and walk up the Lago Grey lake to the Grey Glacier – that was the intention. So after undertaking a short 1hr walk to Lago Nordeskolja and working our cameras overtime, we attempted to make it back to the dock on Lake Pehoe and undertake the journey across the lake. Certainly we did actually manage to get on the ferry, even though we were overly ambitious in our earlier walk with distance and thus our timing enforced a run in order to make the final cut for the ferry, only to find out on the ferry itself that the only return for the day would be immediately after its arrival at Lago Grey. Had we accepted that challenge then we may well have needed to camp out on the lake Into the Wild style for that evening. So, resigned to the fact that we’d literally ‘missed the boat’ we drove around Lake Pehoe and found the perfectly positioned Hotel Pehoe. This place has what I consider to be one of the best views of the Torres del Paine in the whole park. Even better in that you could sit back in the bar, happily order Pisco Sours whilst the sun streamed through the large glass windows and just sink into eternal traveller bliss.

Hotel Pehoe - Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
 
Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile
Several ‘Pisco Pehoe’ sours later  and feeling inspired we drove a little further down the road and undertook a 1hr hike up to a local mirador. It would be an understatement to say the views were simply spectacular, or magnificent, or majestic, or ethereal, or celestial but hell, it was all that and more. Not only was the view like a world created through poetic imagination but we were the only two people occupying this location so the feeling we had was as if we were the sole owners of all that we could see, and I guess in a certain way we were, as on that day, at that time and in that location, it was only us and Torres del Paine in that frame and that my friends is something worth writing about!

Torres del Paine National Park - Patagonia - Chile

Thursday, April 9, 2015

El Chalten - The smoking mountain

El Chalten (Argentina)
09 - 11April 2015
 
The distance between El Calafate and El Chalten is not overwhelmingly large, a meagre 213kms in fact with much of that distance being along the famous Ruta 40. For the well healed, cashed up, or maybe even flippant amongst us, you could fly the distance if you dared but for the most part driving is the most sensible of options when taking on the journey and it has to be said that the accompanying views make the journey more than just a cumbersome drive from point to point. When Inga and I decided to make the journey north to El Chalten (Mont Fitz Roy) we decided that renting a car for that drive and also the later trip to Torres del Paine would be the most enjoyable way of visiting the areas. The idea in itself sounded simple enough, a ‘no brainer’ in fact, but more often than not  its the simplistic ideas that can have unexpected complexities. Let me explain these complexities further with a quick historical reference.
 
I grew up in Commonwealth land of Australia,( but don’t hold that against me), and as Inga so often liked to point out, Australia still has a Queen that British and we still have her smug British face on our coins and notes. In that sense, being a British colony, we Australians have blindly adopted many of the antiquated and archaic rules, conventions, practices, protocols and procedures that have been passed down by the ‘Motherland’. So too our 'driving style' is adopted from the British 'way', and incidentally by about 35% of the world population. This left hand side drive remains a relic of the days when 'men were men', carried scabbards and wore them on their left hand side so that their right hand could easily move to draw the sword in the event of a violent 'unprovoked' attack. Thus due to this positioning, passing in the middle ages was generally done on the left hand side. So you ask what does this notion mean for you in this story? Let me summarise ever so succintly;
 
I sucked at driving in Argentina for the fact that ancient warlords were right handed! Simple as that!
 
 
My attempt to escape the clutches of El Calafate therefore was met with crunching gears, discombobulation, swearing in Serbian, driving the wrong way down one way streets and poor old Argentinian men holding their heads is disbelief at my 'mad skills'. Oh yeah, El Calafate was a scene that morning man.
 
When I finally figured it all out we broke out of El Calafate like a pair of grandmothers busting out of a nursing home to catch a Jerry Springer book signing, slow, but with genuine purpose. And it wasn't too long thereafter that we were on the fabled Ruta 40 and cruising under expansive blue skies and rounding the eastern part of Lago Argentino, heading north.
 
Lago Viedma - Santa Cruz Province - on the way to El Chalten - Argentina
 
On the way to El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
On the way to El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
As we drove under that Patagonian blanket all I could think to myself was 'now this is cool!'. Driving through Patagonia with its sweeping vistas, cobalt blue lakes and all encompassing skies, this to me is what I imagined this part of the world to be. Rugged, desolate, beautiful and inspiring. There's moments, and perhaps they come few and far between for most people, when you recognise that you're very happy. As we swung up the eastern side of Lago Viedma and felt the pull of Mont Fitz Roy as it rose in the distance, I could say that unequivocally, I was very happy!
 
El Chalten is essentially a small mountain village built on the back of its trekking and mountaineering popularity. It's located within the Los Glaciares Nacional Park and is set at the base of Cerro Torre and the majestic Mont Fitz Roy. A frontier town of colour, scattered buildings and no named streets, it holds the torch for hippie values and I wouldn't have been surprised if we had found a boutique bakery that specialised in pumpernickel and clove loaves of bread and fetta & basil muffins. We obviously didn't look that hard in that sense but we did end up finding in our basic searches was La Vineria, a gloriously homely and snug bar that made an equally satisfying mulled wine and was a place that allowed hours to slide by and out of sight without even a second thought.
 
A preview of my future - La Vineria - El Chalten - Argentina
 
La Vineria - El Chalten - Argentina
 
Our first afternoon in El Chalten was spent on a relatively short climb to a vista above the town. The way we spotted the walk originally was pretty much the way that Inga and I did most of our scouting for treks. If we saw a path heading up a mountain and way into the distance then there was no debate, we were going to do it, and not in that casual, comfortable strolling type of manner. When we trekked we put the foot down and burnt rubber (off the soles of our shoes mostly, but still, I won't lie when I say we always moved rapidly). As we also discovered, time signposts to trail locations were always 30%-40% more than we required. A blessing in many ways as we realised walking expectations were desperately inflated but a curse also in the fact that both of us would do the math and work out the (Inga & Henry) arrival time as a reduction from the suggested 'leisurely' time. Our estimates were also mostly correct if truth be told but a trap in waiting for our walk the following day. In any case, on this day the views above El Chalten at Los Condores lookout were exceptionally spectacular, even if Mont Fitz Roy remained in cloud for most of the afternoon. Likewise our walk out to Mirador de las Aguilas brought a view that was perhaps even more exhilarating as it looked out from the mountains onto a vast Patagonian plain with Lago Viedma disappearing off into the distance and bounded by the might of the Andes standing imperiously above it.
 
Mirador de los Cóndores - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina

Mirador de las Aguilas - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
That evening back at our hotel we informed ourselves on how best to get to see the UNESCO heritage listed granite massif of Mont Fitzroy and were advised to jump a shuttle bus up to the start of a trail head at Hosteria El Pillar, a 30min drive out of town, and located at the start of a walk which would be approximately 20kms in total (apparently 5.5-6hrs in total - yeah sure), ending back up in El Chalten. As always, our decision making for things like this was relatively easy, the conversation going something like;
 
Inga: 'So, lets do it'
 
Henry: 'Yep, lets go!'
 
The next morning we had an early pick-up and were away. Cutting through the tall Patagonian forest and climbing above the Rio de la Vueltas, we arrived to the start of the trailhead at Hosteria El Pillar on a glorious morning. The piercing blue skies acted as the perfect backdrop to the jagged, irregular spires that towered above the valley. Again, if you were one to believe in omens then you would have to say that we were just living within our very charmed existence.
 
Trepidation or a failed James Bond move? The walk starts...NOW
 
El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
As we commenced our walk along the Rio Blanco we rose slowly up the mountainside, ascending some 200-300 mtrs above a valley where the trees were just entering their season of colour. The reds and oranges of the leaves for me was something to take note of as us poor Australians are constantly surrounded by the mundane evergreens that keep a hold of their 'Kermit green' all year round. Making our slow ascent up and out of the valley also provided some stunning views of the Glacier Piedras Blancas, a lower glacier captured within the massifs of Mont Fitz Roy.
 
Glacier Piedras Blancas - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
 Glacier Piedras Blancas - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina

Moving through mountain trails painted by small shrubs of dark red, orange and yellow was a real highlight for me. Reflecting back on it now, it was a highlight that was not just one of our best in Patagonia but I would have to say, of the whole trip. The colours of the wild and the dramatic peaks were simply breathtaking. Standing there to just marvel at their form and presence was something that I'll always remember.
 
Los Glaciares Nacional Park - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
Los Glaciares Nacional Park - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
'Smoking Mountain' - Mont Fitz Roy - Los Glaciares Nacional Park - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
'Smoking Mountain' - Mont Fitz Roy - Los Glaciares Nacional Park - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
'Smoking Mountain' - Mont Fitz Roy - Los Glaciares Nacional Park - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
Having a rough idea of where we were going and with a very rudimental map in hand we followed the steady stream of trekkers across the bridge at the Rio Blanco and made our way to a section of the trail that would end up at Lago de los Tres. Now this was the point in the day where we nearly trumped ourselves cold. The guide marker at this stage stated KM 9 of 10, which was the distance from El Chalten to where we stood. The time guide for the last kilometre, i.e., to 10 of 10 at Lago de los Tres, stipulated1hr.
 
1hr!!?? As if 1 kilometre was ever going to take a whole 1hr to complete??
 
WANT TO MAKE A BET?
 
 
As we commenced the final kilometre there was an unmistakable 'up-ness' to all that was going on. The speed at which we attacked the ascent and the manner in which the trail continued to rise above our heads after every turn was alarming. The moment you'd reach a rise and peak over it is the moment you'd see a raft of orange arrow markers pointing you ever farther, ever higher. That final kilometre ended up being pure evil. Climbing at speed we challenged the notion of the 1hr time limit in our minds and in the end it challenged us right back. As stubborn as we both are we never relented and eventually made it to the top in some 50-55 mins. Less than the suggested time of course but questioning the validity of how a difficult climb up could actually be accomplished comfortably in that hour. No matter though, as we climbed above the tree line and hit barren peaks of icy snow we reached the magnificent Lago de los Tres and the awe inspiring peaks of Mont Fiztroy. These towers of barren granite simply thrust themselves skyward, with sharp cliffs plunging down vertically into the glacial lake below. The landscape itself was harsh, barren and bare but very much dramatic and glorious in what I termed  to be 'absolute rawness'. So fantastic.
 
Los Glaciares Nacional Park - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
'Smoking Mountain' - Mont Fitz Roy - Los Glaciares Nacional Park - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
 Los Glaciares Nacional Park - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
 Los Glaciares Nacional Park - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
Los Glaciares Nacional Park - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
 
Inga and I remained the shoreline of the frigid glacial lake for enough time for the associated glacial winds to get the better of us and force us down lower in search of warmer temperatures. Climbing down itself was perhaps a little more technically challenging but not as fatiguing as the march up. We had moments of inspiration and self congratulation on the way down with each occasion that we looked into the pained, tortured faces of trekkers making the ascent and knowing that their pain was probably caused by the same assessment that we had made an hour earlier, '1km? Oh that'll be easy'.
 


The 10km walk back to El Chalten was actually very comfortable and not strenuous at all. Making our way through the Patagonian beech forest it gave us time to fully appreciate our surroundings for their stunning colours and dramatic beauty. It really was just an entirely pleasurable experience.
 
 Rio de la Vueltas - Los Glaciares Nacional Park - El Chalten - Santa Cruz Province - Argentina
 
Making our way back into El Chalten after about 4.5hrs we had of course put to shame the suggested walking time of 6hrs+. With that understanding there was only one place that we were going to go in order to celebrate our success and reflect on the day, and that was La Viniera. A perfect spot, so we found out, to unwind, have ourselves a few drinks and dive into a very impressively made cheese platter.
 
Leaving El Chalten behind - hope to see you again soon!
 
A few hours latter, with the sun starting to fall out of the sky we jumped into our rented car and heading back south to El Calafate, a 213 km drive which was going to be undertaken on the 'wrong' side of the road. Damn you and your right side driving Argentina! Don't sweat it though, I still love you!