Monte Fitz Roy under an Autumn Sky
Los Glaciares National Park, Patagonia (30March2006).
Buenos dios, fellow travellers!
It is Autumn in the Southern Hemisphere.
I love the colours that mark the changing of the seasons. My corner of Australia never shows much dramatic change, however, and this year we have been battered by winds and rains which have washed away any colours we might have had.
So, to find those magnificent Autumn reds and yellows, I’ve had to turn to the archives, and dig out some old images from Patagonia: that beautiful, sere and windswept landscape in the foothills of the Argentinian Andes.
Patagonia
Driving through Patagonia: the expansive plateau of semiarid scrub in southwestern Argentina (29March2006).
Guanaco Baby
Wild Guanacos (Lama guanicoe) are the parent species of the domesticated llama.
It is always a risk going back to old photos: it was nine years ago that we were in Patagonia, and I was shooting .jpegs on a small digital camera… Still, hopefully the scenery (and a few tweaks in Lightroom) will make up for photographic short-comings.
We had flown from Buenos Aires to el Calafate – via Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego, which had come as a bit of a surprise as it is not exactly on the way – and then spent more than four hours in an over-heated bus, bouncing over bumps and twisting around bends, before reaching the gravel roads of el Chaltén.
Being in el Chaltén is like being in the early American West: dusty roads and prefab houses, in a forbidding, dry landscape surrounded by magnificent mountains. We kept expecting tumbleweed to roll down the main (only?) street. The town was built in 1985 to help secure the disputed mountainous border with Chile, but continues to exist because of tourism: it is within the Los Glaciares National Park, on the banks of the Río de las Vueltas, and at the base of Cerro Torre and Cerro Fitz Roy mountains.
We spent four days around el Chaltén, galloping over several of the walks in the area, in the wake of our guide Wanda, a delightful Patagonian woman of French-Italian descent, who understood everything except the meaning of “slowly”.
Río De Las Vueltas
Late afternoon on the De Las Vueltas River; Chile is not far – just through those mountains (29March2006).
¡Vamos!
Our guide Wanda sets a cracking pace up the hills.
El Chaltén Waterfall
Our first walk is just a “short” one to get the travel kinks out.
Sendero al Fitz Roy
The next morning we set off climbing up above the Río De Las Vueltas valley towards Fitz Roy (30March2006).
Ñire
Some of the wonderful colours we start to see around us are thanks to the Antarctic Beech (Nothofagus antarctica), a deciduous tree or shrub native to Patagonia.
Autumn Colours
There are several nothofagus (southern beech) species native to South America: ñires, guindos, and lengas amongst them.
Beech Bush Colours
Beech shrubs cover the lowlands; beech trees grow higher up (30March2006).
Sendero a Laguna de los Tres
The trip notes called this 18km hike to Laguna de los Tres ‘relatively easy’; …
Fitz Roy
…it certainly gave us magnificent views of Fitz Roy, otherwise known as Cerro el Chalten. Chaltén is an old tehuelche (Indian) word meaning smoking mountain. We were blessed with blue skies, but the peaks are usually covered by clouds, and the Tehuelche tribes thought the mountain was a volcano.
Rocky Creek Crossing
Creek crossing on the way to Poincenot base camp.
Ground Cover
These calafate berries are not quite ripe – they are like blueberries when they are ready.
Laguna de Los Tres
The peaks of Fitz Roy and the blue, glacial waters of Laguna de Los Tres …
Wanda’s Lunch
… make a great spot for a well-earned lunch break.
Lago Capri
We skirt Capri Lake on our walk back …
Hut
… past an emergency shelter …
El Chaltén
… and down to el Chaltén, which looks like a frontier town on the plateau (30March2006).
Cerro Torre
Our walk towards Cerro Torre the next day was slightly shorter and easier, but it was so windy at the top at Laguna Torre that we literally couldn’t breathe or speak, let alone take pictures (31March2006).
Pony
We shared the trail with tough mountain ponies.
Pony Train
A pony train carries out the last campsite of the season as winter looms (31March2006).
Sunrise over Cerro Torre
Early the next morning we caught the sunrise over the surrounding mountains.
Lomada de Pliege
The day may have started out clear, but it was bleak, blustery, and very wet at the top of the Lomada de Pliege. A faint rainbow showed through the mist (01April2006).
Lake Argentina
In the wet weather, it was a slog up the 500m rise to Loma del Pliegue Tumbado. A brief break in the rain afforded the ‘excellent panoramic views of the area’ promised in the trip-notes.
Loma del Pliegue Tumbado
We headed back down over the rocky landscape …
Our Guide
… and followed the intrepid Wanda through the grasses and back to the cover of the beech trees.
Heading back to base, we were blasted by the gale-force winds for which Patagonia is rightly famous. It was surreal trying to push forward through the pelting rain and howling wind, carrying with it the biting cold from the nearby glaciers and stinging sand from the unsealed streets of town. I kept thinking I’d be blown straight back to the mountain, like a tumbleweed in a bad western movie. When I finally reached the hotel, I was so sodden that the receptionist took one look at me and whisked me away from the entry. She was steering me towards the laundry drying-room to strip off – but with my Spanish and her English, at the time I had no idea where she was taking me!
Exhausted over our last dinner, I never-the-less felt exhilarated, and somewhat sorry for those who had stayed safely at home, missing an unrepeatable experience.
After all, who ever had an adventure playing it safe?
Till next time ~
Pictures: 30March2006-01April2006
I believe the closing is meant for me as I elected to stay in the hotel. It is hard to believe that it has been nine years ago that we participated in this fantastic adventure.
Ha Ha!! You weren’t the only one who sat out the last walk, as I recall. 😀
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