Posts Tagged refugio

The Dubs

I went on a walk for a few days recently; I chose to hike a route called The W in Torres del Paine near Puerto Natales in Southern Chile, and I made it a tad over 64 miles before I broke down, bought some Fanta and a Sahne-Nuss, and waited for the high-speed catamaran to take me back to civilization.

Click it to make it bigger:
Map of The W at Torres del Paine

Five days, four nights:

Dia Uno] Thought that I’d already gotten lost 20 minutes in, backtracked to realize that no, I was going the right way, And decided to trust myself better the rest of the way. Made it up a pretty steep grade to Campamento Torres, where I pitched my tent and walked up to Campamento Japones and back before making Rice and Lentils (henceforth known as R&L) and dashing off to sleep.

Dia Dos] Woke up at 4:30 (a.m.!) to hike up the quick, albeit vertical trail to the Torres Mirador at sunrise when the towers allegedly glow red with the dawn; was greeted by a laughable scenario:

Laughable Scenario

Hiked down, unpitched tent (struck camp?) at noon or so, and walked back to the junction in clear, partly cloudy weather past a beautiful fjordy lake, a couple gauchos, the refugio at Cuernos, which seemed to house most of the East coast of the United States, as well as a fair-sized chunk of Western Europe, and a million dainty red mountain flowers to Campamento Italiano, where again, I pitched:

Campamento Italiano

Dia Tres] Walked up the middle branch of The Dub to Campamento Britanico and another cloudy viewpoint, at which I was again unable to see past the foggy cloudiness — I chose not to take a picture this time. And arrived back to Italiano in a blizzard, for real, so I waited for an hour or so for it to turn into, again, a warm sunny day. I struck again that afternoon and hoofed it back down the W to Paine Grande, which seemed to be the main center of pseudo-civilization in the park. I’d been planning on hiking another four hours that day, but the running water (showers!) in the campground’s on-site banos lured me in. I’m glad I stayed there, as the afternoon and evening turned out to be sunny and warm; I took it pretty easy, ate some R&L, and took some time to marvel at the amazing array of Gore-Tex that surrounded me. Gore-Tex from all over the world, in every color of the rainbow.

Paine Grande Refugio and Campground

Dia Cuatro] Awoke from a comfortable night of two-sleeping-bag-luxury, made some Nescafe and oatmeal with cocoa and lots of azucar, and started the long slog up to Campamento Paso. This was my favorite part of the trek. Most of the trail followed a couple of bright turquoise (from glacier milk!) mountain lakes, and alternated between deep forest and breathtaking views over the surrounding mountains. Until, that is, I arrived at Glacier Grey. I think that what I wanted when I visited Perito Moreno was a big fat blue glacier in the middle of nothing. And I got it on my second-to-last-day of hiking between Refugio Grey and Campamento Paso. Most people stopped The W at Refugio Grey, so the trail was far less crowded after that point, and it followed the edge of the giant hunk of ice for six strenuous, sweaty kilometros until the campground. Glacier Grey is smaller than Perito Moreno, and less blue, and big hunks of ice fall off much less often, but it was a much more rewarding experience: just myself, a large, slowly moving mass of ice, and a whole lot of nothing.

Glaciar Grey:
Glaciar Grey

Dia Cinqo] Woke up, rubbed the sleep out of my eyes and found a bug in there. Hiked back to Paine Grande, tired and stinky and sore and with broken boots, but made it with a couple hours to spare before my boat, so I relaxed, washed my face in the complimentary running water, and purchased the earlier-mentioned expensive snacks to munch on while playing solitaire.

The embarque back:
Torres del Paine Torres del Paine Torres del Paine

And so,

I’m glad that I’d been training for the marathon. I found that while hiking with a 40-or-so pound mochila, my legs didn’t get tired, but my back and feet definitely did. And I seemed to be hiking a bit faster and more efficiently than most of the other gringos I met on the trail.

And gringos there were. I can confidently say that English was spoken on the trail much more than Spanish, and that blancos outnumbered morrones by at least two to one. It was like hiking in the Alps, I’d imagine, but with more Germans. And it was much, much more beautiful. You should try it.

Also,

Things I broke while hiking the W in Torres del Paine:

    My gaiters
    My boots
    My spork
    The fleshy bit of my fingertip

Finally, observations:

The wind was blowing so hard at the huge Refugio Lago Pahue that it was whipping the tops off of the whitecaps and blowing a mist all over the lake.

You can drink the water right out of the streams up near the glaciers. It was fantastic, and cold, and tasted like absolutely delicious nothing.

I love my long underwear/black loungy pants combo. They’re warm in cold weather and comfortable all the time. Dirt and mud and stink just seem to dissolve away, and they seem pretty indestructable. Thanks, Uncle K!

Black spongy mushrooms that just looked lethal were everywhere. I didn’t eat.

There was a giant, wolf-sized fox with a bushy tail at Campamento Italiano. I was like, “What the Ephron?”

More squat toilets, even grosser this time.

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Bariloche 3

I left Chile. When I walked to the (previously mentioned) trailhead in the rain, the little Chileno actually told me that Chilean national parks are closed to camping until the first of December, because the extended rain sometimes causes trails to get washed out, stranding backpackers. So I knocked on the car window of the only other goofball silly enough to go hiking in the lluvia and asked him for a ride back to Lenca. He turned out to be a nice enough guy, a British expat living in Puerto Montt with his Chilean bride and daughter. He seemed a bit dodgy about discussing his life there in Chile, but when we started talking about hikes in the area, he really opened up and described a dozen or more beautiful nearby hikes (or “walks” as he called them) on volcanoes or to mountain lakes or incredible vistas, but after each one, said something like, “but you won’t be able to do it now, it’ll be covered with snow,” or “too bad right now the rain clouds will make it impossible to view.” So I decided to take a bus as quickly as I could back to Argentina and, hopefully, the sun.

I got to Bariloche (the third time) the next day and checked into the Hostel Inn, a nice place right down the street from Pudu Hostel and Marcopolo. It has a great view and an English-speaking reception, which is nice for those of us who are lazy. And then I went to talk to my hairy malcontent pal at Club Andino. I was all high hopes and expectations as I walked in the office, as the sun was shining a bit (it was only ‘mostly cloudy’!), and I knew that there were many hikes that I’d missed during my two other stints in town. Remember how I wrote that the fellow looked me up and down and told me to go to Refugio Frey the last time I was there? Well, it turns out that he told me that not because I look amateurish or anything (because I don’t, my bright red gaiters make me look like a pro), but because it was the only refugio hikable that early in the year. He told me that they won’t let people go up to the other places without a guide, which cost around AR$2800. So. Guess where I went? Refugio Frey again! I managed to find another campground down on the edge of Lago Gutierrez, which seemed to be connected somehow to the Refugio Frey hike, and so I filled out a little paperwork, asked the grumpy beard about a bus, and went to buy some cookies and pasta.

The plan to get to the trailhead was relatively straightforward. I bought a Via Bariloche ticket for a distance of about 25K to a point on a map near the South end of Lago Gutierrez (which only cost two pesos), put most of my heavy stuff into a locker at the hostel, went back to the bus station, got on the bus, pointed at my 30 peso trail map to the place I needed to go, and responded with a “Si, señor” to el conductor’s rapid and lengthy response. No problem, right? I chatted with an elderly man on the short ride for a while, discussing his life and El Bolson* until we came to the end of Lago Gutierrez. And passed it. My only recourse at this point was to make my way up to the front of the bus and say, “Señor, camping es cerca, no?” to which he replied with a lengthy string of words in a language that I really don’t understand at all sometimes. But a short time later he seemed pleased to tell me that “Si, camping. Aqui.” and I got out.

And was immediately lost. I realized after about an hour of wandering around on cow trails and getting stuck in thorny thickets that he’d left me at the North end of another, nearby lake, not the South end of Lago Gutierrez.

So I walked on the highway for a few kilometros (and crossed the continental divide!) to find the entrance to Los Baqueneros, a huge, posh and completely, desperately empty campground staffed by Ignacio and his very pregnant wife, a couple of mean-looking gauchos, and a whole mess of beef cattle. It was comfortable, and expensive (AR$25! For camping!), and I left the next morning to make my way up to Refugio Frey.

My camp at Los Baqueneros:
On the Way to Refugio Frey (II)

Los Baqueneros is situated at the South end of Lago Gutierrez, and next to it, in the Southwest corner of the lake, are a string of private estancias. The lake is evidently public, but the land is private, so these landowners build their barbed wire fences right up to the waterline, which meant that to get to my trailhead, I needed to walk in the lake. This was fine until I came to a stream that worked its way through an estancia and came out under the fence to flow into the lake. The motion of the water carved out a chunk of the lake bed, making the water there about thigh level at its deepest. I crossed it, cursed the selfishness of these rich landowners, and hiked the rest of the way up the mountain with soggy boots.

It was of course fun up at Refugio Frey. I said hi to Alan and played Uno with a crazy Brazilian/Chilean/Italian named G’e who came up to the refugio “to drink wine,” which he did in spades. I decided to camp out for an adventure (and to save some pesos), and was warm enough, but the wind whipping over the mountain range kept me awake for a while, and I woke up covered with a thin layer of snow inside my tent.

My camp at Refugio Frey (II):

Entonces, I came back to the hostel, booked a trip to El Chalten for two days later, and did some laundry.

I decided to try another refugio hike the next day against the counsel of Beardy at Club Andino, and it was very pretty, and pretty steep, but a totally different experience than an overnight hike. I felt about 40 pounds lighter (which I was, without a big pack), and had a lot of fun tramping around in the snow at the top. It wasn’t dangerous at all, and took me as long to go to the top and back as the map said it took to go one way, so I’m glad I didn’t heed the grumpy man’s advice. And a very kind man who was collecting tree trimming debris from the side of the road gave me a ride back to a bus stop outside Bariloche, and when he realized that I couldn’t understand him that well, he compensated by speaking VERY LOUDLY. So that was fun.

Refugio Lopez:
Refugio Lopez' Front Door Sky Above Refugio Lopez Sky Above Refugio Lopez Self

*He moved to El Bolson 35 years ago and stayed for 6 years before heading back to Buenos Aires, which makes me think that he, like many others who moved to El Bolson in the 70’s, was fleeing persecution from the military dictatorship. And he said that he had a son still living there, so he may have moved all those years ago, and given up his lifestyle in Buenos Aires for the sake of his son’s safety. At least that’s what I’m going to think.

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Blue River, Ska Night, It’s Chile

Originally published at travelswithdelaney.com.

El Bolson got better. The day after I wrote that last, grumpy post, Alon and I headed off to hike a trail to Refugio Cajon Del Azul. At the bus stop to the trailhead we met a very nice couple of young Israelis named Erez and Michal who accompanied us on our trek. It turned into a beautiful day and a magnificent hike to another cozy and welcoming cabin in the middle of absolute nowhere. Unlike Refugio Frey, however, there was no snow at the top, just horses and chickens and goats and an apple orchard and a vegetable garden and a few very angry sheep. And a really nice little family made up of a middle aged couple, their daughter and her husband, and their baby, Tomas, who would not stop laughing and smiling and looking cute the whole time we were there.

Alon, Yours Truly, Horse:
Alon, Yours, Horse

We went to bed early and satisfied, woke up to another beautiful day, ate a nutritious breakfast of dulce de leche and simple carbs and trekked back down the mountain, stopping at the exact same breathtakingly beautiful spot to lunch that we had the day before. We had also crossed two decrepit, ridiculous, handmade bridges the day before, and I was very excited to cross them again. There was just enough danger in crossing these relics to make it exciting and a tiny bit dangerous, and it was probably the highlight of the hike, at least for me. I felt a little Indiana Jones-y.

So fun, a tad dangerous:

Scary Bridge

We needed to hitch a ride back to town, and Michal (who happened to be a winsome young lady) and her boyfriend Erez nabbed a ride within half an hour. Alon and I fared a tad worse. I don’t think that it had anything to do with our looks, however, as we saw a grand total of 3 cars in 2.5 hours of waiting, and managed to grab the 3rd one.

Pitiful:
Hitchin'

So we made it back to town and beat it over to Refugio Patagonico (our first choice of hostels upon arriving in El Bolson, remember?). And yes, it was as magical as we’d hoped. Really cool hosts, really cool fellow travelers, great food, fantastic building and beds and surroundings. About as far removed from our first El Bolson hostel experience as possible. And Ariel, one of our hosts, took us to a reggae/ska show at the bar in town that stays open late and we ended up dancing our tuchuses off until the sun came up. Which was fun.

El Bolson, Better Weather:
El Bolson Downtown

Then I caught a bus back to Bariloche, where I slept the whole day and refused to interact with the entire English speaking population of Hostel Pudu. I also had to wake up the next day at 6:00 to catch a bus to Chile.

The Chilean Border, Ska Band Sighting:
Ska  Band

And now I’m In Puerto Montt, which recently retook the title of coldest, wettest place on earth, according to the book of records that I’m currently writing. I’m starting to think that I may have chosen a bad time to go camping in Patagonia. I keep hearing that it’s unseasonably cold here, but this unseasonable weather is likely to stick around for all of November. What gives?

Yours Truly.

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El Puerto de Patagonia

I’m busy finishing up my fourth day in Bariloche, still recovering from the sickness that I think I got on the bus and made much worse by having a lot of fun here and not resting at all.

This will be a quick rundown:

I came into Bariloche with a little bit of a mystery sickness, so didn’t do much the first night. The next morning I went to Club Andino to ask about backpacking where the grumpy, hirsute man behind the desk looked me up and down and recommended a 4-hour trek to Refugio Frey, which I decided to try out the next day. That afternoon, I took the turistas’ special, the Cerro Companario, which is a chairlift to a nearby peak that allows some pretty great views of the Lake District. I ran into some nice Israelis from the hostel at the chairlift and they decided to accompany me onward to Hotel LLao LLao where we walked around a bit and asked a confused ferry operator how to rent bikes. After a solid half hour of bad Spanish and pestering with questions everyone we saw on a bike, we decided to leave it for the next day, and I bumped out my refugio trek until the day after. That evening we went to (another) teenage dance club (this time with costumes, as it was the day before halloween) and when I ordered a Fernet & Coca, the teenager behind the bar asked me from where I came, evidently so a man standing on a table wearing a big 80’s wig and holding a microphone could point a laser at me and say “Bienvenidos, Estados Unidos!” or something.

At the Top of Cerro Companario:
At the Top of Cerro Companario

We rented bikes the following day and did the Cirquito Chico around a big chunk of Parque Nacional Nahuel Huapi. There were a lot of hills and I am not in fantastic shape, but it was a blast, even if Miri couldn’t quite remember how to ride a bike at first. Bariloche has got to have some of the most amazing views of Alpine-type (Andino-type?) mountain scenery in the world; I’m sure my pictures will not do it justice. And I must have worked an amazing amount of charm, because the nice Israelis decided to join me on the Refugio Frey trek.

Biking the Cirquito Chico:
Cirquito Chico Pose

Which we departed for the next day. We spent the evening before asking Nacho (behind the hostel counter) a whole lot of questions to about how we might get to the trailhead, but still managed to miss our bus and had to split a (albeit very barato) taxi, which seemed a little weird.

Nacho had talked us into taking the 8-hour, more scenic hike out to the refugio, so there was a bit of a rush to get there before dark (as our transportation fiasco made us start a bit late), and it was a pretty tough hike with a lot of elevation gain (even though the Club Andino guide said that it’s “easy-to-moderate”), and we felt a major shift in temperature from the bottom of the mountain to the top. So it was very satisfying to arrive at the refugio after hiking through a couple snowfields, a fair amount of cold, damp wind, and a whole lot of rocks, as the refugio was pretty much the coziest place on earth. Alan, the 19-year-old Barilochean single-handedly staffing the place, greeted us through the kitchen’s half-door and told us what to expect before asking us into the glowing little dining room-cum-parlor that served as the main common area of the building. It was, well, magical. We had brought food but it was almost as expensive to pay to use the kitchen as to have Alan prepare something, so we asked him to make us a couple sundried tomato pizzas, which he had to do by headlamp (one of the coolest, quaintest things I’ve seen in a long time). The pizzas, the wine we brought, the candlelight, the tiny wood stove heating up the equally tiny cabin to about 95 degrees, the full moon, the frozen lake behind us, the wind howling (howling!) outside, the fuzzy stunted cat hungry for affection, our fatigue, our feelings of accomplishment for having climbed a mountain (which we did), and the excitement we all had to be there made it an admittedly fantastic night.

Check out Miri’s tour of the refugio.

Alan making us pizza by headlamp:
Alan Making us Pizza by Headlamp

Full moon night outside the refugio:
Moonrise Over Refugio Frey

Before Starting the Trek Down; L to R: Yours, Alon, Noa, Miri
Before Starting the Trek Down

I think I’m leaving for El Bolson tomorrow. Unless this really is bronchitis, which means that I may stay here and watch movies instead.

Yours,

Chau-Chau Patagonia

Update: Not bronchitis, I´m fine. I just needed some sleep.

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