Guard station, for checking back-country camping permits |
...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
Saturday, February 4, 2017
Laguna Torres Hike
So on the first beautiful day, we donned our big packs and headed up the trail. The trail in question, Laguna Torres, is the usual series of glacial stair-steps leading to the big ex-glacial clearing/forests. Not wanting to over-do it, we stopped at kilometer 5. The scenery was as advertised, breath-taking, world-class, etc.
Rio Fitz Roy |
The trail; the scenery beginning to unfold |
First good view of Cerro Solo and its hanging glacier |
Fitz Roy begins to peek out; it disappears from view for much of the rest of this hike |
At 3.4k high, not all that high; not climbed until the 50s |
Waterfall at the first mirador |
Cerro Torres, right, begins to peek out |
The trail passes through a variety of gnarly woods |
Cerro Solo again |
It's Cerro Torre again you can't take your eyes off |
Neighbors and glacier; behind is the huge Viedma glacier, more an icefield |
As we are heading back, clouds roll in |
Friday, February 3, 2017
El Chalten Scenes
El Chalten was founded way back in 1985, the gateway to the newly created Parque Nacional los Glaciares. Sort of a West Yellowstone, sort of, only West Yellowstone compares poorly on the restaurant scene. FWIW, Lonely Planet rated El Chalten #2 on its 2014 list of cities you need to know. Anyhow, we will have spent 6 nights in El Chalten, crashing, resting, hiking, repeating. The most striking thing about the place, apart from the occasional spectacular world-class alpine views, is the unceasing gale force wind. Well, it does cease now and then in order to rain.
El Chalten, on a glacial out-wash in the national park |
Our nice, relatively new Hosteria El Paraiso; of course, everything in El Chalten is relatively new, just not so nice |
After a long day and a night on the bus |
The bidet is pretty standard issue in Argentina |
Part of commons area |
View from our window; these are side-bar mountains |
A helpful model lights up some of the most popular hiking routes; they all go up |
Where we are |
What you come here to see, Fitz Roy and Cerro Torre and neighbors |
It rained most of our first two days, providing for a much- needed break--but then it cleared for two marvelous days; here is Fitz Roy just coming out |
This from main street in town |
Local RV |
Lots of sculpture for such a young, small town |
Entrepreneurial spirit |
Ditto; we also saw kids erecting their tents on vacant lots |
Someone's end of hike |
Well-behaved if feral pooches |
Backapackas everywhere (note tents in vacant lot) |
Tiny houses very much in fashion |
No lack of RVs |
Wind-skateboarding |
Lots of construction in progress, not all of it progressing all that quickly |
No lack of curiosities |
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