I had a thread up asking for advice for a Patagonia trip so I figured I owed you guys some photos. Went the last couple of weeks of March and I'm still digging through photos but I have enough to tell the story.
It was a long day of travel getting there, and time was somewhat compressed as the forecast showed some bad weather coming and we wanted to get a hike in while it was warm and sunny. Salt Lake to Atlanta to Santiago to Punta Arenas to car rental then drive to Puerto Natales, 36ish hours.
Puerto Natales, which is the gateway to Torres del Paine:
We were doing the "W" trek in the park, and day one was the hike to Base Torres. All of the info that we were told beforehand was that this is an 11 mile hike with about 2500 feet of elevation gain. Actual stats were closer to 14 miles and 4800 feet of elevation gain.
We had clear skies and warm temps, but at two spots on the trail the wind nearly knocked me over. You hear about the wind in Patagonia a lot, and it turns out it's no joke. Wind that would have me scrambling for shelter in the Tetons or Wasatch seems to barely phase the locals.
That night in the tent was loud, and at times semi-frightening. No idea what the gusts were, but the next day there were several shredded tents around the campground. We had opted to rent tents for the hike, where they are set up for you when you arrive into the camp, so at least I wasn't worried about breakage.
The next day the weather had come in, some rain but not too bad, wind had settled some. Since we were a day 'early,' we had and extra day to drive around the park and see some other sites.
Day three we have to hike to Camp Frances. It rained most of this day, with the clouds moving on and off of the peaks. Made for some really moody looking scenes and wild creek crossings.
Trail maintenance and good trail building practice doesn't seem to be a thing in the park yet. Even though they get a ton of hikers. Lots of braided trails, running water on trails, wash outs, etc.
Camp Frances is a dank, dark hole of a place where the cafeteria is a long walk down the hill from the tent sites. There is no where warm and dry to hang out and was the worst of the camps we saw. The plus side of Frances is that it puts you closer to Valley Frances for the next days hike, makes the viewpoints (miradors) up that valley more reachable for a reasonable day. Speaking of cafeteria, we also opted to have all of our meals provided, so no need to carry food or a stove. You eat dinner and breakfast at an assigned time with a large group, family style service. Similar to some Canadian huts with more people and no dishes. A bagged lunch is provided each day.
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