Tuesday, 3 July 2012

No gas but lots of dogs in Bariloche & a pit stop in San Martin de Los Andes (29 May – 3 June 2012)



After a great time in El Calafate and El Chalten we boarded a bus to Bariloche together with some of our new found travel amigos. We had dreaded the 30-hour bus ride a fair bit but luckily numerous violent movies, police controls and a flat tire kept us entertained and we managed to make some more friends on the way. Argentinean buses are actually rather nice, they served food similar to what you get on a plane and our ‘cama’ seats could nearly go flat! So we can’t really complain but we were still happy when we finally arrived in Bariloche around 10pm, craving a hot meal and a hot shower. Little did we know… 


After dropping our stuff at the nice and cheap hostel El Quijote we went to a nearby restaurant where the waiter mumbled something about ‘gas’ that we all didn’t really understand and (without showing us the menu) suggested we’d take the vegetarian platter. We all agreed and the food was pretty good, but just a few hours later we understood what he had tried to tell us.  There had been an accident at a construction site and the whole city of Bariloche had no gas. Which meant: no cooking, no heating, no hot water. Nobody knew when the gas would be turned on again. But at least this explained the temperature of our room and why I had the coldest shower of my life. Anyway, what doesn’t kill us makes us stronger…  

Once we had established what’s happening, our little international travel group (Helga and Katharina from Austria, Karim from France, Bernard from Canada and Rich & I) went for a little walk through Swiss-like Bariloche, where trees wear scarves and where Argentineans place big St Bernard dogs around the plaza to try and get some money off tourists.





Bariloche is surrounded by beautiful lakes and mountains and the best way to explore the area is by bike. So off we went to ride along the Circuito Chico. Soon into the ride we made another friend: an affectionate dog that Ritchie quickly named ‘Hans’ in honour of our German travel amigo who we parted from in El Calafate. Hans turned out to be quite a sporty dog and he actually followed us all the way along the 28km ride. I must add that dogs in South America are usually let loose during the day (which also helps breed a nice population of stray dogs) and therefore we first thought that Hans would help us keep the angry dogs at bay but it turned out it was the other way round… We must have passed about 50-60 dogs and they all had the same mission: Kill Hans! So Hans usually hid somewhere between the wheels of our bikes and our laps. Not the nicest experience when you where too tight to pay for rabies shots back in Australia… Luckily we all survived – including Hans – and the Circuito Chico took us through some stunning landscapes! 





There was still no gas when we got back to Bariloche, which meant that most restaurants were shut or only served cold food (to Ritchie's disgust McDonalds only served salad), so we spent a while in the supermarket to figure out what we could have for dinner. For some reason Argentinean supermarkets aren’t stocked very well and don’t seem to have anything that you can just heat up in the microwave, so we ended up making a bean salad followed by a heap of chocolate. Unfortunately we had bought the cheap chocolate and whatever they put in it does not agree with Ritchie’s stomach. So he spent the next day at the hostel while our travel amigos and I walked up Cerro Companario to enjoy an amazing view over the lake district. 




Back in town, Karim and I went to one of the many infamous chocolate shops where I enjoyed the best hot chocolate of my life. And I must say this definitely made up for the coldest shower of my life! Mmmmmhmmmmmm! 


The next day, our little international travel group parted ways and Rich and I joined Melanie and Urs (Switzerland) for a quick pit stop in San Martin de Los Andes. It’s a pleasant little town also surrounded by lakes and mountains but unfortunately we were there just before the skiing season and therefore the town was pretty dead. 






We went for a nice little walk to a mirador but the highlight of this little stint was probably the drive through a national park on the way to Pucon, Chile. Especially the sight that awaited us at the Chilean boarder was amazing and got us very excited about what we were going to do at our next destination…





THE OTHER SIDE OF THE STORY

Right! The truth in technicolour! 

Having survived the cold we pressed north to Bariloche. I learned very early in our trip not to ask too much about where we are going. It’s best to keep my sometime erratic imagination in the dark because any respectable drug mule knows that nerves = firing squad. I inadvertently found out through various French sources that we were in fact going to be on a bus for 30 hours. Instantaneously a realisation rushed up my spine much like the waves of nausea that sweep over a pregnant woman’s body just before vomiting. I had never spent that much time alone without distraction. What was going to happen? What was I going to do? Who was I going to talk to? Who was going to annoy me? What if the toilette was blocked and everyone has noro virus?  And what about the cocaine in my bottom! Charly was quick to see the anxiety gaining momentum behind my silence and offered  a reward for my impending suffering much like a bribe offered by a parent to a child who is about to have root canal. Charly stated that we were indeed heading north, therefore, the temperature could only increase. Travelling north for 30 hours… her theory seemed sound so I bought a book and charged every electronic device I had in preparation for hysterical boredom. 


 As Charly said above that buses in Argentina were surprisingly good except when you have to flush the toilette with the last of your Fanta because there is no more water to flush! I would like to take this opportunity now to thank the person who went before me who obviously had chilli con carne at some stage.
Well into our journey we received what may have been dinner? Charly described earlier that “the food was comparable to what you would receive on a plane”.  That might be true if Amelia Earhart was the pilot.  The bread/building material resembled something that would have been exchanged by Cuba in return for textiles just after the instigation of the trade embargo. As a crude measure of determining which decade the bread was baked in, I knocked it on my fold out table. It broke the table. Thinking that indigestible dry food would be good on a journey like this one I thought that I should probably have some. Upon opening the ?bread roll?  revealed a contents that resembled the colour grey. Probably an organic compound. I didn’t have my mass spectrometer handy to determine the origin of this matter; therefore, the mystery grey stuff had to go into the ‘I abstain from dinner tonight’ category. I cherish the decision not to eat that bread roll to this day because one should not compromise on their principals even if they are hungry.  


Frequently throughout our journey the bus was stopped by presumably highway patrol looking for I don’t know what. Each time they boarded the bus they yelled out PAPERS! This startled most of the people sleeping but not me, wide awake…waiting. What for? I didn’t know.  The first few times I was worried because I was travelling on my British passport and I wasn’t to certain if the sting of the Falkland Islands misunderstanding had left the memory of the average Argentine police officer. Needless to say, every time I heard PAPERS! I desperately wanted my passport to make the clear distinction that I was in fact borne in Scotland and not England.  To my relief/annoyance my passport was not checked once but to the fear/confusion of our American friend Gladys, who has Guatemalan heritage, she was interrogated every time. The intensity questioning seemed to intensify with each subsequent checkpoint. I wanted to help and defend her but I thought; this bus doesn’t need another hero. That honour went to the guy who ate the chilli con carne. 100mg of Xanex later and it was the next day.  30hours what a breeze!



Tuesday, 19 June 2012

Winterwonderlands in El Calafate and El Chalten (23-28 May 2012)


I’ll start with my thoughts of our stops in El Calafate and El Chalten, and after the great success of “the other side of the story” I’ll try to get Rich to write down his flowery version afterwards. 

After our great (my thoughts) time in Chile’s far south, we caught a bus to El Calafate to see what more wonders Argentina’s side of Patagonia has to offer. Similar to Puerto Natales, El Calafate itself isn’t that special but it’s proximity to the Perito Moreno Glacier drives many backpackers to this little town. 

This brings me back to a promise that I made a couple of posts ago. I wanted to tell you more about the advantages of travelling in winter. So apart from the amazing colours of the vegetation, the main advantage is that instead of hordes of backpackers we have Patagonia pretty much to ourselves! What was maybe a little awkward at the 100-bed refugio, is pretty awesome when you hike through amazing landscapes and instead of hundreds of other hikers you see a handful on a three-day hike. The weather mostly isn’t that bad either with less wind than in summer and rather ‘mild’ temperatures between 0-8 degrees (when we were there). Another advantage is that many things are cheaper and that we don’t have to plan ahead because there are always spare rooms, seats, tickets for everything. So I actually think that autumn/winter is a great time to travel through Patagonia!


Anyway, back to El Calafate: as mentioned the main attraction is the Perito Moreno Glacier and what an attraction this is! 

30km long, up to 5km wide, about 70m high above the water and 170m total ice depth. Perito Moreno is one of only a few glaciers that are still growing and the sounds from the expanding ice and the sight of this majestic giant are just breathtaking! So I’ll catch my breath and let some pictures do the talking.



My physical wounds from our hike through Torres del Paine National Park had healed by then, so I thought it’d be time to treat Ritchie’s mental wounds with a nice hiking trip through the Los Glaciares National Park around El Chalten. Unfortunately the weather didn’t allow for the 3-day treatment, so we just went on a little hike to a beautiful waterfall and a one-day hike to Cerro Fitz Roy with two experienced ‘mountaineers’ from Austria, Helga and Katharina.  



The day-hike took us through some beautiful autumn and winter landscapes, past a frozen ‘laguna’ and then to the foot of Cerro Fitz Roy. The sky was very dramatic all day and the view of the mountain therefore changed every minute which resulted in me taking way too many pictures again which subsequently means that I have to post quite a few… 


After our short trip to El Chalten we went back to El Calafate where we reunited with Ritchie’s BFFs Hans (German) and Karim (French) before heading off on a 30-hour bus ride to Bariloche.      



THE OTHER SIDE OF THE STORY

These places were really nice. I have nothing to add.  



Saturday, 2 June 2012

Wind, snow, sweat and blood in Torres del Paine National Park, Chile (17-23 May 2012)



After a fantastic time at the end of the world we slowly started to make our way up through Patagonia. A 13-hour bus ride took us to Puerto Natales in Chile. It’s a cute little town but the main attraction lies outside of it: Torres del Paine National Park! A Mecca for hikers and we were about to find out if our bodies and minds were up to this challenge. Initially we planned a 4-day hike through the national park to see the Glacier Grey and the Valle del Frances. This was going to be our first proper hike and due to the winter temperatures in Southern Patagonia we didn’t really want to camp, so the only option for us was to stay in the ‘Refugio Paine Grande’. Unfortunately the management of this refugio pretty much doubled the prices only a couple of days before we left for our hike (welcome to South America) and therefore we decided to only stay in the park for 3 days. 


We were a little nervous when we were dropped off at an open field, not really knowing where we had to go; if this guy would really come back to pick us up in 3 days and if we were even going to get back there in time…. Luckily we ran into two Brazilian guys at the very beginning of the trek: Rodrigo and Rodrigo! The Rodrigos were on a big trekking trip through Patagonia and had some great stories to tell, which made us not even really notice the 18kms that we had to walk. The first few hours of the trek were over an open field and Patagonia’s famous wind was BLOOOOOOOOWING! We had the wind in our faces for most of the way and Rich was not happy that his wind-breaker-beard hadn’t fully developed in time… About 1 ½ hours away from the refugio, we arrived at Lago Pohoe. What an amazing sight! An incredibly turquoise lake (due to the glacier water) surrounded by scrubs and trees in red and orange and a massive mountain in the back that disappears in clouds. WOW! Unfortunately some (or quite a lot) of this amazing landscape was destroyed by a big fire in December when a trekker tried to burn his toilet paper... '


The whole area around the Refugio Paine Grande is burnt but miraculously the refugio didn’t get touched (only the camp site and its amenities got destroyed). So luckily we were able to have a roof over our heads for the next two nights and after 5 ½ hours of hiking we were rather happy to arrive. Our enthusiastic ‘hola’ unfortunately didn’t get returned by the guy who was looking after the place and we got a rather unfriendly introduction telling us that the Rodrigos weren’t allowed to camp (even though this is still marked as a camp site on maps and the next camp site is more than 2 hours away); that staying there was expensive; that we wouldn’t get anything for our money apart from a mattress and shower and that we could cook food outside in the rain. Shame we were told we could use the kitchen and didn’t bring a stove… Rich and I managed to sweet talk the guy into using the kitchen but the Rodrigos weren’t as lucky and had to quickly move on since it was getting dark (the poor guys had to walk through the pitch dark for 2 hours!). Staying at this place was rather interesting. In summer, the refugio sleeps about 100 people (+250 campers) but we had this place to ourselves! We cooked in the professional kitchen and had a little conversation with the park ranger (who was cooking half a cow) using the 40 words of Spanish we knew (Yay, we doubled our vocabulary since Buenos Aires).  Then we retreated into our sleeping bags, still wearing our thermals, beanies and gloves since the refugio wasn’t heated. 


When we woke up at 8.30am it was still dark outside and inside – power only works from 6pm-11pm. We put on our many layers of thermals and Goretex and went on a 22km hike from the refugio to the Valle del Frances. At Camp Italiano we ran into the Rodrigos and continued the hike with them. When we were filling up our bottles at a waterfall we heard some very loud thunder: an avalanche was coming down on the other side of the valley! Another WOW moment! The weather wasn’t that great and it was rather cloudy but just as we reached the mirador/lookout, the clouds opened and presented an amazing mountain range. Perfect! The wind at the mirador was intense but up there on the mountains it must have been incredible… 


That night we were joined by Angela, Joe and Max who we had already met at the hostel in Puerto Natales. They managed to get the refugio guy to light a fire, so we could sit around for a little while and dry our sweaty clothes – yes, even Patagonia’s winter can make you sweat! 


The next morning we woke up to a blizzard. Perfect conditions for the 18km hike back to ‘administracion’ where we were going to be picked up J The snow was shooting past us horizontally as we were stumbling along the first few kilometres but I must say, apart from the glacier, avalanche and mountain range, this was another highlight of our hike! The weather then cleared up and we walked through a beautifully transformed landscape. Just 5 minutes before we reached our destination the snow started again turning me into a penguin within seconds.

I really loved this hike and even my feet forgave me quickly! I think Rich will need to speak for himself, so here you go:

First of all, I was forced to write on this blog as I was forced to go to Torres del Paine. Secondly, my account is more of an accurate description of what had transpired. Charly had mentioned above that ‘Torres del Paine National Park! A Mecca for hikers’…..Well I’m not a hiker…. I’m a complainer and boy did I complain until my throat hurt, which was not long as the 75km/h wind was drying every mucosal surface on/in my body. Charly also mentioned that we met two Brazilians on the walk, which is true. They were very nice and Brazilian but unlike Charly, my knees and ankles noticed the 18km walk. 


Our destination was the Refugio, a hotel nestled in the cuff if a mountain range to protect from relentless wind. When we arrived, it was seemingly empty yet it was open…. No one around. A hundred-bed hotel in the middle of no where, no lights, no one around. A little strange to say the least. Had everyone been eaten? I didn’t know. What I did know was that I was tired and disgruntled so whatever beast existed in this horror film, I was prepared to fight until I had a bed. In the fantastically empty void which was the Refugio’s foyer I yelled out OLAH! No reply, the OLAH got louder. So loud in fact that I became confident that I could swear in English and Spanish at the top of my lungs, which I did.  In this time Charly and Brazilian number 1 had circled the hotel to find two guys lying in separate beds in one of the rooms around the back. Were they dead? I didn’t know. If they were we had to leave immediately! As we were discussing our next move, a figure appeared out of the belly of the Refugio it was Diego Maradona.


A stout man, wearing a shirt too small for his build and when he stretched I was able to see his belly button with fluff in it. His demeanor reflected mine, confused as to why anybody would venture out there in the tail end of autumn. As he started to dictate the terms and conditions of the establishment, he passively disclosed that the price had increased over night 70% and there was no power for 19 hours a day. I was not happy and was only marginally able to hold my faculties together. 70%, who did this fat personification of Diego Maradona think he was. In addition, chubby Maradona stated that we were unable to use the kitchen facilities. My angry disposition shifted gears. As the intensity of my rage increased he cautiously mentioned ‘ife u don ike ehhh u can goa’. I realised immediately that we were in his pocket, probably next to a hamburger. Diego’s hardline approach seemed to weaken as he said that we would be able to use the kitchen facility. Oh, so gracious I’m sure every one thought but not me. I knew exactly that it was crafty political move or a move of self-preservation as I did not hide my emotions and we were after all, in the middle of nowhere. The Brazilians left and Charly and I checked in. 


The first night was cold and with a screaming gust outside, made most of the doors in the building slam and open. I was terrified and Charly was asleep. For a straight hour I stared at the door, my mind ablaze with every single ghost/insane host scenario possible. The art that decorated the Refugio were early photographs of indigenous people of the area probably displaced by Diego and his Refugio. The look on their faces resembled a person planning revenge on backpackers.  I was ready to battle anything that would have entered our room with the aid of using a sleeping Charly as armor. Its best if she didn’t know that way she would have been easier to manoeuvre a ridged Charly would have been no good.  Awaking the next morning and realising that we couldn’t really tell if we had been murdered in our sleep we got ready for our walk any way. For the next for four hours I stared at Charly’s heels as we walked and walked and walked. We arrived at our destination, stayed for 3 mins, Charly took 31 photos and then returned. 4 hours looking at heels.


The following night was much more relaxed as I knew that Diego only wanted to be left alone to eat pie and that the slamming doors were not demons. The next day we woke up in a John Woo film. A blizzard had developed over night and was on the war path. After acknowledging that it was in fact my first blizzard I realised that we had to walk in it. 


Enough is enough, I obviously survived so there really is no need to keep waffling.  I do hope that this teaches Charly not to ask me again to contribute to the blog as Charly’s reflection is more endearing. Did I mention the Dogs?.....

More photos here (Warning: don’t look at the last photo if you’re not interested in the post-hike state of my feet):  https://picasaweb.google.com/109362659982164453049/TorresDelPaineBest_of?authuser=0&feat=directlink