Patagonia - A travel and trekking guidebook to Argentina's Los Glaciares National Park
 
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Patagonia trekking - Los Glaciares National Park

There are 35 trekking combinations in the book, detailed below, plus information on trekking peaks that mostly require climbing experience.

For each trek, the book has gradings, start/end points, full route information, topical notes, distances, height gained, appropriate campsites and what terrain you can expect.

Disclaimer - Mountains are dangerous places. Take responsibility for your own actions and ensure you have the necessary skills to keep safe. Although none of the treks require advanced climbing skills, some of these treks require experience and a level of comfort with heights and exposure and, depending on the season, the necessary skills with ice axe and crampons. You are completely responsible for your own safety and should seek expert tuition if in doubt of your own abilities. Grading rationalisation is shown at foot of the page.

Trek summary

Grade

Trek

Min. no. of days (recommended)

Guide recommended

Summary

1A Laguna Torre 1(2) No Do first if decent weather forecast
1B Laguna de los Tres 1(2) No Stay overnight at
Campamento Poincenot
1A Campamento Poincenot 1(2) No Popular trekking campsite
1A Campamento Agostini 1(2) No Popular trekking campsite
1A Campamento Laguna Capri 1(2) No Less busy trekking campsite
1A Source of Rio Fitz Roy 1(2) No Easy excursion from Campamento Agostini
1A Mirador Maestri 1(2) No Better views of Cerro Torre, Torre Egger and
Cerro Standhardt
1A Ice trekking – Glacier Grande 1(1) Yes Guided treks regularly
available in El Chalten
1A Piedra del Fraile 1(2) No Sheltered campsite in
Rio Electrico valley
1B Piedras Blancas Glacier 1(2) No Sheds icebergs into small glacial lake
1B+ Laguna Sucia 1(2) No Source of Rio Blanco
2A Lago Toro 1(2) No Combine with Paso del Viento
2B Loma del Pliegue Tumbado 1(3) No Great views of Torres and Fitz Roy skyline
2B+ Rio Pollone valley 1(2) No Different views of
Fitz Roy
2B+ Piedra Negra 1(2) No Steep hillside to high mountain cirque.
Great views
2B+ Cerro Electrico lookout 1(2) No Great views to Fitz Roy
2B+ Campamento Poincenot to Campamento Agostini 1(3) No See the ‘postcard’ views to Campamento Agostini from both the main glacial lakes
2B+ Refugio los Troncos to Campamento Poincenot 1(3) No Passes Piedras Blancas Glacier
2B+ Refugio los Troncos to Campamento Agostini 1(4) No Multi-day trek taking in most of the trekking campsites
2B+ Paso Agachonas 2(3) Yes

Rarely used pass, tyrolean traverse required

2B+ Paso del Viento 3(3) Yes Easiest way to see Southern Patagonian Ice Cap
2B+ Paso Huemul 2(3) Yes Great views to Lago Viedma and the Southern Patagonian
Ice Cap
2B+ Cerro Madsen 1(2) No Easy trekking peak/scramble
2B+ Loma del Diablo 1(1) No Easy trekking peak
2G Paso Cuadrado 1(2) Yes Stupendous views
2G Polish/Norwegian bivouacs 2(3) Yes Close-up views of Cerro Torre
3G Paso Marconi 3(3) Yes Better views than Paso del Viento but slightly
more adventurous
3G Punta Fina 2(3) Yes Trekking peak
3G Paso Cuadrado to
Filo del Hombre Sentado (Sitting Man Ridge)
3(3) Yes Trek below the
spectacular west face of Monte Fitz Roy
3G Paso Marconi to
Paso del Viento
6(9) Yes Smooth, flat, thick - as close to polar exploration as you are likely to get
3G+ Paso Guillaumet 2(3) Yes Short climbing pitch. Rare views to the ice cap and east to the
steppes
3G+ Paso Superior 1(2) Yes Steep snow slopes to climbers' snow caves
3G+ Head of the
Piedras Blancas Glacier
1(2) Yes Unbeatable views of Fitz Roy
3G+ Paso Guillaumet to
Paso Superior
2(3) Yes Traverses right underneath Fitz Roy skyline
3G+ Paso Cuadrado to
Filo del Hombre Sentado to Paso Guillaumet to Paso Superior
3(5) Yes Multi-day glacial travel with terrific views

Grade information

Dislaimer - Grading is by its nature subjective and you are solely responsible for ensuring you are properly experienced, prepared and equipped for any activity you undertake. The recommendation of a guide is based on a fit adult with no experience of glacial travel or mountaineering techniques. If you are experienced in the mountains, a guide may well not be required. Only you can judge.

The grades given for the treks in the book are based on a fit adult with previous trekking experience but no experience of glacial travel or mountaineering techniques. Grades are on a two-tiered basis, the first (number) detailing how fit you should be to enjoy the trip and the second (letter) being the type of terrain you should expect to encounter. Each grade should be assumed to include everything from the grades preceding it.

1. Basic level of fitness
2. Intermediate level of fitness, trekking experience desirable
3. High level of competence, fitness and desire. Winter trekking and camping experience required

A Low level walks on good paths. Mild inclines
B Some off-trail walking, steep inclines, possibly short periods of stable glacial travel
B+ Off-trail trekking experience required
G Glacial travel. Ropes, ice axes and crampons required
G+ Scrambling/climbing experience recommended

 

   
 

All content on this site copyright of Colin Henderson or Zagier & Urruty Publications, PO Box 94, Sucursal 19, C1419ZAA, Buenos Aires, Argentina. No part may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any informational storage or retrieval system without written permission.

The author and publisher do not accept responsibility for any loss, error, injury or inconvenience incurred by people using the information contained in these web pages. Trekking in a mountain environment is a potentially dangerous activity. You are completely responsible for your own safety and should seek expert tuition if in doubt of your own abilities.