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Aside
from Los Torres, the Valle del Frances (French Valley) was the park's other crown
jewel of geological art. The valley headed north from the lake past a campsite
and up along a boulder river, pushing into valley-funneled winds that had twisted
the canopy of small leafed aerodynamic trees into shapes that act as a telltale
wind vane. The forest floor was scattered with generations of trees past, all
twisted into fantastical forms. Soon after rising steeply, the vegetation hunkered
down and the views opened up.

Rio
del Frances at the beginning of the Valle del Frances, with Cerro Paine Grande
ahead
The Paine Massif's highest peak, Cerro Paine Grande, loomed dark and high to the
west. Covered in white glaciers along its steep slopes, their precarious positions
were made evident by the calving that frequently happened. During our short time
there, we saw three glacier induced avalanches and heard about ten others, all
cascading and building into a roar of sound and wind blown snow amid bouncing
ice chunks.
The stratified back side of Los Cuernos
hovered in craggy formation to the east, and ahead the shark-fin-shaped Aleta
del Tiburon pointed to the heavens. New towers and glaciers became visible, and
it seemed that Tolkien orks would come charging out of their lairs nearby. The
valley was a place to sit and watch, to walk and see the changing perspectives,
and to above all look around in every direction.
Interactive panoramic view of Valle
del Frances / French Valley. You can use the buttons at the bottom of the image
to control the view, or else you can click in the image and control it with your
pointer and mouse button. (If a security message appeared at the top of your web
browser which indicated "active content" or "blocked content",
click on that message and allow blocked content to be able to see the panorama.)
After backtracking down Valle del Frances, we headed southwest along the lower
slopes and skirted Lago Skottsberg. We could see wind blasts in the distance bend
and rattle trees in a wave moving across the landscape, bouncing off the lake
surface below and lifting the tops of instantly created white caps. Water sheets
would twist and circle up back into the air, catching the light like Andean ghosts.
Then the rush would roll up the hillside and roar past, catching our backpacks
and unbalancing our footing, followed by the calm of a steady breeze while the
next air avalanche was bending trees in the distance again.
Refugio Paine Grande - a.k.a. Lodge Paine Grande - was an unusual oasis when it
first came into sight. Situated on the shores of Lago Pehoe, it looked like a
fancy hotel. Complete with cafeteria, store, generator-provided electricity, Internet
access by satellite, and a tiled lobby with overhead lights and formal front desk,
it was a strange contrast to all of the park's other refugios. This one was accessible
by a ferry boat, which on the other end was met by car or bus. So the place buzzes
with both dirty backpackers and groomed high maintenance tourists who are getting
out in the wilds of Chile about as far as they are willing to push a lack of conveniences.
It's a pleasant enough and well run place, though sterile and completely lacking
in the cramped camaraderie of all the other refugios.
The next day's hike north to Refugio Grey, above the drifting icebergs of Lago
Grey, was filled with a different mix of people compared to the rest of our hiking.
Within a few hours of the "hotel", we saw whiny tourists complaining
about the Patagonia weather, wearing jeans and carrying only a pocket camera for
the views they weren't even noticing. But since Glaciar Grey at the other end
of the lake was such a prime destination, we still eventually ended up again with
a new mix of appreciative international backpackers at the refugio.

Icebergs
on Lago Grey, calving from Glaciar Grey in the distance
Refugio Grey had the most interesting location of all the refugios, where the
Grey Glacier cracked and iceberged into Grey Lake, but it was also the most run
down and simple of them all. Small coed bathrooms contained moldy half-constructed
showers, and the layout was very dark and cramped. But it was all location location
location.
I pre-arranged for guides to take me up onto
Glaciar Grey itself the next morning. They outfitted me, a woman from Ireland,
and a South American man; we were given crampons, climbing harness, and ice axes.
Then we were off across the gray blue waters of Lago Grey in a small zodiac to
the western base of Glaciar Grey.

Hiking
with crampons across the top of Glaciar Grey
Walking along the glacier's crevasses, crawling into ice caves, and learning firsthand
about the mechanics of a glacier, it was definitely a well recommended highlight.
We learned basic ice climbing techniques, culminating in a top-roped ascent of
a 60 foot ice wall. Along the way, the glacier showed how it was truly a river
of ice. The center current moved faster than the sides along the "shore",
"waves" moved at different depths, and "eddies" formed behind
land formations. All of this occurred over time periods far longer than any liquid
river, but many of the same principles applied nonetheless. Watching the Irish
woman overcome her fears of the ice wall, and seeing the South American's smiles
looking into the deepest blue pressure depths of the glacier, really accentuated
how fun it all was.

Scott
climbing ice wall on Glaciar Grey

On
Glaciar Grey, above the cold waters of Lago Grey and below looming Cerro Paine
Grande
Late that afternoon we boarded the Grey II ferry boat which arrived offshore at
Refugio Grey, and we hopped into a private (and expensive) "transfer"
which taxied us along the gravel roads to Hotel Tyndall at the south edge of the
park.
Hotel Tyndall exemplified how overpriced and
underserviced the park's few hotels were. For US $160 a night, we got friendly
service and access to a very good restaurant (at additional cost), but also received
a shoddily constructed building with a barely lukewarm shower, non-functional
room heaters, about two feet of walking space on 3 sides of the bed, and the unheated
hotel/restaurant/common areas were so cold that the front desk staff wore parkas.
There was apparently one hotel in the park that charges around US $500-1000 per
night, although the included services were apparently very high quality even if
the building and rooms were not. It was all partly supply and demand, partly price
fixing, and partly the cost of having remote construction and staff, all rolled
into one exorbitant price. Karen and I kept strategizing about ways to make a
serious profitable lodging business there; opportunity in remotest Chile!
The park's cheapest road accessible accommodation was Posada Rio Serrano at US
$92 for two people in a bunk bed room with no room heater and a shared bathroom.
We got out of Hotel Tyndall and transferred over to Posada Rio Serrano since it
couldn't have been much worse than Tyndall and it cost less. The Posada had hot
showers and a wood stove in the hall plus the nearly vacant restaurant was cheaper,
so it was a good move. Although the generator ran outside our window, it was easily
solvable by ear plugs. We washed our clothes in the sink, hanging them to dry
on a clothes line shared with two freshly skinned pigs. It also positioned us
more centrally in the park, and we easily caught one of the few scheduled busses
that passed through a few times each day.
Salto Grande,
a major waterfall, roars its watershed from Lago Nordenskjold to Lago Pehoe below.
The volume of water melting off all the glaciers and snowfields we had hiked past
over the preceding week was very evident: the water not only moved fast, but it
was also deep at the drop's edge. From there, a one hour hike took us to the south
shore of Lago Nordenskjold for a distant perspective on our recent trek which
had been along the north shore. Los Cuernos and the French Valley shone for us,
and even Refugio Cuernos was visible among the dark green trees over toward Almirante
Nieto. The walk was surrounded by yellow-green pillow shaped bushes in a fluffy
quilt pattern across the hillsides, ending at the lookout with a wind that you
could lean on.

Lago
Nordenskjold, looking across to Cerro Paine Grande, Valle del Frances, and Los
Cuernos
The next morning we were met by our kayak guides Rodrigo and Tadeo, complete with
a gear-filled van. Three MBA students from Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business
also showed up as part of their Argentina-Chile-Brazil trip, and we all headed
to the road's end onto the Rio Serrano. After introductions, gearing up, paring
down, and getting a safety talk, we disembarked and were immediately moved along
by the strong current downstream.
Kayaking the Rio
Serrano added another layer to understanding and experiencing the area of Patagonia
between Torres del Paine and Bernardo O'Higgins parks. Although the river moved
away from the picturesque mountainscapes of Torres del Paine, it brought the valley
foothills, forests, and estancias (ranches) into better focus. Tree lined river
banks flowed by, with wild parakeets, Chilean finches, and gliding condors above.
Waterfalls flowed down hillsides to the river's forested pastures, where startled
beef steer watched us cautiously. Finger glaciers of the massive Patagonian Ice
Field were frozen in their slow moving cascade down mountainsides. The river's
only obstacles were wind-whipped waves, bank-sweeping currents, submerged trees,
and one portage, but it was mostly easy going.

Kayaking
on the Rio Serrano (photo courtesy of tripmate Doug Perrygo)
The weather was classic Patagonia: highly variable and windy. Breezes would start
light and then build, throwing water drops from both our paddles sideways into
my face as each blade was raised for the next stroke. Each bend in the river brought
headwinds, or calm, or wind to our backs. When behind us, we could lift our paddles
and use our blades as sails, feeling the pull down our arms propelling us very
rapidly down river. On the third day, we experienced winds and waves that Rodrigo
had only guided people through a few times in his nine years as a full time guide.
Upon reaching the open sound and rounding a promontory of land, swells pushed
the nose of our double kayak airborne before slapping back down and washing over
our burrowed bow deck and spray skirts. It was important to be constantly paddling:
half to push into the wind and half for stability. After returning on that stretch
from the Balmaceda Glacier, the following seas constantly picked up our boat and
turned it perpendicular to our route, necessitating nonstop steering corrections.
Everyone made it through, though another kayak group got turned back and could
not continue on the route.
Campsites were well selected,
one at a calm river cove on top of a million cow pies, and the other at the base
of the lagoon formed by the Serrano Glacier. Lots to eat, too. The guides would
start welcome warming campfires while we ate appetizers of cheese and crackers,
followed by either a rice seafood dish with strawberries and cream dessert, or
a creamy Italian pasta dish with sweetened fruits for dessert. Red wine flowed,
and the pisco sour gave us the extra kick of a buzz.

Karen
on the banks of the Rio Serrano, where we camped at a wide cove in the river
The MBA students started off a bit discombobulated in their planning and prep,
but quickly got everything together and turned out to be great tripmates. We shared
stories, played cards, learned about each other's lives. The group spunkiness
made it all the more fun.
Even better, our lead guide
Rodrigo was a terrific resource, competent guide, and nice guy. After nine years
of guiding kayak and trekking groups through the area, he still took his personal
vacations there too. His love for it all came out in his enthusiasm and helpfulness,
while he was also a smart trip leader who balanced safety with client interests
and ensured everyone was given attention and having fun. Apparently word had spread
about him over time, and he also consulted with estancias during the off season
to educate them and plan for implementing tourism opportunities. He said his biggest
challenge was convincing ranch owners that visitors would actually pay to do things
which required them to work, sweat, and get dirty; that was outside their experience
and definition of a real vacation.

Guides
Rodgrigo and Tadeo cooking "Indian Bread" fungus for us, which grows
on local trees
The trip was wrapped with a several hour ferry ride from our camp at Serrano Glacier
all the way back to the docks at Puerto Natales via the Seno Ultima Esperanza.
Along the way we stopped at an estancia for barbeque lunch, and were visited out
on the water by dolphins leaping in our bow wave. As we pulled up to Puerto Natales,
the huge Navimag ferry "Magallenes" sat waiting for us.
For four days and four nights we traveled by ferry north through Chile's Pacific
coast of islands, fjords, and open ocean waterways. It was an interesting alternative
to the airline and bus options, plus there actually were no roads connecting the
southern Patagonia area of the country with the mid-country ferry destination
of Puerto Montt. It was the country's semi-organized way to see the intricate
channels and unpopulated lands which comprise so much of the southern third of
Chile.
After completing some quick errands in Puerto
Natales, we funneled like livestock onto the industrial looking ferry with newly
met people from Switzerland and Holland. Our bunks were open dorm style, with
no doors or privacy, plus there was a small locker carefully arranged by us for
four days of locker pile access. By chance, we were on the bunks above the same
Dutch couple we got to know while boarding. Showers and bathroom facilities were
shared, although I accidentally took my first shower in a private single bathroom
reserved for one of the few private cabins. Oops, but it was nice anyhow.
The ferry was laid out on multiple levels, all with different purposes. At the
two lowest levels, one of which was open air, were parked all the trucks, containers,
and general cargo. Depending on wind direction, the smell of cattle could be pungent
from there. The ferry was originally started in 1978 when Argentina refused to
allow Chilean freight trucks through their country to get around to the remote
southern Patagonia regions of Chile that we were departing from. Over the years,
passengers gradually became more interested in the idea of traveling through Chile's
remote fjords and island chains even if it was on a freight ferry, so the third
level was gradually converted over to cabins, dorm bunks, and bathrooms. In addition,
a dining area was created on the fourth level up, and a pub/lounge on the fifth.
Pilothouse, crew quarters, and machinery rooms were all interspersed, as well
as sparse accommodations for the truck drivers.

The
island views are likely not properly appreciated by the cargo and cattle
It was not fancy by any means, but the food was good and they made decent attempts
at entertainment for the passengers. An occasional video was played, a bilingual
guide gave a daily informative presentation (once in Spanish and then again in
English), and they even had a dance party plus a night of bingo in the pub. "Happy
Sour" (happy hour for the tasty pisco sour alcohol concoction) was always
announced and handled by Mr. Chicken, the bartender.
The voyage departed from Puerto Natales very early in the morning while the passengers
slept and began winding its way north through a watery labyrinth of islands and
passes. First constricting down to the tight Paso White (White Pass), and then
opening up among numerous islands, the view was constantly shifting near and far.
In the distance, snow-capped volcanoes appeared above the uninhabited green brown
foreshore. Gray hanging foggy clouds started just a few hundred feet up the steep
barren rocky shores, creating a ceiling over our boat for the first day. But then
the skies opened and the winter wear was swapped for sunscreen lotion and T-shirts
for the remainder of the trip. Along the way, we were visited by whales and dancing
porpoises doing sideways launches into the air.

Cruising
through Paso White on the Navimag ferry "Magallenes"
Our only land excursion was to the remote waterside community of Puerto Eden.
Indigenous men on small leaky brightly painted boats came out to take us ashore,
where we could explore one of the few remaining outposts of a fast dwindling native
group. The entire town was circumnavigated on wooden planks, touching upon all
of the brightly colored but peeling corrugated metal shacks. It was a place completely
centered around the water: every home was at the shore, and everyone owned a wooden
motor boat for fishing. There was not a single car or ATV; no roads and nowhere
to go.

The
boats of Puerto Eden
As with trekking in the Torres del Paine, much of the fun was meeting people from
around the world. I literally talked all day with strangers who became friends.
The close quarters, small number of people, and shared travel bonds started some
great conversations. We swapped kayak stories with Laurel the river guide and
writer from Vancouver Island, plus learned about trapping animals and flying float
planes from her husband Brad. John was a wealth of information on personal timber
harvesting and off-the-grid living in Canada. There was the German couple touring
Chile and Argentina; they worked at BMW so we compared both car and trekking notes.
Adrian taught us about cheese making in Australia, and I debated with Welsh Sam
about the philosophical implications of different economic models plus how ideologically
different teaching methods can be combined. And so many more conversations on
deck, at a meal, or in the pub.

Passengers
enjoying a sunny day on the Pacific Ocean from the top deck, with the Andes mountains
and volcanoes as a backdrop
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