Argentina // Patagonia

The Fitz Roy sector of Parque Nacional Los Glaciares

The northernmost section of Parque Nacional Los Glaciares, the Fitz Roy sector, contains some of the most breathtakingly beautiful mountain peaks on the planet. Two concentric jaws of jagged teeth puncture the Patagonian sky with the 3405m incisor of Monte Fitz Roy at the centre of the massif. This sculpted peak was known to the Tehuelche as El Chaltén, “The Mountain that Smokes” or “The Volcano”, owing to the almost perpetual presence of a scarf of cloud attached to its summit. It is not inconceivable, however, that the Tehuelche were using the term in a rather more metaphorical sense to allude to the fiery pink colour that the rock walls turn when struck by the first light of dawn. Francisco Moreno saw fit to name the pagan summit after the evangelical captain of the Beagle, who, with Charles Darwin, had viewed the Andes from a distance, after having journeyed up the Río Santa Cruz by whaleboat to within 50km of Lago Argentino. Alongside Monte Fitz Roy rise Cerro Poincenot and Aguja Saint-Exupéry, while set behind them is the forbidding needle of Cerro Torre, a finger that stands in bold defiance of all the elements that the Hielo Continental Sur hurls against it.

The locally vaunted claim that the northern sector of Parque Nacional Los Glaciares is Argentina’s trekking paradise is fully justified, and the closer you get to the mountains, the clearer their grandeur becomes. One of the beauties of the park is that those with limited time, or not in peak fitness, can still make worthwhile day-walks using El Chaltén as a base. The shortest of these walks is to Chorrillo del Salto, a plunging twenty-metre waterfall, framed by a moss-green cliff and adorned by the skeletons of drowned lenga trees, ten minutes off the RP-23, 3km past Campamento Madsen north of town.

For those who enjoy camping, the quintessential three-day Fitz Roy/Cerro Torre loop at the centre of the park makes a good option, and can be done in either direction. The advantage of going anticlockwise is that you avoid the steep climb up to Lagunas Madre y Hija and you have the prevailing wind behind you when returning to El Chaltén. However, the biggest gamble is always what the weather will be like around Cerro Torre, so if this unpredictable peak is visible on day one, you might like to head for it first. The longer interlocking circuit to the north will add at least another two days.

Adequate outdoor clothing is essential in the park at all times of the year, as snowstorms are possible even in midsummer. Note that there is a ban on lighting campfires in the park, so if you need your food hot, make careful use of gas stoves; horses are no longer allowed in the park, either, owing to the damage they were doing to the terrain but some operators now use environmentally friendly llamas as pack animals for treks.

Read More
  • The Cerro Torre controversy
  • The Hielo Continental Sur