Navigation Menu

Smoking Mountains Fitz Ray Trek, Patagonia, Argentina

Fitz Roy Trek, Patagonia, Argentina

Image Cradit : Nitin Kanish


El Chaltén to Laguna Torre to Poincenot Camp to Laguna Eléctrico
Round-Trip: 36 miles, 4 to 7 days
When to Go: February to March to avoid the crowds of midsummer and enjoy stable fall weather when the infamous Patagonian winds abate
Hike among Argentina’s fabled Fitz Roy Massif, the iconic ridge where the peaks of Poincenot, St. Exupery, and 11,073-foot Fitz Roy itself rise out of the steppes of Patagonia like a vision. This grand tour gives you three views of Fitz at sunrise, with Cerro Torre and Marconi Pass thrown in for good measure. This ramble through Delaware-size Los Glaciares National Park takes you from gnarled, spooky beech forests and open plains to glaciers, roaring waterfalls, and granite monoliths afire with orange dawn light.
Insider Tip: From Camp Poincenot, hike up in the predawn hours to Laguna de los Tres by headlamp for the full impact of sunrise on the Fitz Roy Massif.
20 best images of Monster Mountains . they are world best mountains.


The classic route to reach there 


Classic Route: An 11km meander across gentle slopes to the foot of inspiring Cerro Torre (3,128m), joining the Rio Fitz Roy en route. Diversion at Laguna Torre brings you to an even better viewpoint before circling back to Camp Jim Bridwell as Glaciar Torre looms behind. The next day traces a path up to high plateau, then winding through the Lagunas Nieta, Hija, Capri and Madre. Overnight at Camp Poincenot, and the following day take two separate diversions: over moraine and boulder-field to a rose-tinted Fitz Roy sunrise at Laguna de los Tres, and a second, wilder and more rugged, to the rarely visited shore of Laguna Sucia below Glaciar Rio Blanco.  Then, its 9km or so along Rio Blancos banks and up the Rio Electrico valley. Retrace your steps to Camp Poincenot to return, taking a valley to your left for further rewards in scenery and atmosphere, overnighting in the glorious refuge perched above Laguna Capri and looking out over range, river and glacier to Fitz Roys serrated peak.



A Circuit: This can only be done by hikers with experience of glacier-walking, and guided. Follow the classic route as above, continuing on from camp Piedra del Fraile past desolate Laguna Electrico and circling back behind Fitz Roy, and down and around Glaciar Torre, yielding fantastic views of Fitz Roys north face.



Los Glaciares National Park, host to the fantastic Fitz Roy Massif, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and, at 8,500sq miles, of a scale matched only by its grandeur. Approximately a third of its area is covered by ice-fields connecting 47 major glaciers, which sets the area apart as the largest continental ice expanse after Antarctica.

Smoking Mountain

The range's tallest peak, once known as Cerro Chalten (Smoking Mountain), not as a volcano but for the cloud seen to form around its peak, was renamed in 1877 after the captain of the HMS Beagle, Robert Fitzroy. The dramatic mountain was sighted by his 1834 expedition, sailing up the Santa Cruz River to chart the desolate and isolated Patagonian coast: now, it is symbolic of the Santa Cruz province and iconic to thousands of travellers worldwide.

Smoking Mountain


Smoking Mountain

The northern extreme of Los Glaciares is characterized by a range of fantastical spikes, of which Mount Fitz Roy is the most enduring image. A series of jagged, monolithic towers of barren granite thrust into the sky; precipitous cliffs plunge down towards frigid glacial tarns and sparse, indigenous flora.


Smoking Mountain

High Range Hills





Sunset View

Nature View

A Fitz Roy trek will typically incorporate both the Fitz Roy and Cerro Torre base camps (thereafter progress becomes exclusively the domain of elite climbers), while trails go on to navigate myriad lakes and outcrops of hardy vegetation, even ascending a few lesser peaks and approaching Viedma Glacier. Hiking here is truly varied.

0 comments:

Everest Base Camp Trek, Nepal

Lukla to Everest Base Camp


Khumbu Nepal Everest Base Champ

Round-Trip: 70 miles, 16 days
When to Go: Pre-monsoon (March or April) gives you the rhododendrons in bloom and lots of climber action, but post-monsoon (November) gives you drier weather. Go with guide services that use local Sherpa guides, cooks, and porters—it’s part of the experience.
Arguably the greatest of all high-mountain journeys, this stroll through Nepal’s Khumbu district lets you see three of the highest peaks on Earth (Everest, Lhotse, and Lhotse Sar) in one glance—and dozens more Himalayan giants along the way. A favorite is the view from Thyangboche, called by renowned mountain explorer W.H. Tillman the “greatest view in the world.” But it’s the deep immersion in the Sherpas’ Buddhist culture that will bring you back for the friendly villages, the monasteries, and the polyglot scene of world travelers who come for the high-octane pilgrimage to Everest.
Insider Tip: Go slow on the way up. Healthy hikers could cover 35 miles in two days, but the need to acclimatize means you’ll take ten days on the trek in to Everest, but only three on the trek out. The enforced downtime allows you to savor the experience—and the culture of people who live there.

Prize of Daily Use things:-

Prices are as follows: Water 120-450Rs Coke 150-400Rs Meals 500-900Rs Hot Shower 200-400Rs Candy 80-280Rs Battery Charging 100-300Rs per hour.

0 comments: