GPT50 (Cabo Froward)
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* Start Date to Finish Date (use Format YYYY-MMM-DD) / Duration in Days / Hiking or Packrafting / Travel Direction (SOBO for Southbound or NOBO Northbound) / Chosen Route and/or Option Name (RR for Regular Route) / Names or Alias
Summary with remarks to route that are considered useful for other hikers and packrafters. Include alerts, suggestions and personal perception of attractiveness and difficulties.
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Section Log, Alerts and Suggestions
Season 2025/26
Season 2024/25
Season 2023/24
Season 2022/23
- 2023-04-12 to 2023-04-16 / 5 days / Hiking / Circuit SOBO & NOBO / RR from km 19.7 there and back / Jakub & Veronika
We hiked this beautiful and remote trail from and to the parking lot. The trail is hard, especially in the humid weather (the stones on the beaches are more slippery further you get), but there are no problems with the orientation on the trail, you just need to follow the track files when you're not sure, where to next. Usually you can choose between walking on the beach (low tide) and forest path closer or further from the shore (hight tide). We recommend to take the further one at least ones so you see the endless peatbogs with miniatures of Chilean cyprus trees (here the late season and morning frost helps with harder surface) and deep Andean primary forrest. The thing that complicates all is tide. You NEED to have tide charts with you (see below). Sleeping is easy, puesto serves for the first night just fine with still usable stove and benches to sleep on (if anybody could provide an ax, please do it, it would be a great help to others 😉 and camsites are on both sides of all rivers and even in the middle of them. Last but not least, we have one personal wish, when you walk this hike, have spare plastic bags to collect some rubbish. The first puesto and all the campsites suffer from tourist and fishermen waste. We tried our best, but there is much more to do.
For tide forecast see Links to other Resources below.
- 6 to 9 March 2023 / Véronica / GPT50 RR out and back / 3.5 days
An absolutely beautiful section and fitting end to my GPT journey. I was fortunate to hike it with mostly good weather, although it was cold and sometimes difficult to warm up after fording the rivers, which can only be crossed during low tide. I had the tide charts for Punta Arenas downloaded, and carried some extra food in case I got stuck at the river crossings and had to wait out low tide. I went during the full moon and so got two low tides during daylight hours — in the mornings around 9 a.m., and then in the evenings around 8 p.m. I always timed my crossing of the rivers with the lowest tide. I found it easy to hitchhike from Punta Arenas to the end of the road at Punta Árbol. The route is relatively straightforward to follow along the beach, or coastal forest, or peat bogs until you reach the third river. There is a refuge right before the first river with loads of delicious raspberry bushes. It also would be a good place to sleep or wait out bad weather. It has a couple of platforms to use as beds, a wooden table, and a small woodstove. The first river (Río Yumbel, km 31.3) is easy to cross at both high and low tides. You can cross either at the mouth of the river where it meets the Strait, or further upstream behind a log dam, where water levels only reach your shins. The second river (Río San Nicolás, km 38.7) is the deepest of the rivers. At low tide the water went to my upper thighs, and the second time I crossed (on the return) it went up to my waist (I'm 165 cm). There are sticks planted in the sandbars that serve as good markers for the shallowest place to cross. The third river (Río Nodales, km 46.6) went up just past my knees. Some people leave their tents and most of their gear at Río Nodales and head to the Cape with a day pack, but I preferred to bring all my things due to tide timings and to have the freedom to camp where I wanted. (There have also been reports of foxes destroying unoccupied tents in search for food, even if no food was left inside.) After Río Nodales, the terrain gets more adventurous. Lots of climbing over (or under) fallen trees on the beach, or on slippery rocks and minor cliffs. But perfectly doable. There is only one time where you have to go into the woods and use some fixed ropes to climb over some steep terrain, otherwise I reccomend sticking to the beach. Even if it can be slow going, it is better than bushwhacking through the thick rainforest. There is a great campsite at the base of the climb to the Cruz de los Mares. The trail up to the cross is well-marked and has some metal steps going up the steepest parts. All in all, it was a wonderful hike, I saw lots of marine life and birds, and it was a fun challenge to walk according to the rhythm of the tides.
The first day I started around 12:30 p.m. and camped on the south side of the second river, right after crossing it at low tide around 7:30 p.m. The second day was long — I got up early to get to the third river for low tide at 8:45 a.m. I crossed it and hiked to the Cape and the cross. Then I walked back and camped on the north side of the third river after crossing it at low tide (around 8 p.m.) The third day I got up early again to cross the second river at low tide (9 a.m.). I could have walked all the way back to the trailhead that day, but the weather was so beautiful that I wanted to spend one last night on the trail, so I camped at Bahía El Águila, just a few km south of the lighthouse.
Season 2021/22
Season 2020/21
Season 2019/20
Season 2018/19
Season 2017/18
Season 2016/17
Resupply and Accommodation
Resupply and Accommodation in nearby Towns
Resupply and Accommodation along the Route
Transport to and from Route
Permits, Entry Fees and Right-of-Way Issues
Links to other Resources
Images
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