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ENG:Lago Windhond

60 bytes añadidos, 01:33 28 feb 2020
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[[ES:Lago Windhond]]{{BorradorDraft}}
{{Rutas Patrimoniales english}}
{{RutaForm2_englishRutaForme
|Actividad=Trekking
 
|País=Chile (english)
|CiudadesChile=Puerto Williams
|BellezaEscenica=Atractiva
|Atractivos=Bosque, Lago
|DuraciónDuracion=3 días|Dificultad Física=Exigente|Dificultad Técnica=Media
|Sendero=Siempre Claro
|Señalizacion=Inexistente
|Infraestructura=Inexistente
|TipoTrek=Recorrido
|ComparteIdayRetorno=Circuito
|Distancia=41 km.41000
|MetrosAscenso=
|Primer Autor=Rutas Patrimoniales
|KMLZ=Lago_Windhond.kmz
|m=https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/embed?mid=1pwwHs47fZDUwlrKNafZRQ0j9O2WkmHjv
|ComentariosMapa= {{leyenda mapa dientes de Navarino}}
|TipoDeMap=HYBRID
}}
==Access==
From Puerto Williams to the La Cascada sector at the head of the Róbalo valley, Suinvolving 2.8 kilometers of gravel road. It’s a ten minute drive and 50 minute walk to SNUPIE 1. From Puerto Williams to the Ukika River, 3.5 kilometers along route Y–905Y905, then branching south along a secondary road, equivalent to about 50 minutes walking time to SNUPIE 1.
===By car===
You have to be very careful indeed in the next 400 meters. Crossing this sector with steep slopes can be dangerous, if visibility is poor or if there are strong winds, which can throw somebody off balance. If you suffer from vertigo, you must be accompanied by somebody surer.<br>
It is a very short stretch (about 10 minutes). Don’t try to look for any alternative route – there isn’t one, and it could mean taking unnecessary risks. Markers are placed very close to each other, so follow them without deviating from the route.<br>
After SNUPIE 4, turn slightly right (southwest), following the line of the cliff and the stone markers. After a hundred meters or so on a flat area that tends to drop gently, the top of the mountain narrows towards the left (south-southwest) and one can clearly see, on that same heading, a small but deep depression that looks like a crater and has one marker at its near end and two markers on its far end. Cross this “crater” along its bottom.<br>
After the double marker, continue along the steep slope until you reach the pass that can be seen below. Crossing this short slope is the most delicate part of this stretch. The ground consists of small, loose stones that occasionally cover smooth flat rock that can be quite slippery. You must test each step as you advance, especially if there is strong wind, so as to not slide down the slope.<br>
Descending this slope ends the first difficult part of the route and starts the second one – a small pass generally covered by cornice of snow. The idea is to cross towards the left (east) and then continue south following the line of the valley devoid of vegetation that can be seen below the pass.<br>
The small lake has to be circled on the right, without getting close to it. Bear in mind that it can be covered in snow in spring. The slope ends, and the ground until the next SNUPIE is firm, fine stony ground that is pleasant to walk on.<br>
===Fourth segment===
SNUPIE 10 is made up of several markers painted on 3 trees close to one another and located in the middle of a small peat bog close to the river. They indicate a double change of direction and two alternative routes – towards lake Windhond on a southerly heading and towards Puerto Williams, on a generally northern heading along the Windhond and Ukika valleys.<br>
Both options are clearly visible on markers displayed on trees and accompanied by inscriptions that say “LW” for “lake Windhond” and “PW” for “Puerto Williams”. These markers are repeated about 50 meters beyond SNUPIE 10 in both directions to prevent any distracted hiker from taking the wrong route.<br>
This is a firm peat bog that is easy to walk on. Every so often the moss Sphagnum Magellanicum (often called “soft peat”) appears; it is easily recognizable because of its typical hues which vary from white to red. It is not dangerous in itself, but it is very spongy. For easy walking and in order to preserve this plant, we recommend that you do not step on it.<br>
You will see several “peat holes”, as they are commonly called, as you cross the peat bog. These are clear witnesses to the eternal war waged by peat bogs against their main component – water (which makes up nearly 95% of the composition of the moss). You have to zigzag enough to avoid stepping in these holes, since they can be fairly deep.<br>
At the start of summer, the peat bog becomes a privileged site for Caiquenes to nest. These nests can commonly be found on the ground, so be careful not to touch them.<br>

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