Cambios

GPT82P (Aysen Glacier Trail)

14 600 bytes añadidos, 13 febrero
sin resumen de edición
==Season 2025/26==
 
* <span style="background-color:aqua;">'''2025-01-29 to 2025-02-05 /7 days and 1 rest day / Packrafting/ SOBO / RP + Var 01 / Lisa & Michel'''</span>
 
 
Key Points
- Previous entries are very detailed and have been super helpful to us, especially from Natalie and Tomàs
- Track files now contain Romans tracks, no need to download them seperately anymore
- High levels of Rio Nef make the route considerably slower and you might need to bushwack around parts of flooded trails. This seems to have been a problem for Natalie and Tomàs and now us. We don‘t know how much it changes seasonally (might be better to do it late in the season as the glacial melting will be less than in summer, Lauren and Seb did not have issues with high water levels in March)
- The trails did not seem to have been maintained the last two years, from the description we felt like its definitely more overgrown than it has been. That makes trailfinding and BB slower. If no one clears the trail be prepared for very slow progress with lots of thorns. (This is mostly for the first part up to Lago nef, although the other side did not seem to have been cleared either, the vegetation is much less agressive on that side)
- Absolutely stunning section with amazing views, no people, lots of BB and frustration.
- Try to get a good weather window, otherwise you miss out on all the good views.
- We did not have a machete and we were fine, I don‘t think it would have been of much use.
- SOBO makes more sence as Lago Nef is the biggest challenge and you might get stuck without finding a way through the ice.
- There are buses from Cochrane to El Maitén (3pm Tuesday, Friday and Sunday - beginning of the trail if doing SOBO) and Colonia Norte(8.30am Monday and Thursday, ending of the trail with SOBO) that would shorten roadwalking. However make sure to ask in Cochrane for when and where they go exactly.
 
Day 1: Cochrane to Settler Abandoned (29.6)
We took the 7am bus towards Coyhaique and got out at -47.132211, -72.72116, a bit after El Manzano. We were hoping for a hitch on the MR but no car passed us on the ~3h road walk. Careful that you don’t miss the beginning of the trail that leaves the minor road on the left in a curve. In this part we did not lose the trail, but it was overgrown and progress was slow. With Natalie and Tomàs believing no one had worked on it the previous year, it now seems no one cleared it in the last two years.
Due to high water levels the trail was flooded here -47.12517,-72.90743 (same as Natalie and Tomàs mentioned). We first tried BB around, Michel fell and broke one of his Poles, then tried to find the way up through the bluffs that Natalie mentioned but cold not find a solution. I assume we had lower water levels than they had, since for us the trail was not completely flooded, it just included fording a side arm of the Rio Nef twice, with quite some flow. We had not tried before because it was impossible to see how deep it was. First ford was mid thigh (177cm) and second only knee deep. If you can still see the middle part of the trail (for us it was an island), this is probably the fastest option. The trail continued to be overgrown until the abandoned settler. We camped next to Rio Nef about 500m after that, nice beach access to the river but not sheltered and no other water source. It took us 11h to get there, about 8h30min excluding breaks.
We assumed Rio Nef could change its level depending on the time of day since it‘s all glacial melting but the level was the exact same in the morning. The lake seems to be a reservoir inhibiting such short time changes. So don‘t count on fords to be easier during the morning hours.
 
Day 2: Settler abandoned to Lago Nef (Camp 50.6)
After Settler abandoned the trail becomes a bit better, less overgrown. As Natalie said, first ford (37.0) was easy, the camp there looks nice. Well sheltered and clear water access. The second one (38.5) was as mentioned quite a surprise. Rio Nef has flooded the trail, I don‘t know how it would look with lower water levels. However instead of going around (everything looked like heavy bushwacking) we chose to ford along the edges of the inlet of River. Water levels went up to a bit more than hip deep at the deepest point and it was very slippery. Still faster than making a trail around. If your PR is quick to inflate that would definitely be the safer option - or go with drysuits through the ford. Especially since the water is freezing cold (5 °C). We could not find the trail that goes to the puesto as everything was very swampy and wet and instead went around RP on the right side of the fence, crossed the swamp over some logs and joined the trail after the puesto - hence never went to see it. The easiest way would have been to walk on the outside of the fence and then go onto the logs as they had crushed the fence there anyways. But this may be fixed in coming years since the puesto there seemed to be used (horses around and the building looked in surprisingly good shape). Tabanos and Mosquitos were horrible in that part. Ford (40.2) was easy and good water source. (remember to take water here, no water sources until on the way down from the pass). Shortly after the trail again becomes overgrown and hard to see at times. Keep your GPS at hands, it is nice to be on it even overgrown. Did not seem like anybody had worked on it this year but worked well to the pass. Great views up here of Lago Nef. We were a bit discouraged because the icebergs had all piled up on the south end of the lake and it appeared like we might not get through with our packraft. However we later found out this can change a lot through the day and if you cross the lake early after a windless night the ice gets some time to disperse a bit and not be as tight.
Way down from the pass was easy in the beginning but then much more overgrown and harder to see than on the way up, very slow. Basically it became much more overgrown as soon as it wasn‘t steep anymore.
Once you make it to 44.4 the CC parts are very fast and easy walking, the trail parts were hard to see and partly flooded for us. Always possible to go around and join the trail soon after though. Much slower than CC sections. We camped at Camp (50.6), a bit sheltered from the wind because of the moraine of the glaciar but not much. Clear water source closeby - no need to take water from Rio Nef. Long day again, it took us 12h30min to get there, 10h50min of hiking excluding breaks. Very slow progress all day.
 
Day 3: Lago Nef to Lake after Glaciar (57.8)
Started late since we were tired from the hard days. Hardly any wind on the lake when we got there at around 10.30am. The lake was not frozen, lots of icebergs and blocks of ice close to our (south) shore. Seemed like we could get through since it was not too dense so we got our packraft ready roughly at the point the gps track suggests as a launch point. This was only because the iceblocks seemed the least dense to us there, go wherever there is the smallest amount of ice. That changes a lot depending on the wind on the lake. By the time we were ready to leave, the wind had picked up quite a bit (headwinds, the predominant wind direction here) and the ice was pressed more toward the shore. A bit annoyed about ourselves and that we did not leave earlier, we decided to give it a try anyways. We managed to get through the ice by slowly edging our way through and pushing away the blocks with hands and paddles (careful not to use the blades but the handles as the blades migh break on the hard ice). At some point I was a bit worried that we might get stuck in between with no possibility of going forward or backward, but that didn‘t happen. Once we were past the band of iceblocks close to the south shore we made faster progress with medium strong headwinds (~10km/h, gusts of up to 20km/h) and reached the end of the lake after a bit less than 2 hours. We crossed the lake in the middle since the southwest shore had more ice and only went towards that side after ~3km on the lake. The lake exit was a quite steep granite shore, very wind protected. Getting out was easy, getting the packraft up (we use T-Zips and have all our gear inside the boat) was hard since the shore is very steep and unstable. If you can, I‘d suggest leaving some heavy gear in backpacks on the outside of the boat so you don‘t need to carry up all together. The crossing of moraine and glaciar was slow but easy. In the beginning we stayed a bit further left of the gps track to be on the high part of the moraine and than crossed onto the glaciar at the point with the least steep slopes, which was easy. From there we stayed a bit further right than the track files, probably similar to previous groups. However since the glacier is changing constantly that obviously is not fixed. Natalies reference point (-47.08282, -73.25064 , rounded solid rockwall to your left just before a drop off to a glacial lake) was very helpful - just know that you want to go up the steep slope to the left of that rockwall, i.e. climb above that rock. We aimed for its right side and then needed to turn around a bit, having to scramble through very loose and steep sand and rocks. After that, CC is easy. We made camp at the first lake right after the glacial lakes, very pretty and perfect for a swim. After this there is the next lake you could camp at or the mentioned expedition shelter but then on the trail through the forest camping could be hard (and definitely not as beautiful) until here (-47.139213, -73.258273) where there is a beautiful spot next to the stream you need to cross. It will take you another 2-3 hours to get there.
Including getting the boat ready and repacking and breaks this shorter section took us around 6.5 hours.
 
Day 4: 57.8 to after Lago Cachet Dos (Camp at -47.12079, -73.15232)
Nice CC along the lakes. Once you enter the forest the trail is less overgrown than before Lago Nef but very easy to lose. Especially in the wet sections with swamps and grass it is hard to see but worth trying to find it again as it is nice if you‘re on it. After some kms it rises on the right side of the valley and is easier to stay on from there on, progressively getting better. The descent to the riverbed is mostly on big granite rocks and very enjoyable. After crossing the stream you‘ll descend into the dry river bed and CC down on hard sand - very fast progress. Eventually it rises up to the high valley on the eastern side of Glaciar Colonia, in dry conditions the steeper sections are easy but when wet this could be tricky. We camped at -47.12079, -73.15232 next to a small lake with incredible views over Glaciar Colonia. Somewhat wind protected because it‘s set back from the cliff, but out in the open. We had quite some rain that night and the next morning and were fine.
 
Day 5: Rest day and exploring the surroundings
We chose to wait out the bad weather and explored the surroundings once the rain passed. If you get the chance it is really worth going up the hill to the weather station you‘ll see and then down on the other side where you‘ll have a perfect view over the waterfall and where the river enters underneath the glaciar, an incredibly beautiful and impressive sight for us. Even more with all the remains of how the glaciar used to block the river.
 
Day 6: Lago Cachet dos to Lago Colonia (-47.25881, -73.191799)
Continue CC around the lakes and along the stream, very enjoyable walking and beautiful views. Easy fords. Once the track joins with Variant G the trail starts, it is not very clear until the beginning of the forest. In the forest we hardly lost it and if we found it again quickly. In the steep section in the beginning the trail deviates a bit from the track files but joins again quickly. We followed the trail and it was perfect. Lots of ups and downs and very annoyingly deep boggy sections kept us slow. By the end we both had completely soaked shoes, the grasses and mosses are hard to read and you sink in deeply. Beautiful views on the Lago Colonia once you reach the highest point. From the expedition camp down to the lake less clear of a trail but very enjoyable steep granite sections that get you down quickly. Lots of Mosquitoes all day. We camped at (-47.25881, -73.191799) at the lake, very flat but not sheltered - not a problem since the lake was almost without wind for us. If windy, this would not be recommendable. Stream with clear water closeby.
 
Day 7: Lago Colonia to End of Rio Colonia (-47.301876, -72.90828)
We crossed Lago Colonia with light headwinds (against the predominant wind direction, don‘t know what was going on) and took quite long. Packed our boat to porter the first rapid as it looked really hard to line it through. However I think we probably had lower water levels than others did so that might have made the rapid harder (lot‘s of big boulders everywhere). We had lower water levels than visible on Google Satelite images. Inflated our boat and tried lining the second rapid. (Thought it was rideable at first but no, not for us at this waterlevel) and had troubles doing so (don‘t have a line long enough, had to be partly in water to get boat through, almost got pulled down and then carried the boat around on the boulders) and got back in after the rapid. Retrospectively we would have preferred to porter until the end of rapid two, it‘s an easy CC across boulders and would have been as quick. Really comes down to water levels though. Rapid two might be much easier to portage on the right hand side where the shore isn‘t as steep and there‘s less flow. We ran everything after and the fourth rapid was definitely not bigger wavewise then the first/second so the river must really change a lot. We had ground contact quite often but never got stuck. After the first ~5km on the river the rapids are over and it‘s a smooth, yet cold ride down. We camped here (-47.301876, -72.90828) at around 6pm. (All day took us 8hours including breaks and de-and inflating the boat)
 
Day 8: Rio Colonia to Cochrane
We saw the bus tables in Cochrane of the bus going on Monday 8.30 and Thursday 8.30 to Colonia Norte and thought if we were at the bus stop at 10.30 we would catch it. We were wrong. Still not sure when exactly the bus leaves - we talked to 3 different groups of people and everybody said smth different (either at 8.30 from colonia norte or at 12 or at around 9.30 to 10). Everybody agrees that there should be a bus that all of them never had taken and that it leaves from the bus stop (-47.26623, -72.83772 (at Option 4)). We believe it must leave early (8.30 or 9.30) from there as we did not see it and were there at 10.30. Walked the road for about 20kms until the first car passed in our direction and took us all the way to Cochrane.
 
 
2026-01-05 to 2026-01-10 / 6 days / Packrafting / SOBO / RP / Anh
 
The first kilometers were easy, path visibility and technical not difficulty. Only the 200-meter is very difficult to follow: OH-TL-V {82P-01} [21.6+0.2]. I didn’t take manchete with me, so BB with wild roses (overgrown) were very painful.
The last 12 kilometers to Lago Neff are much more difficult to find and progress is slow. The path is rarely or never used and is therefore overgrown. I kept losing the path, probably because I'm too stupid.
 
- On the glacier:
In my case, it didn't make sense and was dangerous to walk on the mountain side CC due to unstable landslides. That means it actually makes more sense to walk on the glacier. I couldn't follow the GPT track because the glacier had probably changed. I was walking about 30m below the edge of the glacier.
All the paths in the forest to Lago Colonia are partly clearly visible, even if they are not easy to find.
 
I was late on the way to Lago Colonia and had a big problem (strong current) crossing a small ford.
I recommend spending the night before the RP-TL&CC-V {82P} [75.4+8.1] section and walking this part of the trail in the morning.
 
Crossing Lago Colonia early with two rapids was no problem. A connecting part of my paddle broke at the end of the lake, so I had to hike on the left side of Rio Colonia. The rocks are covered with small bushes and there are NO trail or animal path, so it took a lot of time to complete this short route -> not recommended.
==Season 2024/25==
Key take-aways:
-Lago Nef may be nearly or completely covered with a small thin layer of ice (at this time of year, ice as far as we could see from a vantage point before the lake). So unless so if your coming NOBO you have warm sunny weather to melt it and or waves to break it up, may be prepared for a longggg ice breaking journeyin trouble. For us, on a sunny calm day, the ice was mostly melted ~1pm (left hand side of lake). I would also not advice crossing this lake in the evening as there are no safe camping spots until after unless you have sufficient time to finish the glacier,, many overhead hazards/rock fall/icecrossing before camp. -Rio Nef had has flooded many sections of the trail for us. The worst being a 2km stretch in which we were able to easily bush bash up and down the bluffs. The second worse was what it did to ford 38.5. The river had taken over this ford and from the beginning it was over hip deep, we chopped a side path on the left. The last annoyances were just wet feet walking along this side of the routebut still doable
- Roman is a beast and Lauren + Sebastian are heros attitude wise to do this route through the rain. Download Romans tracks as they are still not in the GPT files. Their wiki's are also better for base planning.
 -We took it very easy with departure times on this trip, rarely getting going before 930/10 and we were moving very slow due to terrain and heavy packs (in the end I had food for at least 10 days-oops). Average average speed was no more than 2km/hr, maybe even less. .. -We did not meet Aquilino Olivari but we stayed at his open puesto @ 39.1. Perhaps if we had contacted him for a request to stay at his puesto or even hire him for horses he would have given us up to date trail conditions. -Machete was only useful for some overgrown rose bushes and making a trail to avoid flooded Ford 38.5. 
-There is another expedition camp ~100m in on the optional look out trail (look out trail doesn't seem to exist)
 -The trail on the Rio Nef side part was always visable visible (except for the main pass, where you need to check the gps more often). It was however already a bit over grown with rose bushes up to the abandoned puesto and then slightly overgrown elsewhere with the low-mid height shrubbery. The trail in the Cross section valley was hard to follow visability visibility wise. The trail in the last forest towards the second expedition shelter (labeled as steep part -47.22946, -73.21168 ) was in good condition (proper trail). It did get a little more difficult to follow after the shelter for a short bit. -No issues with slippery/exposed rock (we had dry weather) -No issues with Lago Colonia. For all water sections I wish I had warmer socks and or toe warmers. We sit in canoe style with our lower legs and feet pressed against the floor. We needed more breaks to keep our feet from fully freezing due to the Not ideal position for glacial water. -Water in Colonia is grey and opaque so hard to see obstacles. First rapid of Rio Colonia was happily skipped. The grey glacial water hides many large boulders and the flow is strong. Second rapid was also skipped (looked a lot easier than the first). Tomáš ran the rest of the rapids and I walked most (not a fan of the grey water, but in the end nothing was more than simple class02). The fourth rapid looked the largest wave wise but it was clean. We rarely had ground contact, but I think it is because we had higher water levels due to rain/warm weather. The grey water makes it difficult to judgeand having knees so exposed made me uncomfortable. - Don't expect to find good camping along Rio Colonia, it's mainly all spikey shrubbery and river rock. I suggest camping at a beach (only beach) near the end of Lago Colonia or the beach AT the end of Colonia on the other side (windy). -A better alternative to walking or hitching the ~30km road to the ferry is to continue onto Baker. Tomáš thought of it last minute but I decided against it due to not knowing much about the Baker/ terrible weather arriving. To keep it short, it looks like you can get out near the Airport on the road to Tortel, walk ~10km and then hitch. We did not take this option but got a ride from Neftali, a settler just up river from the take out. Overall, we had 5 days of sun (wr we waited in Coyhaique for three days for them), so we were very lucky. We met nobody for the whole trip. We think this is the nicest section in the south out of the ones we have done. Like 39 and 40, just without the people. 
Transport: We took the 8am bus from Coyhaique (book in advance). Told the bus driver to drop us off at the "confluencia", 13km after Puerto Bertrand. The bus took ~8hrs. A more interesting alternative is to paddle the Baker river from Puerto Bertrand to the normal put in. You could also put in after the rapids. This would not be slower, as Baker is rather fast and you save some walking.
Day01-02: Rio Baker to Puesto 39.1
We came after a few days of heavy rain in the area plus it had been a rather wet summer. Crossing the Baker was easier than expected (strong countercurrents on both sides help), but crossing the grey/opaque Rio Nef was harder than expected, the flow was very strong. The Rio Nef crossing was where we had our first signs of flooding. We made a mistake and deflated our boat once we got to the other side (30 m downstream of the GPT files). We didn't see the deep, but short, channel blocking the access to the trail. Luckily there is was a wooden boat there and it was just long enough to use and porter our stuff between the two. It was just after 7 when we finished this crossing and decided to at least get over the first bump. We didn't meet any settlers. On the way up the first bump don't forget to take the trail turnoff from the bend in the MR (which looked very recently “improved”):-47.12790, -72.81425. Along the trail you can see tire tracks down within the river delta, just not sure how many times you would have to ford and if the fords would be people friendlythey are walkable. We found a nice camp behind some poplar trees on the other side of the bump around here -47.13819, -72.84482. You could hear water nearby, but the rose bushes made it impossible to get to, so you must drink from the river. There was no water before this point. The next day was very windy right from the get go, but luckily it was dry. The wind was very taxing and quite constant, 30-45km/hr. The trail (starting at the MR turnoff) was overgrown with rose bushes, but it was obvious to see. Not good for drysuit walkingif that's you... We don't think the trail had been touched this year. Unfortunately due to high water levels the trail was totally flooded for ~2km starting here -47.12517, -72.90743 (fresh water nearbyfor drinking). We made an easy way up and over the bluffs and regained the trail at the bottom. Rose bushes and wind were the only annoyance. Machete came semi-handy, took us maybe an hour extra. The trail continued to be quite overgrown until the abandoned settler's house. The house is locked but you probably could pitch a tent under the porch if needed, we had lunch under it and it provided a nice break from the wind. After the house, the trail was in good condition and more scenic as you climb a short hill over a hill side cut by an ancient glacier towards an attractive laky landscape. I struggled a lot due to a painful cough but it was still nice. There are a couple of strangely placed pine tree plantations next to the trail and then larger ones further in the valley, we are not sure who or how someone is planning to harvest them...The first Ford@37 was easy. It looked to me there was , a nicer better camping spot for camping just after the ford than the one that listed looks like it is listedon the other side. The second Ford@38.5, was a bit of a surprise. Rio Nef seemed to have taken over the ford and everything was deeply flooded and flowing, second step in would have already been over hip deep. We searched around for alternatives and ended up clearing a trail to the left. It would have made more sense to just inflate the boat and cross. We were surprised that even far from the ford the canal like feature was hip deep or more. A machete was very helpful here and it might have taken us 90 extra minutes. There was one last muddy ford directly in front of the puesto, almost knee deep in the good parts. The puesto was indeed there and newly built, it has a wood stove and other miscellaneous items. Unfortunately the water source is the swamp, so I would recommend bringing water from the first ford (not the second, which is the grey Rio Nef water). Also be careful about crumbs and food, there are lot of mice, hopefully the open door was enough ventilation not to get hanta like Gene Hackman's wife...
(Drinking water: up to the Puesto was come and go, other than the river itself. Not that frequent, but it existed in the waypoints that are marked. )
Day03-04: Puesto39.1 - Lago Nef+Glacier area
We woke up to picture perfect weather, but unfortunately we didn't did not manage to leave the puesto until past 11:00 - oops. Therefore we didn't even make it to the lake (stopped 2km before), the trail was quite slow for us. I found that going up the pass was quite nice and the others' trail work in previous years has lived on (Tomáš CCed most of the way) You still need to check the gps often, cairns were helpful. I think everyone should refrain from posting photos of what the other Other side look like, it was such an amazing is a beautiful surprise!! The second half down the pass was less clear and much slower, but lots of water sources there. Props to Roman for making it to the lake by 4:30 without trail clearance! Rio Nef was still absolutely raging. Along the river bed it was flooded - again, but the trail (when it wasn't CC) was still there, just covered in water. A couple of times it was deeply flooded and we had to make our own way via bushbashing through the thorns or floating wood. We made camp just before the ford (48.9) on small stones, there was a more weather protected camp high up in the forest just before (and just after a stream). It took us almost 9 hours to get to the ford including a 1.5hr lunch - oops again.Day04 The ford was "still" water but it was up to my bum (5'6). The rest of the way to the lake was easy CC and the slightly flooded trail was frozen so our feet didn't get that wet. The lake was indeed beautiful but almost completely covered in a thin (<1cm) layer of ice (~10am). From a view point just before the lake I could scout out a band of non frozen ice on the left side of the lake where the sun was shining (zoom camera helps sometimes). Everything else, as far as I could tell, had a sheet of ice. I kind of ruined Tomáš's dreams to break through the ice around the icebergs and requested to walk to the far left side of the lake. There was a slight misunderstanding and we ended up putting the boat in too early. We had about 3m of ice free progress until it was full on ice again and progress reduced to almost zero. Breaking the ice may have been easier with a kayak paddle, canoe paddles only let you break one side at a time. Either way we turned around, deflated the boat and walked further towards where my photo showed the stretch of ice free water. If you climb up onto the flat above the eroded lake bank, you could go even further to here: -47.10450, -73.21040, where you could use a little stream valley to get down. We put in here -47.10754, -73.20492. IT IS IMPORTANT to note that at this time of year, if you have no sun or no waves to melt or break natural way of breaking the ice (sun, waves ext.) after a cold cloudless windless night), you may be in for a longggg ice breaking journey (another reason to go SOBO). Also important is to not cross the lake if you don't have enough time (2-3 hours) to get through the glacier, it is unstable terrain, not safe for camping. In the end the delay helped us because by the time we started paddling for good, it was mostly ice free (~1pm). We had next to no wind and got to the end in about an hour. The water is freezing!There was a granite-crushed beach beside the glacier when we were there, making getting out and packing easy. The walk through the moraine and glacier was slow. We downloaded we used Roman's tracks from the year before, we didn't follow them to as a tee (reference but probably went similar like to Lauren and Sebastian), but they were helpful when we were unsure's route. Whatever you do, stay away from the unstable slopes to the left and the big icy overhang bottom left further in. Overhead hazards and rock fall are a thing, especially on wet and warm sunny days, we saw two large rock falls, one being a small car sized boulder. Other than that the descriptions before are sufficient. I had fun on the glacier, but Tomáš thinks there could still be holes you could fall in, so do watch your step, especially where the water flows. A good point of reference that marks the end of the glacial ice is here (approx), -47.08282, -73.25064 , it is a rounded solid rockwall to your left just before a drop off to a glacial lake, aim for it for easier navigation. After that the CC was easy and the lakes just beyond the glacier were very pretty. You can hop on rocks over the stream here:-47.09244, -73.26085. Tomáš went to check out the optional view point trail (Option 12) and found a tarped expedition shelter ~100meters in, we camped there. No toilets (destroyed by a tree) but it was equipped with good shovels and was significantly warmer than the beach, no mosquitoes. The trail further seemed overgrown, if it ever was a trail. However, the forest is open. On the company's website, there is a picture that is clearly taken from the end of this sidetrail, so it is definitely doable.
(Drinking water: Water at Puesto is swampy, from the puesto you can get water from the fords. No water up the pass but after the pass there is plenty of water. At the Lago Nef there was a stream on the left. Obviously plenty of water on the glacier and then post glacier there are many lakes and creeks. A nice creek just before Option 12/the previously unknown expedition camp.
Day05-07: Cross Valley / Lago Colonia / Rio Colonia
As for the cross valley, once again I am seriously impressed Roman got through so fast without knowing the way. The first part through the forest was okay but the trail is often almost or totally invisible, also the bogs were annoying and cold. The second part which was in the open was even more invisible. Cairns would be helpful here but maybe the expedition team wants to keep it the way it is. The water waypoint, -47.13916, -73.25818 , was a small slippery ford for us, over a waterfall, so take caution. The exit onto the river bed is eroding, we exited here -47.14341, -73.26198 . Walking the riverbed was indeed faster than anything else along the route. (Tomáš: The river in the valley looked like fun class III to III+ of almost continuous rapids ending with a mortal rapid where it meets the glacier. Obviously only for people who know what they are doing - I recommend to bring your backpacks downstream while scouting and then go back to packraft). Cerro Arenales is absolutely gorgeous, I hope everyone can get a nice weather day for this part! . In good weather we had no issues with the first granite traverse and the one closer to the lake. Tomáš accidentally wound up on east side of the main lake that has the weather station next to it (the one L+S had a wet scramble on), but itbut it did not go, he had to turn around. When we hit the actual trail after the "Ford?" waypoint (Which was jumpable) Tomáš traced it backwards and noticed it did not go the same route we went, the trail goes to -47.20767, -73.23661. Somebody with time should investigate further, seems like the company takes people more to the east than the GPT. Tomáš thinks there must be another shelter. However, Roman’s route seems more scenic. This will hopefully make it as exploratory trail for the next year. We camped at -47.22261, -73.22310, nothing special and lots of mosquitoes. Tomáš does not think Roman’s camp recommendation is very good. By the way the valley seems to be where the river gets diverted when the valley gets blocked by a glacier.Day06 An easy day. We took a slightly different way to the start of the labeled "steep forest" because Romans route was quite wet. The steep forest part was nice because it was finally a real trail, some marshy spots though. There were two fords for me and none for Tomáš bcs he moved some narrow logs to cross. We rarely had to check the gps until after the expedition shelter, where it goes along the rock bluffs. We put in a bit earlier for Lago Colonia on the river upstream of it here: -47.26765, -73.18360. It was grey and shallow on the right, I was not a big fan. On the left there was a rapid, probably class II or lower, but we saw it only from a distance. It was slightly windy for our crossing (15-20km/hr, tailwind) but we had no issues with waves. There is one nice camping beach at -47.32077, -73.12995 on the left closer to the end of the lake with a waterfall nearby. Much better camping there than the end of the lake or anywhere along the river. I don't advise camping along the river unless you don't mind sleeping on river rock and thorns. Tomáš walked the boat for the first rapid, the flow is strong and there are many boulders scattered and hidden under the grey water. It was around 8:30pm when we were at the corner of rapid #2 and I made Tomáš stop because I didn't believe there would be camping worth paddling near dark for (he thought we would camp just downstream of that rapid, where indeed you can get up on sand) and camp . So we camped in a sad little patch of river rock. It wasn't terrible in the end but it looked terrible.
Day07 We finished the river the next day starting very late due to cold rain. I was not in the mood for paddling the grey water rapids so I walked them, but Tomáš ran everything without a problem, no more than class II. The fourth one was definitely the biggest wave-wise, but it was clean of boulders. We had virtually zero ground contact but we were traveling in-between heavy rain systems. Tomáš proposed that we continue onto the Baker for about 25 km to shorten the road, and although this idea sounded more fun, I declined and voted for the road due to incoming storms and not knowing enough about the Baker. Chances of hitchhiking are very low, there are roughly only 25 people living in the valley. Somehow we lucked out and met Neftali, a settler just up river from the take out. He picked us up at the start of the road and drove us all the way back to Cochrane. The single car ferry operates for free from 8:30am-12:30 and then 1pm-6pm. There is technically a bus that goes to the valley. Definitely on Mondays and then possibly Wednesdays (says Neftali) or Thursdays (as paper in the Cochrane bus station seemed to suggest) at the bus stop -47.26623, -72.83772 (at Option 4). If the paper is correct, the bus leaves Cochrane on 8:30 and goes back at 12:30. It was labeled “Colonia Norte”.
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