Diferencia entre revisiones de «ENG:Reserva Nacional Altos de Pemehue»
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− | + | [[ES:Reserva Nacional Altos de Pemehue]] | |
− | {{ | + | {{Indexed}} |
{{Rutas Patrimoniales english}} | {{Rutas Patrimoniales english}} | ||
+ | {{RutaForme | ||
+ | |Actividad=Trekking | ||
+ | |||
+ | |País=Chile (english) | ||
+ | |CiudadesChile=Los Ángeles | ||
+ | |BellezaEscenica=Atractiva | ||
+ | |Atractivos=Vistas panorámicas, Bosque, Flora atractiva, Fauna atractiva, Río | ||
+ | |Duracion=2 días | ||
+ | Algo Exigente | ||
+ | |||
+ | |Sendero=Tramos sin sendero | ||
+ | |Señalizacion=Suficiente | ||
+ | |Infraestructura=Inexistente | ||
+ | |||
+ | |Latitud1=-37.907156 | ||
+ | |Longitud1=-71.631867 | ||
+ | |Distancia=48200 | ||
+ | |MetrosAscenso= | ||
+ | |MetrosDescenso= | ||
+ | |Comentarios distancia= | ||
+ | |AltitudMedia= | ||
+ | |Primer Autor=Rutas Patrimoniales | ||
+ | |Imágen Principal=Cordillera-de-Pemehue-g3.jpg | ||
+ | |KMLZ=Cordillera_Pemehue.kmz | ||
+ | |ComparteIdayRetorno=Ida y Retorno por la misma ruta | ||
+ | |TipoDeMap=HYBRID | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ==General Description== | ||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-de-Pemehue-g1.jpg|thumb|500px|right]] | ||
+ | The Alto Biobío Heritage Route: The | ||
+ | Araucarias of the Pemehue Range provides | ||
+ | an opportunity and a challenge | ||
+ | for anyone who loves horseback riding | ||
+ | and observing nature. This circuit | ||
+ | offers vistas of extensive araucaria, | ||
+ | raulí, roble, ñirre, and lenga forests, | ||
+ | as well as the chance to see the recent | ||
+ | remains of human interventions | ||
+ | in Andean ecosystems. The beautiful | ||
+ | views and panoramas visible from | ||
+ | the peaks of the Pemehue and Las | ||
+ | Placetas ranges are the ideal complement | ||
+ | for the swift-flowing and impetuous | ||
+ | streams and rivers that bring | ||
+ | the exuberant native vegetation to life, | ||
+ | giving it shape and colour. The trail, | ||
+ | hand-carved out of volcanic rock, is itself | ||
+ | a remnant of earlier forest penetration. | ||
+ | The route runs through one of the | ||
+ | last refuges for araucaria forests in the | ||
+ | Alto Biobío, boasting a spectacular geography | ||
+ | of beautiful lakes at over 1000 | ||
+ | m.a.s.l., mountain veranadas, gullies, | ||
+ | magnificent granite promontories, | ||
+ | and basalt columns.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | The Heritage Route crosses a transition | ||
+ | zone in terms of flora and fauna. | ||
+ | Nationally, this area hosts the highest | ||
+ | diversity of vegetable and animal | ||
+ | species. The Pemehue Range constitutes | ||
+ | a mixed biogeographic unit, | ||
+ | combining elements associated with | ||
+ | sclerophyll and xerophyte vegetable | ||
+ | formations such as Nothofagus | ||
+ | and araucaria forests. From an ecological | ||
+ | point of view, the area consists | ||
+ | of two ecoregions: Chilean Brush | ||
+ | (Matorral Chileno) and Temperate | ||
+ | Valdivian Forest (Bosque Templado | ||
+ | Valdiviano). Biogeographically, it includes | ||
+ | the biotic regions of Central | ||
+ | Chile and the Subantarctic. The area is | ||
+ | extraordinarily rich in endemic biota, | ||
+ | amparticularly | ||
+ | in monospecies plant and | ||
+ | animal genera and families. On the | ||
+ | other hand, anthropogenic intervention | ||
+ | has resulted in a high degree of | ||
+ | deterioration in some vegetable and | ||
+ | animal communities. Botanically, | ||
+ | the area is characterized by splendid | ||
+ | araucaria (Araucaria araucana) | ||
+ | forests. This Chilean conifer grows at | ||
+ | over 900 m.a.s.l. and its name comes | ||
+ | from the Pewen vernacular. Its seeds, | ||
+ | rich in starch, were and are the nutritional | ||
+ | foundation of the indigenous | ||
+ | Pehuenche diet. In fact, Pehuenche | ||
+ | means “peoples of the pine groves”.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | This circuit provides a brief synthesis | ||
+ | of the transformative capacity of humans | ||
+ | in the mountain environments | ||
+ | of central-southern Chile. It also offers | ||
+ | visitors the chance to see emblematic | ||
+ | fauna such as condors, pumas, and | ||
+ | foxes. Geomorphologic processes in | ||
+ | mountain environments are also readily | ||
+ | apparent along the route. The circuit | ||
+ | should be done over a minimum | ||
+ | of four days of slow-paced rides over | ||
+ | wide, well-marked stone and dirt trails. | ||
+ | Along the way, you can rest and camp | ||
+ | at mountain posts at Santa Rosa Lake | ||
+ | and Butaco River, and at other sites on | ||
+ | the shores of rivers or streams.<br> | ||
+ | |||
==Season== | ==Season== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Expected time== | ||
+ | 2 to 3 days | ||
+ | |||
==Access== | ==Access== | ||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-de-Pemehue-g2.jpg|thumb|right]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | To get to the Heritage Route, start | ||
+ | from the city of Los Ángeles in the | ||
+ | central valley, 132 km from the city of | ||
+ | Concepción and 116 km from the city | ||
+ | of Chillán. You should exit old Route 5 | ||
+ | South (Ruta 5 Sur), turning left (southeast) | ||
+ | at the intersection with Route | ||
+ | Q-61-R, connecting Los Ángeles and | ||
+ | Santa Bárbara. After driving 40 km | ||
+ | on a paved road, you will reach Santa | ||
+ | Bárbara, a small rural town located | ||
+ | on the north shore of the Biobío River. | ||
+ | Here, you can find services and equipment | ||
+ | for travellers, including all the | ||
+ | basic supplies for your adventure. You | ||
+ | can also visit a colonial Spanish frontier | ||
+ | fort found near the main square | ||
+ | (plaza), about 200 meters from the | ||
+ | Biobío River. After leaving Santa | ||
+ | Bárbara, continue heading southeast | ||
+ | on Route Q-61-R for another 19 km | ||
+ | until reaching the El Piulo bridge. This | ||
+ | bridge spans the narrowest and deepest | ||
+ | portion of the Biobío River, uniting | ||
+ | the townships of Santa Bárbara and | ||
+ | Quilaco.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Before crossing the bridge, look for | ||
+ | a sign to the right of the road indicating | ||
+ | the distance to the beginning of | ||
+ | the Heritage Route (33.2 km). At this | ||
+ | crossing, the Biobío River is 30 meters | ||
+ | deep and no more than 25 meters | ||
+ | wide. The emblematic river spills | ||
+ | swiftly over rocks carved out by its | ||
+ | fast-flowing waters. After crossing the | ||
+ | bridge, you will go another 1.7 km until | ||
+ | reaching an intersection with Q-75, | ||
+ | a gravel road that connects the villages | ||
+ | of Quilaco and Loncopangue. Turn | ||
+ | left towards Loncopangue, a small rural | ||
+ | settlement about 6.5 km from the | ||
+ | turnoff. Along the way, you can enjoy | ||
+ | beautiful panoramic views of the | ||
+ | Biobío River Valley and the mountain | ||
+ | spurs that surround it. When you leave | ||
+ | Loncopangue (still on Q-75), you’ll | ||
+ | go 12.7 km to Balseadero de Callaqui | ||
+ | (Callaqui Ferry). This is also the site of | ||
+ | the first indigenous Pehuenche community | ||
+ | in the Alto Biobío, known as | ||
+ | Callaqui. Take Route Q-151 along the | ||
+ | south shore of the Biobío. This dirt road | ||
+ | connects Callaqui Ferry with Fundo | ||
+ | Porvenir and is in poor shape; it ends | ||
+ | at the wall of the Pangue Hydroelectric | ||
+ | Plant. The access to Fundo Porvenir is | ||
+ | 5.9 km from Callaqui Ferry. Here, a | ||
+ | metal sign welcomes visitors to the | ||
+ | government estate, an important area | ||
+ | for the protection and conservation of | ||
+ | natural resources, and provides information | ||
+ | about the Heritage Route. On | ||
+ | the estate itself, you will see the dwellings | ||
+ | of the Pehuenche families living | ||
+ | on the low prairie and the remains, still | ||
+ | standing, of the old houses of Fundo | ||
+ | Porvenir. Mr. Lizardo Urrea, a local | ||
+ | guide and resident of the sector for | ||
+ | over 40 years lives just 2.7 km from the | ||
+ | entrance to the estate.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | When you arrive at Mr. Urrea’s | ||
+ | house, you can park your vehicle, rest, | ||
+ | and make the necessary arrangements | ||
+ | for doing the route on horseback; | ||
+ | overnight lodging is also available. | ||
+ | The route itself begins about 2 | ||
+ | km from the house, which is near the | ||
+ | village of Ralco or Alto Biobío on the | ||
+ | southern shore of the Biobío River. | ||
+ | You should set out for Guidepost No. | ||
+ | 1 (Cuyaqui Stream) on horseback. | ||
+ | Before reaching the actual circuit, you | ||
+ | will cross beneath large metal towers | ||
+ | bearing the transmission lines from | ||
+ | the Pangue and Ralco hydroelectric | ||
+ | plants. The magnitude of the effects | ||
+ | that these megaprojects have had | ||
+ | in terms of landscape modification | ||
+ | in the Biobío River Valley is evident: | ||
+ | steel giants march in neat rows across | ||
+ | forests, rivers, and streams, leaving | ||
+ | mountainsides bleeding and deeply | ||
+ | wounded by the designs of modernity | ||
+ | and, farther south, the Pangue plant | ||
+ | and dam interrupt the life, magic, and | ||
+ | basic cycles of the formidable Biobío | ||
+ | River. Some 600 meters from the home | ||
+ | of Mr. Urrea, there is a duly marked | ||
+ | detour. Follow the path to the right, | ||
+ | riding along the Cuyaqui Stream until | ||
+ | reaching Guidepost No. 1. This first | ||
+ | guidepost is accompanied by an informational | ||
+ | table with valuable data | ||
+ | about the route: a map, the segments | ||
+ | of the circuit and their distances, attractions | ||
+ | along the way, and sites of | ||
+ | interest.<br> | ||
+ | |||
===By car=== | ===By car=== | ||
===Public transport=== | ===Public transport=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Trail markings== | ||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-condor.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | This guide is indispensable | ||
+ | for anyone | ||
+ | wishing to visit the Alto | ||
+ | Biobío Heritage Route: | ||
+ | The Araucarias of the | ||
+ | Pemehue Range. It provides | ||
+ | written material, | ||
+ | cartography, and images | ||
+ | associated with each | ||
+ | segment of the circuit | ||
+ | to supplement the route | ||
+ | markers and sign postings. | ||
+ | The circuit consists | ||
+ | of 20 guideposts of patrimonial | ||
+ | interest. These are | ||
+ | duly marked with signs | ||
+ | that are generally placed | ||
+ | to the left of the trail. The | ||
+ | estimated times given for | ||
+ | each segment of the circuit | ||
+ | include allowances | ||
+ | for sightseeing and exploring | ||
+ | the route and its | ||
+ | surroundings. This circuit | ||
+ | has been divided into five | ||
+ | segments. Specific characteristics | ||
+ | are associated with each | ||
+ | guidepost, site of interest, and segment | ||
+ | of the circuit. The signposting | ||
+ | implemented along the route includes | ||
+ | four types of markers:<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | 1. Guidepost marker: A wooden | ||
+ | post, 1.5 meters tall, with a metal | ||
+ | plate indicating the guidepost number, | ||
+ | name, and altitude. Black and | ||
+ | white arrows indicate the distances | ||
+ | to this and the next guidepost.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | 2. Route marker: A wooden post, | ||
+ | about 2 meters tall, used to help | ||
+ | indicate the trail in some areas. | ||
+ | The tops of these signs are painted | ||
+ | bright red.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | 3. Welcome sign: At the entrance | ||
+ | to Fundo Porvenir. This sign offers | ||
+ | general information about the | ||
+ | route (map, segments, distances, | ||
+ | guideposts).<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | 4. Informational table: Beside | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 1, Cuyaqui Stream | ||
+ | Ford. This table gives detailed information | ||
+ | about the route and its | ||
+ | main attractions.<br> | ||
+ | |||
==Route description== | ==Route description== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Segment 1=== | ||
+ | '''Cuyaqui Stream Ford - Second Sawmill Bench'''<br> | ||
+ | *Distance: 6,2 km.<br> | ||
+ | *Walking Time: 2 hr 30 min.<br> | ||
+ | *Season: November to march<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <span style="color:red">Wide, wellmarked, | ||
+ | stone | ||
+ | horse trail | ||
+ | ascending along | ||
+ | the edge of the | ||
+ | Cuyaqui Stream. | ||
+ | Scenic views of | ||
+ | native forests | ||
+ | and old sawmills. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo1-a.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo1-b.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | The route begins at the Cuyaqui | ||
+ | Stream Ford, following an old forest | ||
+ | penetration road. Abandoned in 1981, | ||
+ | the trail borders the Cuyaqui Stream | ||
+ | Gorge and the foothill known as San | ||
+ | Pablo Hill. The Cuyaqui Stream crossing | ||
+ | is about 20 meters wide with a | ||
+ | rocky bed. Its swiftly running waters | ||
+ | pour generously into the Biobío River | ||
+ | another 500 meters downstream, | ||
+ | just before the wall of the Pangue | ||
+ | Hydroelectric Plant. The Biobío zigzags | ||
+ | down from its headwaters, | ||
+ | found at over 1000 meters altitude in | ||
+ | the peaks of the Pemehue Range. For | ||
+ | more than seven kilometres, these | ||
+ | hemmed-in waters sustain several | ||
+ | species and ecosystems that are ecologically | ||
+ | very valuable. The topography | ||
+ | of the first part of the circuit, some | ||
+ | 1700 meters from the Cuyaqui Stream | ||
+ | Ford, is abrupt, with steep slopes, deep | ||
+ | ravines, and landslides. The dominant | ||
+ | vegetation is roble (Nothofagus | ||
+ | obliqua), raulí (Nothofagus alpina), | ||
+ | and coihue (Nothofagus dombeyi); | ||
+ | quila (Chusquea quila) is also important. | ||
+ | Here the trail is in good shape, | ||
+ | although you should ride carefully in | ||
+ | the landslide areas and where the trail | ||
+ | is narrowest. The landscape changes | ||
+ | as of 650 m.a.s.l., and the vegetation, | ||
+ | mostly second-growth coihue and | ||
+ | raulí, grows denser on both sides of | ||
+ | the path.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | As you go on, you will see a | ||
+ | large landslide covering the trail at | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 2. This is an example | ||
+ | of the effects of natural disturbances | ||
+ | on the landscape. The colonization | ||
+ | and re-vegetation of this extensive | ||
+ | landslide area shows the ecosystem’s | ||
+ | capacity for recovery. The landslide | ||
+ | is about 50 meters wide and 500 meters | ||
+ | long, running from the head of | ||
+ | San Pablo Hill to the Cuyaqui River. | ||
+ | Look for quila and species of the genus | ||
+ | Nothofagus such as coihue and | ||
+ | roble colonizing the stony, otherwise | ||
+ | bare soil. The former residents | ||
+ | of Fundo Porvenir say that the landslide | ||
+ | occurred at the beginning of the | ||
+ | 1980s. The construction of the forest | ||
+ | penetration road, the traffic of heavy | ||
+ | machinery, and heavy precipitations | ||
+ | may have triggered this geomorphologic | ||
+ | process.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Former lumbering operations and | ||
+ | their ecological impact'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The trail leaves Guidepost No. 2 and | ||
+ | continues through a forest of coihue, | ||
+ | roble, and raulí. Guidepost | ||
+ | No. 3, First Sawmill Bench, | ||
+ | is about 300 meters | ||
+ | along the trail. | ||
+ | This open sector, | ||
+ | approximately one hectare, is crossed | ||
+ | by a small stream and surrounded by | ||
+ | native vegetation. The vestiges of a | ||
+ | sawmill that began operating here in | ||
+ | 1972 stand in mute witness to the intense | ||
+ | lumber exploitation of the 1970s | ||
+ | and 1980s. These ruins include two | ||
+ | steam engines (8 and 12 horsepower), | ||
+ | half buried and rusted by the passage | ||
+ | of time. One of these machines, | ||
+ | with bits of metal and wood encrusted | ||
+ | among its iron parts, is right beside | ||
+ | the trail, completely abandoned and | ||
+ | overgrown, a manifestation of human | ||
+ | colonization – an ancient epic in | ||
+ | which humans and machines fought | ||
+ | side by side to conquer Pemehue – and | ||
+ | the natural forces that limit its realization. | ||
+ | You will also see old buildings | ||
+ | and the remains of a cabin used as a | ||
+ | post by the workers of the time. The | ||
+ | First Sawmill Bench was one of the | ||
+ | first lumber projects in the Pemehue | ||
+ | Range, initiating operations, mainly | ||
+ | the sawing of coihue, in 1972 and | ||
+ | shutting them down in 1981. When | ||
+ | operational, the sawmill produced | ||
+ | approximately 4000 inches of sawed | ||
+ | timber daily and the now-abandoned | ||
+ | steam engines provided the motor | ||
+ | force for both a saw and an edger. | ||
+ | After sawing, the lumber was stacked | ||
+ | and trucked, weather and road conditions | ||
+ | permitting, to the estate owner’s | ||
+ | houses of Fundo Porvenir.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | This lumber was eventually taken to | ||
+ | the city of Santa Bárbara, where it was | ||
+ | stored in stockyards owned by a company | ||
+ | also named Santa Bárbara and | ||
+ | the former owner of Fundo Porvenir, | ||
+ | Mr. José Ángel Ciappa. During peak | ||
+ | exploitation periods (December to | ||
+ | March), anywhere from seven to ten | ||
+ | trucks would leave from here daily | ||
+ | with 400 inches of wood apiece, mainly | ||
+ | coihue and raulí. Early in the 1980s, | ||
+ | the economic problems of the owner | ||
+ | of Fundo Porvenir resulted in the permanent | ||
+ | shutdown of the First Sawmill | ||
+ | Bench. The sector and the landscape | ||
+ | now bear the irrefutable stamp of the | ||
+ | predatory action of humans. Along | ||
+ | with machines and penetration roads, | ||
+ | the piled-up remains of more than | ||
+ | 2000 inches of sawed coihue lie in | ||
+ | nearly complete decomposition.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | When you leave Guidepost No. 3, | ||
+ | First Sawmill Bench, the old forestry | ||
+ | road continues upwards. The landscape | ||
+ | is characterized by forests of | ||
+ | coihue, hazelnut (Gevuina avellana), | ||
+ | and quila brush (Chusquea quila). The | ||
+ | topography is precipitous and the bed | ||
+ | of the Cuyaqui Stream slowly becomes | ||
+ | visible from the trail. The slope of the | ||
+ | river increases sharply and Cuyaqui | ||
+ | Valley becomes much narrower and | ||
+ | more boxed-in, with enormous mature | ||
+ | coihue specimens standing along | ||
+ | the shores. This part of the trail runs | ||
+ | along the stream and you will have the | ||
+ | chance to see plant species associated | ||
+ | with more humid or uliginous environments. | ||
+ | These include laurel (Laurelia | ||
+ | sempervirens), chilco (Fuchsia magellanica), | ||
+ | nalcas (Gunnera tinctoria), | ||
+ | and copihues (Lapageria rosea).<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Unparalleled beauty and challenging | ||
+ | horse-back riding along the shores | ||
+ | of the Cuyaqui Stream | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 4, Cotton Road | ||
+ | (Camino Algodones) is about one kilometer | ||
+ | away from Guidepost No. 3. | ||
+ | At the beginning of this road, an old | ||
+ | wooden fence marks the threshold to | ||
+ | an area that clearly differs – in ecology | ||
+ | and morphology – from the previous | ||
+ | segments. The road’s name stems | ||
+ | from ironic references made by the former | ||
+ | workers of Fundo Porvenir given | ||
+ | the extremely harsh, wild nature of the | ||
+ | old trail, which was about 700 meters | ||
+ | long. Here, enormous trunks sprawl | ||
+ | across the bed of the Cuyaqui Stream, | ||
+ | dragged there by the rapids whereas, | ||
+ | upstream, you can see magnificent | ||
+ | panoramic views of the araucaria forests | ||
+ | of the Las Placetas Range. As of | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 4, the trail runs along | ||
+ | the Cuyaqui Stream, mostly on its left | ||
+ | shore. Your ride along the wide trail is | ||
+ | complicated by abundant rocks and | ||
+ | large stones, and some parts should | ||
+ | be done on foot. The characteristics of | ||
+ | this section of the trail, built between | ||
+ | 1970 and 1974, evoke the magnificence | ||
+ | of human entrepreneurship, ingenuity, | ||
+ | and effort.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Cotton | ||
+ | Road (Camino | ||
+ | Algodones) heads | ||
+ | out of the dense | ||
+ | vegetation and into an | ||
+ | open clearing that grants | ||
+ | a beautiful vista stretching | ||
+ | from the bed of the Cuyaqui | ||
+ | Stream to the surrounding | ||
+ | mountain ridges. As you | ||
+ | ride along, you will see forests | ||
+ | of coihue, hazelnut, | ||
+ | quila, and maqui brush | ||
+ | (Aristotelia chilensis) along the shores | ||
+ | of the Cuyaqui Stream, as well as occasional | ||
+ | specimens of tineo or palo | ||
+ | santo (Weinmannia trichosperma), | ||
+ | chilco, laurel, nalcas, and other species, | ||
+ | most of which are associated with | ||
+ | uliginous environments. You will also | ||
+ | hear the lyrical songs of the choroy or | ||
+ | narrow-billed parakeet (Enicognathus | ||
+ | ferrugineus), the chucao (Scelorchilus | ||
+ | rubecula rubecula), and the pitio | ||
+ | (Colaptes pitius pitius), natural inspiration | ||
+ | available only at the heights | ||
+ | of Pemehue. Another 400 meters beyond | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 4, the trail continues | ||
+ | its ascent, crossing over to the | ||
+ | right or north shore of the Cuyaqui | ||
+ | Stream. The characteristics on this | ||
+ | side of the stream are similar to those | ||
+ | on the south shore. Large rocks and | ||
+ | stones are interspersed among the | ||
+ | dense, damp vegetation. The stream | ||
+ | bed is associated with rich biodiversity. | ||
+ | At the end of Cotton Road, the | ||
+ | trail crosses back over the Cuyaqui | ||
+ | Stream (Guidepost No. 5). The sight of | ||
+ | huge trees felled and dragged along | ||
+ | by the force of the current makes this | ||
+ | the ideal place for a well-earned rest. | ||
+ | Here you can dally over the flora and | ||
+ | fauna, finding a wide variety of trees, | ||
+ | bushes, ferns, and nalcas. Introduced | ||
+ | medicinal plants like poleo (Mentha | ||
+ | pulegium) and mint (Mentha rotundifolia) | ||
+ | can be found all along the | ||
+ | circuit and in all its different ecological | ||
+ | environments, interspersed with | ||
+ | diverse native plants that also have | ||
+ | medicinal applications. Historically, | ||
+ | the plants used by the Pehuenches | ||
+ | and colonists were those associated | ||
+ | mainly with the underbrush. Llushu | ||
+ | lawen (Hymenophyllum dentatum), | ||
+ | a fern species, is used to heal the belly | ||
+ | button of newborns; llanca lawen | ||
+ | (Lycopodium paniculatum) is used to | ||
+ | treat ulcers and tumors; and lafquen | ||
+ | lawen (Euphorbia portulacoides) is a | ||
+ | water remedy. One of the best-known | ||
+ | native medicinal plants is cachan lawen | ||
+ | or cachanlagua (Erythraea chilensis). | ||
+ | Infusions of this plant can be | ||
+ | used for several therapeutic purposes, | ||
+ | including treating fevers and high | ||
+ | blood pressure, aiding circulation for | ||
+ | rheumatic conditions, and combatting | ||
+ | circulatory and hepatic disorders. | ||
+ | It is also an appetite stimulant that | ||
+ | aids in digestion.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The indigenous Pehuenches relied | ||
+ | frequently on the magical use | ||
+ | of plants. For example, women used | ||
+ | huentru lawen (Ophioglossum vulgatum) | ||
+ | to conceive male children and | ||
+ | huilel lawen (Hypolepis rugosula) | ||
+ | helped the machi or shaman forecast | ||
+ | problems caused by huekufu or | ||
+ | demons (1). Love potions to separate | ||
+ | lovers were prepared with huedahue | ||
+ | (Gleichenia litorales) and latue | ||
+ | (Latuapubzjlora). The latter is a highly | ||
+ | feared plant that can be lethal but | ||
+ | is a hallucinogen when taken in small | ||
+ | doses. The plants known as country | ||
+ | celery or panul (Apium panul), panke | ||
+ | or nalka (Gunnera tinctoria), and chupón | ||
+ | (Greigea sphacelata) are still | ||
+ | highly valued for their medicinal and | ||
+ | nutritional properties.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Undoubtedly, the use of forest | ||
+ | resources, “lelfunmapu” to the | ||
+ | Mapuches, was a fundamental aspect | ||
+ | of the Pehuenche and colonial | ||
+ | lifestyles. It defined some of the main | ||
+ | features of their identity and particular | ||
+ | world view. Along with plants, a large | ||
+ | amount of mushrooms were or are | ||
+ | also collected. More than ten species | ||
+ | of these are from the genus Cyttaria. | ||
+ | Known commonly as changles and | ||
+ | digüeñes, these fungi are associated | ||
+ | with the Nothofagus forest, especially | ||
+ | roble or pellín (N. obliqua) and | ||
+ | coigue (N. dombeyi). You will have so | ||
+ | much native flora to wonder over for | ||
+ | its enormous ecological and cultural | ||
+ | value that you will arrive at Guidepost | ||
+ | No. 5 (1000 m.a.s.l.) – after 5.1 km of | ||
+ | magnificent horse riding – before you | ||
+ | know it.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''A first encounter with the | ||
+ | araucarias and their tragic history | ||
+ | in Pemehue'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | After gathering your strength at | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 5 and carefully checking | ||
+ | your riding gear, you should follow | ||
+ | the trail that leads away from Cuyaqui | ||
+ | Stream heading towards Guidepost | ||
+ | No. 6, Second Sawmill | ||
+ | Bench. On this | ||
+ | segment of | ||
+ | the circuit, | ||
+ | the | ||
+ | level | ||
+ | of | ||
+ | difficulty | ||
+ | of the trail is | ||
+ | medium. The path is | ||
+ | mostly dirt, with very light | ||
+ | “trumao” soil in some sectors | ||
+ | and stones and larger | ||
+ | rocks in others, especially | ||
+ | right before Guidepost No. 6, | ||
+ | Second Sawmill Bench. The | ||
+ | slope of the trail also sharpens, | ||
+ | revealing the erosive effects | ||
+ | of the action of water. | ||
+ | The predominant vegetation | ||
+ | is coihue and quila, which are | ||
+ | shorter and lower in this drier | ||
+ | atmosphere. You are now | ||
+ | riding at over 1000 meters of | ||
+ | altitude, and the trail crosses | ||
+ | a landscape predominated | ||
+ | by araucaria forests | ||
+ | (Araucaria araucana) | ||
+ | and the magnificent | ||
+ | rocky promontories of the tallest peaks | ||
+ | of the Pemehue and Las Placetas ranges. | ||
+ | Listen again for the melodic calls | ||
+ | of the choroy (Enicognathus leptorhynchus), | ||
+ | also known as “wawilma” | ||
+ | or the slender-billed parakeet. This | ||
+ | small, meridonial, native Andean parrot | ||
+ | feeds on the piñón, or araucaria | ||
+ | pine nuts, thereby helping to scatter | ||
+ | the seeds of these centenary trees.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The importance of the araucaria, | ||
+ | or pewen in the language of the | ||
+ | Mapuches, is due to the conifer’s ecological | ||
+ | value as well as its capacity | ||
+ | to sustain the sociocultural development | ||
+ | of the Pehuenche peoples during | ||
+ | the prehispanic periods. It is for | ||
+ | this very reason that they began to | ||
+ | call themselves Pehuenche, meaning | ||
+ | the people of the pewen, or the araucarias. | ||
+ | The araucarias grow in areas | ||
+ | known as pewenmapu or pewenento, | ||
+ | the land or area of the pewen (2). Very | ||
+ | early accounts report the importance | ||
+ | of this resource to the subsistence of | ||
+ | the former hunters that inhabited this | ||
+ | mountainous region, a tradition that | ||
+ | has been maintained to date in spite of | ||
+ | the deep cultural changes experienced | ||
+ | by the Pehuenches. In 1760, Mariño de | ||
+ | Lobera stated:<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | “The subsistence of these people | ||
+ | is mainly pine nuts taken from pine | ||
+ | cones of different kinds and qualities, | ||
+ | the same as their trees... and the number | ||
+ | of them is so great that these trees | ||
+ | are in all the thickets and forests and | ||
+ | are sufficient for providing for all the | ||
+ | people, which are innumerable, so | ||
+ | much so that they are used to make | ||
+ | bread, wine, and stews. And as the | ||
+ | main harvest occurs at a given time | ||
+ | of the year, they have large silos made | ||
+ | underground in which they store the | ||
+ | pine nuts, hiding aboveground several | ||
+ | water channels... because if they | ||
+ | do not have water above them, they | ||
+ | sprout and then rot... They also distil | ||
+ | from this abundance a highly medicinal | ||
+ | white resin for a variety of illnesses....” | ||
+ | (3)<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Around the Second Sawmill Bench, | ||
+ | some 200 meters northeast of this former | ||
+ | lumber operation, is the spring | ||
+ | whose waters give life and vigour to | ||
+ | the Cuyaqui Stream. You can reach | ||
+ | the spring on foot, following a barely | ||
+ | visible path through the quila brush. | ||
+ | A pool of water about 5 meters across | ||
+ | accumulates at the mouth of the | ||
+ | spring, forming a 3-meter-high waterfall. | ||
+ | A small creek (about 1-2 litres per | ||
+ | second) flows out from the waterfall, | ||
+ | giving rise to the headwaters of the | ||
+ | Cuyaqui Stream. Here, you can enjoy | ||
+ | native vegetation such as ferns, nalcas, | ||
+ | and other floral species in a fairly | ||
+ | undisturbed natural environment that | ||
+ | is rich in biodiversity.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | At the site of Guidepost No. 6, Second | ||
+ | Sawmill Bench, the abandoned, decomposing | ||
+ | remains of countless | ||
+ | coihue and araucaria trunks, some | ||
+ | over a meter in diameter, are spread | ||
+ | out over an area of sparse vegetation. | ||
+ | About 10000 inches of uncut wood, | ||
+ | mostly coihue, were left here. When | ||
+ | operational, the facilities and sawing | ||
+ | equipment could generate about | ||
+ | 1500 inches of wood, mainly araucaria, | ||
+ | daily. Coihue was processed at | ||
+ | the First Sawmill Bench, since the standard | ||
+ | operating procedures of the day | ||
+ | required moving the wood from the | ||
+ | higher areas in trucks or with the aid | ||
+ | of oxen. The effort made by the sawmill | ||
+ | workers is noteworthy, especially | ||
+ | considering that they dealt not only | ||
+ | with the rigors of forestry operations in | ||
+ | isolated, wild environments, but also | ||
+ | with the lengthy trip made daily from | ||
+ | their homes on Fundo Porvenir or in | ||
+ | the village of Ralco to the exploitation | ||
+ | sites on the mountain. In those days, | ||
+ | the trip to the Second Sawmill Bench | ||
+ | required a bit over three hours of hard, | ||
+ | exhausting hiking.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Segment 2=== | ||
+ | '''Second Sawmill Bench - El Cóndor Lookout'''<br> | ||
+ | *Distance: 6 km.<br> | ||
+ | *Walking Time: 2 hr 30 min.<br> | ||
+ | *Season: November to march<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <span style="color:red">Well-marked, stone horse trail, ascending and descending. Panoramic views of the Cuyaqui Stream Gorge, Pemehue peaks, and Las Venenosas Gorge. Scenic views of araucaria forests and prior forest exploitation. Fauna sightings. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo2-a.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo2-b.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo2-c.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | Take your time exploring the vestiges | ||
+ | of the Second Sawmill Bench. | ||
+ | Then mount back up and head out | ||
+ | slowly, making frequent stops, along | ||
+ | the trail leading to the summits of Las | ||
+ | Placetas Range and the first spurs of | ||
+ | the Pemehue Range. About 500 meters | ||
+ | past Guidepost No. 6, you can | ||
+ | take a break and gather your strength | ||
+ | in an area free of vegetation that offers | ||
+ | interesting and lovely views of the | ||
+ | Cuyaqui Stream Gorge and the volcanic | ||
+ | and granite peaks and promontories | ||
+ | of the surrounding mountain | ||
+ | formations. On this route dominated | ||
+ | by araucaria forests and quila underbrush, | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 7 marks the beginning | ||
+ | of the final ascent to the peaks | ||
+ | of Las Placetas and Pemehue.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''The majestic peaks of the | ||
+ | Pemehue and Las Placetas ranges'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The horse trail continues on past | ||
+ | the headwaters of Cuyaqui Stream, | ||
+ | now heading towards Guidepost No. | ||
+ | 8, Las Placetas and Pemehue Lookout. | ||
+ | After zigzagging along for about 800 | ||
+ | stony meters, the trail into the forest | ||
+ | straightens out, with the peaks of Las | ||
+ | Placetas Range on the right hand side | ||
+ | and the magnificent Cuyaqui Stream | ||
+ | Gorge on the left. The vista here extends | ||
+ | some 500 meters in length and | ||
+ | is broad and unspeakably beautiful. | ||
+ | The location offers an unforgettable | ||
+ | view of the Cuyaqui Stream Ravine | ||
+ | and the enormous rocky promontories | ||
+ | of Las Placetas Range, crowned by | ||
+ | araucaria forests. During this segment | ||
+ | of the circuit, you will see how the natural | ||
+ | elements affect the conformation | ||
+ | and physiognomy of the landscape. | ||
+ | A shelf carved from granite and cornices | ||
+ | of abundant stony material on | ||
+ | the mountainside evoke not only the | ||
+ | transformative force of human beings, | ||
+ | but also of the elements in mountain | ||
+ | environments. Processes associated | ||
+ | with sharp changes in temperature | ||
+ | and the important presence of snow | ||
+ | at altitudes exceeding 1000 meters | ||
+ | can be seen from this area.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Here, great, tall granite towers rise | ||
+ | over your head, where they are exposed | ||
+ | to the actions of the wind, | ||
+ | water, and temperatures. The very | ||
+ | heights of Las Placetas Range seem | ||
+ | to stretch out, reaching toward the | ||
+ | heavens; gorgeous araucaria specimens | ||
+ | stand firm against the forces of | ||
+ | the elements, taking us back to | ||
+ | earlier times, environments, | ||
+ | and landscapes. Watch | ||
+ | for a route marker about | ||
+ | 100 meters beyond Guidepost No. 8 | ||
+ | and to the right of the route. This sign | ||
+ | points the way to an excellent lookout | ||
+ | point over Las Venenosas Gorge | ||
+ | and Cuyano Stream. If you continue | ||
+ | riding another 100 meters over the | ||
+ | peaks of the Pemehue Range, heading | ||
+ | towards Guidepost No. 8, you will | ||
+ | be granted a magnificent, expansive | ||
+ | view with beautiful panoramas of the | ||
+ | Las Placetas and Pemehue ranges, | ||
+ | Callaqui Volcano, the tall and irregular | ||
+ | peaks of Sierra Velluda, and the | ||
+ | mountain valleys of the Cuyaqui and | ||
+ | Cuyano streams. You are now 1439 | ||
+ | m.a.s.l. and have covered 8.5 km of the | ||
+ | Heritage Route.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Araucarias, culture, and mountainous | ||
+ | ecological environments'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Moving on from Guidepost No. 8, | ||
+ | you will begin a slow descent to the | ||
+ | southeast, in the direction of Guidepost | ||
+ | No. 9. The trail runs along the north | ||
+ | mountainside of the Cuyano Stream | ||
+ | Gorge, only about 200 meters from the | ||
+ | high watershed peaks of the Pemehue | ||
+ | Range. On this segment of the circuit, | ||
+ | the forests are predominantly araucaria | ||
+ | and lenga (Nothofagus pumilio), | ||
+ | with the ever-present associated quila | ||
+ | underbrush. Keep your eyes open for | ||
+ | interesting flowers blooming in the | ||
+ | rocky walls on both sides of the trail. | ||
+ | To the right, the Cuyano Stream Gorge | ||
+ | and Las Venenosas Veranadas are surrounded | ||
+ | by vast stretches of araucaria | ||
+ | forests previously subjected to intense | ||
+ | and unmitigated forestry exploitation. | ||
+ | This grazing area was named | ||
+ | Las Venenosas (The Poisonous Ones) | ||
+ | because of the weeds or bushes in the | ||
+ | area that are poisonous for livestock, | ||
+ | principally cattle.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | About 400 meters before Guidepost | ||
+ | No. 9, Third Sawmill Bench, the trail | ||
+ | turns off to the left, following a narrow | ||
+ | path that crosses a native forest. | ||
+ | This path merges with the former | ||
+ | forest penetration road around the | ||
+ | Third Sawmill Bench. You can get to | ||
+ | the sawmill by veering right after the | ||
+ | marker indicating Guidepost No. 9. | ||
+ | About 80 meters down, there is a route | ||
+ | marker on the left that points in the direction | ||
+ | of the old sawmill.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Several piles of sawed araucaria | ||
+ | lumber, both boards (7x1 inches) and | ||
+ | blocks (10x10 inches) can be seen at | ||
+ | the Third Sawmill Bench, where nearly | ||
+ | 40000 inches of araucaria have | ||
+ | laid abandoned and decaying since | ||
+ | 1978. Blackened mounds of sawdust | ||
+ | are scattered among the vegetation, | ||
+ | perfectly humidified by the passage | ||
+ | of time. Trees and bushes grow in the | ||
+ | middle of what was once an intensive | ||
+ | work centre, revealing the length of the | ||
+ | abandonment. When you are done at | ||
+ | the Third Sawmill Bench, head back | ||
+ | southwards to the old forestry trail. | ||
+ | Here you will take up a more shadowy | ||
+ | segment of the circuit, surrounded | ||
+ | constantly by araucaria, lenga, coihue, | ||
+ | ñirre, and quila forests. The remains of | ||
+ | large trees lying over the trail are a typical | ||
+ | element on this part of the trail, as | ||
+ | are the extensive araucaria forests of | ||
+ | the Cuyano Stream Valley.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | You will ride a little more than one | ||
+ | kilometer past Guidepost No. 9 on a | ||
+ | wide, easy-riding trail before coming | ||
+ | to Guidepost No. 10, Las Venenosas | ||
+ | Lookout (1424 m.a.s.l.). This offers an | ||
+ | unforgettable vantage for looking | ||
+ | out over the Cuyano Stream Gorge | ||
+ | and Las Venenosas Veranadas. At | ||
+ | this guidepost, the changes in vegetation | ||
+ | and landscape are more evident. | ||
+ | Some grounds lack vegetation | ||
+ | and the rest are dominated by quila | ||
+ | and coirón, characteristic species of | ||
+ | Andean steppe and mountain veranada | ||
+ | environments over 1200 m.a.s.l. | ||
+ | Coirón is a dominant species in the | ||
+ | area. Its name likely comes from a | ||
+ | Mapuche dialect and alludes more to | ||
+ | the rolled and grassy form of the leaf | ||
+ | (Andropogon argenteum, Festúceas), | ||
+ | which has several sections, than to the | ||
+ | species itself. Basically, this means that | ||
+ | the leaves have whorls and are hard | ||
+ | and pointy. If you are lucky, you will | ||
+ | be able to catch a glimpse of a condor | ||
+ | (Vultur gryphus), the majestic and | ||
+ | symbolic carrion bird of the Andes.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | About 200 meters south of this | ||
+ | guidepost, riding along the foothills | ||
+ | of the Pemehue Range, the wide forestry | ||
+ | trail reaches its end after 1000 km | ||
+ | of interesting and spectacular riding. | ||
+ | The trail forks and, to the left, you will | ||
+ | see the ascent to El Peñón Ridge; to the | ||
+ | right, a detour leads to La Frutilla Lake, | ||
+ | approximately 2 km southeast. The | ||
+ | fork is marked by a route marker.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''El Peñón Range and El Cóndor | ||
+ | Lookout'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | When you pass the fork in the road, | ||
+ | you will begin the climb up to the peaks | ||
+ | of El Peñón Range, moving along the | ||
+ | north face, bare of trees but covered | ||
+ | in sparse quila and coirón brush. Here, | ||
+ | you’ll need to keep a close eye on the | ||
+ | route markers in order to stay on track. | ||
+ | This segment ends one kilometer past | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 11, El Cóndor Lookout | ||
+ | (1467 m.a.s.l.).<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | This guidepost offers an exceptional | ||
+ | vista of the Cuyano Stream Gully and | ||
+ | you might even catch a glimpse of the | ||
+ | surprising and unparalleled flight of | ||
+ | the condors that habitually soar over | ||
+ | the zone. The slow ascent to El Peñon | ||
+ | Ridge merits frequent stops along the | ||
+ | way and is marked by route markers.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Segment 3=== | ||
+ | '''El Cóndor Lookout - Santa Rosa Lake'''<br> | ||
+ | *Distance: 1,8 km.<br> | ||
+ | *Walking Time: 1 hr. 30 min.<br> | ||
+ | *Season: November to march<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <span style="color:red">Dirt or “trumao” soil horse trail, descending to Santa Rosa Lake and ascending to Portezuelo Trinidad Lookout. Scenic views of veranada landscapes, Santa Rosa Stream Gorge, Callaqui Volcano, Sierra Velluda, lakes. Fauna sightings. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo3-a.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo3-b.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo3-c.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''The descent to Santa Rosa Lake | ||
+ | and the Santa Rosa Stream Gorge'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The summit of El Peñón Ridge is | ||
+ | at 1507 meters altitude. This is the | ||
+ | site of Guidepost No. 12, Descent to | ||
+ | Santa Rosa Lake. To the east, you can | ||
+ | see the beautiful mountainscapes | ||
+ | of the Santa Rosa Stream Gorge and | ||
+ | Callaqui Volcano and, to the south, | ||
+ | Portezuelo Trinidad. We recommend | ||
+ | that you check your riding gear at | ||
+ | this guidepost, as you will be commencing | ||
+ | a slow, steep descent. Back | ||
+ | in the saddle and heading towards the | ||
+ | lakes Las Parrillas, Las Totoras, and La | ||
+ | Tasa, watch for the numerous whitish | ||
+ | trunks covering the foothills lining | ||
+ | the Santa Rosa Stream Gorge. These | ||
+ | provide more evidence of human action | ||
+ | and the use of fire to clear the | ||
+ | land for livestock, a common practice | ||
+ | of the colonists. These burns assured | ||
+ | the regeneration of grasses for the following | ||
+ | season but have impeded the | ||
+ | normal recovery of the affected native | ||
+ | forest and have intensified erosion | ||
+ | and soil loss in the primary burn sectors, | ||
+ | mostly veranadas. The blackened | ||
+ | bark of some araucarias indicates the | ||
+ | fire reached as far as their stands. The | ||
+ | thick bark of these trees reflects the | ||
+ | millenary adaptive processes of this | ||
+ | formidable conifer when faced with | ||
+ | the vicissitudes of nature such as volcanism | ||
+ | and the irrational predatory | ||
+ | action of humans.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The most important activities in this | ||
+ | mountain region have been forestry | ||
+ | and livestock. The often indiscriminate | ||
+ | exploitation of forest resources | ||
+ | has caused serious damage to the forests | ||
+ | and natural resources associated | ||
+ | with these ecosystems. The need for | ||
+ | the local communities to make suitable | ||
+ | areas for planting and grazing | ||
+ | has meant a progressive decrease in | ||
+ | vegetative covering, as have uncontrolled | ||
+ | burns and cutting of the forest, | ||
+ | common practices among both | ||
+ | the colonists and indigenous peoples. | ||
+ | Moreover, large-scale lumber exploitation | ||
+ | by the company Ralco S.A. between | ||
+ | 1940 and 1970 and by the former | ||
+ | owners of Fundo Porvenir along | ||
+ | with the high demand for wood by | ||
+ | the cellulose industry contributed | ||
+ | heavily to the decrease of vegetative | ||
+ | covering. This resulted in a loss of the | ||
+ | productive and regenerative capacity | ||
+ | of the native forest, especially for species | ||
+ | like araucaria, lenga, coihue, roble, | ||
+ | and raulí.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | It should also be noted that wood is | ||
+ | extracted for firewood, charcoal, and | ||
+ | building materials, especially fences, | ||
+ | in areas next to winter pastures. The | ||
+ | intervention in the forest has not usually | ||
+ | been regulated by management | ||
+ | plans and, therefore, the agricultural | ||
+ | methods applied do not necessarily | ||
+ | guarantee the appropriate use of the | ||
+ | soil. On the contrary, the “floreo del | ||
+ | bosque”, or cutting down the best individuals | ||
+ | without considering longterm | ||
+ | consequences, was a commonly | ||
+ | used technique for local wood exploitation, | ||
+ | seriously affecting the forest’s | ||
+ | capacity for regeneration.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Evidence of ancestral Pehuenche | ||
+ | culture in the Pemehue Range'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | About 300 meters from Guidepost | ||
+ | No. 12, to the right of the trail, is a magnificent | ||
+ | promontory of white granite | ||
+ | rock dripping stone fragments down | ||
+ | the mountainside and forming a cone | ||
+ | of low-level erosion. At the apex, araucaria | ||
+ | specimens were witness to the | ||
+ | unbreakable will of the colonists in | ||
+ | these extremely harsh ecological environments. | ||
+ | In this sector, you should | ||
+ | pay close attention to the trail, noting | ||
+ | the remains of Pehuenche utensils used | ||
+ | in their historic travels to the pinalerías, | ||
+ | or araucaria forests. Fragments of a | ||
+ | stone mortar used to grind pine nuts | ||
+ | evokes past travels and broadens our | ||
+ | understanding of the geographic and | ||
+ | territorial distribution of this culture in | ||
+ | the Andean massifs of the Alto Biobío.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Remains of Pehuenche mortar | ||
+ | near Las Parrillas Lake'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Earlier, the Pehuenches, or people | ||
+ | of the araucarias, occupied the valleys | ||
+ | of the western slopes of the Andes | ||
+ | Mountains, from Antuco Volcano in | ||
+ | the north to Villarrica Volcano in the | ||
+ | south, according to the geographic | ||
+ | distribution of the araucaria forests, or | ||
+ | pinalerías. Nowadays, the Pehuenche | ||
+ | population and communities are | ||
+ | geographically limited in Chile to | ||
+ | the sector of the Andes Mountains | ||
+ | known as Alto Biobío, which is, administratively, | ||
+ | made up by the townships | ||
+ | of Alto Biobío and Quilaco in the | ||
+ | Biobío Region and Lonquimay in the | ||
+ | Araucanía Region. The Pehuenches of | ||
+ | Alto Biobío are grouped into 11 communities, | ||
+ | located on the shores of the | ||
+ | Queuco and Biobío rivers, with an estimated | ||
+ | population of 7000. In this | ||
+ | area, which is part of the Alto Biobío | ||
+ | Indigenous Development Area (ADI), | ||
+ | the land occupied by the Pehuenches | ||
+ | and recognized by the State of Chile as | ||
+ | part of their former territories covers | ||
+ | approximately 90,000 hectares (4).<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The geographic, ecological, and | ||
+ | environmental factors of Alto Biobío | ||
+ | have determined the lifestyle and | ||
+ | sociocultural organization of the | ||
+ | Pehuenche communities, as well | ||
+ | as the useful and symbolic | ||
+ | relationships that have | ||
+ | been established with | ||
+ | these territories and | ||
+ | their natural resources. | ||
+ | Thus, we are able | ||
+ | to distinguish between | ||
+ | different occupied | ||
+ | spaces that form | ||
+ | part of a productive cycle | ||
+ | sustaining the traditional | ||
+ | life style of both the | ||
+ | Pehuenche communities | ||
+ | and the colonists that lived in the area, | ||
+ | including Pemehue Range and Fundo | ||
+ | Porvenir. These spaces include veranadas, | ||
+ | winter pastures, pine groves, native | ||
+ | forest, rivers, and lakes. For the | ||
+ | Pehuenches, an important part of the | ||
+ | territory is shared and is used based | ||
+ | on the annual cycle of activities and | ||
+ | the availability of natural resources. In | ||
+ | this sense, each family owns the goods | ||
+ | that it is able to gather, but some communities | ||
+ | still do not recognize exclusive | ||
+ | individual propriety over land or | ||
+ | territories that, ancestrally, belonged | ||
+ | to the community, such as the pine | ||
+ | groves or araucaria forests and the veranadas. | ||
+ | Once, any Pehuenche could | ||
+ | cultivate the soil as they liked and the | ||
+ | products were theirs to keep. However, | ||
+ | they could not use the earth itself as | ||
+ | property, neither selling nor renting it. | ||
+ | Although it was of common use, it belonged, | ||
+ | ultimately, to the community.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Both the winter pastures, with their | ||
+ | accompanying houses, corrals, crops, | ||
+ | and native forests, and the veranadas | ||
+ | are associated with the annual | ||
+ | weather regime and depend on the | ||
+ | presence or absence of snow. Once the | ||
+ | snow begins to melt in the spring, the | ||
+ | Pehuenches and colonists began the | ||
+ | ascent to the veranadas, taking their | ||
+ | animals to the new pastures and beginning | ||
+ | the pine nut harvest. The territorial | ||
+ | continuity between these ecological | ||
+ | environments, that is, the free | ||
+ | movement of people and resources | ||
+ | over them, was a fundamental aspect | ||
+ | for the economic and cultural development | ||
+ | of these peoples, as well as | ||
+ | for the management of the natural | ||
+ | resources. Their manner of relating to | ||
+ | the earth, based largely on the transhumance | ||
+ | livestock and collection | ||
+ | of wild fruits (pine nuts, hazelnuts, | ||
+ | digüeñes) is common throughout the | ||
+ | entire Alto Biobío and in the Pemehue | ||
+ | Range. The names of the mountains, | ||
+ | rivers, and streams are reminiscent of | ||
+ | the fact that the route that you are | ||
+ | travelling on was once part of the area | ||
+ | through which the Pehuenche peoples | ||
+ | were distributed geographically and | ||
+ | historically. Most recently, this area | ||
+ | sheltered the indigenous peoples from | ||
+ | the brutal onslaught and persecution | ||
+ | to which they were subjected by Chile | ||
+ | and Argentina in the mid nineteenth | ||
+ | century.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Cognitively, the Pehuenches understand | ||
+ | the forested araucaria formations | ||
+ | in the same way they do | ||
+ | their own society. They distinguish | ||
+ | clearly between feminine (fruit-bearing) | ||
+ | specimens, or domopewen, and | ||
+ | masculine specimens, or wentrupewen; | ||
+ | specimens with male and female | ||
+ | cones are understood to be bisexual. | ||
+ | Fecundation of the araucarias is anemophilous, | ||
+ | or done through the wind; | ||
+ | the Pehuenches understood this fertilization | ||
+ | to be a sexual process in which | ||
+ | the pines of both sexes come into contact | ||
+ | underground through their roots | ||
+ | or in the air via mountain parrots.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Thus, each araucaria forest is an | ||
+ | extensive family group known as a | ||
+ | lobpewen, and equivalent to a lobche, | ||
+ | or Pehuenche family. The Pehuenches | ||
+ | believe that these forests are protected | ||
+ | by supernatural beings: the old | ||
+ | man of the pewen cares for the male | ||
+ | trees, whereas the old woman of the | ||
+ | pewen looks after the female trees. | ||
+ | Family prayers are said to these entities | ||
+ | prior to the harvest and community | ||
+ | prayers at the end of this. These | ||
+ | rites are performed in the forests themselves, | ||
+ | thereby assuring the conservation | ||
+ | of the trees, their protection, and | ||
+ | fertility (5).<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Having passed the white granite | ||
+ | rock, the landscape becomes rather | ||
+ | dry and arid, with scant trees and | ||
+ | low quila and coirón brush. Santa | ||
+ | Rosa Lake appears, surrounded by | ||
+ | araucaria forests and quila bush. In | ||
+ | the distance, an enormous basalt | ||
+ | rock, reaching up to around 100 | ||
+ | meters height, and Portezuelo | ||
+ | Trinidad greet you. Good news: you | ||
+ | are nearing Guidepost No. 13, where | ||
+ | you will rest and camp after your first | ||
+ | day on the trail.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The surface of Santa Rosa Lake is | ||
+ | approximately 5.2 hectares (280 meters | ||
+ | wide and 380 meters long) and the | ||
+ | lake is 9.5 meters deep at its centre. It is | ||
+ | surrounded by araucaria forests and | ||
+ | quila brush and its shores, which | ||
+ | lack beach areas, are covered | ||
+ | by junquillo vegetation. The | ||
+ | rather warm waters of | ||
+ | the lake are inviting | ||
+ | and you | ||
+ | should | ||
+ | indulge in some well-earned rest, relaxation, | ||
+ | and recreation. This is the | ||
+ | ideal place to camp and prepare your | ||
+ | food. You can get water from a spring | ||
+ | just 20 meters from the marker that indicates | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 13. Remember | ||
+ | that you must, with the help of your | ||
+ | guide, unsaddle your mounts and put | ||
+ | them out to pasture. It is also a good | ||
+ | time to look for dry firewood and light | ||
+ | your campfire beside the wooden post | ||
+ | used by the colonists on their habitual | ||
+ | trips to the area. Such constructions | ||
+ | are characteristic of the mountain veranadas | ||
+ | and are usually used for shelter | ||
+ | by the herdsmen when they drive | ||
+ | their animals to the high pastures. | ||
+ | The Santa Rosa post was built by Mr. | ||
+ | Lizardo Urrea, a former worker on | ||
+ | Fundo Porvenir, in 1993.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Segment 4=== | ||
+ | '''Santa Rosa Lake - Mallín Largo Veranada'''<br> | ||
+ | *Distance: 6 km.<br> | ||
+ | *Walking Time: 3 hr.<br> | ||
+ | *Season: November to march<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <span style="color:red">Poorly indicated or “trumao” soil horse trail over the peaks of the Pemehue Range, descending to Mallín Largo | ||
+ | Veranada. Scenic views of pristine araucaria, lenga, and ñirre forests. Panoramic views of Prados de Maitenes Stream Gorge and Huida Ridge. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo4-a.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo4-b.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo4-c.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''On the road to Portezuelo Trinidad | ||
+ | and the Prados de Maitenes | ||
+ | Stream Gorge''' | ||
+ | |||
+ | You should wake the next day renewed | ||
+ | and refreshed, ready to take | ||
+ | to the trail for a second day of riding. | ||
+ | Start by heading south towards | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 14, Mirador Portezuelo | ||
+ | Trinidad; this is now the fourth segment | ||
+ | of the circuit. After leaving Santa | ||
+ | Rosa Lake, the trail slowly climbs down | ||
+ | to El Peñón Stream. The landscape | ||
+ | is characterized by quila and coirón | ||
+ | and, to the south, Portezuelo Trinidad, | ||
+ | a mountain ridge surrounded by low, | ||
+ | sparse brush. To the right of El Peñón | ||
+ | Stream, whose stony bed does not | ||
+ | exceed 3 meters across, you can see | ||
+ | a rocky formation nearly 100 meters | ||
+ | high with some araucaria specimens | ||
+ | colonizing its stony base. After riding | ||
+ | another 300 meters, you will see two | ||
+ | large rocks to the right of the route | ||
+ | polished by the action of the snow. | ||
+ | The locals call these Las Lápidas (the | ||
+ | tombstones), as the area was once a | ||
+ | Pehuenche burial site. Take your time | ||
+ | exploring this place and enjoying the | ||
+ | gorgeous vistas of Santa Rosa Lake | ||
+ | and Gorge. When you take up the trail | ||
+ | again, you will head towards one of | ||
+ | the highest altitude spots on this circuit, | ||
+ | Portezuelo Trinidad Lookout (1528 | ||
+ | m.a.s.l.).<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | From here, you will have spectacular | ||
+ | panoramic views in practically | ||
+ | all directions and your pictures are | ||
+ | sure to reveal mountain images and | ||
+ | landscapes of unmatched beauty. To | ||
+ | the northeast and in the distance are | ||
+ | the white, irregular peaks of Sierra | ||
+ | Velluda; to the east is the magnificent | ||
+ | Callaqui Volcano (also known as | ||
+ | Callaquen Volcano), its fumaroles, and | ||
+ | the foothills of the araucaria-forested | ||
+ | Colluco Veranada; to the south lie | ||
+ | Quilapehuén Hill and the high watersheds | ||
+ | of the Pemehue Range; and, to | ||
+ | the west, the peaks of El Peñón Ridge | ||
+ | and Stream.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | When you leave Portezuelo Trinidad | ||
+ | Lookout, the trail continues southward | ||
+ | along the peaks of El Peñón Ridge towards | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 15, Quilapehuén | ||
+ | Hill Lookout (1716 m.a.s.l.). This is the | ||
+ | beginning of a pristine araucaria forest | ||
+ | and the Prados de Maitenes Stream | ||
+ | Gorge. The trail between Guideposts | ||
+ | 14 and 15 is characterized by scant | ||
+ | trees, with some araucaria specimens | ||
+ | dotting the lower stretches of El Peñón | ||
+ | Stream and the highest mountain | ||
+ | summits.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | A rocky promontory stands off to the | ||
+ | right of the trail, about 40 to 50 meters | ||
+ | high. A small araucaria grove crowns | ||
+ | the nearly vertical wall at the highest | ||
+ | part, or the cornice. The trail here | ||
+ | is fairly tricky, with abundant stone | ||
+ | matter that was loosened or broken | ||
+ | off from the rock by the effects of gravity, | ||
+ | the rain, and abrupt temperature | ||
+ | changes, falling from the highest parts | ||
+ | of the volcanic cornice. Lake Trinidad | ||
+ | is also part of this landscape with its | ||
+ | typical varied geomorphologic forms | ||
+ | and ecological processes of mountain | ||
+ | environments at over 1500 meters altitude. | ||
+ | This site also offers an unforgettable | ||
+ | view of Quilapehuén Hill and | ||
+ | evidence of old burnings or fires. Two | ||
+ | araucarias stand off to the right of | ||
+ | the trail, offering a warm welcome to | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 15, where excellent panoramic | ||
+ | views of Quilapehuén Hill and | ||
+ | El Peñón Stream Gorge, an affluent of | ||
+ | the Santa Rosa Stream, await you.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''The araucarias of the Prados de | ||
+ | Maitenes Stream Gorge and El | ||
+ | Peñón Ridge'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | After crossing the remains of an old | ||
+ | fence, you will move to the left, slowly | ||
+ | going through a shadowy araucaria | ||
+ | forest. Some 1000 meters to the | ||
+ | south, you will reach Guidepost No. 16, | ||
+ | El Peñón Ridge. This route borders the | ||
+ | peaks of Pemehue, El Diablo Stream | ||
+ | Gorge, and the northern part of the | ||
+ | Prados de Maitenes Stream Gorge. | ||
+ | Here, you can take in the entire magnitude | ||
+ | of this beautiful amphitheatre | ||
+ | of araucaria. The presence of the socalled | ||
+ | pine beard or pine moss indicates | ||
+ | that these forests, associated | ||
+ | with lenga and quila, were not past | ||
+ | victims of fire or lumber exploitation. | ||
+ | Thus, the area’s ecological integrity is | ||
+ | adequate for managing the conservation | ||
+ | of its resources.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | From this perspective, the Pemehue | ||
+ | Range has important ecological characteristics | ||
+ | that warrant special care | ||
+ | for the conservation, protection, and | ||
+ | support of biodiversity. These aspects | ||
+ | include the presence of part of the deciduous | ||
+ | Andean forest of the Biobío, six | ||
+ | inadequately known species, and 34 | ||
+ | species in precarious stages of conservation | ||
+ | such as the guiña (Felix guigna), | ||
+ | condor, “crybaby lizard” (Liolaemus | ||
+ | chiliensis), frog (Telmatobufo venustus), | ||
+ | and Creole perch (Percichthys trucha) | ||
+ | as well as endemic species like the | ||
+ | amphibian Alsodes vittatus. In turn, | ||
+ | the water courses running through | ||
+ | the ravines provide a favourable environment | ||
+ | in which numerous invertebrates, | ||
+ | amphibians, and fish can develop | ||
+ | their life cycles.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Nonetheless, one of the main | ||
+ | threats to the conservation of these | ||
+ | ecosystems and their associated biodiversity | ||
+ | is the vulnerability of the soils | ||
+ | given hydric erosion processes derived | ||
+ | mainly from the traditional and historic | ||
+ | uses to which the area’s natural | ||
+ | resources have been subjected. In spite | ||
+ | of this, the native vegetation that you | ||
+ | see along the route has been slowly | ||
+ | recovering through a process of ecological | ||
+ | succession of second-growth | ||
+ | forests.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Guidepost No. 16 is sheltered by | ||
+ | gorgeous araucaria individuals. Here | ||
+ | you can recover your strength and | ||
+ | observe the veranadas of the Prado | ||
+ | de Maitenes Stream Gorge towards | ||
+ | the east and, towards the south, the | ||
+ | enormous rocky promontory of Los | ||
+ | Caciques Hills, with araucarias on | ||
+ | both its foothills and its highest peaks. | ||
+ | This same site offers an excellent panorama | ||
+ | of El Diablo River Gorge on the | ||
+ | right, that is, to the west. We recommend | ||
+ | you take a brief rest here and | ||
+ | check your riding gear in preparation | ||
+ | for the descent to Guidepost No. 17, | ||
+ | Mallín Largo Veranada. It is especially | ||
+ | important that you watch for route | ||
+ | markers on the way down as these | ||
+ | will indicate an eastward shift in the | ||
+ | trail. Once at Guidepost No. 17, the | ||
+ | predominant vegetation is low quila | ||
+ | brush, along with coirón and lowgrowing | ||
+ | ñirre (Nothofagus antartica) | ||
+ | forest. Huida Ridge is visible in the distance | ||
+ | and Mallín Largo Veranada is a | ||
+ | bit nearer.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Mallín Largo Veranada'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Congratulations! You have nearly | ||
+ | reached Guidepost No. 17, or Mallín | ||
+ | Largo Veranada, in the Prados de | ||
+ | Maitenes Stream Gorge. You have ridden | ||
+ | 20 km of the route and have been | ||
+ | on horseback for almost 10 hours all | ||
+ | told. You and your mount should be | ||
+ | ready for another break. Here, an interesting | ||
+ | ñirre grove covers about three | ||
+ | hectares of a more or less flat, grassy, | ||
+ | damp area used for livestock and set | ||
+ | beside the headwaters of the Prados | ||
+ | de Maitenes Stream. The ruins of an | ||
+ | old corral and the presence of cattle | ||
+ | mark this sector, which is one of the | ||
+ | most important veranadas on Fundo | ||
+ | Porvenir. The area was previously occupied | ||
+ | by Genaro Sotomayor and his | ||
+ | family, former tenants of the Fundo, | ||
+ | as well as other colonists from farther | ||
+ | south. The cheese produced here and | ||
+ | at the Prados de Butaco post supplied | ||
+ | the local families and was sold, mostly | ||
+ | in the city of Mulchén. Interestingly, | ||
+ | the most intense occupation of these | ||
+ | mountains occurred around the 1950s, | ||
+ | when the colonists of Fundo Porvenir | ||
+ | first burned the land to make it suitable | ||
+ | for livestock. This practice, although | ||
+ | at odds with conservation | ||
+ | processes, was highly useful for family | ||
+ | subsistence and was habitual in | ||
+ | spring or early winter, as it allowed the | ||
+ | regeneration of grasses such as coirón, | ||
+ | arvejilla, liuto (Alstroemeria aurea), | ||
+ | cat’s ear (Hypochoeris radicata), and | ||
+ | quila. This fodder is necessary for feeding | ||
+ | and maintaining livestock, valuable | ||
+ | capital in the productive systems | ||
+ | of the rural Andes Mountains. You are | ||
+ | now nearing the end of the fourth | ||
+ | segment of the circuit, which heads | ||
+ | downhill and to the east, towards the | ||
+ | confluence of the Prado de Maitenes | ||
+ | Stream and the Butaco River. From | ||
+ | here on, the trail slowly draws nearer | ||
+ | to the Prado de Maitenes Stream, | ||
+ | making it possible to see Los Caciques | ||
+ | Hill to the north and, in the distance, | ||
+ | Huida Ridge to the east.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Segment 5=== | ||
+ | '''Mallín Largo Veranada - Prados del Butaco'''<br> | ||
+ | *Distance: 7 km.<br> | ||
+ | *Walking Time: 3 hr.<br> | ||
+ | *Season: November to march<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <span style="color:red">Dirt horse trail bordering the Prados de Maitenes Stream and Waterfall. Scenic views of Prados de Maitenes Stream Gorge, Butaco River, and araucarias atop the Huida Ridge. Quila growth and raulí forests in the Butaco River Gorge. End of Route at the Prados del Butaco Post. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo5-a.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo5-b.jpg|thumb|400px|right]] | ||
+ | [[File:Cordillera-Pemehue-tramo5-c.jpg|thumb|right]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''The descent along the Prados de | ||
+ | Maitenes Stream'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | After riding about 25 minutes from | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 17, the trail passes | ||
+ | through a more or less dry sector with | ||
+ | abundant quila and coirón. It runs | ||
+ | along the Prados de Maitenes Stream | ||
+ | towards Guidepost No. 18, Prados de | ||
+ | Maitenes Stream Waterfall. After going | ||
+ | about 500 meters, you should cross | ||
+ | the stony stream from the south to the | ||
+ | north shore; the bed here is about 5 | ||
+ | meters wide. After riding another 15 | ||
+ | to 20 minutes, the trail reaches a fairly | ||
+ | elevated point. If you look to the | ||
+ | southeast, you will see nearly the entire | ||
+ | length of the Prados de Maitenes | ||
+ | Stream Gorge and Callaqui Volcano; a | ||
+ | rocky promontory of sheer walls with | ||
+ | araucaria-decorated summits stands | ||
+ | off to the left of the route. At the base | ||
+ | of this rocky formation is a beautiful, | ||
+ | pale reddish lenga forest.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | About 20 minutes from this place, | ||
+ | you will cross back over the Prados de | ||
+ | Maitenes Stream. At this crossing site, | ||
+ | you will have a view of the confluence | ||
+ | of this stream with the larger Butaco | ||
+ | River, which flows to the area from farther | ||
+ | north. The trail continues to follow | ||
+ | the stream, although this is now | ||
+ | some 80 to 100 meters below the trail. | ||
+ | The panoramic views on this segment | ||
+ | of the circuit are extremely lovely, | ||
+ | especially on the south-facing mountainside, | ||
+ | that is, to the left of the trail, | ||
+ | where forests of roble and raulí are predominant. | ||
+ | Some 200 meters ahead, | ||
+ | several waterfalls drop down over volcanic | ||
+ | rock, giving rise to a spectacular | ||
+ | cascade about 40 or 50 meters high. | ||
+ | The trail continues along, slowly approaching | ||
+ | the bed of the Prados de | ||
+ | Maitenes Stream, crossing interesting | ||
+ | lenga, ñirre, and raulí forests on | ||
+ | the way. Here, the stream is approximately | ||
+ | 30 meters wide and the bed is | ||
+ | stony with large rocks and tree trunks | ||
+ | dragged along by the swift-moving | ||
+ | waters.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Guidepost No. 18, Prados de | ||
+ | Maitenes Waterfall (1063 m.a.s.l.), is | ||
+ | off to the left of the trail. To the right, | ||
+ | a raulí forest stands testimony to the | ||
+ | ravages of past fires. The waterfall, in | ||
+ | a part of the stream with large stones | ||
+ | and rocks, is approximately seven meters | ||
+ | tall and gives rise, at its base, to a | ||
+ | pool that is some 20 meters long and | ||
+ | seven meters wide. This is the perfect | ||
+ | place to stop for a well deserved swim | ||
+ | and to let your horse have a drink of | ||
+ | water. If you look downstream, you will | ||
+ | see a number of damp vegetation species, | ||
+ | including nalcas, growing along | ||
+ | both shores of the stream whereas, in | ||
+ | the bed of the stream, countless tree | ||
+ | trunks have been dragged into place | ||
+ | by the water.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | As you head towards Guidepost No. | ||
+ | 19, or the Confluence Lookout (Butaco | ||
+ | River-Prados de Maitenes Stream), you | ||
+ | will continue descending and moving | ||
+ | slowly away from the stream. The trail | ||
+ | crosses open fields used for livestock, | ||
+ | where the vegetation is dominated | ||
+ | by sparse, low brush, mostly quila and | ||
+ | coirón. In the sector, you will eventually | ||
+ | see cattle grazing on the fodder. | ||
+ | As you approach Guidepost No. 19, | ||
+ | the vegetation becomes progressively | ||
+ | denser and second-growth roble and | ||
+ | raulí begin to dominate the landscape. | ||
+ | Once at Guidepost No. 19, you can look | ||
+ | out over the Butaco River Gorge and | ||
+ | see the confluence of this river with | ||
+ | the Prados de Maitenes Stream and | ||
+ | the imposing Huida Ridge, its highest | ||
+ | peaks topped with araucarias. From | ||
+ | this point on, the trail runs through a | ||
+ | thick forest of raulí, coihue, and roble, | ||
+ | halfway up the mountainside that | ||
+ | drops down to the western shore of the | ||
+ | Butaco River. Later, you will begin the | ||
+ | final descent to the Butaco River and | ||
+ | the last part of your ride to Guidepost | ||
+ | No. 20, Prados de Maitenes Post.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''At the Butaco River Gorge and | ||
+ | Huida Ridge'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | From Guidepost No. 19 on, the | ||
+ | landscape is dominated by secondgrowth | ||
+ | stands of pure raulí, with the | ||
+ | associated quila underbrush. The trail, | ||
+ | narrow and surrounded by vegetation, | ||
+ | is clearly marked. After riding for | ||
+ | about 25 minutes through this type | ||
+ | of forest and ecological environment, | ||
+ | you will reach an open sector with | ||
+ | evidence of past human intervention; | ||
+ | scant vegetation and the remains of | ||
+ | blackened tree trunks tell of old burns. | ||
+ | Continue through the raulí formations | ||
+ | until you reach a small creek or stream, | ||
+ | at which point you will come upon a | ||
+ | second, smaller open area, practically | ||
+ | at the end of the descent to the Butaco | ||
+ | River.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Enjoying the Butaco River'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | About 400 meters ahead, the waters | ||
+ | of the Butaco River, an important | ||
+ | affluent of the Biobío River in the upper | ||
+ | reaches of its basin, are tranquil and | ||
+ | placid. The stream is about ten meters | ||
+ | wide and no more than two meters | ||
+ | deep, surrounded by abundant, | ||
+ | humid vegetation. A small sand and | ||
+ | gravel beach invites you in for a hardearned, | ||
+ | refreshing swim. However, before | ||
+ | heeding the cries of your travelweary | ||
+ | bones and jumping into these | ||
+ | icy waters, we strongly suggest that | ||
+ | you stop and take a look at the birthdate | ||
+ | on your driver’s license!<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''The end of the route'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | After your aquatic adventure, the | ||
+ | horse ride continues along another | ||
+ | 400 meters until reaching Prados del | ||
+ | Butaco Post, built alongside the river | ||
+ | in 1995 by Mr. Lizardo Urrea. Follow | ||
+ | the trail over beautiful, more or less flat | ||
+ | terraces, with the river to your left and | ||
+ | dense forests of roble, coihue, and ñirre | ||
+ | to your right. Once at Guidepost No. | ||
+ | 20, you will see the old buildings and | ||
+ | wooden fences of the mountain post. | ||
+ | Summer grasses and cattle in the sector | ||
+ | indicate that the area is still a grazing | ||
+ | veranada. From here, you have | ||
+ | gorgeous views of La Moñuda Hill | ||
+ | (1783 m.a.s.l.) some three kilometers to | ||
+ | the south and Huida Ridge to the east. | ||
+ | Your second day of riding has come | ||
+ | to an end and you should prepare to | ||
+ | camp, gathering dry firewood and offering | ||
+ | your horse and its weary bones | ||
+ | a rest. You are now at kilometer 27 of | ||
+ | the Alto Biobío circuit: The Araucarias | ||
+ | of the Pemehue Range (1063 m.a.s.l.) | ||
+ | after two days of interesting and magnificent | ||
+ | adventures. Congratulations!<br> | ||
+ | |||
==Recommendations== | ==Recommendations== | ||
{{Topoguide|}} | {{Topoguide|}} | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | *Once you reach the end of the old lumber trail | |
− | * | + | that penetrates the forest, you should pay attention |
− | {{ | + | to the route markers that indicate which |
+ | way to go, especially if you are travelling without | ||
+ | a guide. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *The total estimated time for doing the Heritage | ||
+ | Route, that is, the 27 km from Guidepost No. 1 to | ||
+ | Guidepost No. 20, is about 12.5 hours horseback. | ||
+ | However, we recommend that you take four days | ||
+ | to do the circuit (round trip), riding to Guidepost | ||
+ | No. 13, Santa Rosa Lake (approximately seven | ||
+ | hours), on the first day and to Guidepost No. | ||
+ | 20, Prados del Butaco (5.5 hours) on the second | ||
+ | day. These are good campsites, where clean | ||
+ | water and dry firewood are available. You can | ||
+ | also camp at Guidepost No. 17, Mallín Largo | ||
+ | Veranada-Los Maitenes Gorge. However, depending | ||
+ | on your timeframe and the weather, | ||
+ | you may want to limit your visit. In such cases, | ||
+ | segments 1, 2, and 3 are the most interesting in | ||
+ | terms of ecology and landscape. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *An important part of the route runs over | ||
+ | rocky terrain, with gravel or stones on the trail. | ||
+ | This makes the ride more challenging, especially | ||
+ | in the sector known as “Cotton Road” (Camino | ||
+ | Algodones). Riding here implies a progressively | ||
+ | greater expenditure of energy and, therefore, | ||
+ | a higher physical demand. Thus, you should | ||
+ | prepare yourself well for the ride and take the | ||
+ | necessary equipment considering that the trail is | ||
+ | a recommended four-day ride. We suggest that | ||
+ | travellers with little equestrian experience only | ||
+ | do the circuit to Guidepost No. 13, Santa Rosa | ||
+ | Lake, an estimated two-day round trip. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Take appropriate clothes and camping equipment | ||
+ | (tent, synthetic sleeping bags, waterproof | ||
+ | parkas, gloves, appropriate boots, other camping | ||
+ | gear). Rain is possible, even in January and | ||
+ | February, and the temperature drops at night. | ||
+ | Remember to throw a compass and a GPS into | ||
+ | your backpack, as these will allow you to generate | ||
+ | your own data regarding the route. A good | ||
+ | camera is indispensable! | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Prior to the trip, you should stop by the police | ||
+ | station (retén de Carabineros) in Loncopangue | ||
+ | and tell them your itinerary, final destination, | ||
+ | and the expected length of your stay in the area. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Be extremely careful with campfires and bring | ||
+ | back any food scraps, plastics, or other waste | ||
+ | from the trip so that other adventurers like yourself | ||
+ | will have an equal chance to enjoy the area. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Finally, contact Mr. Lizardo Urrea (Fundo | ||
+ | Porvenir; phone: 984682590) to prepare and | ||
+ | coordinate your journey. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==External Links== | ||
+ | ===Weather=== | ||
+ | {{Tiempo atmosferico Los Angeles}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{Trekkings Chile english}} | ||
+ | [[category:Routes in english]] |
Revisión actual del 20:12 18 dic 2018
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General Description
The Alto Biobío Heritage Route: The
Araucarias of the Pemehue Range provides
an opportunity and a challenge
for anyone who loves horseback riding
and observing nature. This circuit
offers vistas of extensive araucaria,
raulí, roble, ñirre, and lenga forests,
as well as the chance to see the recent
remains of human interventions
in Andean ecosystems. The beautiful
views and panoramas visible from
the peaks of the Pemehue and Las
Placetas ranges are the ideal complement
for the swift-flowing and impetuous
streams and rivers that bring
the exuberant native vegetation to life,
giving it shape and colour. The trail,
hand-carved out of volcanic rock, is itself
a remnant of earlier forest penetration.
The route runs through one of the
last refuges for araucaria forests in the
Alto Biobío, boasting a spectacular geography
of beautiful lakes at over 1000
m.a.s.l., mountain veranadas, gullies,
magnificent granite promontories,
and basalt columns.
The Heritage Route crosses a transition
zone in terms of flora and fauna.
Nationally, this area hosts the highest
diversity of vegetable and animal
species. The Pemehue Range constitutes
a mixed biogeographic unit,
combining elements associated with
sclerophyll and xerophyte vegetable
formations such as Nothofagus
and araucaria forests. From an ecological
point of view, the area consists
of two ecoregions: Chilean Brush
(Matorral Chileno) and Temperate
Valdivian Forest (Bosque Templado
Valdiviano). Biogeographically, it includes
the biotic regions of Central
Chile and the Subantarctic. The area is
extraordinarily rich in endemic biota,
amparticularly
in monospecies plant and
animal genera and families. On the
other hand, anthropogenic intervention
has resulted in a high degree of
deterioration in some vegetable and
animal communities. Botanically,
the area is characterized by splendid
araucaria (Araucaria araucana)
forests. This Chilean conifer grows at
over 900 m.a.s.l. and its name comes
from the Pewen vernacular. Its seeds,
rich in starch, were and are the nutritional
foundation of the indigenous
Pehuenche diet. In fact, Pehuenche
means “peoples of the pine groves”.
This circuit provides a brief synthesis
of the transformative capacity of humans
in the mountain environments
of central-southern Chile. It also offers
visitors the chance to see emblematic
fauna such as condors, pumas, and
foxes. Geomorphologic processes in
mountain environments are also readily
apparent along the route. The circuit
should be done over a minimum
of four days of slow-paced rides over
wide, well-marked stone and dirt trails.
Along the way, you can rest and camp
at mountain posts at Santa Rosa Lake
and Butaco River, and at other sites on
the shores of rivers or streams.
Season
Expected time
2 to 3 days
Access
To get to the Heritage Route, start
from the city of Los Ángeles in the
central valley, 132 km from the city of
Concepción and 116 km from the city
of Chillán. You should exit old Route 5
South (Ruta 5 Sur), turning left (southeast)
at the intersection with Route
Q-61-R, connecting Los Ángeles and
Santa Bárbara. After driving 40 km
on a paved road, you will reach Santa
Bárbara, a small rural town located
on the north shore of the Biobío River.
Here, you can find services and equipment
for travellers, including all the
basic supplies for your adventure. You
can also visit a colonial Spanish frontier
fort found near the main square
(plaza), about 200 meters from the
Biobío River. After leaving Santa
Bárbara, continue heading southeast
on Route Q-61-R for another 19 km
until reaching the El Piulo bridge. This
bridge spans the narrowest and deepest
portion of the Biobío River, uniting
the townships of Santa Bárbara and
Quilaco.
Before crossing the bridge, look for
a sign to the right of the road indicating
the distance to the beginning of
the Heritage Route (33.2 km). At this
crossing, the Biobío River is 30 meters
deep and no more than 25 meters
wide. The emblematic river spills
swiftly over rocks carved out by its
fast-flowing waters. After crossing the
bridge, you will go another 1.7 km until
reaching an intersection with Q-75,
a gravel road that connects the villages
of Quilaco and Loncopangue. Turn
left towards Loncopangue, a small rural
settlement about 6.5 km from the
turnoff. Along the way, you can enjoy
beautiful panoramic views of the
Biobío River Valley and the mountain
spurs that surround it. When you leave
Loncopangue (still on Q-75), you’ll
go 12.7 km to Balseadero de Callaqui
(Callaqui Ferry). This is also the site of
the first indigenous Pehuenche community
in the Alto Biobío, known as
Callaqui. Take Route Q-151 along the
south shore of the Biobío. This dirt road
connects Callaqui Ferry with Fundo
Porvenir and is in poor shape; it ends
at the wall of the Pangue Hydroelectric
Plant. The access to Fundo Porvenir is
5.9 km from Callaqui Ferry. Here, a
metal sign welcomes visitors to the
government estate, an important area
for the protection and conservation of
natural resources, and provides information
about the Heritage Route. On
the estate itself, you will see the dwellings
of the Pehuenche families living
on the low prairie and the remains, still
standing, of the old houses of Fundo
Porvenir. Mr. Lizardo Urrea, a local
guide and resident of the sector for
over 40 years lives just 2.7 km from the
entrance to the estate.
When you arrive at Mr. Urrea’s
house, you can park your vehicle, rest,
and make the necessary arrangements
for doing the route on horseback;
overnight lodging is also available.
The route itself begins about 2
km from the house, which is near the
village of Ralco or Alto Biobío on the
southern shore of the Biobío River.
You should set out for Guidepost No.
1 (Cuyaqui Stream) on horseback.
Before reaching the actual circuit, you
will cross beneath large metal towers
bearing the transmission lines from
the Pangue and Ralco hydroelectric
plants. The magnitude of the effects
that these megaprojects have had
in terms of landscape modification
in the Biobío River Valley is evident:
steel giants march in neat rows across
forests, rivers, and streams, leaving
mountainsides bleeding and deeply
wounded by the designs of modernity
and, farther south, the Pangue plant
and dam interrupt the life, magic, and
basic cycles of the formidable Biobío
River. Some 600 meters from the home
of Mr. Urrea, there is a duly marked
detour. Follow the path to the right,
riding along the Cuyaqui Stream until
reaching Guidepost No. 1. This first
guidepost is accompanied by an informational
table with valuable data
about the route: a map, the segments
of the circuit and their distances, attractions
along the way, and sites of
interest.
By car
Public transport
Trail markings
This guide is indispensable
for anyone
wishing to visit the Alto
Biobío Heritage Route:
The Araucarias of the
Pemehue Range. It provides
written material,
cartography, and images
associated with each
segment of the circuit
to supplement the route
markers and sign postings.
The circuit consists
of 20 guideposts of patrimonial
interest. These are
duly marked with signs
that are generally placed
to the left of the trail. The
estimated times given for
each segment of the circuit
include allowances
for sightseeing and exploring
the route and its
surroundings. This circuit
has been divided into five
segments. Specific characteristics
are associated with each
guidepost, site of interest, and segment
of the circuit. The signposting
implemented along the route includes
four types of markers:
1. Guidepost marker: A wooden
post, 1.5 meters tall, with a metal
plate indicating the guidepost number,
name, and altitude. Black and
white arrows indicate the distances
to this and the next guidepost.
2. Route marker: A wooden post,
about 2 meters tall, used to help
indicate the trail in some areas.
The tops of these signs are painted
bright red.
3. Welcome sign: At the entrance
to Fundo Porvenir. This sign offers
general information about the
route (map, segments, distances,
guideposts).
4. Informational table: Beside
Guidepost No. 1, Cuyaqui Stream
Ford. This table gives detailed information
about the route and its
main attractions.
Route description
Segment 1
Cuyaqui Stream Ford - Second Sawmill Bench
- Distance: 6,2 km.
- Walking Time: 2 hr 30 min.
- Season: November to march
Wide, wellmarked, stone horse trail ascending along the edge of the Cuyaqui Stream. Scenic views of native forests and old sawmills.
The route begins at the Cuyaqui
Stream Ford, following an old forest
penetration road. Abandoned in 1981,
the trail borders the Cuyaqui Stream
Gorge and the foothill known as San
Pablo Hill. The Cuyaqui Stream crossing
is about 20 meters wide with a
rocky bed. Its swiftly running waters
pour generously into the Biobío River
another 500 meters downstream,
just before the wall of the Pangue
Hydroelectric Plant. The Biobío zigzags
down from its headwaters,
found at over 1000 meters altitude in
the peaks of the Pemehue Range. For
more than seven kilometres, these
hemmed-in waters sustain several
species and ecosystems that are ecologically
very valuable. The topography
of the first part of the circuit, some
1700 meters from the Cuyaqui Stream
Ford, is abrupt, with steep slopes, deep
ravines, and landslides. The dominant
vegetation is roble (Nothofagus
obliqua), raulí (Nothofagus alpina),
and coihue (Nothofagus dombeyi);
quila (Chusquea quila) is also important.
Here the trail is in good shape,
although you should ride carefully in
the landslide areas and where the trail
is narrowest. The landscape changes
as of 650 m.a.s.l., and the vegetation,
mostly second-growth coihue and
raulí, grows denser on both sides of
the path.
As you go on, you will see a
large landslide covering the trail at
Guidepost No. 2. This is an example
of the effects of natural disturbances
on the landscape. The colonization
and re-vegetation of this extensive
landslide area shows the ecosystem’s
capacity for recovery. The landslide
is about 50 meters wide and 500 meters
long, running from the head of
San Pablo Hill to the Cuyaqui River.
Look for quila and species of the genus
Nothofagus such as coihue and
roble colonizing the stony, otherwise
bare soil. The former residents
of Fundo Porvenir say that the landslide
occurred at the beginning of the
1980s. The construction of the forest
penetration road, the traffic of heavy
machinery, and heavy precipitations
may have triggered this geomorphologic
process.
Former lumbering operations and
their ecological impact
The trail leaves Guidepost No. 2 and
continues through a forest of coihue,
roble, and raulí. Guidepost
No. 3, First Sawmill Bench,
is about 300 meters
along the trail.
This open sector,
approximately one hectare, is crossed
by a small stream and surrounded by
native vegetation. The vestiges of a
sawmill that began operating here in
1972 stand in mute witness to the intense
lumber exploitation of the 1970s
and 1980s. These ruins include two
steam engines (8 and 12 horsepower),
half buried and rusted by the passage
of time. One of these machines,
with bits of metal and wood encrusted
among its iron parts, is right beside
the trail, completely abandoned and
overgrown, a manifestation of human
colonization – an ancient epic in
which humans and machines fought
side by side to conquer Pemehue – and
the natural forces that limit its realization.
You will also see old buildings
and the remains of a cabin used as a
post by the workers of the time. The
First Sawmill Bench was one of the
first lumber projects in the Pemehue
Range, initiating operations, mainly
the sawing of coihue, in 1972 and
shutting them down in 1981. When
operational, the sawmill produced
approximately 4000 inches of sawed
timber daily and the now-abandoned
steam engines provided the motor
force for both a saw and an edger.
After sawing, the lumber was stacked
and trucked, weather and road conditions
permitting, to the estate owner’s
houses of Fundo Porvenir.
This lumber was eventually taken to
the city of Santa Bárbara, where it was
stored in stockyards owned by a company
also named Santa Bárbara and
the former owner of Fundo Porvenir,
Mr. José Ángel Ciappa. During peak
exploitation periods (December to
March), anywhere from seven to ten
trucks would leave from here daily
with 400 inches of wood apiece, mainly
coihue and raulí. Early in the 1980s,
the economic problems of the owner
of Fundo Porvenir resulted in the permanent
shutdown of the First Sawmill
Bench. The sector and the landscape
now bear the irrefutable stamp of the
predatory action of humans. Along
with machines and penetration roads,
the piled-up remains of more than
2000 inches of sawed coihue lie in
nearly complete decomposition.
When you leave Guidepost No. 3,
First Sawmill Bench, the old forestry
road continues upwards. The landscape
is characterized by forests of
coihue, hazelnut (Gevuina avellana),
and quila brush (Chusquea quila). The
topography is precipitous and the bed
of the Cuyaqui Stream slowly becomes
visible from the trail. The slope of the
river increases sharply and Cuyaqui
Valley becomes much narrower and
more boxed-in, with enormous mature
coihue specimens standing along
the shores. This part of the trail runs
along the stream and you will have the
chance to see plant species associated
with more humid or uliginous environments.
These include laurel (Laurelia
sempervirens), chilco (Fuchsia magellanica),
nalcas (Gunnera tinctoria),
and copihues (Lapageria rosea).
Unparalleled beauty and challenging
horse-back riding along the shores
of the Cuyaqui Stream
Guidepost No. 4, Cotton Road
(Camino Algodones) is about one kilometer
away from Guidepost No. 3.
At the beginning of this road, an old
wooden fence marks the threshold to
an area that clearly differs – in ecology
and morphology – from the previous
segments. The road’s name stems
from ironic references made by the former
workers of Fundo Porvenir given
the extremely harsh, wild nature of the
old trail, which was about 700 meters
long. Here, enormous trunks sprawl
across the bed of the Cuyaqui Stream,
dragged there by the rapids whereas,
upstream, you can see magnificent
panoramic views of the araucaria forests
of the Las Placetas Range. As of
Guidepost No. 4, the trail runs along
the Cuyaqui Stream, mostly on its left
shore. Your ride along the wide trail is
complicated by abundant rocks and
large stones, and some parts should
be done on foot. The characteristics of
this section of the trail, built between
1970 and 1974, evoke the magnificence
of human entrepreneurship, ingenuity,
and effort.
Cotton
Road (Camino
Algodones) heads
out of the dense
vegetation and into an
open clearing that grants
a beautiful vista stretching
from the bed of the Cuyaqui
Stream to the surrounding
mountain ridges. As you
ride along, you will see forests
of coihue, hazelnut,
quila, and maqui brush
(Aristotelia chilensis) along the shores
of the Cuyaqui Stream, as well as occasional
specimens of tineo or palo
santo (Weinmannia trichosperma),
chilco, laurel, nalcas, and other species,
most of which are associated with
uliginous environments. You will also
hear the lyrical songs of the choroy or
narrow-billed parakeet (Enicognathus
ferrugineus), the chucao (Scelorchilus
rubecula rubecula), and the pitio
(Colaptes pitius pitius), natural inspiration
available only at the heights
of Pemehue. Another 400 meters beyond
Guidepost No. 4, the trail continues
its ascent, crossing over to the
right or north shore of the Cuyaqui
Stream. The characteristics on this
side of the stream are similar to those
on the south shore. Large rocks and
stones are interspersed among the
dense, damp vegetation. The stream
bed is associated with rich biodiversity.
At the end of Cotton Road, the
trail crosses back over the Cuyaqui
Stream (Guidepost No. 5). The sight of
huge trees felled and dragged along
by the force of the current makes this
the ideal place for a well-earned rest.
Here you can dally over the flora and
fauna, finding a wide variety of trees,
bushes, ferns, and nalcas. Introduced
medicinal plants like poleo (Mentha
pulegium) and mint (Mentha rotundifolia)
can be found all along the
circuit and in all its different ecological
environments, interspersed with
diverse native plants that also have
medicinal applications. Historically,
the plants used by the Pehuenches
and colonists were those associated
mainly with the underbrush. Llushu
lawen (Hymenophyllum dentatum),
a fern species, is used to heal the belly
button of newborns; llanca lawen
(Lycopodium paniculatum) is used to
treat ulcers and tumors; and lafquen
lawen (Euphorbia portulacoides) is a
water remedy. One of the best-known
native medicinal plants is cachan lawen
or cachanlagua (Erythraea chilensis).
Infusions of this plant can be
used for several therapeutic purposes,
including treating fevers and high
blood pressure, aiding circulation for
rheumatic conditions, and combatting
circulatory and hepatic disorders.
It is also an appetite stimulant that
aids in digestion.
The indigenous Pehuenches relied
frequently on the magical use
of plants. For example, women used
huentru lawen (Ophioglossum vulgatum)
to conceive male children and
huilel lawen (Hypolepis rugosula)
helped the machi or shaman forecast
problems caused by huekufu or
demons (1). Love potions to separate
lovers were prepared with huedahue
(Gleichenia litorales) and latue
(Latuapubzjlora). The latter is a highly
feared plant that can be lethal but
is a hallucinogen when taken in small
doses. The plants known as country
celery or panul (Apium panul), panke
or nalka (Gunnera tinctoria), and chupón
(Greigea sphacelata) are still
highly valued for their medicinal and
nutritional properties.
Undoubtedly, the use of forest
resources, “lelfunmapu” to the
Mapuches, was a fundamental aspect
of the Pehuenche and colonial
lifestyles. It defined some of the main
features of their identity and particular
world view. Along with plants, a large
amount of mushrooms were or are
also collected. More than ten species
of these are from the genus Cyttaria.
Known commonly as changles and
digüeñes, these fungi are associated
with the Nothofagus forest, especially
roble or pellín (N. obliqua) and
coigue (N. dombeyi). You will have so
much native flora to wonder over for
its enormous ecological and cultural
value that you will arrive at Guidepost
No. 5 (1000 m.a.s.l.) – after 5.1 km of
magnificent horse riding – before you
know it.
A first encounter with the
araucarias and their tragic history
in Pemehue
After gathering your strength at
Guidepost No. 5 and carefully checking
your riding gear, you should follow
the trail that leads away from Cuyaqui
Stream heading towards Guidepost
No. 6, Second Sawmill
Bench. On this
segment of
the circuit,
the
level
of
difficulty
of the trail is
medium. The path is
mostly dirt, with very light
“trumao” soil in some sectors
and stones and larger
rocks in others, especially
right before Guidepost No. 6,
Second Sawmill Bench. The
slope of the trail also sharpens,
revealing the erosive effects
of the action of water.
The predominant vegetation
is coihue and quila, which are
shorter and lower in this drier
atmosphere. You are now
riding at over 1000 meters of
altitude, and the trail crosses
a landscape predominated
by araucaria forests
(Araucaria araucana)
and the magnificent
rocky promontories of the tallest peaks
of the Pemehue and Las Placetas ranges.
Listen again for the melodic calls
of the choroy (Enicognathus leptorhynchus),
also known as “wawilma”
or the slender-billed parakeet. This
small, meridonial, native Andean parrot
feeds on the piñón, or araucaria
pine nuts, thereby helping to scatter
the seeds of these centenary trees.
The importance of the araucaria,
or pewen in the language of the
Mapuches, is due to the conifer’s ecological
value as well as its capacity
to sustain the sociocultural development
of the Pehuenche peoples during
the prehispanic periods. It is for
this very reason that they began to
call themselves Pehuenche, meaning
the people of the pewen, or the araucarias.
The araucarias grow in areas
known as pewenmapu or pewenento,
the land or area of the pewen (2). Very
early accounts report the importance
of this resource to the subsistence of
the former hunters that inhabited this
mountainous region, a tradition that
has been maintained to date in spite of
the deep cultural changes experienced
by the Pehuenches. In 1760, Mariño de
Lobera stated:
“The subsistence of these people
is mainly pine nuts taken from pine
cones of different kinds and qualities,
the same as their trees... and the number
of them is so great that these trees
are in all the thickets and forests and
are sufficient for providing for all the
people, which are innumerable, so
much so that they are used to make
bread, wine, and stews. And as the
main harvest occurs at a given time
of the year, they have large silos made
underground in which they store the
pine nuts, hiding aboveground several
water channels... because if they
do not have water above them, they
sprout and then rot... They also distil
from this abundance a highly medicinal
white resin for a variety of illnesses....”
(3)
Around the Second Sawmill Bench,
some 200 meters northeast of this former
lumber operation, is the spring
whose waters give life and vigour to
the Cuyaqui Stream. You can reach
the spring on foot, following a barely
visible path through the quila brush.
A pool of water about 5 meters across
accumulates at the mouth of the
spring, forming a 3-meter-high waterfall.
A small creek (about 1-2 litres per
second) flows out from the waterfall,
giving rise to the headwaters of the
Cuyaqui Stream. Here, you can enjoy
native vegetation such as ferns, nalcas,
and other floral species in a fairly
undisturbed natural environment that
is rich in biodiversity.
At the site of Guidepost No. 6, Second
Sawmill Bench, the abandoned, decomposing
remains of countless
coihue and araucaria trunks, some
over a meter in diameter, are spread
out over an area of sparse vegetation.
About 10000 inches of uncut wood,
mostly coihue, were left here. When
operational, the facilities and sawing
equipment could generate about
1500 inches of wood, mainly araucaria,
daily. Coihue was processed at
the First Sawmill Bench, since the standard
operating procedures of the day
required moving the wood from the
higher areas in trucks or with the aid
of oxen. The effort made by the sawmill
workers is noteworthy, especially
considering that they dealt not only
with the rigors of forestry operations in
isolated, wild environments, but also
with the lengthy trip made daily from
their homes on Fundo Porvenir or in
the village of Ralco to the exploitation
sites on the mountain. In those days,
the trip to the Second Sawmill Bench
required a bit over three hours of hard,
exhausting hiking.
Segment 2
Second Sawmill Bench - El Cóndor Lookout
- Distance: 6 km.
- Walking Time: 2 hr 30 min.
- Season: November to march
Well-marked, stone horse trail, ascending and descending. Panoramic views of the Cuyaqui Stream Gorge, Pemehue peaks, and Las Venenosas Gorge. Scenic views of araucaria forests and prior forest exploitation. Fauna sightings.
Take your time exploring the vestiges
of the Second Sawmill Bench.
Then mount back up and head out
slowly, making frequent stops, along
the trail leading to the summits of Las
Placetas Range and the first spurs of
the Pemehue Range. About 500 meters
past Guidepost No. 6, you can
take a break and gather your strength
in an area free of vegetation that offers
interesting and lovely views of the
Cuyaqui Stream Gorge and the volcanic
and granite peaks and promontories
of the surrounding mountain
formations. On this route dominated
by araucaria forests and quila underbrush,
Guidepost No. 7 marks the beginning
of the final ascent to the peaks
of Las Placetas and Pemehue.
The majestic peaks of the
Pemehue and Las Placetas ranges
The horse trail continues on past
the headwaters of Cuyaqui Stream,
now heading towards Guidepost No.
8, Las Placetas and Pemehue Lookout.
After zigzagging along for about 800
stony meters, the trail into the forest
straightens out, with the peaks of Las
Placetas Range on the right hand side
and the magnificent Cuyaqui Stream
Gorge on the left. The vista here extends
some 500 meters in length and
is broad and unspeakably beautiful.
The location offers an unforgettable
view of the Cuyaqui Stream Ravine
and the enormous rocky promontories
of Las Placetas Range, crowned by
araucaria forests. During this segment
of the circuit, you will see how the natural
elements affect the conformation
and physiognomy of the landscape.
A shelf carved from granite and cornices
of abundant stony material on
the mountainside evoke not only the
transformative force of human beings,
but also of the elements in mountain
environments. Processes associated
with sharp changes in temperature
and the important presence of snow
at altitudes exceeding 1000 meters
can be seen from this area.
Here, great, tall granite towers rise
over your head, where they are exposed
to the actions of the wind,
water, and temperatures. The very
heights of Las Placetas Range seem
to stretch out, reaching toward the
heavens; gorgeous araucaria specimens
stand firm against the forces of
the elements, taking us back to
earlier times, environments,
and landscapes. Watch
for a route marker about
100 meters beyond Guidepost No. 8
and to the right of the route. This sign
points the way to an excellent lookout
point over Las Venenosas Gorge
and Cuyano Stream. If you continue
riding another 100 meters over the
peaks of the Pemehue Range, heading
towards Guidepost No. 8, you will
be granted a magnificent, expansive
view with beautiful panoramas of the
Las Placetas and Pemehue ranges,
Callaqui Volcano, the tall and irregular
peaks of Sierra Velluda, and the
mountain valleys of the Cuyaqui and
Cuyano streams. You are now 1439
m.a.s.l. and have covered 8.5 km of the
Heritage Route.
Araucarias, culture, and mountainous
ecological environments
Moving on from Guidepost No. 8,
you will begin a slow descent to the
southeast, in the direction of Guidepost
No. 9. The trail runs along the north
mountainside of the Cuyano Stream
Gorge, only about 200 meters from the
high watershed peaks of the Pemehue
Range. On this segment of the circuit,
the forests are predominantly araucaria
and lenga (Nothofagus pumilio),
with the ever-present associated quila
underbrush. Keep your eyes open for
interesting flowers blooming in the
rocky walls on both sides of the trail.
To the right, the Cuyano Stream Gorge
and Las Venenosas Veranadas are surrounded
by vast stretches of araucaria
forests previously subjected to intense
and unmitigated forestry exploitation.
This grazing area was named
Las Venenosas (The Poisonous Ones)
because of the weeds or bushes in the
area that are poisonous for livestock,
principally cattle.
About 400 meters before Guidepost
No. 9, Third Sawmill Bench, the trail
turns off to the left, following a narrow
path that crosses a native forest.
This path merges with the former
forest penetration road around the
Third Sawmill Bench. You can get to
the sawmill by veering right after the
marker indicating Guidepost No. 9.
About 80 meters down, there is a route
marker on the left that points in the direction
of the old sawmill.
Several piles of sawed araucaria
lumber, both boards (7x1 inches) and
blocks (10x10 inches) can be seen at
the Third Sawmill Bench, where nearly
40000 inches of araucaria have
laid abandoned and decaying since
1978. Blackened mounds of sawdust
are scattered among the vegetation,
perfectly humidified by the passage
of time. Trees and bushes grow in the
middle of what was once an intensive
work centre, revealing the length of the
abandonment. When you are done at
the Third Sawmill Bench, head back
southwards to the old forestry trail.
Here you will take up a more shadowy
segment of the circuit, surrounded
constantly by araucaria, lenga, coihue,
ñirre, and quila forests. The remains of
large trees lying over the trail are a typical
element on this part of the trail, as
are the extensive araucaria forests of
the Cuyano Stream Valley.
You will ride a little more than one
kilometer past Guidepost No. 9 on a
wide, easy-riding trail before coming
to Guidepost No. 10, Las Venenosas
Lookout (1424 m.a.s.l.). This offers an
unforgettable vantage for looking
out over the Cuyano Stream Gorge
and Las Venenosas Veranadas. At
this guidepost, the changes in vegetation
and landscape are more evident.
Some grounds lack vegetation
and the rest are dominated by quila
and coirón, characteristic species of
Andean steppe and mountain veranada
environments over 1200 m.a.s.l.
Coirón is a dominant species in the
area. Its name likely comes from a
Mapuche dialect and alludes more to
the rolled and grassy form of the leaf
(Andropogon argenteum, Festúceas),
which has several sections, than to the
species itself. Basically, this means that
the leaves have whorls and are hard
and pointy. If you are lucky, you will
be able to catch a glimpse of a condor
(Vultur gryphus), the majestic and
symbolic carrion bird of the Andes.
About 200 meters south of this
guidepost, riding along the foothills
of the Pemehue Range, the wide forestry
trail reaches its end after 1000 km
of interesting and spectacular riding.
The trail forks and, to the left, you will
see the ascent to El Peñón Ridge; to the
right, a detour leads to La Frutilla Lake,
approximately 2 km southeast. The
fork is marked by a route marker.
El Peñón Range and El Cóndor
Lookout
When you pass the fork in the road,
you will begin the climb up to the peaks
of El Peñón Range, moving along the
north face, bare of trees but covered
in sparse quila and coirón brush. Here,
you’ll need to keep a close eye on the
route markers in order to stay on track.
This segment ends one kilometer past
Guidepost No. 11, El Cóndor Lookout
(1467 m.a.s.l.).
This guidepost offers an exceptional
vista of the Cuyano Stream Gully and
you might even catch a glimpse of the
surprising and unparalleled flight of
the condors that habitually soar over
the zone. The slow ascent to El Peñon
Ridge merits frequent stops along the
way and is marked by route markers.
Segment 3
El Cóndor Lookout - Santa Rosa Lake
- Distance: 1,8 km.
- Walking Time: 1 hr. 30 min.
- Season: November to march
Dirt or “trumao” soil horse trail, descending to Santa Rosa Lake and ascending to Portezuelo Trinidad Lookout. Scenic views of veranada landscapes, Santa Rosa Stream Gorge, Callaqui Volcano, Sierra Velluda, lakes. Fauna sightings.
The descent to Santa Rosa Lake
and the Santa Rosa Stream Gorge
The summit of El Peñón Ridge is
at 1507 meters altitude. This is the
site of Guidepost No. 12, Descent to
Santa Rosa Lake. To the east, you can
see the beautiful mountainscapes
of the Santa Rosa Stream Gorge and
Callaqui Volcano and, to the south,
Portezuelo Trinidad. We recommend
that you check your riding gear at
this guidepost, as you will be commencing
a slow, steep descent. Back
in the saddle and heading towards the
lakes Las Parrillas, Las Totoras, and La
Tasa, watch for the numerous whitish
trunks covering the foothills lining
the Santa Rosa Stream Gorge. These
provide more evidence of human action
and the use of fire to clear the
land for livestock, a common practice
of the colonists. These burns assured
the regeneration of grasses for the following
season but have impeded the
normal recovery of the affected native
forest and have intensified erosion
and soil loss in the primary burn sectors,
mostly veranadas. The blackened
bark of some araucarias indicates the
fire reached as far as their stands. The
thick bark of these trees reflects the
millenary adaptive processes of this
formidable conifer when faced with
the vicissitudes of nature such as volcanism
and the irrational predatory
action of humans.
The most important activities in this
mountain region have been forestry
and livestock. The often indiscriminate
exploitation of forest resources
has caused serious damage to the forests
and natural resources associated
with these ecosystems. The need for
the local communities to make suitable
areas for planting and grazing
has meant a progressive decrease in
vegetative covering, as have uncontrolled
burns and cutting of the forest,
common practices among both
the colonists and indigenous peoples.
Moreover, large-scale lumber exploitation
by the company Ralco S.A. between
1940 and 1970 and by the former
owners of Fundo Porvenir along
with the high demand for wood by
the cellulose industry contributed
heavily to the decrease of vegetative
covering. This resulted in a loss of the
productive and regenerative capacity
of the native forest, especially for species
like araucaria, lenga, coihue, roble,
and raulí.
It should also be noted that wood is
extracted for firewood, charcoal, and
building materials, especially fences,
in areas next to winter pastures. The
intervention in the forest has not usually
been regulated by management
plans and, therefore, the agricultural
methods applied do not necessarily
guarantee the appropriate use of the
soil. On the contrary, the “floreo del
bosque”, or cutting down the best individuals
without considering longterm
consequences, was a commonly
used technique for local wood exploitation,
seriously affecting the forest’s
capacity for regeneration.
Evidence of ancestral Pehuenche
culture in the Pemehue Range
About 300 meters from Guidepost
No. 12, to the right of the trail, is a magnificent
promontory of white granite
rock dripping stone fragments down
the mountainside and forming a cone
of low-level erosion. At the apex, araucaria
specimens were witness to the
unbreakable will of the colonists in
these extremely harsh ecological environments.
In this sector, you should
pay close attention to the trail, noting
the remains of Pehuenche utensils used
in their historic travels to the pinalerías,
or araucaria forests. Fragments of a
stone mortar used to grind pine nuts
evokes past travels and broadens our
understanding of the geographic and
territorial distribution of this culture in
the Andean massifs of the Alto Biobío.
Remains of Pehuenche mortar
near Las Parrillas Lake
Earlier, the Pehuenches, or people
of the araucarias, occupied the valleys
of the western slopes of the Andes
Mountains, from Antuco Volcano in
the north to Villarrica Volcano in the
south, according to the geographic
distribution of the araucaria forests, or
pinalerías. Nowadays, the Pehuenche
population and communities are
geographically limited in Chile to
the sector of the Andes Mountains
known as Alto Biobío, which is, administratively,
made up by the townships
of Alto Biobío and Quilaco in the
Biobío Region and Lonquimay in the
Araucanía Region. The Pehuenches of
Alto Biobío are grouped into 11 communities,
located on the shores of the
Queuco and Biobío rivers, with an estimated
population of 7000. In this
area, which is part of the Alto Biobío
Indigenous Development Area (ADI),
the land occupied by the Pehuenches
and recognized by the State of Chile as
part of their former territories covers
approximately 90,000 hectares (4).
The geographic, ecological, and
environmental factors of Alto Biobío
have determined the lifestyle and
sociocultural organization of the
Pehuenche communities, as well
as the useful and symbolic
relationships that have
been established with
these territories and
their natural resources.
Thus, we are able
to distinguish between
different occupied
spaces that form
part of a productive cycle
sustaining the traditional
life style of both the
Pehuenche communities
and the colonists that lived in the area,
including Pemehue Range and Fundo
Porvenir. These spaces include veranadas,
winter pastures, pine groves, native
forest, rivers, and lakes. For the
Pehuenches, an important part of the
territory is shared and is used based
on the annual cycle of activities and
the availability of natural resources. In
this sense, each family owns the goods
that it is able to gather, but some communities
still do not recognize exclusive
individual propriety over land or
territories that, ancestrally, belonged
to the community, such as the pine
groves or araucaria forests and the veranadas.
Once, any Pehuenche could
cultivate the soil as they liked and the
products were theirs to keep. However,
they could not use the earth itself as
property, neither selling nor renting it.
Although it was of common use, it belonged,
ultimately, to the community.
Both the winter pastures, with their
accompanying houses, corrals, crops,
and native forests, and the veranadas
are associated with the annual
weather regime and depend on the
presence or absence of snow. Once the
snow begins to melt in the spring, the
Pehuenches and colonists began the
ascent to the veranadas, taking their
animals to the new pastures and beginning
the pine nut harvest. The territorial
continuity between these ecological
environments, that is, the free
movement of people and resources
over them, was a fundamental aspect
for the economic and cultural development
of these peoples, as well as
for the management of the natural
resources. Their manner of relating to
the earth, based largely on the transhumance
livestock and collection
of wild fruits (pine nuts, hazelnuts,
digüeñes) is common throughout the
entire Alto Biobío and in the Pemehue
Range. The names of the mountains,
rivers, and streams are reminiscent of
the fact that the route that you are
travelling on was once part of the area
through which the Pehuenche peoples
were distributed geographically and
historically. Most recently, this area
sheltered the indigenous peoples from
the brutal onslaught and persecution
to which they were subjected by Chile
and Argentina in the mid nineteenth
century.
Cognitively, the Pehuenches understand
the forested araucaria formations
in the same way they do
their own society. They distinguish
clearly between feminine (fruit-bearing)
specimens, or domopewen, and
masculine specimens, or wentrupewen;
specimens with male and female
cones are understood to be bisexual.
Fecundation of the araucarias is anemophilous,
or done through the wind;
the Pehuenches understood this fertilization
to be a sexual process in which
the pines of both sexes come into contact
underground through their roots
or in the air via mountain parrots.
Thus, each araucaria forest is an
extensive family group known as a
lobpewen, and equivalent to a lobche,
or Pehuenche family. The Pehuenches
believe that these forests are protected
by supernatural beings: the old
man of the pewen cares for the male
trees, whereas the old woman of the
pewen looks after the female trees.
Family prayers are said to these entities
prior to the harvest and community
prayers at the end of this. These
rites are performed in the forests themselves,
thereby assuring the conservation
of the trees, their protection, and
fertility (5).
Having passed the white granite
rock, the landscape becomes rather
dry and arid, with scant trees and
low quila and coirón brush. Santa
Rosa Lake appears, surrounded by
araucaria forests and quila bush. In
the distance, an enormous basalt
rock, reaching up to around 100
meters height, and Portezuelo
Trinidad greet you. Good news: you
are nearing Guidepost No. 13, where
you will rest and camp after your first
day on the trail.
The surface of Santa Rosa Lake is
approximately 5.2 hectares (280 meters
wide and 380 meters long) and the
lake is 9.5 meters deep at its centre. It is
surrounded by araucaria forests and
quila brush and its shores, which
lack beach areas, are covered
by junquillo vegetation. The
rather warm waters of
the lake are inviting
and you
should
indulge in some well-earned rest, relaxation,
and recreation. This is the
ideal place to camp and prepare your
food. You can get water from a spring
just 20 meters from the marker that indicates
Guidepost No. 13. Remember
that you must, with the help of your
guide, unsaddle your mounts and put
them out to pasture. It is also a good
time to look for dry firewood and light
your campfire beside the wooden post
used by the colonists on their habitual
trips to the area. Such constructions
are characteristic of the mountain veranadas
and are usually used for shelter
by the herdsmen when they drive
their animals to the high pastures.
The Santa Rosa post was built by Mr.
Lizardo Urrea, a former worker on
Fundo Porvenir, in 1993.
Segment 4
Santa Rosa Lake - Mallín Largo Veranada
- Distance: 6 km.
- Walking Time: 3 hr.
- Season: November to march
Poorly indicated or “trumao” soil horse trail over the peaks of the Pemehue Range, descending to Mallín Largo Veranada. Scenic views of pristine araucaria, lenga, and ñirre forests. Panoramic views of Prados de Maitenes Stream Gorge and Huida Ridge.
On the road to Portezuelo Trinidad and the Prados de Maitenes Stream Gorge
You should wake the next day renewed
and refreshed, ready to take
to the trail for a second day of riding.
Start by heading south towards
Guidepost No. 14, Mirador Portezuelo
Trinidad; this is now the fourth segment
of the circuit. After leaving Santa
Rosa Lake, the trail slowly climbs down
to El Peñón Stream. The landscape
is characterized by quila and coirón
and, to the south, Portezuelo Trinidad,
a mountain ridge surrounded by low,
sparse brush. To the right of El Peñón
Stream, whose stony bed does not
exceed 3 meters across, you can see
a rocky formation nearly 100 meters
high with some araucaria specimens
colonizing its stony base. After riding
another 300 meters, you will see two
large rocks to the right of the route
polished by the action of the snow.
The locals call these Las Lápidas (the
tombstones), as the area was once a
Pehuenche burial site. Take your time
exploring this place and enjoying the
gorgeous vistas of Santa Rosa Lake
and Gorge. When you take up the trail
again, you will head towards one of
the highest altitude spots on this circuit,
Portezuelo Trinidad Lookout (1528
m.a.s.l.).
From here, you will have spectacular
panoramic views in practically
all directions and your pictures are
sure to reveal mountain images and
landscapes of unmatched beauty. To
the northeast and in the distance are
the white, irregular peaks of Sierra
Velluda; to the east is the magnificent
Callaqui Volcano (also known as
Callaquen Volcano), its fumaroles, and
the foothills of the araucaria-forested
Colluco Veranada; to the south lie
Quilapehuén Hill and the high watersheds
of the Pemehue Range; and, to
the west, the peaks of El Peñón Ridge
and Stream.
When you leave Portezuelo Trinidad
Lookout, the trail continues southward
along the peaks of El Peñón Ridge towards
Guidepost No. 15, Quilapehuén
Hill Lookout (1716 m.a.s.l.). This is the
beginning of a pristine araucaria forest
and the Prados de Maitenes Stream
Gorge. The trail between Guideposts
14 and 15 is characterized by scant
trees, with some araucaria specimens
dotting the lower stretches of El Peñón
Stream and the highest mountain
summits.
A rocky promontory stands off to the
right of the trail, about 40 to 50 meters
high. A small araucaria grove crowns
the nearly vertical wall at the highest
part, or the cornice. The trail here
is fairly tricky, with abundant stone
matter that was loosened or broken
off from the rock by the effects of gravity,
the rain, and abrupt temperature
changes, falling from the highest parts
of the volcanic cornice. Lake Trinidad
is also part of this landscape with its
typical varied geomorphologic forms
and ecological processes of mountain
environments at over 1500 meters altitude.
This site also offers an unforgettable
view of Quilapehuén Hill and
evidence of old burnings or fires. Two
araucarias stand off to the right of
the trail, offering a warm welcome to
Guidepost No. 15, where excellent panoramic
views of Quilapehuén Hill and
El Peñón Stream Gorge, an affluent of
the Santa Rosa Stream, await you.
The araucarias of the Prados de
Maitenes Stream Gorge and El
Peñón Ridge
After crossing the remains of an old
fence, you will move to the left, slowly
going through a shadowy araucaria
forest. Some 1000 meters to the
south, you will reach Guidepost No. 16,
El Peñón Ridge. This route borders the
peaks of Pemehue, El Diablo Stream
Gorge, and the northern part of the
Prados de Maitenes Stream Gorge.
Here, you can take in the entire magnitude
of this beautiful amphitheatre
of araucaria. The presence of the socalled
pine beard or pine moss indicates
that these forests, associated
with lenga and quila, were not past
victims of fire or lumber exploitation.
Thus, the area’s ecological integrity is
adequate for managing the conservation
of its resources.
From this perspective, the Pemehue
Range has important ecological characteristics
that warrant special care
for the conservation, protection, and
support of biodiversity. These aspects
include the presence of part of the deciduous
Andean forest of the Biobío, six
inadequately known species, and 34
species in precarious stages of conservation
such as the guiña (Felix guigna),
condor, “crybaby lizard” (Liolaemus
chiliensis), frog (Telmatobufo venustus),
and Creole perch (Percichthys trucha)
as well as endemic species like the
amphibian Alsodes vittatus. In turn,
the water courses running through
the ravines provide a favourable environment
in which numerous invertebrates,
amphibians, and fish can develop
their life cycles.
Nonetheless, one of the main
threats to the conservation of these
ecosystems and their associated biodiversity
is the vulnerability of the soils
given hydric erosion processes derived
mainly from the traditional and historic
uses to which the area’s natural
resources have been subjected. In spite
of this, the native vegetation that you
see along the route has been slowly
recovering through a process of ecological
succession of second-growth
forests.
Guidepost No. 16 is sheltered by
gorgeous araucaria individuals. Here
you can recover your strength and
observe the veranadas of the Prado
de Maitenes Stream Gorge towards
the east and, towards the south, the
enormous rocky promontory of Los
Caciques Hills, with araucarias on
both its foothills and its highest peaks.
This same site offers an excellent panorama
of El Diablo River Gorge on the
right, that is, to the west. We recommend
you take a brief rest here and
check your riding gear in preparation
for the descent to Guidepost No. 17,
Mallín Largo Veranada. It is especially
important that you watch for route
markers on the way down as these
will indicate an eastward shift in the
trail. Once at Guidepost No. 17, the
predominant vegetation is low quila
brush, along with coirón and lowgrowing
ñirre (Nothofagus antartica)
forest. Huida Ridge is visible in the distance
and Mallín Largo Veranada is a
bit nearer.
Mallín Largo Veranada
Congratulations! You have nearly
reached Guidepost No. 17, or Mallín
Largo Veranada, in the Prados de
Maitenes Stream Gorge. You have ridden
20 km of the route and have been
on horseback for almost 10 hours all
told. You and your mount should be
ready for another break. Here, an interesting
ñirre grove covers about three
hectares of a more or less flat, grassy,
damp area used for livestock and set
beside the headwaters of the Prados
de Maitenes Stream. The ruins of an
old corral and the presence of cattle
mark this sector, which is one of the
most important veranadas on Fundo
Porvenir. The area was previously occupied
by Genaro Sotomayor and his
family, former tenants of the Fundo,
as well as other colonists from farther
south. The cheese produced here and
at the Prados de Butaco post supplied
the local families and was sold, mostly
in the city of Mulchén. Interestingly,
the most intense occupation of these
mountains occurred around the 1950s,
when the colonists of Fundo Porvenir
first burned the land to make it suitable
for livestock. This practice, although
at odds with conservation
processes, was highly useful for family
subsistence and was habitual in
spring or early winter, as it allowed the
regeneration of grasses such as coirón,
arvejilla, liuto (Alstroemeria aurea),
cat’s ear (Hypochoeris radicata), and
quila. This fodder is necessary for feeding
and maintaining livestock, valuable
capital in the productive systems
of the rural Andes Mountains. You are
now nearing the end of the fourth
segment of the circuit, which heads
downhill and to the east, towards the
confluence of the Prado de Maitenes
Stream and the Butaco River. From
here on, the trail slowly draws nearer
to the Prado de Maitenes Stream,
making it possible to see Los Caciques
Hill to the north and, in the distance,
Huida Ridge to the east.
Segment 5
Mallín Largo Veranada - Prados del Butaco
- Distance: 7 km.
- Walking Time: 3 hr.
- Season: November to march
Dirt horse trail bordering the Prados de Maitenes Stream and Waterfall. Scenic views of Prados de Maitenes Stream Gorge, Butaco River, and araucarias atop the Huida Ridge. Quila growth and raulí forests in the Butaco River Gorge. End of Route at the Prados del Butaco Post.
The descent along the Prados de
Maitenes Stream
After riding about 25 minutes from
Guidepost No. 17, the trail passes
through a more or less dry sector with
abundant quila and coirón. It runs
along the Prados de Maitenes Stream
towards Guidepost No. 18, Prados de
Maitenes Stream Waterfall. After going
about 500 meters, you should cross
the stony stream from the south to the
north shore; the bed here is about 5
meters wide. After riding another 15
to 20 minutes, the trail reaches a fairly
elevated point. If you look to the
southeast, you will see nearly the entire
length of the Prados de Maitenes
Stream Gorge and Callaqui Volcano; a
rocky promontory of sheer walls with
araucaria-decorated summits stands
off to the left of the route. At the base
of this rocky formation is a beautiful,
pale reddish lenga forest.
About 20 minutes from this place,
you will cross back over the Prados de
Maitenes Stream. At this crossing site,
you will have a view of the confluence
of this stream with the larger Butaco
River, which flows to the area from farther
north. The trail continues to follow
the stream, although this is now
some 80 to 100 meters below the trail.
The panoramic views on this segment
of the circuit are extremely lovely,
especially on the south-facing mountainside,
that is, to the left of the trail,
where forests of roble and raulí are predominant.
Some 200 meters ahead,
several waterfalls drop down over volcanic
rock, giving rise to a spectacular
cascade about 40 or 50 meters high.
The trail continues along, slowly approaching
the bed of the Prados de
Maitenes Stream, crossing interesting
lenga, ñirre, and raulí forests on
the way. Here, the stream is approximately
30 meters wide and the bed is
stony with large rocks and tree trunks
dragged along by the swift-moving
waters.
Guidepost No. 18, Prados de
Maitenes Waterfall (1063 m.a.s.l.), is
off to the left of the trail. To the right,
a raulí forest stands testimony to the
ravages of past fires. The waterfall, in
a part of the stream with large stones
and rocks, is approximately seven meters
tall and gives rise, at its base, to a
pool that is some 20 meters long and
seven meters wide. This is the perfect
place to stop for a well deserved swim
and to let your horse have a drink of
water. If you look downstream, you will
see a number of damp vegetation species,
including nalcas, growing along
both shores of the stream whereas, in
the bed of the stream, countless tree
trunks have been dragged into place
by the water.
As you head towards Guidepost No.
19, or the Confluence Lookout (Butaco
River-Prados de Maitenes Stream), you
will continue descending and moving
slowly away from the stream. The trail
crosses open fields used for livestock,
where the vegetation is dominated
by sparse, low brush, mostly quila and
coirón. In the sector, you will eventually
see cattle grazing on the fodder.
As you approach Guidepost No. 19,
the vegetation becomes progressively
denser and second-growth roble and
raulí begin to dominate the landscape.
Once at Guidepost No. 19, you can look
out over the Butaco River Gorge and
see the confluence of this river with
the Prados de Maitenes Stream and
the imposing Huida Ridge, its highest
peaks topped with araucarias. From
this point on, the trail runs through a
thick forest of raulí, coihue, and roble,
halfway up the mountainside that
drops down to the western shore of the
Butaco River. Later, you will begin the
final descent to the Butaco River and
the last part of your ride to Guidepost
No. 20, Prados de Maitenes Post.
At the Butaco River Gorge and
Huida Ridge
From Guidepost No. 19 on, the
landscape is dominated by secondgrowth
stands of pure raulí, with the
associated quila underbrush. The trail,
narrow and surrounded by vegetation,
is clearly marked. After riding for
about 25 minutes through this type
of forest and ecological environment,
you will reach an open sector with
evidence of past human intervention;
scant vegetation and the remains of
blackened tree trunks tell of old burns.
Continue through the raulí formations
until you reach a small creek or stream,
at which point you will come upon a
second, smaller open area, practically
at the end of the descent to the Butaco
River.
Enjoying the Butaco River
About 400 meters ahead, the waters
of the Butaco River, an important
affluent of the Biobío River in the upper
reaches of its basin, are tranquil and
placid. The stream is about ten meters
wide and no more than two meters
deep, surrounded by abundant,
humid vegetation. A small sand and
gravel beach invites you in for a hardearned,
refreshing swim. However, before
heeding the cries of your travelweary
bones and jumping into these
icy waters, we strongly suggest that
you stop and take a look at the birthdate
on your driver’s license!
The end of the route
After your aquatic adventure, the
horse ride continues along another
400 meters until reaching Prados del
Butaco Post, built alongside the river
in 1995 by Mr. Lizardo Urrea. Follow
the trail over beautiful, more or less flat
terraces, with the river to your left and
dense forests of roble, coihue, and ñirre
to your right. Once at Guidepost No.
20, you will see the old buildings and
wooden fences of the mountain post.
Summer grasses and cattle in the sector
indicate that the area is still a grazing
veranada. From here, you have
gorgeous views of La Moñuda Hill
(1783 m.a.s.l.) some three kilometers to
the south and Huida Ridge to the east.
Your second day of riding has come
to an end and you should prepare to
camp, gathering dry firewood and offering
your horse and its weary bones
a rest. You are now at kilometer 27 of
the Alto Biobío circuit: The Araucarias
of the Pemehue Range (1063 m.a.s.l.)
after two days of interesting and magnificent
adventures. Congratulations!
Recommendations
- This trekking is described in full detail in the following topoguide of the Ministery of Public Patrimony. The printed guide can be obtained for free in the Ministery:56-2-3512100 -> 2325. It is hihgly recommended to take it to the walk, as it enriches the experience with descrptions of flora, fauna, geography and geology.
- Once you reach the end of the old lumber trail
that penetrates the forest, you should pay attention to the route markers that indicate which way to go, especially if you are travelling without a guide.
- The total estimated time for doing the Heritage
Route, that is, the 27 km from Guidepost No. 1 to Guidepost No. 20, is about 12.5 hours horseback. However, we recommend that you take four days to do the circuit (round trip), riding to Guidepost No. 13, Santa Rosa Lake (approximately seven hours), on the first day and to Guidepost No. 20, Prados del Butaco (5.5 hours) on the second day. These are good campsites, where clean water and dry firewood are available. You can also camp at Guidepost No. 17, Mallín Largo Veranada-Los Maitenes Gorge. However, depending on your timeframe and the weather, you may want to limit your visit. In such cases, segments 1, 2, and 3 are the most interesting in terms of ecology and landscape.
- An important part of the route runs over
rocky terrain, with gravel or stones on the trail. This makes the ride more challenging, especially in the sector known as “Cotton Road” (Camino Algodones). Riding here implies a progressively greater expenditure of energy and, therefore, a higher physical demand. Thus, you should prepare yourself well for the ride and take the necessary equipment considering that the trail is a recommended four-day ride. We suggest that travellers with little equestrian experience only do the circuit to Guidepost No. 13, Santa Rosa Lake, an estimated two-day round trip.
- Take appropriate clothes and camping equipment
(tent, synthetic sleeping bags, waterproof parkas, gloves, appropriate boots, other camping gear). Rain is possible, even in January and February, and the temperature drops at night. Remember to throw a compass and a GPS into your backpack, as these will allow you to generate your own data regarding the route. A good camera is indispensable!
- Prior to the trip, you should stop by the police
station (retén de Carabineros) in Loncopangue and tell them your itinerary, final destination, and the expected length of your stay in the area.
- Be extremely careful with campfires and bring
back any food scraps, plastics, or other waste from the trip so that other adventurers like yourself will have an equal chance to enjoy the area.
- Finally, contact Mr. Lizardo Urrea (Fundo
Porvenir; phone: 984682590) to prepare and coordinate your journey.
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