Day 6
Trek to Laguna Torre OR Trek to Loma del Pliegue Tumbado / Evening visit to Andreas Madsen house museum (B, L, D)
Today, depending on the weather, you will choose between the “Laguna Torre” OR the “Loma del Pilegue Tumbado” treks or you will go on a guided walking tour among the forests of Los Glaciares National Park.
Trek to Laguna Torre
This trek is rather gentle, without too much climbing. You enjoy the views of Mt Torre, the Aldea Range, Mt Solo and several glaciers, you will appreciate several glacial terrains, ñire and lenga forests, and you will reach some great spots for panoramic views. Geologists and photographers from around the world love to come here because of this glacial valley’s perfect shape. You can also visit De Agostini campground where some of the most famous climbers in the world have spent a night or two before scaling one of these granite massifs.
Duration: 6 Hours
Distance: 20 Km.
(There is the option for the group to be divided into two sub-groups: one following a shorter trek and the other attempting the full trek).
Trek to Loma del Pliegue Tumbado
This trek takes you along the less walked trails up to a 360° viewpoint, from where you will marvel at the Torre and Fitz Roy valleys, the mountains themselves, the Patagonian steppe and Viedma Lake – the largest lake of Argentina. In the last section of the trail, you will come across different flora, found in these high plateaus and exposed areas, and if you look closely, you will also spot marine fossils (ammonites and belemnites).
Duration: 6/7 Hours.
Distance: 18 Km.
(There is the option for the group to be divided into two sub-groups: one following a shorter trek and the other attempting the full trek).
Regardless of the route that will be finally chosen, you will enjoy a picnic lunch during the trek, and in the afternoon, you will descend back to your hotel in El Chalten.
Late in the afternoon, you will go on a guided visit to the Andreas Madsen house museum where you learn about the life of one of the first Europeans to settle in the region (a Dane pioneer who lived in the area 100 years ago), and the adventures and challenges faced by Madsen's family.
When entering the home of these pioneers, you will be able to admire the original architecture of the house, which remains intact more than 100 years later. You can see the lenga wood chopped by hand with an axe, and the walls made up from layers of old wooden crates, newspapers and hessian for insulation. This type of architecture is known as Southern Patagonia Pioneers’ architecture, and this museum is one of the few places you can see it in its original form.
You will also be able to check the furniture and old tools used by the family. On the walls, there are black and white photographs of family life that give an idea of what it was like to live in deep Patagonia at the beginning of the 1900s.
In the end, you will sit at Andreas' dining room table and enjoy a hot evening meal while listening to numerous tales and anecdotes of bygone days. After all, Patagonia is not just a beautiful landscape. It is an amalgamation of incredible stories of men and women who, through lots of hard work and effort, decided to live in this wild corner of the earth.
Accommodation at Destino Sur Hotel or similar.