Trip Report
Adventure Climbing in Argentina.
Saturday February 20, 2010 3:38pm
In the long weeks since having climbed the North Tower of Paine, waiting in vain for the right day to climb the Central Tower, much time was spent fantasizing about warm weather routes and creating the ultimate Top 10 climbs for the coming season. But when the opportunity came for me to go back to El Cajon de los Arenales, to explore the inner canyon and attempt some new routes, I realized that the fantasy had become a reality.
With much haste I put together an itinerary that would allow my Brazilian friend, Wagner Machado, to take some time from his geology work in Rio and come down to help me realize this vision. From the start, however, we found that we were going to have to work hard just to get there. Wagnerīs luggage was lost, forcing a delayed start, and when we tried to get in contact with the logistical support that I had met last year, the phone number was wrong. This led us to the crux of the trip...

Hiring a regular taxi driver to take us and all of our gear to the Gendarmeria Portinari (a border frontier Army outpost) was the biggest mistake we could have made. His taxi ran only on propane, and so had the horsepower of a lawn-mower. Unable to make it up the smallest of hills, we alternated getting out with walking with our gear to the tops of these hills, until finally, the "Little Engine That Could" stopped dead, leaving us and our mountain of climbing gear miles from where we needed to be. 5 hours of load ferrying later we finally could crash.

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Credit: Hoots
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Waking up the next morning, I was struck by the strange lack of gale force winds, snow, or other climbing-prohibitive weather patterns: THIS ISNīT PATAGONIA! Being at almost 3000m at basecamp, and with my still persistant tendonitis in my foot, we decide to acclimate on a nearby spire, climbing Carlos Daniel (250m 5.10a) and taking some pictures of interesting features from the summit. The next day, we went for a long hike over the talus into the inner canyon to repeat a climb on El Marinero, a giant prow of rock rising steeply from the shore of the glacier-fed laguna, and see if it held the opportunity for a new route. We climbed 2 pitches, but failed to see any evidence of a route in existance. The terrain above us seemed steep and intimidating, unlike the route we were supposed to be on. Reaching a belay stance we decided to leave a gear anchor and fix our ropes down to the ground so we could scope out a line with the binoculars and come back with all the gear we would need to establish our climb.

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Credit: Hoots
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Wagner scopes it out.
Wagner scopes it out.
Credit: Hoots
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Back on the ground Wagner and I were both amazed at what we saw: a perfect line going up a series of steep dihedrals just to the right of the vertical to overhanging South Face. We were stoked. After a day of taking some more gear to the base we were ready. Leaving at 8am (not the 12am alpine start I had been used to!), we hiked to the base of El Marinero, jumared up our lines, and I racked up to lead the 3rd pitch, hoping for the best.

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3rd pitch crux.  OW with thin pro.
3rd pitch crux. OW with thin pro.
Credit: Hoots
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The "Birth Canal" pitch.  Perfect hands await those who can fit throug...
The "Birth Canal" pitch. Perfect hands await those who can fit through!
Credit: Hoots
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We hoped for the best, and we got it. The route opened itself in front of us. The climbing was difficult, and sustained, but never was there a question of where it would go: it was a natural line up a beautiful face on immaculate rock. The climbing and quality of the rock was very much like that of the High Sierra, and several times I had remind myself that I wasnīt on the Incredible Hulk, but in the Argentine backcountry! The steep corner systems offered up amazing and endless hand and finger cracks, through slots and over roofs, always ending in comfortable belay ledges, pitch after pitch.

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Stemmin it out!
Stemmin it out!
Credit: Hoots
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After 7 long pitches, we made it to the top of the wall, with no drama, onsight and all free aside from a tension traverse I made which Wagner eliminated following. As we rapped the face, sometimes following our route, sometimes to the left, we found no evidence of a previous route except for a single slung horn halfway up the wall. We installed all new rappel stations, only placing 2 pitons and one bolt. We assume the original route climbed to the top, but are unable to figure out where it would have gone, and are unsure if it had ever been repeated since its recorded ascent in 1993. Our route is for sure the second route on the face, and perhaps the second ascent of the formation overall. The route is comparable to the best of the other long hard free climbs in the canyon, and will become an area classic once more climbers start venturing a bit deeper into the canyon.

We named the route El Regalo de Poseidon (Poseidonīs Gift) 300m 5.11b 7 pitches.

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Credit: Hoots
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The rest of the trip was relaxed and uneventful. We repeated several classic established routes in the Camponile Towers before returning to a sweltering hot Mendoza (this time hiring a 4wd vehicle to take us down!). Now I recover from being fever-stricken for the last couple days and wait to take a bus down to Bariloche for a few weeks of R & R before heading back home.

A big thanks goes out to the American Alpine Club and the Mountain Fellowship Award which made this trip possible!

This trip report and many more can be found at http://www.ryanhuetter.blogspot.com

  Trip Report Views: 2,573
Hoots
About the Author
Hoots is a climber from Toyota, Tacoma.

Comments
Rhodo-Router

Gym climber
sawatch choss
  Feb 20, 2010 - 11:01pm PT
Awesome, Ryan!

How 'bout this: the new thing I was on yesterday has the working title "Gift of Water." Very strange...

Hollame para mas aventuras. Let's see if we can make some of those Top 10 happen.
Mungeclimber

Trad climber
Nothing creative to say
  Feb 20, 2010 - 11:17pm PT
excellente!
Paulina

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
  Feb 21, 2010 - 09:42am PT
How cool! New line! Very inspiring. Thanks, Hoots.
Cpt0bvi0u5

Trad climber
Merced CA
  Feb 21, 2010 - 07:07pm PT
awesome TR! Adventure climbing is the best! Looks like you guys had a great time
goatboy smellz

climber
Gulf Breeze
  Oct 5, 2010 - 05:53pm PT
muy bueno!
graniteclimber

Trad climber
The Illuminati -- S.P.E.C.T.R.E. Division
  Nov 15, 2010 - 09:46pm PT
Thanks!
karodrinker

Trad climber
San Jose, CA
  Nov 16, 2010 - 01:33am PT
That looks awesome. I love climbing.
Jello

Social climber
No Ut
  Nov 16, 2010 - 02:43am PT
Excellent TR and photos - Thank you!

-Jello
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
  Nov 16, 2010 - 07:57am PT
Hoot!

Good job guys, and thanks for bringing us along!
Sonic

Trad climber
Golden, Co
  Aug 31, 2011 - 01:34pm PT
Bump for South America Climbing
Go