Saturday, April 30, 2011

On your mark, get set, PEDAL!


Well, it’s not actually a race. In fact it’s quite the opposite of a race. But I do have a competitive side to me, and sometimes I have to remind myself that it’s not about arriving (and arriving first), but rather about enjoying the journey itself and taking time to stop and smell the rosa mosqueta.

The weather leading up to the actual departure date has been amazing. Perfect biking weather. Cool, sunny, and very little wind. Strange for this time of year. Almost inviting me to hurry up and start my trip. But, whoa, hold your horsepower. I’ll leave when I’m ready to leave.

That being said… leaving is not that easy.

The first step is tough, very tough. Sure, I can talk anyone’s ear off about trips, past present and future. I can plan upcoming trips and reminisce about this or that past adventure. I consider myself a fairly experienced, adventurous and independent wander body. But that first step is really really tough.

I said my goodbyes. I ate my last Bariloche asado. I drank down my last Bariloche fernet. I bought the last of my bike accessories. I organized the few material goods that I own. And when I could not postpone my trip any longer...… I left.


Matias walked me to the street, treated me to a personalized photo shoot (photos to come!), kissed me goodbye, and when he saw me hesitating, said, “Go!”

Tears in my eyes, I pried my fingers off of the brakes and glided down Palacios to Gallardo. I wobbled at first getting used to the weight of my overloaded bike, but then got my balance, but never the confidence to take one last look over my shoulder.

That day was a tough day. The sobbing feeling in my chest didn’t die down until I was safely 30km from Bariloche. And even then, my heart didn’t stop begging me to turn around and go back. I felt it aching. I felt it pleading. Its voice was so strong, so powerful, so persuasive. It made my brain second-guess itself. “What am I doing?” It moaned. “What the fuck am I doing? I don’t want to do this. I don't want to leave. I don't want to take this trip.” It took all my strength, mental and physical, to keep my bike’s handlebars pointing towards Villa la Angostura.

I enjoy a good adventure. I love the thrill of throwing myself into the unknown. I feed upon uncertainty and spontaneity. But when it comes down to it, I also get scared. Change is scary. Going about it alone can be terrifying. Leaving friends, family, and lovers behind can make a person feel very alone. It is very very easy to back out.

So with my heart slowly convincing my brain to desire comfort, security, and stability… what made me continue pedaling? What life force kept my eyes staring straight ahead? What energy pulled me away from everything my heart wanted? The soul, perhaps? The core spirit of Alisa? The deep down inner ME that knows how to keep her priorities straight?

I know this is my path. But that doesn’t mean that it will be easy. Change is never easy. But pushing one’s comfort limits is where life begins. This is going to be an amazing journey and one heck of an adventure!

Let me introduce you to my team:

Tioca la Mandioca


Horacio el Batracio


And, yours truly, The Girl With The Purple Shirt


I hope to get better at taking self portraits.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

On the road.

Traveling is truly and utterly amazing.

Sometimes I forget that. Sometimes I am blinded. Sometimes I get trapped in the daily meat grinder of routine. Sometimes I lose myself to worry and stress. Sometimes I forget that life is more than making and spending money. Sometimes I become so comfortable in the comforts of society. Sometimes I forget.

Sometimes I need that push to break the silky web that binds me to the sedentary lifestyle. The silky web is both invisible, resilient and hypnotic. It casts a spell on me, makes my eye lids heavy, and numbs my senses. Its grip is terrifyingly powerful.

But when I do step out of the rhythmic monotonous churnings of society life blinking into the unknown, I embrace it like a long lost friend. When I wipe the sleepy routine from my eyes, I see beautiful opportunities that have always been there, but I have been too ambivalent to care. I love the challenges that life presents me; I love the opportunities for rapid and unpredictable growth; I love the characters I have the pleasure of sharing life’s moments with, each one with a story and a quirky personality; I love the kindness of strangers; I love the bizarre coincidences; I love the metaphors; I love the chance encounters; I love the spontaneous epiphanies.

Sometimes you go blackberry picking and come back with more than stained fingertips, scratched arms, dark fruit and a belly ache. Not many people know this, but the blackberry bush is tremendously magical. It pulls you into its vortex and demands that you play by its rules. It offers many lessons to learn and philosophies to ponder. It tempts and inspires. It teases and guides. It pricks and nourishes.

Sometimes you go to el Bolsón with a plan. Sometimes that plan is turned upside sideways. And sometimes it’s beautiful.

I left Bariloche a day late due to a sore throat and feverish chills. My bike felt foreign due to days of pedaling neglect while I was off climbing mountains. Not a lot of traffic that Wednesday on Route 40, fortunately. I took time to admire the backdrop of my unfolding movie-like life path. I passed the bluest lakes. I smiled at the rolling mountains. I bowed my head to the cloudless sky.


Before I knew it, 70-80 km were behind me and the sun was setting. My legs were complaining. My tummy was hungry. I would need to find a place to set up the tent. A few kilometers before arriving to the town of El Foyel I saw a little farmhouse. I’m not sure what pushed me to slow my bike to a stop and roll up to the gate. When I clapped my palms together to announce my arrival, curious woman with a kind face approached to calm the barking dogs. It was getting dark, I explained, and wondered if they had a place for me to pitch my tent. She led me and my bike to the apple grove and I set up camp next to the greenhouse. After clearing away fallen apples, yellow jackets and little pellets of sheep dung, I soon had my bike unloaded, my tent up, and a pot of hot polenta ready. That night I went to bed warm, with a full belly and with a smile on my lips.


The next morning I awoke to another beautiful sunny day. Before I took off, I shared some mate with Belén and her children: Lucy, 4 and Mario, 2. We chatted about farms, bikes, and country life. I am amazed the simplicity and kindness of strangers.


If life is complicated it’s only because we make it that way.

26 kilometers from el Bolsón, I crossed paths with two French cyclists, seven months into their journey. We shared a brief moment in time and then took off again in our different directions.


I arrived into el Bolsón on an artisan fair day. As I waited for a text message response from my friend, Vicky, I wandered the fair eyeing this or that handmade craft. A beautiful sunny hot day, rare for this time of year. I stopped to chat with Diego, the palm reader world traveler from Venezuela.

Life has mysterious workings and I am humbled by its magic. Sometimes you meet people and it doesn’t seem that the meeting is due only to chance. Diego, Hernan, Ezequiel and Viki let me sleep in a little cabin they had behind their house. We stayed up very late playing cards and chatting of various philosophies and celestial wonders.


The next day started slowly with mate rounds and sensational sunshine. It was late afternoon by the time I packed the bike and took off for Vicky’s house.

Vicky was a coworker at the restaurant where I worked this past winter. All winter long, she and I bonded over our shared sentiments concerning our bosses. She’s been after me all summer to visit her and I finally got around to taking her up on the offer.


To sum up the next few days that I spent with her, Sergio, and four French backpackers, I have one word: Amazing. Amazing amazing amazing.

Vicky and Sergio have a cute little cabin in the woods. In summer they run a campsite and refugio and offer home cooked foods and freshly-picked fruit smoothies. The place is incredible. There is such a peace about it. Whether you spend your time collecting blackberries, splitting firewood, hunting for mushrooms, sitting and thinking, cooking, eating, reading, or listening to the snap, crackle and pop of firewood erupting in flames, you, like many others, will find it very hard to leave.


I also ate a staggering amount of freshly handpicked peaches and apples. First class ticket on the belly ache express! Oooooooooo… but so worth it!

On top of the tranquility paradise of the actual place, Vicky and Sergio along with their four cats and two dogs, are amazingly open sweet friendly funny buena onda people you will ever meet. Period.

On the second night, Horacio, another restaurant coworker, showed up and we had a little winter work reunion over pasta with freshly picked pinetree mushrooms in a cream sauce and a few bottles of Malbec. Oh divine!


It was tough to leave, but it had to be done. If not, I would still be there. Really, it’s that great of a place.

Next stop was to Carol and Horacio’s treble clef tower home. The last time I visited these fiery two was around this time last year for autumn harvest. Their semi-independence from “the system” is admirable and dedication to art is inspiring. They cultivate the majority of their food and everything else is locally grown and produced. They dedicate hours to classical music and painting. They’ve taught me about astrology, numerology and edible plants. And they definitely have some electric stories to tell.

I spent two days with them. We picked red ripe tomatoes and huge curved squashes, ate delicious homemade super food, watched foreign films, and talked life philosophies.


Next stop was Yanina’s. I absolutely adore this girl. She lived with me in my apartment in kilometer 13 for a month. We got along great. Cooking, drinking wine, the occasional hike, and chatting chatting chatting. I was very excited to visit her.


But I got lost on the way to her house. It started raining. I’d been meaning to buy a decent rain jacket, but haven‘t gotten around to it. Imagine, if you will, a soaking wet cyclist hauling an overloaded bicycle on country dirt roads frantically flagging down cars and simultaneously stretching out a hand searching for a cell phone signal. There are some downfalls to biking, I’m discovering.

Yanina lives in a great little cabin on a farm somewhere between el Bolsón and el Hoyo. Farm district, I call it. She works all day at the hospital. You know what that means… I had the whole day to myself to dedicate exclusively to poking my nose around farms. Farms! Cute family farms! I can’t see how life can get any better than this. Really I can’t.

I was born and raised in the heart of New York City. And I think I’d probably still be there if it wasn’t for my parents wanting to give me a well-rounded upbringing. I got a chance that many New York City kids don’t often have. I was introduced to nature at an early age and have since kept the contact information in my address book. As a kid, I was fortunate to wander around barefoot in a grassy backyard, to put my hands to the Earth and accept its energy, to laugh with the wind as it gossiped through the sunburnt autumn leaves, to look Mother Nature in the eye and see divinity. And I carry those experiences with me. And recently I’ve found myself deliberately moving farther and farther from the city into the countryside. Away from cosmopolitan chaos. Into nature.

There is a richness, a simultaneous simplicity and complexity, a peace, an invigorating energy in country life. There is a beauty in working the soil, a satisfaction in producing life‘s necessities, a fundamental relationship to be forged between individual and universe.


I have a lot to learn about farm life, but I harbor a profound respect for farmers.

And on top of it all, locally grown produce is far superior to anything we would get in a conventional supermarket. Whether it be homemade cheese made from fresh farm milk or jams made from handpicked berries or the succulent smell of a recently plucked peach or the flakey crust of right-out-of-the-oven bread. Everything tastes better when it’s fresh, local and homemade.

And since I have an apparent obsession with good food, the farm is my haven.

The day I left el Bolsón was a bitter sweet blackberry and cardamom day. I knew I was leaving one of my favorite places on the planet Earth, one of the only places where I can see myself settling down on a cute farm, garden and farmyard animals and all. But I knew I had to leave. If I didn’t make myself leave, I would never leave. And I have a big trip to get on the road afterall!

Route 40 between Bariloche and el Bolsón runs through beautiful countryside, mountains, lakes, forests, canyons. It is also very hilly. On route to el Bolsón it was downhill. Returning to Bariloche… a lot of uphill. An eternity of uphill.

Day one of the return journey I wanted to get as many kilometers as I could behind me. That was my goal. I also wanted the dreaded Cañadon de la Mosca to be a nightmare of the past. It was around 4pm when I arrived to the Gendarmería control about 65 kilometers from el Bolsón. I stopped for mate and a chat with the guys. It was cold. Long pants and jacket cold. Numb toes and bright rosy cheeks cold.

The Cañadon de la Mosca is like my Everest of that bike trip. I dreaded it like an overstayed visa dreads passport control. It’s not that it’s super steep, but rather it’s a slow constant up… for many kilometers. The sun was tip toeing towards the horizon. I looked the Cañadon in the eyes, “It’s you and me now” My voice didn’t waver. The Cañadon stared right back. “Bring it” It challenged.

It was on.


The Cañadon showed no mercy. But I‘m not so easily discouraged. I knew that I had to get to the top before I would allow myself to stop for the night. And so I did. A few hours, many crackers, and a significant number of encouraging horn honks later, I made it to the top. Whew.

But the fun’s not over yet. Next came the challenge of finding a place to sleep.

I almost missed the turnoff for Lake Guillelmo. I saw the sign, slammed the breaks, turned around, and bounced down the gravel road. “No Camping” signs stared at me unblinking and unbelieving, but I paid no attention. I really didn’t have much choice. I was exhausted from 8 hours of biking and I had to spend the night somewhere. I never actually got to the lake. The Caña de Colihue forests were too thick and too impassable. I found an acceptable grassy area, set up the tent and set about making my polenta with dried mushrooms and wild quinoa.


I must admit I was a little uneasy that night. I was so very alone in an unknown secluded forest. Everything was a little spooky. The ever darkening light. The curious birds that kept peaking over at me. I had no cell phone service. No one knew where I was.

So I did what any mildly freaked out traveler alone in the middle of nowhere would do… I started talking to myself.

“I’m a little scared right now.” I began, Eat Pray Love style.

“But this is what you wanted, Alisa” A voice answered from deep inside me. “You wanted adventure. You wanted to travel alone. You wanted to be able to pitch your tent in the middle of nowhere. You wanted new experiences. Well, here you go. You have it all now. Then why are you not happy? Why are you scared? Why are you lonely? This is what you wanted.”

“I know. I know.” I answered hesitantly. “I know this is what I wanted, but it’s all so new. I’m not used to it yet.”

“Don’t worry.” I comforted myself. “Every new experience outside your comfort zone is difficult at first. It can be scary. It can be uncomfortable. But if you let the experience teach you, you will grow in new ways. And soon the unfathomable will become much more than doable. Enjoy this moment; let it push you. And most importantly be open to how it will change you.”

And that’s how I fell asleep that night. Dreaming of change and adventure. Huddled in my green “The North Face” brand safe haven. Alone. Very much alone. The trucks and four wheeled night travelers hurried by on Route 40 and I closed my eyes and listened to their lullaby.

It was very cold that night. The morning dew was frozen on my tent’s exterior when I ventured out into the emerging daylight and it took quite a while to heat up water for my oatmeal.

By eleven o’clock it was still quite chilly, but I was on the road inching my way to Bariloche. I wanted nothing more than to arrive. And that desire made the day seem eternally long.

But after only 45km (or 3 and a half hours) on the bike, I was arriving in Bariloche. I was passing familiar sights and smells and a ripple of excitement climbed up my body and erupted into a smile.

Matias was waiting for me when I showed up at his front door. It was good to be home.

So now I have yet another successful test trip behind me. You know what that means… I’m only mere steps away from the big big big trip. I still have a few things on my preparations shopping list, many sad goodbyes and gracious thankyous to distribute, and a weather forecast to stalk… but not much else stands between me and the open road. I’m guessing a few more days. Next Tuesday or Wednesday… whichever day has less wind blowing from the west… I’ll be heading toward Villa la Angostura.

And that makes me simultaneously very sad and very hopeful. Sad to be leaving. Hopeful knowing that this is what I am meant to do. This is my path. I know that because it’s what my heart says. I don’t want to postpone my goals. Life is for living. Now.

So I’ll leave you with a thought that could only be conceived in a hippied out town like el Bolsón.

The reason I’m here on Earth is to live this very moment. That is the meaning of life. That is my purpose. To have this very experience. To accept and love it. That’s it. That’s everything.

So live every moment, fully involve yourself in it, squeeze the juice out of it, and love it for exactly what it is.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Bariloche’s 4 Refugios: Not for the faint of hearted.

Period.

I was tempted to leave the blogpost here and let your imaginations run wild with the title alone, but sometimes the real stories are worth telling. I believe that this is such a story. It tells of miscalculated shortcuts and subsequent tree surfing; it features boxed wine and soaring Andean Condors; and the protagonists are none other than Matias, myself and the unpredictable uncontrollable unconquerable weather of a Patagonian autumn.

Bariloche is the trekking capital of my heart. It has a little bit of everything: from hop-skip-jump beginner treks for the city folks to knee-shaking-palm-sweating mountain-ridge traverses for the fearless fanatics. Everything from rolling forested hills with well-marked paths to dramatic jagged snowy peaks with ferocious howling wind (and tremendous views). Yes, Bariloche has it all.

One of my goals before leaving Bariloche was to do the 4 refugio trek, a circuit of four mountain shelters, or refugios, Frey, Jakob, Laguna Negra, and Lopez. I had heard that it would be tough, but I mean… how tough could it be?

Bariloche to Frey

We chose Cerro Catedral’s parking lot as the starting point. You have your options, but this is my favorite.

My worn trekking shoes already know the way to Frey from doing the trail so many times. They knew where to avoid the squishies, where to skip over the graspy hands of forest roots, where to run, where to wisely conserve precious energy. The only difference was that on this trek our backpacks were heavy, very heavy, prepared for five days in the mountains.

I found myself disappearing into my head, as is common on treks. Letting my feet carry me over the rocks, dirt, mud, roots, streams… my thoughts wandered ahead of me, soared over me, tripped under me. The mountain is great for sloooooowing down and dedicating time and energy to appreciating the things we are normally top busy or too in a hurry to pay any attention to.

We quickly passed from exposed path, to comforting forest, to tremendous mountain. And before we knew it, we marched up to our first refugio.


The stars were fierce that night. A perfect night. No wind. We bundled up against the autumn chill and, from the shelter of our tent, we cooked up an improvised rice dish typical of camping cuisine.


Familiar constellations smiled down and performed a welcome dance party. Welcome to the mountain, they sang.

Frey to Jakob

A week prior, I had done this trek with Sol, a friend and Canopy co-worker. Sol is not a mountain girl. She’s a city girl from Buenos Aires. This is not an easy trek. I’m very proud of her for toughing it out. I’ll include some of those pictures here as well.


As I mentioned, this is not a physically or mentally easy hike. After circling around Laguna Tontec, you head up. Straight up. Prepare your thighs, calves, and lungs. Because once you reach Laguna Schmoll, you can take a rest if you need it, but you’ve still got a climb to the cancha de fútbol.

At the top of the crest if it’s a clear day, you may graced by a snow-topped Tronador peaking across a valley.

Little do you know that you have to cross that valley and climb up the other side. So prepare your knees because it’s quite a rocky way down. The valley is home to forests, marshes, and quite acceptable campsites. But watch your step, it’s squishy!


Another steep hike up leads to a breathtaking view. A view that includes, TADA!, Laguna Jakob and Refugio San Martin.

But don’t cheer just yet, it’s still a long long long rocky hike down. But it’s a beautiful feeling to make it!


Unlike the refugieros of Frey, the ones at Jakob are just that much more isolated from civilization. They are welcoming, warm, wonderful, and willing to supply you with water for mate. Jakob is less commercial than Frey; it’s not as far down the road to selling out. And the bathrooms are better.

Jakob to Laguna Negra

Ah. The famous Jakob to Laguna Negra stretch. I had never done this one, but I had heard about it. This is the tough one, they all told me. And they are right. This is the one that requires the most mental and physical strength. This is the one that everyone everyone everyone gets lost on. Yes, everyone.

The morning we were supposed to embark for Laguna Negra, the odds were against us. Wind. Lots of wind. Drizzle. Rain. More wind. And… due to said wind, Matias’s tent pole snapped in half. As I evaluated all the contributing factors, I was convinced that we would be heading back down to Bariloche that day. My goal of doing all four refugios would have to wait until who-knows-when. The next trip to Bariloche, if there ever is one. That really sucks. My face wore a frown.

And while I was pouting away, Matias fixed the tent pole (have I mentioned that Argentines can fix anything? Anything.) and we decided to chance it. The refugiero said he would radio to Laguna Negra that night to confirm that we had made it. We set off.


With our faces bent into the wind, we climbed and walked and grasped and gasped and staggered and swaggered for hours and hours. Yes, we got lost. Yes, it is a very very very difficult trek. Yes, there were a few times that I honestly feared for my life. But was it worth it? Yes, yes it was.

The wind was the exhaustingly present the entire trek. Especially at the top!


But here’s where it gets interesting. Any worried family members may want to stop reading here.

Arriving to Laguna Negra one comes across a very long very steep very winding path. Anyone familiar with Laguna Negra will shudder at the mere mention of “el caracol” or “the snail”. The refugiero back at Jakob had told us of an alternative path, a shortcut, and we jumped at the opportunity to avoid the caracol. As we were approaching Laguna Negra, leg-shakingly exhausted with soaking wet sneakers, Matias announced that he thought he’d found the shortcut. We left the main trail and started climbing. Soon the climbing became extremely vertical. I’d never considered rock climbing an extreme sport… until this moment. The rock we were climbing was slick from the mist that had started falling again. We climbed up up up and soon it became increasingly important that we didn’t fall. With no harnesses, ropes, or gear, one foot slip, one miscalculated hand grip, one loose rock would be bad, very very bad. And with the whole day’s exhaustion, the ever fading daylight, heavy trekking backpacks and slippery sneaker soles…

And on top of it all, I mistakenly went left instead of following Matias right. Subsequently, I found myself hanging on for dear life to the slender, but resilient branches of Lenga trees as my feet swung below me kicking at near vertical slippery soil.

It is very important in this situation not to freak out. Anyone familiar with rock climbing knows this. Once you entertain the idea of falling, your body suddenly enters into a state of paralyzed fear. You can’t move up or down or sideways. You are consumed with this fear. Suddenly your hands overgrip, your legs shake uncontrollably, you tire yourself out. And you fall.

So, keeping this in mind, I remained calm. I kept my mind clear and focused on up. Up. Up. Up. It was very important that I tough it out. It was imperative to push on. Honestly I didn’t have any other option. It was either be a hardcore mountain girl, or fall. And falling wasn’t an option.

Needlesstosay (or is it?), we had not correctly identified the shortcut. This became apparent to us as we arrived at a relatively flat treeless area… and saw where Laguna Negra was supposed to be (where we were supposed to be)… two whole valleys over. But since the sun had long since passed the horizon line, and with daylight quickly fading, we set up the tent on the most level ground we could find. Once we changed into dry clothes, climbed into our sleeping bags, and opened the box of wine… we smiled. We weren’t where we had planned to be that night, but we were dry, warm, and most importantly we were safe.

The next morning we took our time waking up. Our mouths were dry from not filling up our water bottles at the last stream, our backs were sore from sleeping on bothersome shrubs, and our minds not fully rested after periodically waking up at the foot of the tent and having to haul our sleeping pads back up the 45 degree incline we were on. Upon stepping foot outside the tent, our situation dawned on me anew. We were still who-knows-how-many hours from Laguna Negra, our sneakers were still soaking wet, we hadn’t eaten more than a handful of crackers because we didn’t have any water to cook with, and we didn’t have a path to follow. That morning I tried my absolute hardest to remain in a good mood.


Matias, his hardcore mountain saavyness, and his incredible patience win the triple MVP award of the four refugio trek.

After crashing through trees, scaling rock walls, sliding down canyons, and surveying the landscape to make sure we were still relatively on the “right” path… we joined with the real trail. When I saw the trail markers, I knew we were saved! When the rooftop of the refugio peaked over the rocks, a wave of relief flooded over me. Happiest moment ever!


There were four of us that night. Fede, the refugiero; Sergio, the veterinarian from La Plata; Matias; and myself. We stayed up late drinking boxed wine, eating luxurious pizza, and chatting around the fire burning stove.

Laguna Negra to Lopez

Matias told me a few days later that after our “detour” the day before, he thought that I had had enough adventure and would want to go back to Bariloche from Laguna Negra without continuing on.

Fat chance.

There was no way that I would come this far and not take it to the end.

We got a late start to Lopez. In fact by the time I woke up and sauntered over to the refugio, our buddy Sergio had already taken off.

After our morning mate and breakfast cereal, we set off in search of the last stop on our refugio adventure. Around the laguna and up to the mountain ridge.


Tronador was hiding that day, and yet we were fortunate to see him peaking through a cloud window.


The path took us over large unstable black rocks that rocked gently to keep us paying attention. I was beyond words. We were walking along a mountain ridge. This is as real as it gets, I exclaimed, there is nothing more real than this. The world extended below us. Life doesn’t get much more lifelike.

We descended into a valley and as we crossed said valley, Matias pointed out a mountain in the distance. See that mountain, he asks, I think we have to climb it.


No.

He must be joking. It was a mountain mountain we was referring to. Not a wimpy fake mountain. A real mountain. I couldn’t, wouldn’t, didn’t want to believe him.

But, of course, he was right. I looked up. A mountain of loose stones of various shapes and sizes. The sun was low in the sky. The light was getting the mystical quality of late afternoon. There was not much time to dilly dally. This mountain had to be climbed. And relatively quickly.

When you don’t have any other option, you can push yourself to do the unthinkable. I really didn’t have many options. The path that led to the next refugio passed over this mountain. And I had to climb it.

Up up up. Shaking legs trusting in wobbly rocks. Up up up. I was tempted to look down, but decided against it. Up up up. Until the tippy top was within reach. Up up up.

At the top, I allowed myself to turn around and look down. What a feeling.

It was all downhill after that. When a pink Refugio Lopez came into view, a smile was born. A knowing smile. A smile that only the last refugio on this journey could provoke.


That night we fell asleep to the wild screeches and squawks of a lost condor, a confused fox on steriods or an outraged tourist. We’re not quite sure which.

Lopez to Bariloche

Do you ever have those moments that make you stop to think: “Wow, this is too amazing to be coincidence!”? Some people call them divine intervention, some people call it fate, some people call it luck. We had one of those moments on our way down from Lopez, which for me, was the cherry on the top of the snow covered mountain.


When you’re in the mountains, time takes on a different meaning. Hours and minutes mean very little. Sunlight is everything. Moonlight is everything else

Coming down from the mountain meant that we had to get accustomed to playing by society’s rules once again. Rules governed by the hour and minute hands of the gigantic life clock. When I found out that the bus passed by the trailhead around 12:10pm… and then again at 16:40... It became pretty important to catch that first bus. Unless we wanted to wait for four hours.

Matias had a little less urgency to catch that bus. Afterall, only one of us is from the big city rhythm. By the time we started heading down the mountain, it was 11:50 and it was clear that there was no way that we would make it to the bus. Nonetheless, I started to jog down the mountain. We jumped over roots, dashed around corners, avoided tourists. I knew we were going to miss the bus, but kept the pace up anyway and we sped down the mountain. By the time we reached the main road, the clock struck 12:21pm. My hope frowned.

Matias passed under the wire fence and turned back to help me with my backpack. The little glimmer of hope still residing in me told him to go to the right and check if the bus was still there. As I was ducking under the fence, I heard a shout. And a honk!

By chance, the bus was passing right when we stuck our heads around the corner. If we hadn’t run down the entire trail. If we had said one more word to the people we passed on our way down. If I had passed Matias my backpack under the fence. If we had spent one more minute talking to the refugiera. If the bus hadn‘t been 11 minutes late… we would have missed our ride. But as fate, chance, luck would have it… we made it, sweaty and out of breath and all smiles.

And, with that, I end the story of the four refugios: with a smile, a little bit of luck, and a good story. And, with that, my last goal for Bariloche is accomplished!