Cochamo, Chile
    
December 18-21, 2013
    
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    After a long flight into Santiago, we endured a 12-hour overnight
    bus ride to Puerto Montt, immediately followed by another 3-hour
    bus ride to the small village of Cochamo. We stayed the night
    there, finally being able to get horizontal sleep for the first
    time in over 3 days!
    
    In the morning we got a ride to the trailhead, from where we
    expected a 5 hour hike to the valley, aka. La Junta. Thankfully
    the hike turned out shorter since our packs weren't too heavy,
    and the tree cover provided a welcome respite from the
    heat! However, the horse flies (tabanos) were out in full force!
    
    We had booked one of the two private rooms at the refugio,
    figuring that with our short stay this will provide the most
    comfortable and optimal setup (and after all, honeymoons are
    supposed to be about splurging!) We enjoyed meeting Daniel,
    Sylvina, their son Zen and the rest of the crew, all of which
    were really friendly and awesome. Did I mention they cook
    amazing dinners? It was hard to think about leaving the comfort
    of the refugio at all, but the impecable-looking granite was
    calling!
    
    One thing we did not appreciate or realize prior to coming was
    the length of hiking required to reach most of the climbing.
    The walls were a good 3-4 hours away from the valley, on very
    steep and narrow (almost bush-whacking at times) paths - making
    day trips a tough proposition. It turns out most people hike in
    and bivy the day before climbing, and this is something we did
    not anticipate or have the gear for. We heard one of the best
    routes is "Al Centro Y Adentro" in the Amphitheatre area, which
    also has a slightly shorter approach than Trinidad.. so we decided
    to give it a go the following day. Rated 5.11c, I'm not sure
    what exactly we were expecting, but we were assured the 5.11c moves
    can be easily pulled through on bolts if the need arose... the
    majority of the route was supposed to be stellar 5.10 crack
    climbing, which is exactly what we were looking for.
    
    So we woke up at 5am, and had breakfast at the refugio that was
    prepared for us the night before, before beginning the slog up.
    I'm not sure how much elevation gain the trail has, but it was
    a definite butt-kicker! We were definitely feeling a bit tired
    by the time we reached the bivy spot, wondering what exactly
    we have signed up for. From there, it's another hour up a
    talus-filled gully (also steep!), which culminates with a
    "squeeze chimney boulder problem" shortly before the base of the
    climb is reached. When we got to this spot, we were totally
    exhausted, and negotiating this crux may or may not have required
    quite a bit of grunting and swearing. :) However, we did negotiate
    it, and now were there, staring up at some amazing granite!
    
    The climb has 12 pitches, 9 of them are 5.10, and 3 of them 5.11.
    The first two were fantastic, a lot of 5.9 climbing with some
    5.10 cruxes thrown in; the third pitch was first crux, a 5.11b
    bombay chimney roof followed by a fist crack (having a single
    #4 camalot made that part very memorable). At that point, the sun
    hit the wall and created a total sweat-fest, with the tabanos
    coming out at full force. Climbing meant we were unable to swat
    at the $@(*%&!@ tabanos, and at times you just had to ignore them...
    until they bit a chunk off of you, that is! The 4th pitch was some
    spectacular 5.10d liebacking followed by a short face climbing
    section, and then we were staring at the real deal, pitch #5, the
    5.11c slab crux of the climb. I must admit, it did not look like I
    imagined it... yes, there were bolts, but only 4 of them, in
    over 100ft of climbing, with basically zero options for other gear.
    How exactly would one 'pull through' it? Well, I was determined to
    at least try. After an hour long battle with the pitch (but we did
    get past the cruxy face!), we looked at the time of day (well past
    noon), and evaluated how much energy we actually had left. We
    also knew we have to rappel the entire route and repeat the 3+ hour
    slog down to the hut... all things considered, we admitted defeat,
    and bailed. Of course, the rope got badly stuck and I had to
    re-climb pitch #4 - glad not to be doing it in the dark completely
    exhausted!
    
    The rest of the day down was uneventful, and I kept motivated
    thinking about the 2 pizzas we had ordered to be made for us when we
    returned... well, they were totally amazing, what can I say!
    
    The next morning we woke up at 5am and decided to try it again...
    no, we actually just slept in. :) Feeling fairly trashed from the
    excursion the day before, we weren't motivated to go too far, and
    we soaked in the river, read the Cochamo issue of Alpinist, talked
    to other climbers, and generally didn't do much. In the afternoon,
    we recouped enough energy to think about climbing again, and went
    up to the only 'crag' close to camp, the 2-pitch Zebra wall.
    Daniel, Sylvina and Zen were actually planning on going there as
    well, for Zen's first multi-pitch climb! When rappelling down, we
    took some pictures and were mesmerized by the 8-year old's crack
    climbing!
    
    Since this was our first trip to Patagonia, there was a lot more
    we wanted to see and do, so the following morning we had to hike
    out. We surely wished we could have stayed longer, Cochamo is
    such a fantastic spot!
    
    Next: Bariloche/The Frey
    
    
    
    
  
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    Cochamo streets | 
    They had awesome salmon indeed! | 
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    Cochamo | 
    Cochamo playground | 
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    Piggies cruising around town?! | 
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    Elliptical trainers with a view? Cochamo water-side.. | 
  
  
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    Hanging out in Cochamo by the water | 
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    Starting the hike to Cochamo - La Junta | 
  
  
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    Horses are how everyone gets around in this valley | 
    Deep troughs from all the horse traffic and muddy conditions | 
  
  
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    Lots of neat bridges making the trail quite easy! | 
    Lots of water everywhere, and all safe to drink - nice! | 
    Our first view of the granite, after emerging from the forest. Spectacular! | 
  
  
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    Trinidad on the left and the left side of the Amphitheatre on the right | 
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    Gorgeous wildflowers | 
  
  
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    The first wall on the left | 
    Another beautiful meadow! | 
    That's how one gets across the river. | 
  
  
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    The gorgeous camping area. Trinidad and the Gorilla in the background/left | 
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    Our sweet room for a few days! | 
    That's what I call a room with a view... | 
    The view from the refugio | 
  
  
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    The main area of the refugio - beautiful | 
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    Beautiful place to be a horse.. | 
    The river crossing cart for the refugio/trails to Trinidad and Amphitheatre | 
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    All smiles at the beginning of the hike.. | 
  
  
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    The breath-taking Anfiteatro | 
    Filling up on some crystal-clear water | 
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    Pristine water | 
    What a jungle.. | 
  
  
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    Melissa pauses while we contemplate the "squeeze chimney boulder problem" | 
    At the base of the "squeeze chimney boulder problem" :) | 
  
  
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    Spent. And we haven't even roped up yet! | 
    Awesome rock | 
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    Starting pitch 1 of Al Centro y Adentro | 
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    Looking down pitch 1 | 
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    Pitch 2 - 5.10d bulge to a weird offwidth above it | 
  
  
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    And then an amazing 5.10+ finger crack. Pitch 2 is awesome! | 
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    Melissa coming up pitch 3. 5.11b "bombay chimney" move followed by a brief offwidth and then a #4 camalot crack from heaven for most of the pitch. | 
  
  
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    My professional belay technique is showing.. | 
  
  
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    Pitch 4 - sweet 5.10+ lieback/dihedral | 
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    On top of the lieback pitch | 
    Looking down at the end of pitch 4 (some interesting 5.10 face climbing after the stellar liebacking) | 
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    The 5.11c face pitch. It was very ugly.. | 
    Looking down at the 5.11c pitch from the last bolt. Pretty sporty, but then I suck at face.. this pitch demoralized us. | 
  
  
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    Looking at our climb from the approach | 
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    Hanging out at the refugio is way more relaxing than climbing ;) Reading the Cochamo article/history | 
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    The start of Apnea | 
  
  
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    The second day was quite overcast, which was good as it wasn't super hot | 
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    Melissa coming up the first pitch | 
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    The second pitch starts with a perfect hand crack and goes to amazing fingers on top | 
  
  
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    About to get into the sweet finger crack | 
    Trinidad | 
  
  
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    Zen is one of the most psyched young climbers you will ever meet! | 
    Zen makes liebacking look easy | 
  
  
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    Zen and Daniel chilling out and bringing up Sylvina | 
    Melissa cruises the 5.10d next to Apnea | 
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    Daniel styling Apnea | 
    "Zen, you are making it look easy!" "Zen replies: Well, it is easy... for me." :-) | 
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    And Sylvina finishes the climb for probably the first whole-family ascent of Apnea! :) | 
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    Waiting for the bus in Cochamo. Of course, he was 30 mins late.. | 
    Our B&B in Puerto Varas | 
  
  
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    For some reason they love ellipticals in this place? | 
    Fuel | 
  
    
     
    
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