Posts Tagged ‘Patagonia’

El Cruce de Los Andes 2012 — Day 3

February 17th, 2012

< Previous Entry: El Cruce de Los Andes, Day 2, Part 2

Six-thirty a.m. rolled around way too quickly. It seemed like only ten minutes ago I had snuggled down with that itchy blanket like it was cashmere, and lost consciousness. As I forced myself to sit up, yawning and watching my fellow competitors doing the same in the lurid glow of the fluorescent lights, I wondered how long I had slept. The night before, I’d deliberately avoided all references to the hour because I didn’t want to know. Realizing how little sleep I would get was only going to make me more anxious before the third and final day, and I was already thrown off by these logistical challenges that I had not expected. I had learned by now that as physically demanding as this race was, the mental part was equally as critical.

The military barracks had showers, and though I rinsed off under the warm spray, I still had to get re-dressed in the clothes I had worn yesterday — the same running tights and race shirt in which I had run more than 45K sweating the entire time, then waded waist-deep through lake water, then dried in the campfire smoke, then wore to bed. I couldn’t stand the way I smelled. I knew I had clean running togs waiting for me back at camp, in my bag, and this made me feel a little better about my day ahead. All my fellow bunk-mates were in my exact position, so we shared a unique lack-of-sleep, lack-of-food, nasty-clothes solidarity. We filed onto the buses.

I leaned my seat back and tried to sleep, but the winding mountain roads were made of dirt and gravel, the bus didn’t exactly have advanced shock absorbers, and I bounced around like a BB shaken in a coffee can. I stretched my legs straight out into the aisle and rotated my ankles, trying to improve circulation. My feet and hands had been puffy since yesterday morning — my trainer-partner had explained this was my body’s defense against dehydration, its attempt to retain as much water as it could. Examining my skin stretched tightly across bloated hands and ankles, I considered that my body was perhaps a little too defensive.

By the time we pulled up to the border and stopped in front of the Argentine immigration office, I felt glad our race coordinator had to go talk to the officers, because I could fall asleep immediately. And did. The rattle of the idling engine gently rocked the bus.

So, I noticed right away when someone cut the engine. Through my haze of waking up in the abrupt quiet, I knew this was not a good sign. My fellow passengers were conferring, spinning around in their seats to consult each other, and drifting off the bus to ask what was happening. I figured there was nothing I could do to contribute to the situation, and fell back to sleep.

I don’t know how long it lasted, but what woke me up this time was the sound of crying. Specifically, by the woman across the aisle from me, sobbing, and being comforted by two other racers. I sat up, suddenly alert, and eavesdropped. As rapidly as they were speaking in Spanish, I understood that we could not return across the border and enter Chile — not without our documents. Whatever arrangements the race organizers had made with the border officers the night before were moot. We couldn’t get back to camp. And we probably wouldn’t be finishing the race today.

I jumped up and ran off the bus. Maria Kournikova was standing with several other runners, in a circle around the race coordinator. I asked my partner if what I’d heard was true and she confirmed that yes, this was the scenario. She was upset, but staying calm, unlike some of the others who were shouting all at once at the race coordinator.

The coordinator, who had been all no-nonsense, large-and-in-charge the night before, was clearly flustered now. She put her hands up and yelled above the din. No, she said, they would not let us across the border without our passports — but the race directors at camp had been notified. They were sending our bags here, so we’d be able to get back to the starting line. We’d be starting late, yes — we’d be the last teams to leave — but it was better than not running at all.

A truck pulled up not long after, and a race staffer jumped out, went around to the trailer, and started unloading suitcases and backpacks. We called our team numbers to him, and he’d rifle through the pile and hold a bag out to eager hands. Several people were now scattered around the lawn of the border office, digging through their luggage, unpacking new running clothes and tearing open packets of food. My stomach groaned and I thought about the trail mix bars in my bag. It wouldn’t be the ideal breakfast, but better than nothing. I hadn’t eaten much dinner, and the lone mini-Snickers I’d had yesterday in my Camelbak was long gone, having been stress-eaten on the bus the night before.

I pressed through the others and looked into the trailer. Only about seven or eight bags remained in there. None of them were mine.

Maria Kournikova had gotten her backpack, and was now offering me some cookies she’d unpacked. “Where’s yours?” she asked.

“I don’t know. It’s not there.”

She stopped chewing. “It’s not there?”

“It’s not there.” I wasn’t alone. Several other racers had not received their bags, either. Some of them were snapping at the race staffer in the truck, and he hollered that it wasn’t his fault and jumped into the cab and peeled out.

Which left the female race coordinator. People were livid and hollering at her, and she was trying to write down the names and team numbers of those who had not received their bags, and they kept yelling, and then she burst into tears. Some of the women racers snapped right from shouting to trying to hug her, which made her shriek, “Don’t touch me!” and jump away like she’d been scalded. Pandemonium.

Very few of the teams now had both runners with proper documents — the rest were missing one or both passports, so we still couldn’t return. It was by now late morning and the first runners would be crossing the border any minute now. People were suggesting to the race coordinator that we be allowed to start from here, and run to the finish line. It wouldn’t be ideal, but at least we could finish the race.

The race coordinator went in to talk to the border officers, and came out a few minutes later looking desperately unhappy. They weren’t letting us go anywhere, she said. We had no documents — our passports had not been stamped last night, coming from Chile — and we weren’t even supposed to be in Argentina. We would have to wait until all our passports had arrived before we could go anywhere. And that could be a very … long … time.

We wouldn’t be finishing the race.

Pandemonium. More shouting. More crying. And then, in the middle of it all, a flash of blue race shirts and blur of Camelbaks — a team of two men had jumped up and started sprinting up the road, toward the finish line. Runners screamed at them to come back. Border guards yelled for them to stop. Border guard dogs barked. An immigration officer jumped onto an ATV and zoomed down the road, after the absconding team. The race coordinator dropped to the ground and started wailing. Pandemonium.

In the middle of it all, I burst out laughing. I wasn’t happy — far from it — but this situation had gone from absurd to surreal. Other runners glared at me as I laughed until I was exhausted, wiping tears from my eyes, a residual giggle escaping now and then.

The first racers had started coming through the border, getting their passports stamped and waving them triumphantly at us as they darted up the road. My bunk-mates all plopped down in front of the border office and watched glumly as a flood of blue shirts came running through. Some of them knew the racers and shouted encouragement. There was no sign of the team that had fled to the finish line, nor the officer on the ATV. I assumed they had ducked him until they could blend in with the other racers, now crowding the dirt road. I was glad they got away. At least they get to finish, I thought. I didn’t feel like laughing anymore.

I was thirsty, and wandered inside the border office to find a drinking fountain. I asked a cleaning lady and she told me it was in the bathroom. She meant the sink.

I was going to be here for a long time. I filled my Camelbak water bag, hoping the treated drinking water down here in the valley was as clean as the mountain streams far above. I went back outside. The border guards had set up passport-stamping tables by now, and masses of racers jostled to get their documents validated and keep running.

One of the border guards stood by the door holding a leash attached to a gigantic yellow Labrador in a police K-9 vest. I asked the guy if I could pet the dog, and he said yes — it would not even have occurred to me to ask this from a U.S. customs officer with a working dog. I scratched the Lab behind his ears and he flopped down onto the ground, flipping over so I could rub his belly. Petting a dog is supposed to relieve stress, and I didn’t know what else to do. Watching all the racers running toward the finish line was just too depressing.

I sat there for a few minutes with the dog until I saw the race coordinator on the grass talking intently to a bunch of the other stranded racers, including Maria Kournikova. I watched, frowning, and then suddenly all the runners sprang into action, strapping on Camelbaks, pulling on shoes and taking off down the road, mingling in with the rest of the runners. My partner flew over to me. “¡Eileen! ¡Podemos correr! ¡Vamos, vamos!”

For whatever reason, they were letting us finish, and by the way everyone was beating it out of there and by Maria Kournikova’s sense of urgency, I understood this was a decision that could be reversed at any time. I jumped up (startling the lolling “working” Lab at my side), grabbed my pack, and latched it onto me while jogging after my partner.

I had no idea how far along the course we were, but huffing up the dirt road, I prepared mentally for another full day of running. It was daunting. I was not starting from a good place. I’d had five cookies for breakfast, no other food in me or with me, and a Camelbak half filled with restroom sink water. I had planned to switch to more supportive shoes today; I’d planned to put on a different type of running bra, since the one I’d been wearing for over 24 hours had chafed its metal clasps into my back. I couldn’t do either of those. And I was filled with doubt, more so than the other two days. I’m uncomfortable. I’m unprepared. I don’t have what I need. What happens when I run out of energy and have no way to replenish? What if I’m in pain and my last two Tylenol don’t cut it?

The doubts turned into dire predictions. This is going to be terrible. I’m going to be hurting, slow, tired, and I’m never going to make it. I can’t run like this! I’m never going to finish. At the same time I realized what was happening: I was defeating myself. The inner argument started all over again as I ran slowly down the dirt road, which had moved from the open sunshine of midday into the cooler, tree-shaded forest.

I can’t dwell on what is wrong with this situation. I have to stay positive. It is shady. It is not hot. I have water. I can take it easy and concentrate on finishing.

The cumulative hours of running today and yesterday, nearly 90K combined, had rubbed raw patches across my back where my Camelbak fastened. I can’t run like this, whined the defeatist inner voice. I’m going to have to stop.

So we fix it. We figure it out, the other voice responded. We are not stopping.

Why is one of them an “I” and the other one “we”? I pondered as I flipped my Camelbak around to hang in front of me. I ran like that for a while, but it didn’t feel natural and slowed me down. Forget it. I’ll never be able to finish with this thing dangling in front of me. It’s no use. …

… We are too gonna finish. We are gonna stop and get comfortable and we are going to finish.

I slowed down and called for Maria Kournikova, running easily in front of me, to wait. In my bag was an extra tank top, and I stripped off my race shirt, yanked my race buff in between my bra and my back for extra padding, and changed into the tank top. The different material helped. I adjusted the straps on my Camelbak so that it hung lower, low enough to avoid rubbing against the chafed areas on my back. Better.

Now, we run and we finish.

The road stayed on the path through the trees, along rolling slopes, with gentle uphills and slightly steeper downhills: a nice, pleasant course. We can handle this. For another hour or so, I did handle it. We all did. Me and the voices in my head.

Then, the doubt: it’s been over an hour and I am supposed to be eating. This course is gonna be 26K, longer if they screw with the distances like they have been doing all along, which they probably will. I’m going to run out of gas. I’m not going to make it.

And the refutation: Give me a break. You can’t spell ASSET without ASS! We have plenty of energy! Fat stores … engage!

And just as the voice of reason was winning, the road wound down, down, down and a man in a Cruce staff shirt stood at a crook in the road, pointing to his right and cheering. “Faltan uno! ¡Solo uno mas!”

Wait, what? We’d been running slightly less than two hours; I was preparing for at least twice that and likely more. I had become so conditioned to ignore the distances stated by the race people along the road that I disregarded what he said.

We turned onto a beach along a different lake; the sand was mushy and wet, and we ran through deep streams of cold water that flowed from the woods into the lake. Aw man, now we have to run in wet socks and shoes? I wondered how long that would last, and defeat started its annoying prattle. Oh great. Now we’re gonna get blisters. Now we’re gonna …

Shut up. Would you just shut up already?

Miraculously, on this day, the guy in the street had not been messing with us after all. He was right. There had been only one kilometer to go … to twin boats ferrying racers across a short but deep river, to the other side where coordinators were helping them disembark. Runners waiting on the shore were clapping, cheering, hugging, congratulating those just arriving, including a very confused me. “What? We’re done? We’re done?”

We were done! … well, almost. The race organizers had shortened today’s course from 26K to 21K, apparently in response to complaints that the previous days’ distances were longer than advertised. We were supposed to cover 100K in three days; we’d covered nearly 90K in two. And the border office was located more than halfway along today’s course.

The finish line was just up the road. The hard part was over. But strangely — especially after today’s nasty dialogue between the competing voices in my head — I felt cheated. I knew logically that I had run as much of the course as I could, that I had not done anything to shorten it, that I would have run the entire thing if I could — and, more importantly, I could have run it. I had done as much as race logistics and circumstances would allow. I had finished honorably and fairly.

But I still felt cheated — and worse, felt like I had cheated — when our Aussie and American friends, Janno and Melissa, came running up, having started from camp that morning. “Eileen! Maria! You’re here!” Hugs. “We were so worried when you didn’t come back! We had no idea what happened to you!”

We gave them a brief account of what we’d gone through from last night to now. “You finished! You got to run after all!” they crowed.

“Well, not the whole thing,” I amended. “We ran from the border — remember? We didn’t really finish.”

Janno waved that off. “Stop it. You did finish. You did it! We did it!”

Hugs. High fives. Photos.

As I climbed out of the canoe and stepped onto the shore, I thought about the asterisk I was mentally attaching to my finishing time. Yes, I had completed the race … according to official race regulations … but not really, that inner voice whispered. I didn’t want to finish with an asterisk, but it was how I would finish, nonetheless. Other people had run farther than I had. Fact.

I thought about why I felt disappointed. Even though I had run more than two marathons back-to-back and had covered just under the 100K the race had demanded, I wondered if I could really say I had accomplished what I had set out to do.

I had entered El Cruce because I wanted to know if I could rise to the formidable challenge it posed. I knew that I could handle stress, having lived through unavoidable challenges that life had thrown my way. I had survived them … but mostly because, during those times, I had no choice. This race was a chance to find out whether I had it in me to survive stresses that I did not have to endure. I put myself in this situation, and I could walk away if it got too bad.

I thought about the volcano, the uphill climbs, the driving cold wind, the mushy snow. The painful feet. The exhaustion. The sunburn, the chapped lips, the raw skin, the swollen extremities. The wet. The cold. The hunger. The uncertainties I hadn’t planned for — frustration, no bags, limited sleep, unexpected travel, a roller-coaster of emotion as I prepared to run, then not run, then run, then not run, then run.

Lots of people had dropped out of the race, most of them after the fiasco with the bags. But I didn’t. I could have, and no one in the world would have blamed me. As we rounded the corner and saw the big blue inflatable arch at the end, it occurred to me that not only didn’t I quit, amid all the difficulties — but that I had never considered it. Not even once. Technicalities aside, distance be damned: I had my answer.

I grabbed Maria’s hand for the third time that weekend and we ran as fast as we could through the finish line.


Equipo #494, Maria Espinosa and Eileen Loh (Team Possum Scout) finished El Cruce de los Andes 2012 in 21 hours, 46 minutes. No asterisk.

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El Cruce de Los Andes 2012 — Day 2/ Part 2

February 14th, 2012

< Previous Entry: El Cruce de Los Andes 2012 — Day 2, Part 1

When I spotted the finish line, way across the vast span of blue lake (which sparkled almost obscenely cheerfully in the late-afternoon sun) I let myself bask in undiluted, full-body rage for maybe 10 seconds — 15? — but not much longer, because Maria Kournikova had gotten far ahead of me, runners were coming up behind — and if they were as pissed off as I was over this long, precarious technical portion sprung on us after more than 40 kilometers of hiking and running, they were not showing it. I had to suck it up. There was no other choice.

I retrieved an energy gel packet and downed its contents. I already knew what awaited me: no more running, thank the gods, but strength and dexterity challenges that could mean serious injury with one misstep. This was actually a course I would enjoy under other circumstances, but why couldn’t they have us do it earlier? Why now, when we were depleted? And why, why, why didn’t they tell us it was coming?

As much as I wanted to wallow in self-pity, I did not have that luxury. Big fallen trees crisscrossed my path and I ducked down under them, pulled myself over them, sloshed deeper into the water until they were low enough to step over. I had stopped following my partner’s steps, because Maria Kournikova was so much taller than me that her most logical path was not necessarily mine. This course became ours to traverse in whatever way worked for us. Trees gave way to pointed, slippery boulders along the shore, waves splashing onto them. We had to either find natural hand- and foot-holds and pick our way across, half in and half out of the lake, or climb up over the rocks. At the trickiest obstacles, a race staffer would be perched on a rock or branch above, shouting instructions. I glared at one who looked comfortable, sitting with his thermos of warm maté. “Well I hope you’re enjoying your tea.”

Maybe I could allow myself a little bitchiness.

I was by now soaked to the waist, and shivered as I followed fellow racers emerging from the water and climbing up onto rocks too smooth to “boulder” across. The rocks were wet from natural spray, and from all the waterlogged shoes that had walked over them. I needed both hands to steady myself stepping up and down, skidding on loose stones, testing the strength of branches before using them to pull me up or support me as I descended. There was little to no passing one another here; not many paths to take, and an errant leg or hiking pole jostling into another racer’s space could be disastrous. Another team had stalled ahead of us, one of them standing there considering her options, and Maria Kournikova shrieked, “Vamos!” The woman lunged forth. It was the first time I saw my partner acting unsettled during this race and I felt a little better. Maybe she’s not totally bionic.

Another section of logs. Then more rocks. About an hour later, this gave way to long stretches of sand covered by stones the size of grapefruits. Ankles rolled alarmingly at times on them, and I thought of my original race partner, Holly, who had fractured her ankle doing that. This was easier than climbing, but no place to get lazy. The stones began to get smaller and smaller and easier to run on, in paths through the deep sand and toward the finish line: finally, thank God, the finish line. We held hands and ran through again. Seven hours, 40 minutes: we would’ve blown away our time yesterday if not for the damnable 90 minutes at the end … But, whatever. Done with Day Two.

I walked toward the campsite, located on the grassy area behind the lake, the blue tents already set up in rows and music pumping over the speakers. Again, other racers hailed us, some holding out their hands for high-fives as we trudged into camp. “Felicitaciones!” I felt great, though tired and wet and cold, and mentally reviewed my course of action. Dry clothes. Stretch. Eat. Massage. The race organizers had arranged for masseurs to come to our camp with massage tables and oils, and last night I had signed myself up for two back-to-back sessions. Tonight is all about recovery. Comfort. It is gonna be faaaabulous.

At the edge of camp a few bags and suitcases lay scattered, having been transported from yesterday’s campsite. I hurried over, eager to retrieve mine and get out of my wet clothes and shoes. Standing around were Juan, Guillermo and Paolo, my friends from last night. “Lena!” they greeted me (the name Eileen confounding many non-English speakers). “Como hiciste hoy? ¿Cuantas horas la tomaste?” (The competitive bullshit might be absent from camp camaraderie, but everyone wanted to know how long it took you to finish.) Kiss-kiss and we stood around chatting. The guys had been equally surprised and annoyed at the lakeside portion at the end. Good, I thought, it wasn’t just me.

“I have bad news for you,” Juan said then, wincing a bit in sympathy as he relayed the news — many of our bags had not yet arrived at the camp.

“Oh, God, no.” I looked at the sparse scattering of backpacks and suitcases on the ground, realizing that of course, these could not represent even a fraction of the teams competing. “When are they coming? I’m freezing!” I regretted it immediately: these guys were still in their wet racing clothes, too, and they’d gotten here before me. I hated to sound like a princess.

“They’re not saying,” Jose responded. “We have no idea.”

That meant no dry clothes or shoes … no sleeping bags … no towel … no medical kit where Tylenol and Advil awaited my throbbing feet. No cups or dishes, so I couldn’t eat. My stomach clenched and growled as if to send me a message: unacceptable. I went back to the tent I shared with my partner.

Maria Kournikova was sitting inside, rubbing eucalyptus balm into her feet. We had a quick chat about the situation. She’d heard our luggage wouldn’t be arriving until midnight, at least. Ohhh nooooo. She knew many of the race insiders, so she was probably right. I did a quick inventory of my Camelbak. I had my rain jacket, and an extra tank top and socks I’d stuffed in there, in case it rained and I wanted to change during the run. Miraculously, they hadn’t gotten wet in the lake. I had two more Tylenol, a mini Snickers bar, lip balm, sunblock, and some water. I changed into all the dry clothes I could, shuddered as I jammed dry-sock-clad feet into wet shoes, and left our tent.

The kitchen was setting rows of little sandwiches out, by now realizing many people were hungry and without plates or utensils, and my stomach sent up a louder and more insistent bark. I grabbed a couple of mini chorizo sandwiches and considered that I could wait for my luggage from the comfort of my scheduled massage.

Then I started to whimper. My wallet was in my absent bag. I could not pay for the massage until it got here.

Some staff members had built a campfire, and several people surrounded it. Shoes, socks, and wet clothes were being spread out on the ground next to the embers. Racers had abandoned any sense of modesty and were pulling off all but the most intimate layers of clothing, shoving various and equally intimate body parts toward the flames. Some people put their socks on hiking poles and held them over the popping, crackling flames like marshmallows. The crowd around the fire grew denser and larger as racers kept arriving from the course, shivering and wet, learning their bags were not there. Staff members came running with armfuls of wood and extended the fire, creating a long wall of flames.

Finally, some announcements about the situation: the transport boat had broken and many of the bags would not be expected for several hours. The race officials had arranged for people without their luggage to travel by bus across the border to San Martin de los Andes, Argentina, where they could sleep in military barracks and then be returned to camp tomorrow morning, to be reunited with their bags and start the race. Though no one would have their passports, this wouldn’t be a problem, the announcer assured us. “We strongly advise that those racers without their bags get on a bus and go to San Martin de los Andes. We have made arrangements with the border offices. The lack of documents will not be a problem.”

I considered the situation. Sleeping in a real bed sounded tempting, certainly better than shivering in the cold here without my sleeping bag. But I didn’t like the idea of being separated from my luggage for longer than it was necessary.

Besides, I was having fun. Many of the English-speaking racers had gathered by the fire and, though strangers yesterday, we were now super close in every way it was possible to be close — huddling together for warmth; giggling; joking; passing around cans of beer and communal bowls of spaghetti, with everyone using the one available fork — hey, we’re family now, we reasoned. Melissa and Janno, from the U.S. and Australia, had received their bags and they shared their dry clothes with us. We were all right. Not ideal, but all right. We had some dry clothes, and some food, and some warmth as we all flipped in unison, from one side to the other, rotating in front of the fire like a row of rotisserie chickens.

But Maria Kournikova came to find me. She was most decidedly not fine. She’d heard from her race insider friends that our bags wouldn’t be here until three in the morning at the earliest. “We should go to San Martin,” she urged. “We need sleep before tomorrow, and it is getting colder and colder. We don’t want to get sick. We should go.” I could tell she was not gonna budge, and I decided to abandon the warmth-survival-party by the fire and stay with my partner. We gathered up what few possessions we had with us and got on one of the buses going to San Martin de los Andes.

It took a couple hours to get there — there were three border checkpoints from Chile to Argentina, and we stopped for a long time at each one — but finally our bus came to a shuddering halt outside a military building. As we stopped, a race coordinator stood up and asked who was still planning to run tomorrow. My hand shot up, along with about two-thirds of the others. We were told to get out; those dropping out of the race would be taken elsewhere. As I got out of the bus, I stole a look at the people who were quitting. Yes, the bag situation was bad, but I couldn’t imagine dropping out now.

We flooded into the barracks. Our accommodations were sparse — bunk-cots in a giant room with thin mattresses, pillow, and a thick itchy wool blanket — but even with the bright fluorescent lights still glaring down on me, I fell immediately into a deep, dreamless, grateful sleep.

Next Entry: El Cruce de Los Andes 2012 — Day 3 >

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Photos Copyright 2012 El Cruce Columbia

El Cruce de los Andes 2012 — Day 1

February 8th, 2012

For years I secretly harbored a desire to take part in one of those insane, extreme adventure races that you see featured on the Discovery or Travel Channel and think, who in their right mind would do that? So last summer, when my friend Holly asked me to partner with her in one of them, I jumped at the chance. It was El Cruce de Los Andes, a grueling 3-day race over 100K of Patagonian mountain terrain between Chile and Argentina. This year’s edition included a 1,560-meter ascent up the volcano Mocho-Choshuenco (which has a height of 2,133 meters), and a run around its peak. ¡Rombo al Volcán! the Cruce website shrieked. How much fun does that sound? So much fun!

As months went by I gradually realized just how much time, effort, and money I would have to devote to this. I started running longer, farther and more often, exercised with a trainer, and went to Cusco, Peru, weeks before the race so I could train at altitude. My goal was merely to finish, and to find out how I held up under intense challenges and stress. I always thought I had the type of personality that could press on when I was exhausted, hurting, and wanting to stop … but one never really knows unless one is in that situation, does one?

My Cruce experience was almost over before it started: Holly fractured her ankle three weeks before the event and couldn’t compete, and this race requires teams of two. We were both so bummed. At the last minute, though, Holly’s friends from Argentina, who knew Cruce organizers, pulled in a replacement partner for me.

After a three-day blur of taxis, buses, airports, and customs from Peru through Chile, I arrived the day before the race at the Cruce campgrounds. We would be spending the first two nights in Puerto Fuy on the shores of Lago Pirehueico. There I met my new partner, Maria: a tall, striking Argentine personal trainer with impossibly long legs, waist-length blonde hair, and, I was soon to discover, the cardiac capacity of an adult cheetah. This would be her fourth Cruce. She was friendly, helpful, knowledgeable, and so daunting. I dubbed her Maria Kournikova.

That first day of camp had a festive atmosphere: music blasting, cameras clicking, boisterous reunions, cheerful introductions, barbecue grills smoking; people splashing in the lake, tanning themselves on the sand, eating and drinking; and waving at the documentary helicopters that dipped and banked over the sparkling waters and swaying treetops and rows of cobalt blue tents that rippled over the hillocks like flags. Local dogs — a scruffy black mutt, a pug mix, a fat beagle — wove in and out of the competitors, sniffing for handouts of sausage and beef. It could have been any giant camping party but for the faint air of tension that permeated the gregarious mood. Lording over the mountainscape to our southwest, the flat-topped, ice-covered Mocho-Choshuenco volcano loomed over its surrounding peaks, a silent and foreboding reminder of the trials that lay ahead. Here and there, people contorted themselves in runners’ stretches, another reminder that we were here to work, not play.

Everyone went to bed early.

The next morning, competitors started emerging from dew-soaked tents before the sun rose, and within an hour everyone was up: shivering, standing in line for breakfast, water, Gatorade, and port-a-potties; taping and lubricating feet, zipping up blue race jackets, bolstering knees and ankles with bandages and braces, pulling on compression socks, lacing trail running shoes, loading camera bags, reviewing the contents of Camelbak running packs, stretching stretching stretching. By the time 8 a.m. rolled around and we headed down the dirt road that led to the start of the course, people were removing their jackets and stuffing them into backpacks. The sun had burst forth strong and hot in a clear morning sky and we didn’t need them now, but the snow-glazed cap of Mocho-Choshuenco awaited us.

We moved en masse about 2 kilometers up the road, some people running but most walking briskly, knowing that another 33 kilometers lay ahead and that there would be plenty of running today. I couldn’t believe how fast Maria Kournikova could walk — her rapid long-legged stride carried her past joggers and walkers seemingly without effort as she chatted and joked with those she passed, many of whom she knew. My stumpy legs were no match and I jogged to keep up. Our dog companions from camp trotted along, and I wondered for how long they would stay with us.

The race organizers had given us small flags of our countries, with our names stamped on them, to attach to our Camelbaks. Most of the flags around me were the pale blue-and-white stripes of Argentina, followed in number by Chile’s navy blue, white, and red flag, and then the vivid green and yellow colors of Brazil. Other flags popped up here and there, but I was one of very few people, maybe 10 among the 1500+ in the race, who bore the Stars and Stripes on my back. Several people shouted “USA!” or “Vamos Estados Unidos!” when they saw me, as they would throughout all three days of the race. I felt giddy, as though I were in the Olympics.

We gathered at a suspension bridge that we knew would be the one bottleneck of the day, and this was really the start of today’s run. Race coordinators stood at the end of the U-shaped bridge, controlling the flow of runners onto it, ensuring we didn’t snap it and go tumbling into the cold green river below. As I waited my turn I saw the scruffy black mutt and fat beagle sitting on the bank, watching us, not taking their chances on the bouncing, swaying bridge. Smart doggies. I stepped onto the bridge, hiking poles in one hand, and grabbed its steel support cable with the other. Its wood slats smelled good, like cedar. Down a long ramp at the other end, and a wide dirt trail stretched out into the jungle. We started running when we hit the ground.

For the first couple of hours the trail was crowded with runners and mostly uphill. I found it hard to set a rhythm, since I was constantly having to pass someone, or dodging those passing me. Maria Kournikova stayed in front of me the whole time and I watched her pace: walking up the steeps, running on the flats and gradual uphills, with me never going as fast as she was but as fast as I could. She clicked into trainer mode: insisting I eat something every half hour, reminding me to drink water, coaching me on how to breathe better, asking now and then, “¿Como estas?”

“Bien,” I’d gasp, unwilling to talk much more than that, lest it get in the way of what had become very intense breathing. We were on a rather direct ascent, and I was working as hard as I could, prodded by Maria Kournikova’s relentless pace. I was red-faced, sweating, panting; she trucked along as casually and comfortably as if she did this every day. Which, for all I knew, she did. As time went on, the runners thinned out on the path, and it became easier to navigate.

The sun burned into the side of my neck and hoped I hadn’t sweated off my sunblock. The higher we got, the cooler it became, and the landscape began to change: less vegetation, more rock and open sun. Along the way I saw another American flag in a backpack with a toy monkey’s head sticking out; these belonged to Theresa from Maine, running with her partner, Olivia from Spain. I had my own stuffed companion buried in my bag: I didn’t want Maria to see Travel Bear and urge me to leave him at camp to save weight. A gift from my niece Charlotte, he has come with me to five continents and was definitely running with me.

We kept going, up through rock, flat plants and scrubby grass, the trees and bushes now far below. All around me, spectacular views of surrounding mountain peaks rising high into the sky looked surreal, like a movie set. The wind grew colder and more insistent and I stopped to pull on a long-sleeved shirt, gloves, buff around my neck, and knitted ear band under my cap. I chewed half a trail mix bar and gulped diluted Gatorade. I could see racers ahead of me, tiny in the distance, climbing a long, steep, straight-up incline toward the top. It did not look easy or —despite the splashy ¡Rombo al Volcán! marketing — fun.

Frost iced the grass as we kept going up the switchback trail, and then we rounded a curve and stepped suddenly into winter: inches of snow on the ground, coated with a thin layer of blown dirt, mushy on the path where hundreds of feet and poles had trodden. My trail runners slipped and slid, unable to gain traction, and I saw others having the same problem. Those who had worn hiking boots were faring better. Maria Kournikova had the footing of a mountain goat and kept her quick steps, stopping on occasion to wait as I moved laboriously through the snow. I felt guilty about slowing her down, but she seemed in good spirits. “Estas bien, Eileen?” She stopped to carve our names and countries into the dirty snow with her pole: MARIA ARG, EILEEN EEUU.

The path turned again and then we were on that sharp climb to the volcano’s peak, a long slow grim march that would have been far more tolerable if not for the shrieking wind bearing down on us like the wrath of God. I huffed upward, my feet sliding in all directions, glad for the hiking poles that had become necessary to keep my footing while others slipped and fell around me. I watched Maria Kournikova’s red Camelbak above me: how was she moving so fast through this? The ascent seemed never-ending, and with little else but whiteness around, I had to mark my progress by identifying stationary landmarks, mostly teams above me that had stopped for whatever reason. I couldn’t imagine stopping in this wind. In my mind resounded the voice of Dory from Finding Nemo: “Just keep swimming … just keep swimming …” Near the top was a ridge of dirt-blown snow where people had scraped their names and initials. Because this was Super Bowl weekend, I took my hiking pole and wrote LET’S GO GIANTS NY USA.

Finally, the top: the trail evened out, and ahead rose the apex of the volcano, jutting high up from the rest of the mountain. Now we would have to circle it and come back down. I saw how the track veered to the left. It was a wide road through the snow, just as mushy and difficult to traverse as the one uphill. This felt like walking through deep sand, yet some people were running on it. Maria Kournikova could have run, but she slowed to match my walk; I was breathing so hard from the climb that running through snow/sand was not gonna happen. I could see runners off to my right who had completed the circuit around the volcano, lucky bastards: they were sprinting downhill and out of sight.

I wondered how long it would take to get around the volcano. The wind howled and whipped my face. My shoes were sopping, my frozen ears might as well have been uncovered, and though the cold air cut through me, my shirt was wet with sweat. Pulling my buff over my face, as many people did, only got in the way of my breathing. I needed every available bit of oxygen I could get.

The track yawned way out, and my heart sank as I saw runners ahead getting smaller and smaller in the distance before disappearing from view around the track’s circular curve. How long is this thing, anyway? I had imagined the top of the volcano to be a lot narrower, the circuit around it much shorter, but it was like a small mountain unto itself and the track around it looked more like a snow highway. The whole world turned into a blend of blinding white snow that matched the clouds, bright blue sky that matched our race jackets, and dark volcanic rock in the middle of it all that rose into the sky.

The track seemed endless. At every curve I expected to see the end of the circuit, to spot other runners just arriving at the top, but I would instead be greeted by yet another long stretch of snow road, sometimes going up a high hill; yet another vantage point of the majestic volcano peak that by now seemed to mock me. A few times, the snow would flatten out to where I could see rock under it, and I ran on that, anxious to get the hell off this volcano. The wind howled into me, from the side, then from the front, never letting up. And then, rounding one more curve — the peak shielded us from the wind at this angle, and it became blissfully still and quiet. Around the next curve, oh joy — the track angled downhill and I saw other runners on their way up the mountain, now starting the trek that I had just finished. Poor bastards.

But the slope down from the volcano proved a treacherous slippery slide down, down, down, like skiing without skis, and people were falling left and right. A couple of girls plopped down on their butts and just slid down. “Mira, Eileen!” Maria Kournikova shouted. “¡Hazlo así!” And, her left side facing downhill, she started bounding in high-stepped leaps, then would pop herself around so her right side faced down, skip skip skip, alternating left and right like her shoes had springs in them, sure-footed and fast down the hill, passing everyone else struggling to stay upright. While there was no way I could summon up the energy to jump like she was, the side-to-side method worked, and I scooted down half-sliding and half-shuffling.

At the bottom, race coordinators were helping people up onto a spiky hill of dark volcano rock and I silently thanked the gods to see solid terrain once more. My relief was short-lived: the hill was made of loose stones and pebbles over crumbly dirt, just as slippery as the snow, and we had to carefully pick our way up and down. Losing one’s footing here would mean a nasty fall onto nasty rocks below. At this point, two spikes of pain embedded into the base of my skull: I never get headaches, and the ferocity of this one surprised me. I had ibuprofen with me, but this was no place to stop. We had several rocky peaks to cross, up and down, up and down — til, thankfully, grass and bushes started to appear along the landscape and one more descent down the rocks led to a gravel road that wound downward through trees. At this point I realized how badly my legs were shaking. I also realized my headache was gone. I stopped to remove layers of clothes. My hands were shaking too. I asked Maria, with her distance watch, how much longer we had to go. “Quince kilómetros,” she answered. Fifteen more: we were more than halfway there, and the hardest part was behind us.

The gravel road turned into wide dirt trails through the jungle once more: hot, but shaded, the air carrying earthy scents of moss and wood and sun-baked leaves, with an occasional gurgle or roar of a waterfall or mountain stream bubbling over rocks. Racers stopped to fill bottles and Camelbak bladders: no fear of parasites from this cold, clear, pristine water.

I didn’t want to keep bugging Maria about the distance, but exhaustion had set in and I was starting to feel anxious. “Nueve kilómetros,” she’d say, and I’d think okay, nine more, that’s like, five and a half miles … I was mentally comparing the distance to ones I had run before, from training in various locations around the world in the past few months. That’s from Sullivan and Houston to Chelsea Piers and back. That’s from my flat, twice around Finsbury Park and back. That’s from San Blas up to Cristo Blanco and down to the plaza. Anything to give myself some precedent: I know I can do that. I have done it before. I am tired but I can do that. I had not filled my Camelbak from any of the streams, though, and now it was dry. I could not believe I had consumed three liters of liquid and still had five-and-a-half miles to go.

But when we got to a pair of race coordinators in the road, nearing the end of the nine kilometers, they handed us water and Gatorade (to my relief) and shouted, “Faltan cinco kilómetros!” (to my horror).

“Wait, what, five more?” I stopped short in disbelief. “But we’re at 33!” I repeated it in Spanish to Maria Kournikova. She confirmed it with the race people. “Yes. There are five more to go.” She must’ve seen the look on my face because she added, “Vamos Eileen. Puedes hacerlo.”

I wasn’t sure I had it in me. I felt distraught and my twin-spiked headache had come roaring back. As I rooted in my pack for my ibuprofen, another Camelbak with an American flag jogged by — this was Maria, an American running with her British teammate, two of the first people I had met at camp. “Hey hey USA!” she yelled at me. “Three more miles! Go go go!”

I washed my ibuprofen down glumly, wishing I could feel as cheerful. Within 10 minutes the Advil had kicked in and I could jog again. Slowly. But it was faster than walking, and at that point the only thing on my mind was how badly I wanted to cross that finish line, to stop, to sit, to be comfortable again. Maria Kournikova was still sprightly and looked as though she’d spent the day relaxing with a nice cup of coffee and doing crossword puzzles. I’m sure that I, on the other hand, looked as beaten out and defeated as I felt.

Five kilometers later, by Maria Kournikova’s watch: no finish line anywhere in sight. “What in the hell.” I wanted to cry. “¿Donde estaaaaaaa?” I whined to my partner. She shrugged and spoke to some runners passing us, and confirmed we had indeed come five kilometers, but apparently had more than that to go. “Vamonos.”

For the next two kilometers my mind strayed to a deep, dark, terrible place, with me making harsh judgments about myself, the race organizers, the guys in the road, fellow racers, Maria Kournikova, everyone — but especially, and most damningly, myself. I had to remind myself that I was hurting, tired, discouraged, and not thinking straight, but it was surprising to me how quickly I could become irrational and super negative when I felt physically awful. How powerful and immediate was the connection between pain or discomfort, and dangerous bad thoughts.

About two kilometers later, we came upon some locals that had been recruited by the race to give us our remaining distances. “¡200 metros!” they yelled, pointing to a path that wound through the trees. Finally, thank God. “¡Por fin!” I said to Maria Kournikova, and started to jog a little faster.

No finish line. No finish line. We turned a corner and found, instead of the big blue inflatable arch, a steep hill. I cursed and we slowed to a walk. At the top, we started to run again. A little girl was standing at the end of the lane, pointing to a gently sloping uphill trail. I huffed “Gracias,” at her as we jogged up the trail. No finish line. No finish line. “Where in the frigging hell?”

Off to our left I spotted a flight of wooden steps leading down to a street and then, at last, that big blue arch I’d been dreaming about all day. Maria Kournikova grabbed my hand and we ran full speed through it. After nine hours and one minute, I could stop.

Later, speaking to other runners, we confirmed that the course had indeed gone for six more kilometers than advertised, and the people at the end definitely had underestimated the remaining lengths. I was comforted to hear that this discrepancy had thrown other runners into the same psychological funk as me. We had traveled just over 40K that day, more than a marathon, the same distance we were expected to go the next day.

We took buses back to the camp and, walking in, people who had already arrived cheered and clapped for us. “¡Felicitaciones!” This was cool — there was none of the ultra-competitive bullshit I had been expecting and dreading; the racers were all pretty supportive of each other from elites to novices. I limped up to the area in front of the food tent, where people were sitting in clusters eating and drinking, dropped my pack and sank to the grass, stretching leg muscles that were already stiffening up. A dip in the cold lake, a change of clothes and major amounts of pasta were waiting for me and then — tomorrow, another 40K. I didn’t know how I was going to pull that off, but I couldn’t think about that now. I had to concentrate on being so incredibly grateful to pull off damp shoes, peel off two layers of wet socks, apologize to my puffy and sore feet, and finally, blessedly, rest.

Next Entry: El Cruce de Los Andes 2012 — Day 2, Part 1 >

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Photo by Diego Constantini Fotografia
Photo Copyright 2012 El Cruce Columbia

El Cruce de los Andes 2012 Official Photos: Day 1, Gallery 1

El Cruce de los Andes 2012 Official Photos: Day 1, Gallery 2

Argentina: Puerto Madryn & Peninsula Valdés

April 4th, 2011

Though I’m still in Mexico, I thought I’d break away from the Mexican postings for a trip a bit farther down south, to Patagonia Argentina. These are notes I took during a trip there a couple of years ago.

Day One: Puerto Madryn arrival

I can’t remember having been this enchanted by a place in so long a time. Puerto Madryn has a GORGEOUS shoreline; dark gold sand, laid-back atmosphere. Tonight a silver full moon hangs heavy in a starry sky with las Tres Marias brilliant among all the other constellations. Dogs run obedient in the streets. I am sitting in a bar that’s blasting obscure old Janis Joplin tunes and nibbling on a kick-ass cheese and meats plate (tabla con quesos y carnes). The mojitos are strong and made from real mint, entire plants of it in one drink. They have an old cabinet above the bar, mounted with a forward tilt like an important painting, but displaying old booze bottles ensconced on its shelves.

Here are some snaps I took today of Puerto Madryn’s shoreline:

Day Two — Peninsula Valdés (Valdes Peninsula for the gringos)

I spent most of the day in Peninsula Valdés, a nature preserve/ UNESCO World Heritage Site that’s almost an island, connected to Chubut Province by a slim isthmus. I was scheduled to be picked up at 8:15. I awoke not really knowing what time it was because my cell-phone time was wrong, and I’d slept through my wake-up call too. Turns out I got out of bed at 8 a.m.; I hustled downstairs in the nick of time to meet the tour guide, Federico. In the back seat of his red square van were Mark and Thea, an English couple embarking on one of those massive post-university world tours that Brits do so well: first they’d been to Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam, then to Australia and New Zealand. Now they’re on the Americas leg. Lucky.

It was gray and cloudy and we drove toward Peninsula Valdés; I was groggy, and I asked Federico in my bad Spanish if we could grab a coffee somewhere before getting to the peninsula. His response: “You are not in Buenos Aires – this is Patagonia. There are not cafes here – there is not even a gas station where we can stop!” He did say there were coffee machines at the eco-center on the isthmus leading to the peninsula. On the way we passed dry dusty landscapes, sand, and scrubby grasses and short bushes, very flat and in all the desert colors. Animals: South American ostrich (not rhea – he did call it that, but there was a more specific name he was using), llamas who traveled in packs and looked like much bigger deer – very lithe and jumping like deer over the occasional estancia fence; a “peludo” armadillo; gray speckled birds that he said were akin to partridges; “Patagonia hares” — although they are not hares, but tailless rodents with short stumpy heads in the mouse family that walk almost like little dogs, with a little hop. Lots of woolly sheep that produce merino wool. It was at this point of the trip that I realized I had forgotten to charge my camera battery, that it was completely dead, and I would not be taking any pictures today.

We got to the eco-center at Ameghino Isthmus, the entrance to Peninsula Valdés. The center was set up like a little museum, with a big whale skeleton that had been discovered on the peninsula — the space open and airy, well kept, clean and beautiful. They had a soda machine, and three little espresso machines that turned out to be fabulous. It was early and I was still a little hungover from the night before. A cute guy helped me deal with the coffee machines; he didn’t speak any English, and was from around there somewhere.

I went into the bathroom — a surprisingly nice tiled bathroom, a lot like the museum itself in décor. I told Thea it was like peeing in a museum display. Out the window of one of the stalls was the nicest view of the steppe I’d seen thus far: lots of pinks and yellows and beiges and greens in the desert coloring. I went back out and we three passengers climbed a little observation tower to see the thinnest part of this peninsula, with water on both sides.

I got back into the “Pat the Postman” red van, as British Thea was calling it, and we set off toward Punte Norte. Now we were on a rock road and all the stones bounced up clattering against the van, and would for the next six hours. We passed lots of Patagonian scrub-desert and all the animals. All of the peninsula, pretty much, was divided into estaciones – Fernando said each merino-wool sheep took up a lot of land to sustain. The peninsula has salt flats, “Salinas Chica” and “Salinas Grande.” There were very few structures on the land that I could see. One of the nicer estaciones, at the beginning of the peninsula, belonged to an owner of the Buenos Aires Boca Juniors footy team.

Though it threatened to rain all day, it only started coming down in the afternoon. We saw ostriches drinking fresh water from the puddles in the street; Federico said lots of animals survived on the saline water that comes up from the earth there, but could that really be true? I mean, some of those estaciones had horses, but I knew some of the buildings out here, like the eco-center, had fresh water pumped in from Puerto Madryn. That must be how the horses survived.

We saw sea lions on the shore; no whales or penguins because the season was over, but sea lions are apparently breeding and Peninsula Valdés is a big breeding ground. The water was deep green-gray and very cool looking. Back in the van and down the coastline, stopping at another point to see more sea lions. A little orange-and-white cat came running out of the guardhouse toward us; he stayed with us during our entire sightseeing trek and then tried to jump in the van after us when we left. I hoped he had a home. He probably does, with the groundskeeper – just not a lot of attention.

We stopped for lunch. Thea and Mark had been traveling since January and they’re on a strict 100-peso-per day budget – I bought them pizza over their severe protests, but I was all “I didn’t spend any money today” and said I had gotten on the tour for free … I didn’t want to be all “I can afford it, mofos!” even though they probably have just as much money as I do — they just spend it more wisely.

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The Lost Argentine Diaries Part 5: Glacier Photo Edition

June 8th, 2010

A few photos of the glaciers at El Calafate, Argentina. Taken in May 2007. Waayback.

The Lost Argentine Diaries, Part 4

May 23rd, 2010

Once again, let’s step back to 2007, this time to reminisce about the glaciers of Patagonia, Argentina …


May 6 ‘07

I’m in the sala of the Montevideo Hotel in El Calafate. It’s a small sunken living room with a big fireplace, brickwork and stucco, beautiful wood ceilings, dried flowers, iron candlesticks, mahogany-framed photos of glaciers calving, local paintings of local glacier scenes, a cement bench around the perimeter of the room covered in burgundy cushy pillows (very Trading Spaces) with mahogany furniture and I am in a mahogany Adirondack chair covered with earth-toned pillows. Logs are piled into a wood space built in next to the large fireplace and crude mantel. There’s a small plasma TV, discreet internet station and hidden speakers, and it’s a fabulously cozy little place. Adjacent is the helplessly snug little chic restaurant. Am v happy.

May 7 ‘07

Today I went to the Pedro Moreno Glacier. I think only some really outrageous scuba-diving experiences could possibly compare to the awesome sense of privilege I have ever had to see something of this magnitude that exists in nature.

I found these beautiful autumn colors in the surrouding mountains just amazing — trees on fire with russet and golds, right alongside this vast blue-white field of icy peaks fissuring down into deep blue channels. During the morning hours I got a close-up view of the glacier from the vantage point of a boat trolling right up against the glacier wall.

As far as the glacier itself, I have never seen blue like this in my life. It resembles marble, but translucent to a degree and colored varying shades of vivid blue, from almost-white power blue at the top to deep electric blue at the bottom. It has streaks and veins running throughout, deepening to a clear dark sapphire down by the base where time has compressed layer upon layer of ice to resemble colored veined glass. It all looks lit from within, too. You can hear the thunderous booming of glacier chunks shearing off the wall, on the inside and out, and the echoing through the fissured ice resounding long after the noise had stopped. More often than not you couldn’t see the calving, you could only hear it; these were internal calvings. We’d see big chunks of deeper blue ice floating in the water from the internal calvings. It is what I imagine a diamond must look like in extreme closeup. Soledad, our tour guide, says she comes to the glacier every day and that every day it is different.

The glacier lake water was like no water I’ve ever seen before — I wouldn’t call it cloudy but thick spearmint blue, dense with floating ice. I’ve never really given much thought to the properties of ice over time, until now. The end of this ice field, as it shears off and drops into the ethereally blue Lago Argentina, is fissured with pristine white peaks sticking up, like points on a meringue, with the grime of the surrounding mountains its browned tips. It’s a musical instrument, fissured all through with ever-changing chambers and the wind and the sound blowing through it make a uniquely resonant, haunting tone that sings for miles.

I met a fun chick from England named Filly, also traveling alone, who took pictures with me and we drank whiskey over glacier ice. Coolest cocktails ever.  All afternoon, after the boat ride, we hung out for hours at another part of the park that had walkways with several different vantage points along the north face of the glacier, and every overlook was another incredible opportunity to gaze at the phenomenon before our eyes. I just couldn’t believe I was seeing and hearing this, and all I wanted to do was sit and stare and listen to the unearthly crack/booming noise of the calving — at one point a blue cliff jutting over the water just disintegrated and hit the base of the glacier in an explosion to a pile of white dust and blue chunks. BOOOOM, waterfall, with the echoes bouncing and reverberating and prolonging the actual event so long. It also was surprisingly not freezing cold. I did have long underwear over several layers, but one would think that everything surrounding a glacier would be covered in snow or dead, unable to live. Instead it was a beautiful autumnal mountain scene and surprisingly comfortable to stay outside for hours and look at this glacier, which is all you ever want to do.


Here are a few snaps from that day; a bigger glacier photo gallery is up next. It’s a beautiful Sunday, so peace out.

The Lost Argentine Diaries, Part 3

May 12th, 2010

Some photos from Patagonia …