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I summited Aconcagua in January 2008 as part of the Road
Back to Mt. Everest journey. Please read the live dispatches of
the 2008 climb from this link to
the dispatch page. I summited also in 2005.
The following was from my 2005 climb:
Climbing Aconcagua
in Argentina has not been one of my priorities so why would I take
a few weeks in the middle of winter to climb one of the 7 Summits?
And why was it never on my "list"? Aconcagua is the highest mountain
outside of the Himalaya range in Asia. It is famous for horrible
weather and infamous for being a "slag-heap" or rock pile. After
climbing it, I don't think it gets the respect it deserves.
I left Colorado on February 3, 2005 for the long trip to Mendoza
where I met up with our team at the Hotel Horcones. Over the
next two days the others arrived and we lost one of our three guides
(a "training" accident) to a severely fractured heel. Mendoza is a
large city in Western Argentina serving as the primary wine making
region in the country. Since it was summer in February in the Southern
Hemisphere it was hot and humid. On a very late Saturday night after
a great dinner and a Tango dancing show (click on the picture for
the video),
we saw families crowding the ice cream stores and outside restaurant
tables laughing, kissing, holding hands and living the Latin affectionate
life-style. It was nice to see in person. A climbing permit was
required so we went to the Aconcagua Provincial Park office in Mendoza to
pay our $200 fee (for this time of year). It was a simple administrative
process.
The team intact, so to speak, we traveled 4 hours by minibus
to Penitentes, a small ski resort at 8,500'. We stayed two
nights in a dorm type environment spending our time finalizing
our gear and taking an acclimatization hike to the top of the highest
ski run at 10,500'. A local hound, Lorenzo, accompanied us but I don't
think he enjoyed our view of Aconcagua as much as we did.
This was a critical part of our acclimatization schedule in that most
climbers go as fast as they can to the base camps either up the Vacus
Valley to campo Argentina on the North side or the Horcones Valley
to Plaza de Mulas on the South. I believe our extra day at Penitentes
enabled our success and health.
The next day we put our gear into duffle bags (44lbs maximum)
to be loaded onto mules who carried a maximum of 132lbs each. We left
the main paved highway and headed West up a valley following the Rio
de Vacus. For the next three days we walked about 10 miles a day camping
each night at an official camp site complete with Park Rangers who
kept an eye out for littering. We were treated on the first night with
a bar-b-que by our Muleteers. We legally collected scrub wood that
was quickly burned into bright, glowing red embers. The meat was layed
out in large slabs and slow cooked over the heat. Served on a piece
of white bread, it tasted fantastic!
Day three brought our first clear view of Aconcagua. Turing
South, we left the Vacus valley and gradually gained altitude as we
headed towards Plaza Argentina or base camp at 13,800. Aconcagua looked
huge! We could clearly see the Polish Glacier.
Arriving at base camp, we spent two days resting, finalizing
what gear would go higher, what would stay for a return mule trip
and taking more acclimatization hikes along with a carry of gear
to camp 1 at 16,075'. Campo Argentina is a busy place with a large
Ranger presence along with "offices" for the major mule companies and local
guides such as Lanko, Rudy Parra, Inka and others. A 24 hour Doctor is
also on call. This year, she required that everyone register with
her and get their blood pressure, pulse and, most importantly, a
measure of the oxygen content in our blood. I liked this policy since it
identifies anyone who is not acclimatizing properly or has an underlying
health problem that may be amplified at higher altitude.

We moved to camp 1 after three nights at BC. C1 is a few rock
walled tent sites in a small gully just above a flowing river. The
climb from BC is a good test for higher up on the mountain in that
you experience a wide expanse of loose scree especially in the last
several hundred feet up a 30 degree hillside. A similar challenge greeted
us just above BC but became more of a gentle climb up the narrowing
valley until the final stretch.
Three nights ended up on our schedule at C1. The first day
we practiced snow and ice techniques on the nearby snow covered hillside.
The next day involved a carry to camp 2 at 19,500'. The last day we
moved 1,500' higher to camp 1.5 at 17,500. All this climbing was designed
to move gear higher as well as create more oxygen carrying red bloods
using the well proven technique of climb high, sleep low. The climbing
was easy in the sense that the rock covered trail was obvious, the
angles manageable and the loads agreeable. Most of our team made the
climbs in a few hours at the most.

However, the Polish Glacier (click for video)
was a constant reminder of things to come. It never disappears
from sight.
At camp 2, we
found little running water since most of the streams were
frozen and there was no snow at all. Luckily there were some small
depressions of water with a thick ice layer on top. Once we punched
a hole through the ice, we were able to get water for cooking and drinking.
However we still boiled and treated this water since it was still.
The winds are ever present on Aconcagua. They are straight-line forces
that destroy tents, move gear and knock over climbers. We were mindful
to place large (basketball) size rocks around the perimeter of the
rainfly otherwise the tents literally blew away or moved a few feet
from the original site.
The original plan was for Stu (US), Suzy (Canada), Martin
B (UK) and me (US) to climb the Polish Direct route and the
rest of the team Rod (Australia), Mick (Australia), James (Ireland),
Garth (US) and Martin (Argentina) to attack the False Polish also called
the Polish Traverse or simply the Traverse. As is normal
in the high mountains you hear conflicting information. Teams
coming down the mountain claimed the glacier was in terrible shape
with too much ice and the late season conditions had melted away more
gentle angles creating 65 degree ice walls above the bottleneck on
the Direct route. Others spoke of 100 m.p.h. winds and -65F degree
still air temps creating unbearable frostbite. We decided to see for
ourselves and make the decision a couple of days before our summit
bid as to the appropriate route for us. This meant bringing all our
technical gear to the base of the Glacier - ropes, crampons, ice axes,
ice tools, ice crews, pickets, harnesses, carabineers, jumars, etc.
However when the time came to climb the Glacier it was just
Stu and I since the others had made their own decisions to take the
Traverse. We waited until 5:00 AM to leave our tents at camp 2 and
began the climb up the rock scree just to the right of the Glacier.
With light winds and temperatures hovering around 10F degrees, the
conditions were perfect. Dressed in two layers of long underwear, a
couple of down/polarguard jackets for our core and a top layer of Gortex
we stood 600' above camp 2 or about 20,100'. The sun was just starting
to rise and a warm puff of wind brushed against our face.
I stood up after putting on my harness and crampons looking
at Stu doing the same. Suddenly, I made a swift turn back towards the
Glacier to see a car size block of ice falling down the slope. As it
fell hundreds of smaller pieces hurled away from the main piece (the
blue line on the picture on the right). It came to rest at the base
of the Glacier. We looked at each other with total amazement and shock.
Stu had been here the past three years and had never seen such movement
on the Polish Glacier. I had been worried about the stability of the
ice structure since it was mostly 20 to 30 degree and had many large
features.
We had spent many hours discussing routes the past few days
and had agreed to bisect a large bergschrund and take a very ascetic
route mostly directly up the center of the Glacier (the red line on
the picture on the right). We were both motivated and excited. However,
this turn of events made us take pause. Was this a fluke? Perhaps it
was triggered by the warming atmosphere - the sunrise and a mild warm
front moving through the area. Or it was simply a glacier doing what
glaciers do. We discussed our options: continue as planned, take a
different route, retreat to camp 2 or leave for the Traverse and try
to join the rest of our team. We briefly discussed if we were being
too conservative or spooked too easily.
We had only seen one other team on the Glacier. While we knew
it had been climbed by several routes in February, it was unknown if
the conditions had changed for certain. Suddenly it became clear to
me - do not take a chance on this Glacier today. I had not come to
Aconcagua to take significant risks. This was nice Hill but not the
most important climb of my life. We simply did not know what we did
not know. This is always true on high-altitude mountains and this time
was no different with one exception. A block of snow and ice that would
have killed us had come directly down the very route we were approaching
and we would have been there in a matter of hours. And with that we
took off across a high traverse to meet up with the Polish Traverse
and eventually the summit.

We set a fast pace for an area near camp Colera where we cached
our technical gear. Lightened by ten to fifteen pounds we made better
time and soon passed camp Independence and the remnants of a very primitive
hut. Climbing the hill above the hut we joined the main route to the
Canaleta - the last 1000' to the summit. This section was straightforward
as the path was well worn and without snow. It was mostly a gentle
angle of 5 to 15 degrees. However it was here I saw most people struggling
with the altitude. Older men, younger men, women were taking a step
every 30 seconds. They were breathing hard and had a empty look in
their eyes. This was 21,000' after all. My suspicion is that they had
come up the Horcones Valley (the Normal approach) and had spent on
a few nights acclimatizing and were now paying the price.
At the base of the Canaleta, Stu and I left our packs (anchored
by large rocks) and took a water bottle and cameras for the
final climb to the summit. This last section was the most difficult
part of the climb. The rock was very loose and the route meandered
aimlessly upwards. We could easily see the summit now by the throngs
of climbers celebrating on the top! We met the rest of team descending
after a successful summit. They were pooped. It took about an hour
and a half but soon we were on the summit (click for video).
Incredibly, I think we could have made the climb from Penitentes
to the summit and never touched snow. My mind was confused by this
fact since most of my climbs have involved walking, sliding, sleeping
and using snow for survival. I had to remind myself of just how high
I was!

The first view is the famous cross on the summit of Aconcagua.
Made up of tubes it was brightly decorated and serves as an icon for
the summit. I had seen this for years in pictures and felt a wave of
excitement at the first site. The summit itself was a large, flat expanse
of rock about half the size of a football field. Climbers were everywhere
taking pictures, laughing, hugging and crying. Summiting any major
mountain is an emotional event and this was no different.
We took our own set of pictures and I made a satellite phone
call to Cathy. I took some pictures and prepared to send them
to Cathy for a website update as Stu called his wife - got the home
answering machine! Business completed, I took a look around. There
was Argentina, Chili, more mountains and the Pacific Ocean. But the
most prominent feature was the deadly South Face. After an hour we
left for the return trip to camp 2.
Tracing our steps, we made it back in a few hours and fell
into our tents reflecting on the 14 hour day. It ended as
planned but not as planned. Neither of us felt an regrets about abandoning
the Polish Glacier. We still feel it was the correct decision. We felt
good to have made the Traverse in good time and style and
to have seen our teammates along the way. After a night at C2, we left
for Plaza de Mules and then back to Penitentes. Amazingly, we were
in Mendoza 48 hours after our summit.
So why had I never considered this mountain? Well, I love
mountains of all kinds but my heart is mostly in the Himalayas. I have
focused so much on those large mountains that South America never came
into focus. But it should have. Yes, Aconcagua is a large pile of rocks,
but so are most mountains. Yes, Aconcagua is not technically difficult
by the normal routes, but so are most popular mountains. Yes, Aconcagua
is almost 7,000 meters and most popular mountains are not.

The Argentinians are unique. They are not Nepalese. They are
not Alaskans. They are not Africans. Their Latin culture permeates
the mountain. You cannot help but be swept in. There are more difficult
routes than the Normal or the Traverse such as the South Face where
two French climbers died while we were there. The Polish Direct is
a world-class route that many plan for and few actually do once they
see it.
Aconcagua may not get the respect from the climbing community.
But once you go there; take a serious look for yourself; look into
the eyes of your fellow climbers; see the dead bodies; smell the air
at almost 7,000m; respect is the minimum she deserves.
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