An amazing trek between two mountain capitals, Chaomonix and Zermatt and two incredible peaks Mont Blanc and the Matterhorn.
Read MoreThe Cordillera Blanca Trek, Peru. I think this just might be my favorite trek.
I'll be honest. I really had no expectations for this trek. Having done the Teton Crest Trail, Everest Base Camp, the W Trek in Chile and the Tour du Mont Blanc in Europe, I was looking for something in the high Andes.
I had heard people speak about the Blanca for years, but it is only known to serious trekkers. And yes, while I had seen photos, I really had no idea what to expect.
Suffice it to say, I was awe-struck. Continually on this trek. What is wonderful about it? For starters you climb seven passes (ranging from 14,000 feet to almost 16,000 feet) in nine days. All of these passes are wonderfully different as are the surrounding peaks. You are looking up at a multitude of peaks in the 19,000 feet to a few in the 20,000 feet range.
The Andean peaks are dramatic, hugely so. Largely, because they are a fairly "new" mountain range. They haven't been as eroded as the passes and peaks in Europe. They are ragged, rough and defiant.
But what is wonderful about this trek is the combination of these peaks with magnificent valleys (where you usually camp at night). I am talking about hugely remote valleys: imagine valleys one mile across and five miles long. Usually these valleys have but one or two families occupying them. At most, a valley might have 10 families.
The fauna and flora are stunning. Wildflowers abound everywhere. We saw 7 condors during our trek. I could watch condors glide all day.
Finally, though, I would say it is the remoteness of this trek that I loved. Part of wilderness to me is not just nature's majestic, fierce beauty, but the remoteness of it. Unlike the Tour du Mont Blanc or the W Trek or certainly Everest Base Camp, this trek was incredibly unpopulated. We saw only one other trekking group during our trek. That is kind of stunning. While the Santa Cruz trek, nearby, is very popular because it is shorter, the Cordillera Blanca is more remote and empty. It was just wonderful. Because of the remoteness, you felt closer to nature.
Above is a video that tries to capture what this trek is truly like. Which is an impossible task. Enjoy
Glacier National Park, Montana, USA
In college, I spent two summers working in Yellowstone. And while Yellowstone and Grand Teton have special places in my heart. I believe Glacier National Park in Montana is my favorite. Largely because it has the most dramatic backcountry of any park. Where else can you hike and visit our last remaining glaciers and wonder at the magnificence of glacial u-shaped valleys. If you haven't been you need to go...now before the glaciers are gone.
The park has several historic lodges and wonderful lakes. My favorite is Many Glacier Lodge on Swiftcurrent Lake. The lodge is quaint and full of history with magnificent views of Swiftcurrent and the mountains beyond. Many Glacier Lodge is where I would go to hole up and write the great American novel. Or in my case, a comic book. But the views are amazing and the rooms rustic and charming.
From here you have so many choices. You can hike to Iceberg Lake. Just a stunning location. And it's name fits it. When I jumped in on an August afternoon, our guide's thermometer read 39 degrees F.
One of my favorite hikes is to Grinnell Glacier. Here is a short video of the trek there. Which begins with two shuttle boat rides from Many Glacier Lodge dock across Swiftcurrent Lake and Lake Josephine.
The other wonderful thing about Glacier is how the Going to the Sun Road, takes you up to the continental divide. From there you can hike high above the glacial valleys on the Highline Trail. Your car or transportation did the hard work and now you get to enjoy the fruits of your elevation gain.
From the Highline Trail, you can access Granite Park Lodge and the Garden Wall Trail where you are rewarded with magnificent views including Grinnell Glacier (be forewarned, while the Highline Trail is relatively flat, the climb up the Garden Wall Trail and Glacier Overlook is 1,000 feet of elevation gain in one mile). The other thing you should know is that the Highline Trail can at times be narrow, with drop offs, there are cables to hold onto and for the most part the trail is comfortably wide. Again, this trail is largely flat until you get to the trail for the Garden Wall. I have hiked miles of the undulating Highline Trail with people in their 60s and 70s. Here is a short, one minute video of the Highline Trail.
Finally, another favorite of mine is Lake McDonald Lodge. Again this is another historic lodge with wonderful veranda views of Lake McDonald. There is a dock with watercraft and a scenic boat tour. This lodge and the Many Glacier Hotel are both historic and great places to clean up and enjoy a nice bed and meal after a through hike or backpack trip.
If it's winter, it's time to head south, to Patagonia.
If it’s winter, it’s Patagonia.
I’ve met many a trekker and backpacker who come November, or even earlier, hang up their trekking poles and put their sleeping bag and pack away for the season.
But winter isn’t the season of the couch; it’s actually the season of exploration, by simply looking to the Southern Hemisphere.
It’s their summer obviously, and our spring is their fall.
Both winter and spring to us are wonderful times to experience their summer and fall.
In particular, I love Patagonia.
Of all of the places I have been, it is the wildest, wind swept, desolate, surprising, and invigorating place I have ever been to and I know this will sound weird, has the freshest air I have ever breathed.
I think this is because of several factors, you are close to the coast and to some degree Antarctica. There is little development of any kind, and the fierce winds (more on that in a minute) keep this pristine air blowing in from the southern seas.
Of course all of this makes for wonderful star gazing as well, provided you aren’t so tired that you can stick your head out of the tent and look up.
I never forget stepping out of my tent in the middle of the night to pee, looking up and being absolutely stunned. Now I have been to the Himalayas, trekked to Everest Base Camp, and I personally believe Patagonia’s stars beat Nepal’s. Could be the absence of yak dung smoke wafting from stoves(of course that is one of the charms of Nepal), but I digress.
I also think that the remoteness of Patagonia, lends itself to fewer people, less development, less smog, fewer trekkers and a more pleasing experience.
For instance, to get to Torres del Paine Park in Chile, I had to fly over night (8 hours) to Santiago, Chile, then take a plane (4 hours) to Punta Arenas (home port of the Magellan Strait), then take a three hour bus ride to Puerto Natales (the jumping off point for Torres del Paine) and then in my case take a two hour boat ride into a neighboring park and then a zodiac boat ride up into the park. That last choice was for scenery, I could have driven from Puerto Natales into the park, but nevertheless, you get the sense that this is one remote territory.
Getting to Argentina’s side of Patagonia and famed Los Glaciares National Park, which houses the dramatic Fitz Roy and Cerro Torre massifs, isn’t much easier. After flying overnight to either Buenos Aires or Santiago, you then need to fly to El Calafate, then hop on a four-hour bus ride.
You can do both of these trips, by the way, Torres del Paine Park and Los Glaciares National Park in the same trip.
You would probably need two weeks to do these properly.
But the wildness of Patagonia is something to see now before it comes developed.
The weather and winds of Patagonia add to this sense of wilderness. My first day we encountered 90 mile per hour gusts at Grey Glacier overlook. That night huddled in our tent, we felt 60 mile hour winds and horizontal snow whip our tent. The next day we were sent scrambling back down the French Valley by horizontal sleet, and on our last day we hiked up to the famous Towers in three inches of snow. But I truly loved every minute of it. This was adventure.
Patagonia is a feast for the eyes and your camera. Just plow through your Instagram feeds, ever notice how many shots are of the Towers, Fitz Roy and Cerro Torre?
The mountains simply frame themselves. They are rugged, fierce looking and rise stoically by themselves. Compared to the Himalayas where one majestic peak runs into another, these peaks rise up separately by themselves as if to say, “take my picture”. So framing is more graphic and heroic.
One last note: trash is noticeably absent. Unlike parts of Asia, Patagonia is simply pristine. I noticed our guide would bend down to collect even the smallest gum wrapper. It was as if he was thinking it would be a sin to besmirch this pristine wilderness.
What it takes to climb the ultimate trek: Everest Base Camp and Kala Pathar.
It is 4 a.m. I am suddenly awake in my tent. Not because it is 22 degrees outside. But because I hear a sound I don't recognize.
Then it dawns on me. It is my tent mate. He is peeing into a water bottle. This sound would wake me up two more times that evening. He and others had bought water bottles earlier in the day for the express purpose of avoiding having to get up and unzip the tent and trudge outside at 4 am.
Now I tell you this, not to gross you out. But because these are the kinds of things that make trekking to Everest Base Camp hard. It's the difficulty of hiking and camping at altitude for a long stretch and everything that goes with it.
Don't get me wrong, the physical challenges of the trek are hard. There's no denying it. Especially if you choose to climb Kala Pathar after you climb to Everest Base Camp.
One really does need to prepare. For months before my trek, I worked out six days a week. I primarily did boot camp classes with a lot of squats in them (your glutes are your friends when you climb 8 hours a day). I also did stair master sessions. Sometimes I would finish my bootcamp class by doing an hour of stair master. I did a lot of spinning (you need your quad muscles too). Finally, I ran. I participated in a series of races and I did two half marathons in the month before I left for Nepal. Others in my group who lived out west hiked every weekend. A good friend simply stair mastered and did spinning. Whatever physical regimen you choose just make it rigorous, say an hour a day, six days a week for three months prior to your EBC trek.
So while days like climbing to Namiche Bazaar were a bit hard, the hardest challenges of going to Everest Base Camp for me, was the other stuff: the challenges of trekking at altitude and trekking in Nepal. What do I mean by that?
For one, I didn't shower for 14 days.
There are a lot of opportunities to get sick on Everest (virtually everybody had something, and I had a sinus infection) but the last thing our guides wanted was for us to swallow water in the shower and pick up a parasite.
So you're a bit gross. But then so is everybody. Two, because my group was in tents, not every night but a lot of nights (versus other adventure companies who spend every night in tea houses), and I was exhausted and it gets tiring changing your clothes in tents, I simply didn't bother changing my clothes the last three days before the final push to EBC.
As for tents or teahouses. I wanted to camp in tents but honestly it did make the trek slightly more difficult and frankly they are usually pitched just outside the teahouses. So if you want a bit more comfort go for the teahouses. They are still rudimentary with virtually no heat (except in the common rooms). So you are still roughing it if you will.
Then there's the altitude and everything that comes with it.
The altitude just tires you. And frankly you worry about it. The last thing you want is to fly halfway around the world, and not be able to make it to base camp because of altitude sickness.
To cope with that many of us took diamox. This was debated a lot. Once we landed in Lukla, I took anywhere from 250 mg to 500mg a day. Diamox helps you get rid of the carbon dioxide that builds up within you at altitude and hopefully prevents altitude sickness. Some felt it was cheating. Personally I think if you have trained and can cover the physical challenges (which I did), I didn't want be prevented from going to EBC because my body wasn't capable of getting rid of the excess carbon dioxide. Almost everyone on our group eventually took it. And it's important to note that everyone in our group made it to Everest Base Camp.
To fight altitude sickness it is important to drink just a ton of water. Over a gallon a day. I think it's particularly important to drink early. By the time a headache hits you, it's almost too late for fluids to take effect. So I would drink two liters by mid-day each day and another two liters in the afternoon.
We also had two doctors on our trip and they gave us a great recommendation. When climbing, focus on your breathing, particularly on exhaling. You want to rid your body of the carbon dioxide. So as you climb breathe out hard through your mouth. And while everyone knows the adage "one foot in front of the other", this breathing technique (inhale with strong exhale) will put you in a rhythmic mood and take your mind off those endless switchbacks above you.
So what else?
You're sleeping in tents, it's cold (when we started out for EBC it was 10 degrees at 6 a.m.), your tent mate is waking you up every few hours peeing, you are worried about getting altitude sickness, you probably have a cold, you might have digestive issues (welcome to Nepal), you haven't showered in 14 days...I think that just about covers it. Except, if I can say it, things like yak dung. There is no fuel above tree line to burn, so they burn yak dung. It's everywhere, on the trails, drying in the sun etc.
Everest Base Camp trail is the yak dung capital of the world.
Now,It didn't bother me at all, but others didn't love getting cosy by the pot belly stove after a woman dumps a carton of yak dung in the top of it.
So those are the challenges that make Everest hard.
It isn't necessarily the physical toll (my two marathons were more challenging as was hiking Paintbrush Divide with a 40 lb. pack) it's the "everything else" I mentioned.
The one day, though, I truly was tested was Kala Pathar. Ironically the final trek to Everest Base Camp is a low elevation gain, maybe 750 feet if I recall. It's a long and tough day because of the altitude. But Kala Pathar, if you choose to do it the next day (about four to five in our group chose not to after getting to Everest Base Camp), is steep. After the first 50 yards, I had to pull over, breathing hard. It's almost two hours straight up with never ending switchbacks. It is the tallest climb of the trip at 18.700 feet and steep. That's us at the summit below.
All in all, Everest Base Camp is an amazing adventure. Just wonderful. Almost a week doesn't go by that I don't think about it.
The scenery is absolutely stunning. Almost every day, after you are dropped off in Lukla, offers amazing views which only get better the higher you climb. You will be posting to your Instagram accounts long after you have returned. Nothing can prepare you for how beautiful the Himalayas are.
You will probably make life long friends with members of your group. Many came solo because it's hard to find a friend who is either physically fit enough or has the time to spend 19 days doing a trip. So people are welcoming and wanting to share in the experience.
The people of Nepal are amazing. Personally, this was as impact as the scenery. This is a country still dealing with the aftershocks of a devastating earthquake. Nevertheless virtually every person and child we saw shouted, "Namaste" at us as we passed. They are just incredibly nice and friendly.
It is estimated that in 2016, post earthquake, trekking was down 60 percent. No country could use your tired muscles and tourism dollars more than the Nepalese.
So start working out and book a trip. Everest changes you in ways that are hard to summarize. Think of it as a trip that comes with eye opening scenery, a chance to make life long friends, a great sense of personal accomplishment and the opportunity to witness a people who are as resilient as they come.
I will leave you with one last image. One morning in Pheriche, a village you stay in one the way down from EBC, I was getting geared up to continue the trek down. Suddenly, a small little girl (three and a half or four, you can see her in the photo below) came up to me and offered me her only piece of chocolate. I declined of course but I was so taken by such a sweet, giving gesture. As I walked away, she quietly said, "Namaste." That's the one last thing you need to prepare for: a wonderfully resilient and giving people.