How to Get to El Chaltén from El Calafate: Bus, Stops, Times, Tickets & Tips
byIf Patagonia is a movie, El Calafate is the opening credits (glaciers! ice! dramatic music!), and El Chaltén is the “final boss” montage (Fitz…
Welcome to the heart of the wild. This isn’t your average “Top 10” travel list—this is a 15-year labor of love covering the rugged landscapes of the Argentine and Chilean Andes. Since Audrey and I first set foot here, we’ve been obsessed with documenting the real Patagonia. We’re moving past the generic postcards to give you the actual boots-on-the-ground logistics you need to survive and thrive down south.

Patagonia is massive, and it changes drastically depending on where you are. In this archive, we break down the reality of traveling through both Mountain Patagonia and the highly underrated Coastal Patagonia.

Surviving the Elements & Logistics: Patagonia isn’t just a destination; it’s a physical force. We cover exactly how to handle the infamous “Roaring 40s” wind, how to avoid the “sneaky sun” on a cold day, and how to navigate the very real “Siesta Problem” when everything shuts down in the afternoon.
The Trail Reality Check: Detailed, no-nonsense guides to the hiking capital of El Chaltén. Whether you are tackling the brutal last kilometer of Laguna de los Tres, walking through the sideways Lenga trees of Laguna Torre, or just looking for the best short trails for cloudy days when Fitz Roy is hiding.
Welsh Patagonia (Y Wladfa): One of our favorite cultural detours in the world. We dive deep into the history of the Mimosa arrival, comparing the tea houses of Gaiman and Trevelin, and yes—eating our weight in traditional black cake.
The Food & Beer Scene: You are going to burn a lot of calories here, and the food changes drastically from north to south. We’re documenting the essential post-hike craft breweries, the legendary Patagonian lamb, the bakery culture (facturas and dulce de leche), and the coastal specialty nobody expects: Patagonian seafood pizza.

Every post here is backed by our Argentina Authority Ledger—a collection of 10,000+ geolocated photos and years of first-person fieldwork.
Whether you’re planning a solo trek through the steppe or looking for the slow-paced, intentional side of South American life, consider this your master syllabus for the edge of the world.

Grab a mate, settle in, and let’s get lost.
If Patagonia is a movie, El Calafate is the opening credits (glaciers! ice! dramatic music!), and El Chaltén is the “final boss” montage (Fitz…
El Chaltén has a funny way of making you believe two contradictory things at the same time: Audrey and I arrived as the classic…
Somewhere between “We are unstoppable Patagonian mountain goats” and “Please carry me out of here in a sedan chair,” there’s a magical, wind-swept place…
El Chaltén is the kind of place where you can eat gelato in the sun at noon and consider writing your will behind a…
El Chaltén has a talent for rewriting your personality in real time. In the morning you’re a regular Joe/Jane who just wants a flat…
El Chaltén is one of those places where you can be alone with your thoughts… and then immediately be alone with your thoughts while…
El Chaltén feels oddly intentional—like it was placed here with purpose. A handful of streets, bright little buildings, and then boom: Fitz Roy towering…
Laguna Capri is the hike we recommend when you want the Fitz Roy postcard without committing to the full “final boss” day. It’s the…