Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Volcán Copahue

On the border between Argentina and Chile

So close, yet so far. I wanted so much to ski down from Volcán Copahue (2953 meters), but despite trying very hard it was not going to happen.

We are at the Caviahue ski area, the first destination on our 35 000 kilometer trip to Argentina. On day 1, we attempt to get the ski area guides organize a trip to the top of the volcano for us. They normally organize such trips, but not on this day. Apparently the local scientists think that the volcano is too active at the moment. Copahue has been in somewhat active mode recently, and is spewing off steam, smoke, and even spreading some ash on the snow fields surrounding the peak. So no transport to the top and no help from the ski area.

Our vacation spot in Argentina

The volcano



Naturally, we decide to climb to the top on our own. However, our late arrival on the previous night, late wake-up, and the time to return to the car to get our gear delays us, and by the time that we start it is already afternoon. And the peak is far away, there are many kilometers to hike, and the peak is almost a kilometer higher than the highest lift. My friend Tero has some problems with the bindings of his ski touring equipment and he stops as we reach the steeper part of the summit cone, but I continue. But by 5 pm even I give up and turn back to return while there is still daylight. At this point I'm maybe 150 meters away from the crater rim and 300 meters away from the summit. But it is good that I turned back; the return route turns out to be non-trivial, and involves hiking across rock fields. We would have been in trouble without light.

This is how far I got. So close, yet so far.


Our route to the volcano

On day 2, we are out of energy to re-try the climb. Tero's hi-tech watch shows that we burned almost 6000 calories on the climb on the first day, and we are still tired. But the sun is shining and we think we have a plan for getting closer to the top with the help of snowmobiles. We spend the afternoon touring with snowmobiles, in part because I needed practice riding them.

My first time on a snow mobile!

On day 3, it is bad weather and our last day. The snow mobile option has dried up; it is a bad snow year and we'd only get 600 meters away from the summit. We'd have to climb in near zero visibility and howling wind, at very cold temperatures. The ski area has a better route and better vehicles - "bandvagns" - but now the weather is too bad for them to let us ski down. I give up, and we spend the day driving to our next destination.

So close, yet so far. A bandvagn.

Bad weather day


Steam coming out from vents near the Las Maquinitas thermal pond

The volcano


Caviahue Ski Area

But despite not making to the very top of the mountain, our visit at the Caviahue ski area was very nice. The area is small, just a couple of runs, but the runs are fun, and the areas around the slopes also provide a lot of space for skiing.

The area consists of two sections served by the upper and lower lifts. The lower section is interesting because of the beautiful Araucaria tree forests. These massive, evergreen trees look like a strange mixture of pine and palm trees. It is easy to find forest routes on the left and right sides of the ski slope. There are some ditches (and obviously trees) to run into in these areas, however, so be careful.

Araucaria trees

Araucaria trees

Araucaria trees

To get to the upper section, one has to ski down a bit from the top station of the lower lifts. At the time that we were in Caviahue, the slopes towards the upper section were closed and you were expected to take a chair lift down to get there. However, with a few meters of walking even these slopes could be skied, as long as you were able to sneak past the yelling lifties. On a normal year, there would have been two meters of snow at the base altitude, but now there was almost none. So normally these runs would have been in use.

Climbing, with a smoking volcano in the background (what else?)

The most interesting off-piste routes are in the upper section. There is a steep face to the skier's right from the top station, for instance, and many interesting valleys and rock faces on both sides.

Skiing off-piste to the skier's right in the upper slopes


Snow dunes and other terrain features on an off-piste at Caviahue

Skiing. Volcanoes. What else is new?

Touring with Snow Mobiles

On our second day, we took a snow mobile tour with eneQene guides. The tour started with a small 4WD drive off the resort, and then we rode half a day on snowmobiles around the volcano area. It was my first time on a snowmobile, and I was surprised how hard and difficult driving on them is. Compared to skiing, one has to be far more careful about where to take the snowmobile; steeps and side-way slopes are off-limits. It was also a lot of work - at least as a beginner - to control the snowmobile.

But it was a lot of fun and we did get to interesting places with the snow mobiles. We made a brief visit to Chile and saw many snow dunes and ancient volcano craters. We also saw the half-finished geothermal plants, designed to tap into the steam that is generated when melting water from the glaciers reaches hot material a thousand meters under the surface. Hopefully these plants will get into operation, as one plant is reported to be able to generate enough power for 100,000 people.

A snowmobile and a smoking volcano on the background (again!)

And then we ended up in the Las Maquinitas thermal ponds. There are several hot ponds around the in-the-winter abandoned village of Copahue. We chose to visit a lake that was surrounded by collapsed buildings.

It was windy and -10 degrees, but I've come this far, I have to go in. It turns out that the water is warm enough, maybe even too warm. At first I end up sitting on the muddy bottom but quickly realize that is a mistake. My ass is burning from the steam coming from the bottom of the lake. The guide tells me to find a flat stone and sit on top of it.

Las Maquinitas thermal ponds


Collapsed structures near the thermal pond

Almost boiling water... I'm doing OK as long as my ass is not on the bottom

Collapsed structure at the thermal ponds

The abandoned Copahue steam electricity plant


On the snowmobile tour


After-Ski

As the owners of our hotel put it, people come to Caviahue to ski, not to go into bars. We were unable to identify any open bar on our short visit to the village.

Off-piste around the upper slopes of the Caviahue ski center

Important Parameters

Caviahue is 350 kilometers from Neuquen, the closest city with commercial airline connections. Note that most of the domestic flights from Buenos Aires leave from the city airport, AEP, so in order to get to them from an international flight you may have to transfer from the international airport, EZE, to AEP with your luggage.

On our way to Neuquen, Argentina. Buenos Aires below.

Roads in Argentina are relatively well maintened, certainly better than in neighboring countries. You can make the trip in a normal 2WD vehicle, as long as you carry chains. However, police checkpoints are frequent, for reasons that we can only guess. On our way to Caviahue we were stopped a couple of times. One of these stops included dogs sniffing through our stuff, and then having the police take apart our luggage item by item. All the way to checking out individual pills of some of the medicine that I had with me. Had they gone any further in the inspections they would have required rubber gloves. Luckily not, and they let us put our luggage together and leave. Phew! And this was for two western tourists that quite obviously were not in Argentina for any criminal activity! (Except maybe an occasional unauthorized visit to closed-off volcanoes or Chilean backcountry.)

We stayed at Hotel Farallon, the closest major accommodation facility to the ski slopes. The hotel is a 5-10 minute walk away from the ski area. If there had been as much snow as there is on normal winters, the hotel's bandvagn would have taken us to the ski area from the front door. The hotel costs were around 65 USD per person per night, including breakfast. There are plenty of other places to stay at in Caviahue, but they are in the main village and little bit further away. I do recommend Farallon, for its location, the view, and for the nice owners -- who also speak English. For a large part of the Argentinian off-beat tourist locations, that is very rare. And I had failed to learn more than a couple of words of Spanish before the trip, despite my best intentions. Being able to speak at least some Spanish is generally recommended for travels to Argentinian backcountry.

Our hotel's transport to the ski slopes

This would be the way to travel! Your own desert buggy on the back!


The guides that we used on our snowmobile tour were from eneQene. They know their way around the local mountains, and can organize anything, be it from a thermal pool visit to nights in an igloo.

Skiing, with a smoking volcano in the background


Verdict

Caviahue is far away, certainly harder to get to than, for instance, than other major Argentinian ski destinations such as Bariloche or Ushuaia. Caviahue is smaller, the after-ski and party scene is non-existent, and the slopes are small. But strangely enough, Caviahue would still be my choice for a ski destination, if I had to choose just one place to visit in Argentina.

Let me explain. If was with my kids, I'd like to have a small and safe area where I can watch them. The Caviahue ski area is perfect for this. And if I was on my own, I'd like to find the most radical off-piste touring opportunities. And Copahue certainly has them, too, all the way to ice climbing and volcano summits.

The resident off-piste guide at the Farallon Hotel

Flowing snow

Photographing the steam plant

Volcano spewing smoke


Skiing off-piste near the Caviahue ski area


Photo and video credits (c) 2012 by Jari Arkko and Tero Kivinen

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Boots on a Plane

Boots on a plane

I am on my way to Argentina and Patagonia for twelve days of snow fun. Well, six days of snow fun and six days of travel, as we have to wait a bit in Buenos Aires, we zoom around the country to visit different places, and so on.

I have two sets of skis, two pairs of boots, crampons, ice axes, and other fun stuff with me, so regardless of the long way there I think it will actually be fun. This will be my first visit to Argentina, and among other places we'll visit Bariloche, the legendary ski and party destination for the Argentinians, a ski a volcano in Caviahue, and visit Ushuaia, the world's southernmost city. They also have the most southern bar, unless you count the one in Antarctica.

Shopping?

But it will be a long trip, over 33 000 kilometers again. We are also prepared for the eventual airline mistake. As is usual in my travels, I keep my ski boots in the cabin with me. The boots are filled with essential gear, like my ski pants. My backpack contains the jacket, gloves, and my camera gear. I left the ice axes in checked luggage, however.

I should be able to buy or rent the rest, if the luggage gets lost. I'm a bit nervous about that, actually. We're even switching airports in Buenos Aires, and still the airline claims that they will deliver the luggage all the way to the destination. We shall see...

Distances

Route

Photo credits (c) 2012 by Jari Arkko and Tero Kivinen and the Great Circle Mapper

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Plastic Ice

Typical ski photo?


This ski area is so hot that it melts your skis. Water would help, and also make the skiing faster. But their sprinkler system is being replaced, and this also happens to be the only day on our vacation when it does not rain.

We are at the Midlothian Snowsports Center in Edinburgh, in the middle of the summer. My second day of skiing in the UK.



Views



"Sir, do you have pants"?

Even if it is warm, they require you to use long pants, jackets, and gloves, as a fall on the plastic may easily hurt bare skin. So on my first attempt to enter the ski lift on my shorts was cut short by the liftie shouting that I can't go to the slope "without pants". Luckily had long pants with me, so after a small delay I was able to get to the slope.

In a traditional British black cab, with skis (and shorts!)

Sir, do you have pants?


The slopes

The slopes are covered with plastic matting, allowing the ski area to be used at any time. (There is typically no snow here even during the winter.) Holes in the matting allow grass to grow in the slopes, and at times you can not be quite sure whether you are skiing on grass or plastic.

There is one long main slope, a shorter training slope, a very small kids slope, and the fun park with jumps and rails. There are two button lifts and one chair lift, though the chair lift only runs at certain times.

Plastic powder
Skiing and golf on the same day, same place?

Amazingly, the Scottish olympic team practices here, including a former top downhill racer. There was a short race track in the slope even when we visited it.

The feeling in the slopes is quite different from regular snow. Mind you, we were there on a day when the sprinkler system was not operating, and the feeling is likely different on a wet slope. Interestingly, the slope felt otherwise quite similar, but braking and canting had far less effect than it does on snow. This is reason for choosing "plastic ice" as the name of this blog article. In fact, most icy ski slopes would be easier to break in than the plastic. And I can not imagine that the sprinkler system would make braking any easier.

Racing!




Skiing

After-Ski

Well... apparently the after-ski is not that great. Cafe 360, the only food and drink source in the area closes one hour before the ski slope closes. By the time we had taken off our gear, the entire facility was empty, including all staff.

Cafe 360


Details, Details

The slope resides 10 kilometers from the city center of Edinburgh, near Hillend. It is open every day from 9:30 to 19:00 (18:00 on Sundays). One hour lift ticket costs 12 £. The longest slope is 400 meters long.

We took a cab to the slope at the cost of 20 £. Make sure you have a phone number to call for a taxi if you plan on returning this way as well, and prepare for some waiting before the taxi arrives in a busy Edinburgh evening.

Use protective clothing all over your skin, and light gloves. I suspect that the hole-filled plastic may hurt you even if well clothed. Luckily we did not fall.

Base area


Evaluation

This was my first outdoors artificial ski slope experience. It was interesting, and different from all other ski experiences. There is a definite 1960's feeling to this base (and indeed the center was opened then).

I find it difficult to think of the place as something where I'd go to on a regular basis, however. Or maybe I would, if I lived in Edinburgh. In any case, the center is a friendly facility, and I always like the community ski hills. This is a must-visit place for Edinburgh tourists. Recommended!

Ski lift ride

Photo credits (c) 2012 by Jari Arkko, Janne Arkko, and Tarja Arkko