The Pragmatic Consultant

Posts Tagged ‘Hiking’

Walking in Cocuy – Last Day

Next day I had a good breakfast at the Herrera’s house. Scrambled eggs and hot chocolate started my last day of hiking in this beautiful place of Colombia.

This time Andres, one of our hiking partners convinced our guide to hire horses and save us around 2 hours of walking up to four thousand meters. We rode to a small, cozy refugee /hostel in the top of a small hill, just beside the most beautiful laguna I have ever seen – I regret I did not get a single picture of this multicolor beauty – the horse trail is so step and rocky that you have to firmly grab your seat – no time for holding a bulky camera.

SisumaOur horses took us through a step and rocky trail to a place called “el hotelito”, a known place for campers, in the middle of a narrow valley looking at the snow peaks. In this place the horses will rest and wait for us. We started to hike up over a extremely step hill covered with huge rocks during one hour to a granite plateau at 4500 meters.

Pulpito del Diablo

Walking in this plateau was very easy, with stunning views of the “pulpito del diablo” and the “pan de azucar”. 45 minutes and we reached the ice border. In this place we put in our crampons and follow the guide walking over the ice field. First time I do this and it feels like walking on glass pieces. Global warming is quickly melting these beautiful ice fields – the place is full of deep cracks. There are painted marks in the rock signaling where the ice border was in 2006 – like 100 meters downhill! This makes walking in this place, plus the high temperatures very difficult and risky, moreover we were not tied together with as rope!

Hiking Mates

After one hour we reached the 5000 meters. Andres wanted to make the summit of the “pan de azucar”, I waited in a beautiful and flat place besides the “pulpito” along with Liliana, for 45 minutes. What a great place to take pictures and the perfect blue sky make it even better.

Pulpito - from the side

Descent was quick. Andres and Liliana had to catch a bus in the town at 6.30, so all the journey we did in about 6 hours we now had to undo it in less than 4 hours. Both ankles hurt as we rush to the town. They  finally made it and we were ready for a good night sleep.

Next day we took it really easy, and we went to some “termales” nearby. I was so glad we could finish this trip in such a relaxing place with some beers.


Walking in Cocuy – Day 3

We started at 8AM, had breakfast, disassembled the tent, and arranged all the equipment for the long walk. We left our packs hidden in the bushes and started the walk with our day packs. Some later, Carlos will take them in horses to our next camp site.

On the way to Camp 2Hiking up to Camp 2On the Way UpValle de los Frailejones

The walk was difficult, but nothing serious, through a beautiful valley of fraylejones. We continued our hike climbing more and our over stone trails. That single day we hiked 1000 mtrs to up to 4500 mtrs. (a personal record!). Could you believe I forgot to bring something for lunch? I am such an amateur…  ;-)     Fortunately, Leo (our 2nd guide) kindly shared his soup/tuna with me. We had lunch besides a beautiful pond, full of fraylejones and crystal waters.

Finally we arrived to the camp site after 6 hours of walking. That was a significant test of my physical conditions. The site was basically a small plateau between the dust, and rocks.

MeBig Stones at Dawn

There is no vegetation at this altitude. A short walk from here was the “Laguna Grande de la Sierra”, surrounded by the “Concavo”, “Toti” and “Pan de Azucar” peaks. We would try to climb the last one during the next day.

What a gorgeous, pristine, cold and isolated place! Fortunately, only another tent was there—two young park rangers (how could somebody work at this altitude and conditions?). Night there was simply miserable, strong chilly winds smashed my tent for hours. Head aches also prevented me from getting a good sleep. My thumbs started to crack because of the cold and dryness, making the disassembly of my tent the following day a painful operation. In addition, the strong winds did not helped much.

Cocuy Concavo HDRCocuy - Pan de AzucarSunrise @ Laguna Grande

We started our descent at 9AM, leaving our still heavy packs to be picked up by horses later to “La Esperanza”. We arrived there after 4 hours of walking. I can feel that my body is responding better to altitude. We had a yummy trout for lunch, and a 4WD took us to the “Finca de los Herrera”— a beautiful finca conditioned for campers, like 20 mins from “La Esperanza”. We pitched our tents, then I had another chilly shower (call me masochist!), dinner and a good night sleep. This was our coldest night during the trip—anything liquid left outside was solid ice the next morning.


Live to tell about it!

Thanks god is Friday! Time to breath some fresh air, go out and do some hike.

Want to see my last known position? Check this out:

http://share.findmespot.com/shared/faces/viewspots.jsp?glId=0fsO8qVuo7rat0EBdioLWddeqUvKpLeMk

See you out there!

Off Topic:

  • Should I use an ORM tool like SubSonic, nHibernate, or .netTiers? Which one of these have the best performance? I am current using bare DataReaders (which are lighting-fast), but I am sick of updating the DAL components with every change in the DB. Should I stay or move? Now or never..
  • Remember the performance benefits of using SPs vs Inline-SQL? Well, since SQL 2K both methods have pretty much the same performance! Both are compiled by the DB engine. Did you know that?? Check this.
  • Building a quick-n-dirty Web app to CRUD the data of the H Initiative. Playing with GuidViews,  DetailViews and SqlDataSource controls, knowing their pros/limitations.
  • I finally got my Windows Azure and SQL Azure test accounts. Time to current iteration the H Initiative in the clouds.

Hiking in Chingaza

One of the goals during my mini-retirement in Colombia has been to rediscover as most natural parks as possible, get-up from this machine and do some exercise, take lost of pictures and enjoy nature. In June, some friends took me for a day hike to Chingaza National Park. That was love at first sight. It is amazing how such a beautiful place could be so close to Bogota, and the best part is that there was no one there. Either most of the people is lazy enough to ignore this place or they simply do not know how to get there. The less I want is to see crowds of noisy basterds spoiling this place (as happened to Neusa), but if you love and respect nature keep reading..

Chingaza

The páramo of Chingaza, located on the Eastern branch of the Andes, only an hour away by land from Bogotá, between the Departments of Cundinamarca and Meta, is a veritable water factory. Chingaza park has an extension of 53.000 hectares, the high plateau climate predominates. The Altitude ranges between 800 and 4020 meters above the sea level, and temperatures between 4 and 21 centigrade.

This park is huge and the hiking paths I have explored so far will take you to the stunning Siecha Lagunas:

Siecha

These small lakes (lagunas) were considered sacred by pre-Hispanic indigenous tribes (Muiscas), who celebrated offerings in there gelid waters. In 1856 a smaller version of the famous golden Muisca Raft was discovered in their waters. One of the big museums in the world fought for a long time to include it as the most memorable object of the American continent; but when the Siecha raft travelled, legally at the time, to Germany, it was lost for the world in a big fire when the ship carrying it caught fire in the port of Bremen.

Flora associated to this type of land are big “frailejones”, “siete cueros” and much more, an endangered specie of plant located in this park is the “polilepis”; plant with many colors.

Frailejon

At the same time the following kinds of animals are seen; “anteojos” bear, puma, white deers, different sort of birds and a big variety of amphibious. In this place is very easy to spot Condors and Paramo Eagles.

How to Get There

The Chingaza park is open to the tourist,  They are different access points, most of them in the calera way. It is possible to take walks using a variety of routes, all of them with a beautiful view of the nature, some of them still undiscovered.

Take a look at the following GPS track to know how to the Siecha Lagunas from Bogota (by Car):

Driving from Bogota to Siecha at EveryTrail

Map created by EveryTrail: GPS Community

Log in EveryTrail.com to download the GPS track.

Once you leave the car (do not worry, fortunately there is no theft at this altitude…yet), start to walk following this:

Siecha Hike (Chingaza) at EveryTrail

Map created by EveryTrail: Travel Community

 

Recommendations

  • It is recommended to use suitable clothes for this climate. Paramo weather is totally unpredictable and changes quickly (it is windy, foggy and rainy most of the times). Bring good hiking boots, a good rain-jacket (just in case) and a wind shell.
  • Stick to the trails
  • Do not litter

More Information:

http://www.parquesnacionales.gov.co/PNN/portel/libreria/php/decide.php?patron=01.020212