We started again from El Calafate.
Picked up the car and pointed southβtoward the second half of the journey: Torres del Paine.
Some roads were closed due to winter conditions and construction, so we took a longer route. The only real concern was timingβmaking it to the ArgentinaβChile border before it closed. Por suerte, we made it just in time. Smooth crossing.
But by then, it was already dark.
And Patagonia had shifted. Winter had arrived early. The roads ahead were icy, unpredictable. We were still hours away from our hotel inside Torres del Paine, and the advice was clear: stop in Puerto Natales.
So we did.
We managed to adjust part of our reservation and spent the night at one of the most traditional hotels in townβbeautiful, lindΓsimo, full of character and history.
The next morning, while my wife went out to find a warmer jacketβit was colder than expectedβI wandered down to a pier.
Still water.
Low fog.
Soft, diffused light.
A calm that felt almost unreal for Patagonia. One of those moments that doesnβt demand anything from youβjust presence.
After fueling up (importantβthere are no gas stations inside the park), we drove into Torres del Paine.
We stayed at Hotel del Paine, with breakfast and dinner includedβsimple, well done. That first day, we had lunch at Hotel Serrano, very good, and then spent the afternoon scouting locations. Thatβs the rhythm: you donβt chase the shotβyou prepare for it.
The first three days were heavily overcast. The Cuernos del Paine were there, but never fully revealed. Always partially hidden.
At dinner, we met an Australian photographer leading a workshop. He had been there for five days already.
βSame weather,β he said.
Not encouraging.
You know Patagonia is unpredictableβdifΓcilβbut still, you hope. You always hope for that one window: the right clouds, the right light, the moment where everything aligns.
We drove out toward Explora to study the main composition of the Cuernos. Found the angle. Visualized the frame.
Now it was just a matter of waiting.
Back in 2013, when we first came, the focus was differentβmore hiking. We stayed in refugios, did trails like Mirador Base las Torres Hike and a small part of the W. But we hadnβt explored this side of the park before.
This time, it was about lightβand lakes.
We spent the rest of that day around Lago PehoΓ©. At dinner, we met a British photographer. The next morning, we joined him in search of a small beach where he had shot years ago.
We walked off-trail, through open terrain, no clear path. Never quite found the exact spot he rememberedβbut it didnβt matter. Good light, good conversation. Worth it.
Day two: still cloudy.
We visited the cascades, looked for pumasβno luck. Only guanacos, scattered across the landscape. Todo bien.
Then came the shift.
The forecast for the next morning: partially clear.
We woke up early. I ran a bit late and thought I had missed it. But on the way to Explora, we stopped on a small hillβand there it was.
Light breaking through.
Fog sitting low.
The peaks rising above the mist.
An unreal composition. Something you donβt plan. If we had gone straight to the main spot, we would have missed it.
Sometimes being late is exactly what you need.
After those shots, we continued to the main viewpoint.
And thenβeverything aligned.
No wind.
Which in Patagonia is almost impossible.
A perfect reflection on the lake.
Clouds adding just enough structure to the frame.
It was all there.
Color. Light. Balance. Stillness.
The kind of moment that doesnβt happen often. The British photographer was there tooβwe looked at each other, both knowing. The Australian had left the day before.
QuΓ© suerte.
We stayed out, moving around Lago PehoΓ©, working different compositions while the conditions held.
That time of year, the park was already beginning to close for winter. Our hotel had extended its season by just one extra week.
We happened to be there for that exact week.
Couldnβt have planned it better.
We had one more dayβbut the sky closed again. The peaks disappeared back into the clouds.
It had been a single window. Just one.
But it was enough.
Fresh snow on the peaks from the previous days. Light breaking through at the right moment. Everything in place.
We left Torres del Paine with that feelingβquiet satisfaction. Not because everything worked, but because something did.
Back to El Calafate. One last asado at La TablitaβincreΓble.
Then Buenos Aires. Friends, familiar places, Malbec, long dinnersβand a few asados at friendsβ homes, which, honestly, are the moments that define Argentina for me.
And finally, back to the United States.
Suitcase full.
Memory cards full.
Heart full.
And images worth the journey.
β See Torres del Paine images: Patagonia – Chile
The story is 100% mineβde verdad. I just had some help from AI to make it read better. Iβm a photographer and storytellerβ¦ writing is another story.