Mile zero — Punta Arenas
The trip starts at the end of the continent, on the Strait of Magellan. Painted tin houses, a wind that never sits still, and the cold grey water that once carried every ship between two oceans. From here, everything is north.



The sound — Puerto Natales
Three hours up the road, the land folds into fjords. Puerto Natales is a fishing town turned trekker's gateway — boats on the Última Esperanza sound, the first glimpse of ice on the horizon, and the smell of the sea getting colder.



Under the towers — Torres del Paine
Then the towers. Three granite spires that catch fire at dawn over a turquoise lake. Three days walking under guanacos and a wind strong enough to lean on — the reason the whole route exists.




Journey's end — El Chaltén
Across the Argentine border, the road runs out at El Chaltén, beneath Fitz Roy and Cerro Torre. The trekking capital, last on the line — where the needles glow red at first light and the long way north finally stops.


