Kokatat In The Wilds of Patagonia
Eager to protect the dramatic landscapes of Western Patagonia, this September Cristian Donoso will lead an expedition by kayak to this region, one of the most inhospitable places on earth.
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An Exploration, by Kayak, of the Labyrinths of Western Patagonia
Arcata, CA- Eager to protect the dramatic landscapes of Western Patagonia, this September Cristian Donoso will lead an expedition by kayak to this region, one of the most inhospitable places on earth. Spending five months navigating open seas and fjords and pulling their kayaks across glaciers, Donoso and his team will face daunting physical and mental challenges as they gather information that will inform Chile, and the world, about this little-known area.
With its labyrinth of rocky islands, serpentine channels, and icy fjords, Western Patagonia in southern Chile is one of the least-explored areas on earth. Nestled among glaciers that hug the slopes of steep Andean peaks and drenched by storms that blow out of the southern Pacific, the harsh region deters all but the hardiest explorers.
During this five-month ‘Transpatagonia Expedition’ the team will traverse 2,039 km of the central part of Western Patagonia on open sea, lakes, and rivers. They will travel overland for 150 km – including 22 km atop glaciers, dragging their kayaks with provisions behind them as sleds. The group will ascend unclimbed peaks and visit uncharted territories.
Cristian Donoso is a young Chilean explorer who, over the past 14 years, has ventured almost 40 times into Western Patagonia’s’ most inaccessible corners. Just like the indigenous people who paddled their fragile canoes here for thousands of years before the arrival of Europeans, he often travels by sea kayak which allows him to manoeuvre around the narrowest fjords and discover their hidden beauty. “In order to strengthen the protection of this territory, we have to know what’s there,” says Donoso, who reports that today most Chileans have little knowledge of the Western Patagonia region. He warns that such ignorance makes it easier for those seeking commercial gain to exploit the region’s natural resources – seafood, water, virgin forests – with little respect for its biodiversity.
To enhance understanding of the region’s geological past, soil and rock samples will be collected, then analysed by university scientists. The explorers will also collect geological evidence, including stalagmites in caves on Madre de Dios Island, showing how the climate has changed over time. As well, scholars of the region’s human history eagerly await the expedition’s reports on the remains of fishing and hunting camps that belonged to the Kaweskars, who travelled the region for more than 4,000 years.
A famous incident, the 1741 sinking of the English frigate Wager on the north coast of the Guayaneco Archipelago, will come alive again when the explorers dive into the sea to seek the wreck’s exact location. They will then seek to trace the route narrated in the journal of John Byron, who survived the shipwreck thanks to assistance from two indigenous groups who spirited him and three other survivors through the treacherous waters in their canoes.
For more information about the Transpatagonia Expedition and to follow the expedition progress, please visit www.patagoniaincognita.blogspot.com
Get “Into the Water†with Kokatat Watersports Wear, an independent manufacturer committed to growing the sport since 1971! For more information please contact Lisa Beckstead, Kokatat Public Relations representative, at (775) 225-8039, or e-mail lisa_beckstead@kokatat.com. Visit us at www.kokatat.com.