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Cerro Castillo

Coordinates: 46°03′54″S 72°12′27″W / 46.06500°S 72.20750°W / -46.06500; -72.20750
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cerro Castillo
Cerro Castillo viewed from East, Feb 2002
Highest point
Elevation2,675 m (8,776 ft)[1]
Prominence2,088 m (6,850 ft)[1]
ListingUltra
Coordinates46°03′54″S 72°12′27″W / 46.06500°S 72.20750°W / -46.06500; -72.20750[1]
Geography
Cerro Castillo is located in Chile
Cerro Castillo
Cerro Castillo
Parent rangeAndes
Topo mapIGM J 10 (Villa Cerro Castillo) 1:50,000
Geology
Mountain typeIgneous rock
Climbing
Easiest routeice/rock climb

Cerro Castillo is a jagged rocky peak located in the Aysén del General Carlos Ibáñez del Campo Region of Chile, within the Cerro Castillo National Park. Castillo means castle in Spanish, and the steep basalt walls of the mountain indeed make it look like one. On its sides are a few small glaciers and lakes fed by them.

Approach

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Cerro Castillo is 75 km south of the city of Coyhaique along Carretera Austral. There is a small village Villa Cerro Castillo just off the road. The base of the mountain can be approached from the road in one day along Estero Parada river. An alternative is the excellent 4-day hike that starts on a spot called Las Horquetas Grandes on Carretera Austral, goes through forests, has two river crossings (no bridges), and goes over a 1,400 m mountain pass adjacent to the rock walls of Cerro Castillo. The area is remote and sees less than one hiking party per day during the season.

Climbing

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First ascent: February 10, 1966, a party of Chilean university students Gastón Oyarzun, Osvaldo Latorre, Antonio Marcel and Raúl Aguilera climb north (north east) side gully.

Second ascent: February 4, 1976 Nick Groves (GB) with Mike Searle and New Zealand climbers Tom Clarkson, John Mayrick and Lauchi Duff repeated Chilean route and finished a 20 m under the summit.

Third ascent: December 5, 1982 Yugoslavs Tone Golnar and Ljubo Hansel, New Zealander David Waugh and South Korean Chil Kyou Son teamed together to make the first ascent of the southeast face of Cerro Castillo. The route followed a 55° ice couloir (in places much steeper) in the center of the face. The descent required sixteen 50 m rappels.V, 90°/IV, 50-80°, 700 (1400 m),6 h (10 h).

Next ascents: On January 26, 1987 Gino Buscaini and Silvia Metzeltin Buscaini climbed an 800-meter-high, snow-and-ice couloir which had an angle of 55° in the upper part of the west face of Cerro Castillo (Coyhaiquel; 2670 meters) in Chile. We climbed the whole couloir to the col (2570 meters) on the summit ridge. They did not continue on to the summit because of a snow storm.

October 2003, first repetition of supercouloire on southeast wall Chilean climbers Pablo Crovetto, Rodrigo Fica and Spanish companion Eduardo Mondragón.

October 2008, first ascent of couloir central east face (600m. VI, 5.9, WI4, M4) by Carlos Buhler and Joan Sole. They descended via the north side gully.

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View of Cerro Castillo from Route 7, looking Northwest
Surroundings of the Cerro Castillo peak, looking North

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Argentina and Chile, Southern: Patagonia Ultra-Prominences" Peaklist.org. Castillo: Both the Chilean IGM 1:50,000 map and the SRTM data have a large void around the summit. 2675m is an often quoted value that would seem to be compatible with photographs.Note 8 Retrieved 2012-04-16.
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