El Perro Negro

Grumpy old mountain man living in Spain

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Since Dec 2022 we have been running our own Mastodon & GoToSocial servers. What a breath of fresh air the Fediverse has been. We have made many hundreds of new friends from around the world, mostly related to our mountain, tech and nature interests.

Connect with me/us on the Fediverse at:

Early Christmas present from our local walking group. Says a lot doesn't it, especially the card, which reflects quite amusingly on some of my struggles and inability to find the correct route 🤣 🤣

A tee shirt with mountains leading to beer emblem, a bottle of pina colada and a card that reads "Is it really a path?"

Is this good or bad? Which path is this?

One path leads to a future where wilderness is a gated asset, a serene backdrop for the ultra-wealthy and conservation becomes a luxury business.

The other leads back to the core principles of true ecotourism and public protection, where conservation benefits ecosystems and local communities, and awe-inspiring places remain for all.

https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/land-use-biodiversity/chile-moves-create-national-park-edge-world-protect-wildlife-2025-12-19/

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After many previous failures incl managed hosts going out of business, I've finally got up & running on an old 2017 mini-pc from home

@richard

Allows me to do longer mountain posts with more images & also my grumpy ramblings & failings with technology, without clogging up this Mastodon feed.

As the introductory pinned post states "If you're a mountain person who loves tech (or a tech person who loves mountains), we probably have things in common."

Been a frustrating couple of days trying to install automatic webcam image capture & ftp upload to my website. Most programs are far too complex for this simple situation. Ended up with a simple python script. Doesn't help too when my computer wont stop sleeping, suspending or hibernating.

Then, one morning, all at once everything clicks and works fine 😀

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Back after 3 days of travelling and last night slept the sleep of the gods in my own home. You can't beat nearly 10 hours solid sleep

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Looking out from Cerro Paredón near El Chalten towards the east over Lago Viedma to the mountains beyond. Horizontal lines of steppe, pampas, lake, mountains, cloud and sky. A few icebergs can be seen on the lake surface having broken away from the Videma glacier

A series of horizontal lines from the close wavy hills in shadow to the plains leading to an icy blue lake. A couple of icebergs to the right. The outline of dark hills beyond with clouds above

This is quite an unusual image that we didn't realise we had captured until later that day. This is the magnificent Cerro Torre summit in the late afternoon sun. We knew there were condors flying around but didn't expect to see a paraglider appear in the image too 🤣

2 Condors fly in front of Cerro Torre summit. In the background against a snowfield is a paraglider.

The Condor approaching was anything but steady, tossed and jostled by the cliff-face turbulence. She was coming home to find her mate.

With an expert’s grace, she mastered the chaos. She lined up her final approach, adjusted her primary feathers with microscopic precision, and then, folded her wings and dropped like a stone, landing perfectly on a rocky perch just below our vantage point.

Short video of her coming in to land on the cliffs outside El Chalten

Apologies to all my veggie friends for this. I live with a vegetarian and eat almost 95%+ vegetarian food. Love it. But sometimes, especially in Patagonia, you just have to eat a half a sheep.

A plate of Patagonian lamb with sime fries behind and some salsa dishes to one side

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Our final week here in El Chaltén, Can't believe 4 weeks already. Comfortable here, surrounded by warm, friendly people & a great selection of bars & restaurants. We've been doing lots of stunning trekking routes among some of the most dramatic mountains on the planet.

1 rough week but the weather has been superb. Nothing but t-shirts & shorts lately. Days incredibly long, with light from 4:30 am until 10 pm.

Could easily see myself living here. Be sad to leave. It's been an absolute blast.

Richard and his wife Kiersten in mountain jackets stand in front of two big mountains in Patagonia. Mt FitzRoy and Cerro Pollone

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After our failure with photographing the Andean Condor yesterday today we opted for a more static subject. Yes, the magnificent Cerro Torre. I might be biased, but to me this is the finest looking mountain on the planet.

Cerros Torre, Egger & Standhardt mountains. Some close ups to follow.

And guess what ... on the journey back to El Chalten the sky where we were yesterday was full of Condors. Typical eh! 🤣

Cerro Torre, Torre Egger and Standhardt mountains at the head of the Torre valley.

The day was perfect, sun-drenched, warm, with only a gentle breeze. Below us, El Chalten lay like a miniature model village. Across the horizon, the entire Fitzroy and Torre massifs stood stark against a brilliant blue sky, their snowy caps gleaming.

We paused to watch tiny, heroic figures of rock climbers clinging to the granite. I was a little envious.

A person with light green jacket stands on a cliff edge. Beyond lies the town of El Chalten and beyond that the Cerro Torre and Fitzroy mountain ranges

2 rock climbers cling to a near vertical cliff on the western side of Cerro Paredon

In the foreground is the red Firebush shrub that is prominent around here. Beyond lies the town of El Chalten and beyond that the Cerro Torre and Fitzroy mountain ranges

Yesterday was to be our "Day of the Condor". Weather perfect. A chance to photograph Condors up close. Guess what? You've guessed it, 6 hours and just two small specks in the sky in the distance.

We had drawn a blank. Our quest had ended not with a majestic flap of wings, but with a quiet sigh.

Nice views anyway 🤣

Two people sat looking out to some distance mountains. One in red, one in green jackets

The guardians at the refuge showed us a recent video of the resident Puma at the campsite. It was on a trunk of a fallen tree close to where we had just camped. The Puma didn't seem at all disturbed by the presence of humans.

Travelling back through the forest it's slightly off putting knowing that a Puma could be on the trail just round the corner. I must admit to being slightly twitchy!

Of course to all my fediverse American friends this is the norm I guess 😃