With 10 peaks over 5,000 m (16,665 ft), Ecuador has a reputation as a country for serious mountain climbing. Since the 19th century, European and American climbers have come to Ecuador in attempts to conquer both the mountain once thought to be the tallest in the world, Chimborazo, 6,310 m (21,031 ft), and the tallest continuously active volcano in the world, Cotopaxi, 5,897 m (19,655 ft). The German scientist and traveler Wilhelm Reiss conquered Cotopaxi in 1872, while the English climber, Edward Whymper, made the first successful ascent of Chimborazo in 1880.
Hundreds of people now climb these and other Ecuadorian peaks each year. Conditions vary from mountain to mountain, though climbing is usually best from June to September and in December to February. There are
refugios on the high slopes of most of the big mountains where climbers rest, preparatory to making their ascents around midnight — in order to reach the peak at dawn when visibility is at its best and before the sun softens the snow. Weather conditions also tend to be favorable during the full moon, aiding night-time climbs. Proper acclimatization and experience is essential before climbing any of the higher peaks.
With an almost perfectly symmetrical cone, the beautiful
Volcán Cotopaxi, at a height of 5,897 m (19,655 ft), is the second tallest mountain in Ecuador and considered to be the tallest continuously active volcano in the world. It’s probably the country’s most famous volcano. To get the feel of Cotopaxi you can drive through the wild and beautiful Parque Nacional Cotopaxi, and up to the parking lot on the mountain itself at 4,600 m (15,332 ft). Climbers continue upwards to the
refugio where they rest before attempting to climb the peak in the wee hours of the morning.
Next on anyone’s list is
Chimborazo, the country’s highest peak and at 6,310 m (20,697 ft) — trivia buffs get your pens out — the farthest point from the Earth’s center (due to the bulge at the equator). Until Mount Everest was discovered and measured, it was thought Chimborazo was the highest mountain in the world. In the nineteenth century, Humboldt climbed it, writing afterwards that the ascent ranked among one the most spiritual moments of his life. Even Bolívar had a go, but his ascent, like his dream of a Gran Colombia, failed. The first ascent was made by the intrepid British climber, Edward Whymper, in 1880.
Approaching Riobamba, Chimborazo appears gargantuan: the extinct volcano is up to 20 km (12.5 miles) wide at its base alone. As with Cotopaxi, you can drive up to its breath-inhibiting refuge at 4,800 m (15,744 ft), within a fauna reserve peopled by shy vicuña. Opposite Chimborazo,
Carihauirazo (5,020 m or 16,466 ft) challenges even the most experienced mountaineers. On the other side of Riobamba, the incisor peaks of
El Altar (Cupac Urcu or “sublime mountain” in Quechua) bite into lapis skies. Within its amphitheater crater of jagged peaks, a stunning yellow-green lagoon can be reached on a three- or four-day hike from near Riobamba.
El Altar is just one of the three volcanoes which puncture the wilds of Parque Nacional Sangay. The most famous of these is Tungurahua, on its northwestern border, and currently highly active. There are viewing stations, which, depending on the volcano’s activity, can be spectacular at night, when it lights up the sky with firework explosions.
Volcán Sangay, the third volcano, competes with Cotopaxi for its photogenic, symmetrical cone, rising to 5,230 m (17,154 ft). However, unlike Cotopaxi, Sangay is an angry mountain, considered to be one of the most active on the continent. Although climbing it is not discouraged per se, because of ash and rock explosions, the ascent is regarded as very high-risk. Hikers wanting just to get near to the volcano, and camp around its base, can arrange guides at the village of Alao, southeast of Riobamba. Arguably the best views of Sangay park’s volcanoes is from Macas, or on the eastern skirts of the Andes in the Oriente. On a clear morning or evening, the snow-capped peaks seem to float above the tumbling forested hills.
To the north of Quito rises the country’s third-highest volcano, the mammoth
Volcán Cayambe. The 5,790 m (18,991 ft) peak is regarded as one of the hardest and most dangerous climbs in the country. The beautiful volcano glowers above the vast Reserva Ecológica Cayambe-Coca, protecting some ten life zones as it descends from dizzying heights, through dense cloudforest and on down to the jungle of the Oriente. For the best views of the mountain, take the old road round from Cayambe on the Panamericana towards Zuleta. The refuge at 4,700 m (15,416 ft) can be reached in a four-wheel drive jeep.
Southwest of the capital, on the road down to Coca, or else in the Oriente itself, lucky individuals can spot the four great glacier-tipped peaks of
Volcán Antisana at 5,753 m (18,870 ft) soaring into the sky. The best view of the volcano however has to be from a hot spring at the thermal baths of Papallacta on a brilliant bright morning.
South of Quito, you can also tick the
Ilinizas (two for the price of one!), the twin peaks 5,248 and 5,126 m (17,738 and 16,813 ft) high, often lacquered with fresh snow. Though not capped in snow,
Volcán Imbabura (4,621 m or 15,157 ft) which dominates the weaving towns around Otavalo, is nonetheless an impressive sight, and one of the country’s most famous. By now, you will have ticked off all of the country’s ten volcanoes above 5,000 m (16,400 ft). These are Ecuador’s most touted peaks, and explain why the country is often known as “Volcano Land.” Get ticking!
SAFE CLIMBING
The Ecuadorian Mountain Guides Association is called
ASEGUIM tel (02) 256-8664, Calle Juan Larrea 657 and Rio de Janeiro, just off Parque El Ejido, Quito. They run a rigorous training program monitored by other experienced mountaineering associations. All guides carry two-way radios for contact with the nearest town or city. The ASEGUIM guides are also the only ones which have a mountain rescue service. This is costly (so come with adequate insurance!) but reassuring.
Some of the most experienced and reputable climbing operators for the country include:
Alta Montaña tel (02) 2504773, Jorge Washington 425 and 6 de Diciembre.
Safari Tours tel (02) 2552505 or 223381 fax (02) 220426, www.safari.com.ec.
Surtrek tel (02) 2561129, www.surtrek.com.ec
Moggely tel (02) 255-4984, www.moggely.com
Most of these also sell or rent climbing equipment.
Contact the South American Explorers for a list of the Quito-based
climbing clubs which meet regularly and can be a great source of advice. There also some Ecuadorian
mountaineering journals, such as
Montaña and
Campo Abierto which are worth looking out for, as well as the great photographer-mountaineer
Jorge Anhalzer’s mountain guides to the five most-climbed mountains.