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Patagonia Walking holidays

Patagonia Walking holidays

Latest holiday enquiry

Made on 09 Feb 2012
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Latest holiday review

Posted 12 Jan 2011
total reviews

Newest holiday

Added 21 Jun 2010
total holidays

6 reviews for Patagonia Walking holidays4 star overall rating

These full and frank independent Patagonia Walking holidays reviews are from travellers who have booked directly through responsibletravel.com. They are not edited by us or any of the companies we work with. Find the real story, from real travellers below.

Patagonian adventure holiday in Chile and Argentina
Torres Del Paine national park, with it’s beautiful scenery. I could have stayed forever. And the most memorable bit was when we saw a puma! Every day had a memorable event though, I can’t believe how much was packed into two weeks. (more)
From £2798 - £3168 including UK flights
Patagonia trek, Torres del Paine & Los Glaciares
Many memorable parts including staying at the Ecocamp, the whole Torres circuit trek which was made by having an excellent guide and support team, the visit to the Perito Moreno Glacier and the fossilised trees, New Year in Buenos Aires.  (more)
From £2150 excluding flights
Patagonian adventure holiday
The most memorable part of our holiday was camping in Mt Fitz Roy National Park; it was so beautiful and the walking was excellent. We had some really good mountain guides; lots of fun. (more)
From US $1961 excluding flights
Atacama and Patagonia hiking holiday
The highlight was trekking with the most amazing mountain backdrop for several days, in Torres del Paine, culminating in the climb up to Las Torres themselves; there just aren't the words to do this place justice. (more)
From £3350 excluding flights
Patagonian holiday
Most moemorbale was hiking to Torres Del Paine...8 out of 10. (more)
From £2025 excluding flights
Torres del Paine tour
Our great group & superb guides. First site of the mountains from lake pehoe & climbing to the torres were the most memorable. (more)
From £815 excluding flights

Holiday Reviews

We invite every traveller who books a holiday via us to send in a review. Because we don't run the holidays they're completely independent and unedited... remember to read between the lines though, as two people on the same holiday can have different views!

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Unedited reviews from other travellers

5 stars
I am reborn! Simply the best holiday I have ever been on
4 stars
Some great stories to tell the grandchildren. Would recommend to a friend
3 stars
Very enjoyable
2 stars
It was OK
1 star
A bit disappointing really

Want to know more about Patagonia holidays before you go?

Find out more about Patagonia by reading these articles.

Geographical Magazine Editor Carolyn Fry and photographer Alex Benwell travelled to Argentina to visit a new museum that is telling the story of Patagonia's multicultural people. "A few treasured possessions were all they could take. One hundred and fifty three Welsh men, women and children packed up clothes, furniture, books and letters and boarded the tea clipper Mimosa in Liverpool docks. The families sought a new life in a place with enough land for everyone and where theirchildren could grow up learning Welsh culture and language, not English. Exactly two months later, after a gruelling Atlantic journey, they arrived on the eastern coast of Argentina. When they disembarked, in the harsh winter chill of 1865, one woman gave birth to a daughter on the beach. The land at which the settlers arrived was a wild, empty place, where rugged mountain ranges encircled wide, wind-swept plains. Today, the region is still sparsely populated; just under two million people live in 673,000 square kilometres, but there is a sense of order to the place. The solid-looking homesteads that dot the plains are bordered by neat rows of upright Lombardy poplar trees, planted to keep out the wind. Distances between settlements are long, but the major roads are well tarmacked. Although the first settlers faced hunger, hardship and loneliness, their legacy is a society that has learned to live comfortably with the harsh terrain." Read more about Patagonia in this Patagonia article.

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