The Cordillera Huayhuash of Northern Peru Is Jagged, Raw Beauty

This article originally appeared on Outside

Darcie Reed and I had been hiking for four hours along a red- and iron-orange dirt path augured into the steep Andean hillside at almost 15,000 feet when, before a bend in the trail, Gilf Laurente stopped us.

"Close your eyes," Laurente, our guide, who is from Huaraz, said, "and hold my hand."

As we rounded the corner, he ordered, "Open your eyes."

Before us, towering over the lake where we'd camp that night, was the faceted, glacier-cloaked spire of Jirishanca, known as the Matterhorn of the Andes for its sharp, tilted summit. The air was thin, but the view of Jirishanca, at 19,993 feet the highest peak in Peru's Cordillera Huayhuash, took my breath away.

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