The lake's name derives from the Mapuche language and means long lake, an apt name for this long, wide lake, which has a surface area of or 19,300 acres. Lakes Paimún and Epulafquén are connected to the main body of the lake by short, narrow, shallow straits, but are usually considered separate lakes. These two smaller lakes would add about to the size of Huechulafquen Lake if the three were considered a single lake. The Chimehuin River flows south-eastward out of the lake with its ultimate destination the Atlantic Ocean. Junin de los Andes is the nearest city. Lake Paimún, long, is the northern arm of Huechulafquen Lake. Lanin volcano at, the highest mountain in the region, looms over its northern shore. Lake Paimun is fed by glaciers originating on Lanin volcano and by small streams that originate at the border with Chile. Lake Epulafquén, long, is the southern arm of the lake. A complex of volcanoes, the Huanquihue Group, in elevation, rise above its southern shore. About 1800 CE, a lava flow from one of the volcanic cones reached the southern shore of the lake causing a rocky, distorted delta. A short, turbulent stream brings the waters of two additional lakes, Lake Curruhué, long, and Green Lake, long, into Lake Epulafquén. Another short stream feeds into Lake Epulafquén from Lake Carilafquén, long. Hot springs and thermal baths are located near the shores of this lake. Huechulafquen runs in an east-west direction, with marked climatic changes along its shores as annual precipitation decreases from about in the higher mountains overlooking the lake to about at the eastern end of the lake. Most of the precipitation falls in the southern hemisphere winter.
Tourism
Lake Huechulafquen is a popular tourist destination for camping, hiking, boating, climbing Lanin volcano, and fishing for rainbow and brown trout, species introduced to Argentine in the early 1900s. A road runs along the north shore of the lake, passing through several communities of the Mapuche people, who live within the boundaries of Lanin National Park. Another road touches along the southern shoreline of Lake Epulaufquén providing access to the volcanic flows there. This road continues westward, crossing into Chile at the Carirriñe Pass, elevation.