Peru - Cusco and Machu Picchu

Cusco is at 11,000 feet and was, frankly, a welcome change for me given that the jungle's humidity was getting to me. I was looking for 65 degrees and got it...but that difference came with more confrontation with poverty and destitution.


A grimy-faced little girl in traditional dress, dragging a ragged, leashed-up alpaca through the streets for pictures and what little change you would negotiate with her (and her side was backed by the roving police, at times).


The altitude made us feel as though we were rocking gently on a boat, and the cobblestone streets took a couple of chunks out of one of our group who tripped pretty soon after we'd arrived.

We got the EARLY morning train to Aguas Calientes (now I'm calling it Vacation Boot Camp), but only one of the group went straight there, the rest of us jumped the train at kilometer 107 to begin our hike up the Inca Trail (I think it's actually Inka in Spanish).
What do you know, I'm on the Inca Trail!!!
This is the same river that the week of January 25th, blew its banks and flooding out the valley, stranding 2000 tourists. We've got some video ourselves of this river, raging down the valley, but it wasn't nearly the volume we see in this amature news footage from someone stuck there. At the end of this post, I've attached a clip of us at the end of our time here. You can see the river's volume at that time, which - even so - is pretty impressive.

First, we use the amenities before heading forth on this timeless journey.
Hey! Does anyone have any toilet paper?
...and head up on what I called the Incan Death March (which later became the Peruvian Meat Grinder, or to quote Karl Mueller, the Stairmaster from Hell).



We'd had our meager box lunches at the Winaywayna Lodge (which means "forever young" and we're not exactly feeling like that right now, but it's a lovely stop in the day) and had a quick 15 minute jaunt off to the side of the main trail to be rewarded by this smallish settlement of Winaywayna. You got the idea that the rich folk were up higher, with better views and more effective, gravity-driven plumbing. Membership has its privileges...
In order to preserve the agricultural terraces, the park rangers were using hand scythes to cut down the invading plantlife. Apparently, there is a very poisonous species of snake in this area, but our scientist had gone on without us today.


Between the sad box lunch and what seemed like hours of pouring rain, the trail was unrelenting with its torturous boulder staircases and slippery patches of muddy run-off. (Does it sound like I'm complaining? Oh no! I'm here in the Cloud Forest of Peru, so being soaked to the bone is one of the things that comes with the territory of the kind of traveling I like...but to cope through humor is a good thing, oui?)
I digress...
Before the rain hit in the afternoon (and magically ONLY for the time we were trekking this sacred journey...), I had stopped at a clearing where some very pink flowers were showing off for the sky. Since this is not where you'd hear airplanes, when I heard something similar, it caught my attention.
A hummingbird had come to check out the goods. Mr. Ed Gar said later that this was an Angel of the Sun. (On later reflection, this may have been an omen that the Angel and the Sun were leaving the building).

This is the view looking back DOWN, my friends...(and our guide said that the last half of the day was FLAT, to which I should've replied something about pigs flying or the Incan gods sacrificing him for lying to us), but what did we know?


No matter, here it is...Machu Picchu...our reward was a magical clearing of the clouds and the unveiling of this amazing ruins just as we rounded the last corner at the Sun Gate. Public television did a terrific job of outlining the history, the engineering and the circumstances under which Machu Picchu was built.
I can squawk about rain all I want, but man, what a site this was! And I'm not really squawking, but I was truly wet through everything I had on and getting pretty cold. But even at that, how can you stop pulling out your camera to take the next great shot?





...you gotta love an ancient bathroom that has a spot for shampoo! The water engineering through this site was just as effective as it was thousands of years ago. After we'd had such rain, it was evident that the system was as smart as the aquaducts in Europe, build far before and still very much working.


This carved slab was an alter to dedicate offerings to the spirit of the mountain in the distance.

At the end of the day, we enjoyed a riverside table with a cold beverage. As you can see, the river is really energetic, but it hasn't crested its banks as it did this week.
4 Comments:
Superbo! Makes me want to go back! The pics are being relished and savored. Thx!
even the pictures are breathtaking!
You have to be changed after being at place like that...
jim
WOW! Ok, I knew I wanted to go there, but now I REALLY want to go there. Awesome indeed. I hope you get even more pictures up...
Good Lord those photos are GORGEOUS! What fantastic ruins, what beautifully stunning clouds and fog, what amazing communities carved into hillsides.
I'm only sorry someone stole the toilet from that bathroom. What a bummer! :)
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