I'm now in Lima as the final month of my trip is about to begin! All good here in Peru where I've been busy checking out all sorts of Inca ruins... Having somewhat recovered from the Lima nightlife, I'm now completing this post from Iquitos in the middle of the Peruzian part of the Amazon rainforest. The heat and humidity is intense and the atmosphere seems different too, with music blaring out from most places!
Cusco, my first stop in Peru, is certainly one of the most beautiful towns I have been too. It seems similar to Granada or Seville, with beautiful colonial style buildings densely packed together, although it has an Inca touch to it, with a number of buildings having been built on top of Inca ruins. It really is spectacular, although I was shocked by the people selling you stuff on the streets... Every 5 steps someone literally shoves a rubbish painting or some bits of cloth in your face and there is only so much you can take - I guess there isn't much of that in South America, so I was surpised! I had some good Argentine company to help me deal with this stress though, Alejandra and Santiago who turns out to be Che Guevara's second cousin! Some interesting family stories there!!!
Nearby, the Inca ruins of the Valle Sagrado and the Machu Picchu really are special. Partly they are the remaining trace of what was obviously a very impressive society, and then on top of that they are located in some stunning landscape which only makes them seem more amazing. My Machu Picchu experience was slightly diminished by the dodgy banana milkshake from the night before which meant I was more focused on trying not to vomit rather than what the guide was saying, but again you have some spectacular ruins set in some even more spectacular landscape. Unfortunately THE Inca Trail was fully booked so maybe next time...
Pushing on towards Lima, Nazca was the first stop to see the strange Nazca lines which are quite impressive although again there I was contending with sickness, this time induced by this tiny aeroplane being blown around in the wind! Another highlight there are the aqueducts, hundreds of kilometres of underground tunnels transporting water through the desert to the Nazca area, still doing their job hundreds of years after being built. Good engineering!
On from Nazca, I made a quick stop in the oasis town of Huacachina set in some immense sand dunes. Its a nice little place, and I was glad to get my first ever taste of a sand dune desert, combined with a roller coaster like ride in a sand buggy, and some sandboarding, which is not as safe as the tour company suggests! The Israeli guy in my group went home with ripped trousers, bruised legs and looked properly beaten up after his board went out of control!
The final stop before Lima was Pisco where the main attraction are the Islas Ballestas, some islands off the coast which are just covered in birds, and birds' shit which used to be the main Peruvian export. Very nice, but avoid looking up!
Lima was good fun, I met up with Joe's ex-flatmate Dani, who I hadn't seen for years, and although she was tied up with family events, she put me in touch with some other friends of hers who were visiting and we had a good time exploring Lima together! It is set in a mad location, on cliffs facing the sea which look extremely prone to erode at any time, and overall is quite a pleasant place, especially the area of Barranco which I was staying in. The nightlife isn't Buenos Aires, but it certainly got the better of me! Lima, like Peru in general when compared to Bolivia, feels quite dynamic, and although there is plenty of poverty, people seem alot more switched on and entrepreneurial, and it does feel like the place is changing fast.
I feel a bit like a cheat today, as for the first time in South America, I have flown part of the way rather than gone overland, but the flight out here was great. As you crossed the Andes, you could see little streams snaking through the greenery, eventually forging together into a big brown colossus which Iquitos is set right on and I don't think I have ever seen so many trees. Tomorrow I'll be heading to the port looking for a boat to Colombia... Fingers crossed!
Ruins at Ollantaytambo
Natural soap from a root...
Dyeing in action!
Misty morning near the Machu Picchu
Sunrise at Machu Picchu
Watch out for hallucinogenic plants!
Mirrors for observing the stars
Machu Picchu from above
Looking down towards the valley
Thermal baths at Aguas Calientes
The expensive train back to Cusco
Inca stonework built on by the Spanish
Scary plane to visit theNasca lines!
Grains and parrots
Impressive underwater aqueducts
Aqueducts carrying water from the Andes
Hustling and bustling to sell refreshments!
Beans?
They love painting the concrete walls!
The biggest hostel dorm in the world?
Sandboarding!
The hostel pool!
Despite what you see, there is a health inspector in Peru!
They used to like deforming young babies skulls!
Toma lo bueno!
Cau Cau! I'm not a fan!
Having a joke at the flower stand by the cemetary!
La Candelabria!
Spreading your wings!
Ghostly structure for exporting bird poo as fertilizer!
The last of the black marks... I have got my camera fixed (Lima Malecon!)
Sharpening knives on the street
Sunset in Lima
More sunset!!
Sunset drive in theatre!
Giant corn! (spot the cow heart kebabs...)
Just what you don't want for backpacking!!!
Plaza San Francisco in Barranco
My plane fared better than this one!
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