Saturday 9 June 2012

Hola! from Peru Part 3

The final part of our trip has probably been the best bit of it overall. After a free day wandering round Cusco (where I left off on the last mail), the following day we headed off to the Sacred Valley to explore archaeological sites and get ever-closer to our final destination of Machu Pichu.

 

Our first stop was the Chinchero Inca site which had essentially been a food store and consisted of limestone walled terraces and store houses. Crops like cereals, potatoes and vegetables were stored here by the Inca. Now there is a preserved section and another part where the walls form the foundations of a Catholic Church (Spanish colonial style) and other buildings.

 

From there we visited a small community of about 10 families where we met the community leader Daniel & several women. Outside the community enclosure was a valley, lake, eucalyptus woods and terraces where the community grow food. We helped dig & collect "Lisa", a type of small yellow potato-like tuber. These were sorted into tubers for eating, future seeds, tubers for drying and animal feed. The community gave us lunch while we were there – quinoa soup followed by shredded "Lisa" and rice and finished with mint tea. After lunch we were shown how they dye wool for clothes & other items and how they spin and ultimately how they weave the items that they sell.

 

About an hour from there was the Moray Inca Site. This is shaped in concentric terraces that were built into a natural depression in the hillside. Analysis of soils on terraces revealed that this was experimental garden with different microclimates – there was a range of 15'c from top to bottom and it faced east to absorb heat and prevent frost damage.

 

The Sacred Valley (El Valle Sagrado) is a steep sided mountain valley with a flat bottom which was and is used for farming. The main town here is Ollantaytambo (pronounced Oyan-tay-tambo and known to locals as Ollanta), a rustic town with narrow dusty cobbled streets. This is the best surviving example of Inca city planning and the town has apparently been continuously inhabited since 13th century.

 

The following morning we visited the Ollantaytambo Ruins which consists of huge steep terraces and an unfinished ceremonial centre. This was one of the few places where the Spanish lost a major battle. The site was built (though never finished) as a temple – some fine stonework & well-engineered walls are found at the ceremonial centre at the top of the site. The stone for this was quarried on the adjacent mountain 6km away, across the Rio Urubamba. Moving the blocks to the site was a huge feat and the Incas built ramps down to the river. Rather than crossing the river, the Inca created parallel channels which they drained when they needed to move the blocks over them. The area is at the intersection of three valleys and so was chosen as an important administrative centre for the area.

 

After a few issues with a de-railment causing delays, we took the train from Ollantaytambo to Aguas Calientes. Also known as Machu Piccu Pueblo (town), Aguas Calientes is like the Blackpool of Peru. It was very touristy, but the nice bit about it was that there are no cars and a railway line ran down what would be the High St. The hotels and shops on this main street looked like they were poised on the railway platform. Although the town wasn't that exciting, the area in which it was situated was in a deep gorge below the Machu Picchu ruins, where it is enclosed by towering walls of stone cliffs and cloud forest.

 

At 5am the next day, we were up and heading to a very early breakfast so we could catch one of the first buses up to Machu Picchu. It was worth doing as we virtually had the site to ourselves for the first three hours which allowed us to concentrate on the guided tour around it.

 

There are many theories about the reason or reasons that the site was built – as a Royal Retreat (most popular) although from its position it (5 sq. km enclosed by high mountain forests / cloud forests), it is also believed by some to have been a very important economic, social, military, religious and administrative complex. The location provided a defensive location in the case of a surprise attack. Its many cultivation terraces in the agricultural sector would have allowed the growing of crops year round whilst the industrial sector of skilled tradesmen would have been busy producing metallic objects as well as day to day pottery and ornamental ceramics etc. The city was made up of more than 200 houses, squares, granaries, palaces, temples and observatories. Connected by a network of aqueducts and steps, the terraces are 3.5m tall by 3.2m wide. There is much that I can say about the site, but no doubt the ones reading this who have already been will recall these things and everyone else, I recommend reading up on it if you are interested (try visiting http://science.nationalgeographic.com/science/archaeology/machu-picchu-mystery/ and http://travel.nationalgeographic.com/travel/world-heritage/machu-picchu/ for starters).

 

After the tour and to avoid the hordes of visitors descending on the site (about 2,500 people a day for a site that was built for around 500 people!), we did some of the trails around the site. The first was to Puerto Inka (the Inca drawbridge or Inca Bridge) and then we hiked a section of the Inca Trail to Intipunku (the Sun Gate). After 8 hours on site, we headed back to Agua Calientes to catch the train to Ollantaytambo and a bus back to Cusco.

 

Yesterday we visited two museums in Cusco – the Inka Museum and Machu Picchu Museum. The Inka museum was displaying mainly ceramics / pottery from pre-Inca civilisations through to the Inca period & some Spanish displays. The Machu Picchu museum showed us the history of Hiram Bingham's scientific "discovery" of Machu Picchu and what has been determined from the information already available. A lot of the artefacts collected up until 1997 were also on display.

 

Today we had a somewhat eventful journey getting from Cusco to Lima. The flight was delayed and so we didn't get to Lima until mid/late afternoon. We went out with some of the others for a "last supper", as the first two from the group were flying out tonight. Dinner was ceviche with Pisco Sour. Ceviche was very nice but spicy, the Pisco sour helping to sooth it somewhat. Ceviche is a chilled concoction of just fish in my case, but in others fish, shrimp, octopus, squid and possibly other stuff, marinated in lime juice, onions and chilli peppers (which gave it its bite) and served with sweet potato and boiled corned / maize.

 

Tomorrow is souvenir shopping and our flight home.

 

So, until the next exciting adventure.

 

Adios,

Kath & Andy

Hola from Peru 2

Taking advantage of another bus journey, this time on a public bus between Puno and Cusco, I am drafting another mail which I hope to send from Cusco. Outside the bus is the stunning scenery of the "Altiplano", a high altitude glacial valley littered with farms and surrounded by mountains. The altitude is somewhere between 3,400m and 4,312m. Puno, which is at an altitude of 3,830m, is behind us. Cusco, our next destination is 3,400m. At these elevations, even simple tasks such as climbing stairs can leave you breathless and out of puff due to the low levels of oxygen.

 

When I left off from the last mail, we were heading to Arequipa. It was, as well as a visit, an acclimatisation stop but that didn't stop most of the group feeling the effects of altitude sickness once we'd reached Puno later. Cusco, fortunately, is a little lower so we should all be getting a bit better soon.

 

Arequipa, nicknamed "The White City" because the off-white/pale volcanic rock which most of the buildings are built of glisten in the sunshine but also because it was originally populated by a lot of Spanish (white) people, had a very nice historic centre, but otherwise it's a massively sprawling, extremely polluted & dusty city. The brown smog hanging over the horizon isn't the best sight to wake up to in an otherwise fairly blue sky and sunny day.

 

We had a busy city tour starting with a lookout over three of the volcanoes that surround the city and a sample of "Queso Helado" (literally translated "Cheese Ice-cream") but actually made from milk, ice, vanilla and cinnamon.

 

We returned to the City Centre to visit one of the Jesuit Churches. This has a chapel with a dome roof covered with murals depicting rainforest plants and animals.

 

The Monasterio de Santa Catalina (Santa Catalina Monastery, actually a convent) is a 20,000m2 citadel complex occupying a whole block in Arequipa where we had an hour-long tour. It was founded in 1580 by a rich widow. Unlike most convents where nuns lived a life of poverty, these nuns came from the best Spanish families and had servants and slaves. When they became an apprentice nun, they had their own (fairly large) room, but once they became a fully-fledged nun they had their own apartment. One of the trees in the gardens had a Hummingbird nesting in it.

 

We had a short tour of the Cathedral where we got to go to the top by the bell towers and got a 360' vista over the city, before heading to a Creperie for a late lunch.

 

"Museo Santuarios Andinos" was our afternoon visit. It is now the home of "Juanita (pronounced Wan-e-ta), the ice princess", the frozen body of an Inca teenager (12-14yrs) sacrificed on the summit of Nevado Ampato, a  snow-covered volcano to north-west of Arequipa, more than 500 years ago. A tour of the museum climaxes (if that is the right word) in respectfully viewing the frozen body in a freezer.

 

Finally dinner was at a rooftop eatery overlooking the main square & mountains beyond. I had Alpaca steak with risotto, but it wasn't as nice as the previous night's Alpaca Lomo Saltardo (for anyone thinking of sampling alpaca). 

 

Arequipa to Puno was another reasonably long drive but in a cramped bus on a rough road. It was fairly uneventful apart from the wild vicunas, domesticated alpacas and the dizzying heights of 4,500m where a stop for coca tea was a necessary option.

 

Puno is a melting pot of Aymara and Quechua cultures. Most of the inhabitants speak at least Spanish, Quechua and Aymara, with different levels of English comprehension. It is also the gateway to Lake Titicaca (pronounced Te-te-kar-kar). A boat tour across to Islas de los Uros was an informative trip. These are floating reed islands built from buoyant Totora reeds on which up to half a dozen families live. We had a demonstration on how the islands are built and maintained. The reeds grow abundantly in the shallows of the lake and are used by the Uros people for houses, boats, crafts that they create to sell to tourists and are even partially edible. The Uros began their unusual floating existence in an effort to isolate themselves from other aggressive tribes including the Incas. The visit included two islands (picked on a rotation basis so each island gets their fair share of visitors), the trip from the first to the second on an optional reed boat ride. The islands are fairly basic living standards though some of them now have solar panels and so some of the houses also have a TV and radio!

 

Now we are nearing Cusco, the old Inca capital and gateway to Machu Picchu. It is the oldest continuously inhabited city and was home to the Incas for two centuries before the Spanish conquered and built their capital here.

 

So until the next instalment,

 

Hope you have or have had a nice Jubilee weekend,

 

Adios

 

Kath & Andy

 

PS Cusco has been a very interesting couple of days. After arriving yesterday, we were taken on a city tour round some of the plazas and narrow cobbled streets. There was a stop at a Coca Shop, which sells Andean Coca Teas (coca leaves, lime and sugar). After wandering round for a while, we had dinner in a little restaurant near the main square. Depending on how people were feeling with the altitude (traveller's tummy, dizziness, breathlessness) the group had meals ranging from Andean Chicken Soup up to large meals of duck in some kind of salty sauce with arroz and papas fritas.

Today we have enjoyed a relaxing day just mooching round Cusco, walking to a lookout over the city, meandering round the crowds of the main square and generally just taking it easy after what has already been a very packed itinerary.

 

PPS Due to some technical difficulties, I am actually sending this from Lima, almost a week later. With luck, I should be able to send you the third and final installment of our adventures before I get home (maybe!)