Monday, April 27, 2009
Rafting!
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Machu Picchu – Old Mountain
Overall Machu Picchu was an incredible success. I mean just check out the classic pick we took here...Jueanu is that peak you see in the background below.
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Inca Jungle Trek...sometime around March 28th...
Afterwards, the rain chilled out a bit and we got suited up for our downhill adventure. With gloves, helmets, ponchos and riding faces on our group of 8 plus Edgar got rolling. After about three hills and four curves in the road, I decided that mountain biking might not be my forte. All the others in the group were so far ahead that I had to talk to myself aloud just to to get through the tiny streams and over the rocks in the windy mountain road.
After about twenty minutes fearless little Edgar rode alongside to ask if I was ok...I spent the rest of the afternoon riding shotgun with Nacho in the silver van with my bike securely strapped on top. And no, Byron didn't dump me afterwards.
Our first night was spent in a town called Santa Maria. After the real troopers took their cold showers and hung their clothes in a fruitless attempt to dry them, Byron, Bianca, Phil and Edgar took off to the local concrete soccer pitch to play with some locals while I cheered them on and reapplied my bug spray. Then we all sat and watched as the Santa Maria team played a local visiting town. Wives cheered from the passenger seats of parked vans and children supported their fathers as the locals played their hearts out. Our dinner was served exactly at 7 at one of the two local restaurants. The meal included soup, bread, rice, meat, papas fritas and tea. They love their carbs here in Peru.
The next two days we hiked and trekked the Inca trail. It wasn't the famous part that you hear about, but was pretty amazing nonetheless. We walked every type of trail imaginable. We were on roads, paths, perilous steps, railroad tracks, mudslided regions, jungles, deserts; we crossed streams, jumped across rocks, painted our faces, picked avocados, ate avocados, learned some Inca history, danced to 80's discoteca music, befriended local toddlers, acquired enough mosquito bites to cover our entire legs, bathed in hot springs,
ate delightful meals (of soup, bread, rice, meat, papas fritas and tea) and sung cheesy songs. Every night we encountered another city propped up on Inca tourism and stayed in the absolutely worst hostels Edgar could find, but I guess that's what we paid for. Thanks again man!
What may have been lacking in the cuisine and hostels clearly did not dissuade our overall sentiments towards the trek. Turn after turn we were constantly in awe of our surroundings. Of course, turn after turn revealed huge inclines, perilous drops and even hills effected by mudslides. We stopped every half hour or so to collect everyone, drink some water and talk about the history of the trail and the Incas. We found out that the Inca messengers would haul ass across the trail with wreckless abandon. We couldn't fathom that they wouldn't want to cling onto some sort of safety rope (like the ones they actually used for communication). It's sad the Spanish thought is completely necessary to wipe out everything about the civilization. At least they didn't get all the wonderful trails, bridges and handful of shrines.
Finally on the last night before we got to climb up to Machu Picchu we stayed in the city of Aguas Calientes. Our group was split in two because not one shitty hostel had enough room for all of us. Edgar liked the four of us the best so after dropping off the first four behind a sheet of construction plastic/tarp, he led us to the top of the hill to our personal oasis. This hostel was brand spanking new ad not quite open to the public. By not quite, I mean Bianca and Phil had to wait in the public area while their bed was assembled. The view, hot showers, free towel service, comfy beds, gigantic key-chain (no one was going to be able to walk out with the key since a baby doll was attached to it) and in-room televison (complete with three whole channels of crap) made the trek up the hill all the more worth it.
We met up with the other half of the group for dinner and made it seem that our hostel was just as second-rate as the previous ones had been. We could tell that 'Hostel John' was a piece, while our hostel was much more like a 3 star hotel. All of us were sick of the 'menu turisico' that we always got (soup, bread, rice, meat, papas fritas and tea) and we staged a mutiny to refuse the madness. We were at a pizza place and we weren't going to eat anymore of that food they passed off to tourists. We dined on pizzas of all types. We ordered as many pizzas as our hearts desired, drank coke and began to get excited about Machu Picchu. Sadly, in my anticipation of another horrid meal, my tummy gave out on me and I spent the rest of the evening frequenting many of Aquas Calientes' finest restrooms.
The plan for the next day involved us getting up at 4 am to hike the hour and one half to the entrance of Machu Picchu. Bianca, Phil, Byron and I decided to trek up like true troopers, while the rest of the group took the cheater bus. I was propelled up the hill by Byron and by my numerous gas emissions. Having not been able to keep any food in my system, this 1.5 hike up steep Inca rocks might have been the toughest of my life. However, we made it to the top promptly at 6:00am for the smoggy sunrise.
Monday, April 13, 2009
Coming to Peru – A Rocky Start (March 26 – April 3)
This leg of our adventure began with our arrival in Tacna, the southernmost border town in Peru. Our intentions were to get from there to Cuzco by bus, knowing it would be an 15 hour ride, give or take a few. However, as we crawled out of the Crown Vic with our packs and started to enter the bus station, we were stopped by a local tour guide asking us where we were headed. He proceeded to explain that there are protests going on in between Tacna and Cuzco in the crappy pueblo of Puno (the only city on the Peruvian side where you can really see Lake Titicaca), which means it would be dangerous to go by bus. Since Pablo was already trying to help some hippied-out Norwegian girls find their way as well, he explained our options to us. All of them were pretty awful, and only one of them placed in Cuzco with enough time to acclimate to the altitude for our March 28 Inca Trail departure. So we spent the next 30 minutes frantically taking money out of ATM's, ordering plane and bus tickets, and getting explicit instructions from Pablo on where to go and what to do next.
With all that settled, I sat with my chin on the windowsill of the car's backseat waiting for Byron to appear. And so he did – passport in hand! Next stop, travel agency. Very long story short, we got our overpriced plane tickets, stayed in a very cheap ($10US) little room with a view from the roof one block from the main plaza, ate a three-course winner winner chicken dinner for less than $3US each and made it to the airport in the morning for our flight to Cuzco. Wheewww! And it was all thanks to Cesar, mi heroe.
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Way back in March
Onward toward Peru, we grabbed another bus from Iquique to Arica, the northernmost town in Chile. Once again, we rode through mountains of sand and boulders bordering the ocean, but not without a detour to the 'completo' hotdog stand so the fatty bus drivers could get their fixes.
Once we arrived in Arica, we headed off to our hostel which we had reserved earlier that day. Of course, nothing here is easy, and our reservations turned into a first-come, first-served basis. The hostel owner called up his Laguna Beach buddy who had a room where we could crash for the night. After talking to Franklin about how awesome it was that we were from the ole' USA (he didn't many of us, and he missed how wonderful we are). We were starved and after we got off the subject of America he pointed us to the strip of restaurants that were still serving. We bypassed the chicken place to find the joint that served up the 'big' sandwiches. We were skeptical of the size as everyone knows how big sandwiches can be in the states. Once we got the mother we realized they meant business. This thing was a pure monster. It was topped with everything you could ever want on a sandwich. We headed back to the hostel to hit the bed with a food coma.
The next morning we set out for the bus station where we could catch a cab to take us across the
Northern Chile, March 23rd 2009
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Alive and kicking
Booyah!
Heaing out to get some chicken. Less than 3 dollars for a quarter chicken with papas fritas. MMMMM.
Besos
-Bej Ron Iham and Hanna Raskouski
(how our names were spelled for our train tickets)