Machu Picchu

As any tourist visiting Peru, we wanted to check out this place as well. But everybody seems to be interested in making this experience as inconvenient as possible. You can’t buy the train tickets from Peru Rail, you have to get them from the travel agency, which in turn won’t sell them to you unless you buy a package and pay their generous profit margin. Ok, you want to go by road? Not possible as well, there is no road. By foot? Go back to travel agency to get a pass, and again deal with the same people that want to sell you a package you don’t actually need. In the best case scenario, getting one person from Cusco to Machu Picchu (some 90kms) is a 8 hours job, and the logistics involved is “impressive”: switch one train, 3 buses, meet with several guides and/or drivers along the way and so on. We finally got there at night (thanks again to the travel agency which made a mistake when ordering tickets from Peru Rail, so taking pictures in the canyon was out of the question), so we had to waste one more night in the village.

One can visit the Colosseum, the Louvre or the Bran castle (all of which are older, better engineered and better preserved) for under $20, but has to spend over $200 to see Machu Picchu. What a ripoff! Long story short, the whole experience in Peru can be resumed to something like “many years ago there were some smart indians around here who built interesting things; then the Spaniards came and built more; and now it’s us, the Peruvians, trying to make as much money as possible out of this, especially since we can’t do anything else properly. Fortunately, some gringos came to our country and showed the rest of the world what we have here, or else nobody would have ever visited our country…”

Anyways, here are the pics:

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Cusco

Cusco, the historical capital of the Inca empire, is the best looking city we found in Peru, with narrow streets and old buildings. We stayed there for 2 days, while trying to organize the departure to Machu Picchu.624 cus625 cus626 cus627 cus630 cus631 cus633 cus

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Flat tire

For some reason, all flat tires happen during night time. Why? At least this one wasn’t in the neutral zone between two countries, just like the last one…621 flat622 flat

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More Andes

The next destination was Cusco, but in order to get there we had to go once again over the Andes (the pass was at 4200m). The views were spectacular and very wild. Only a few villages, nothing more. Llamas were everywhere! At some point we almost ran out of fuel. There was no gas station but one guy was running a gas station inside his home, so the problem was easily solved.611 cuzco612 cuz613 cuz615 cuz616 cuz618 cuz619 cuz620 cuz

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Camping location

After leaving Nazca, the road climbed sharply. It was getting cold and dark and there was no trace of any village, not to mention hotel. Rocks were everywhere, no sand and no grass to use for camping. We were running out of options but after talking to a truck driver we agreed to camp on top of the cement bags that he had in the trailer. Poor guy! His truck had some electrical problem and he was waiting for help for the past two days there. I’m wondering how long is he going to wait there…609 camp610 camp

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