Sunday, 15 May 2011

Otavalo Market

After a ridiculously long, 40 hour bus ride from Lima to Quito we are finally in Ecuador! After recovering from this horrific journey (complete with gentlemen not making the loo in time) in Quito for a few days we went to Otavalo in time for their Saturday market.

On a Saturday there is an Animal Market and an Artesian Market. We went first to the Animal Market which is frequented by all the countryside small farmers to buy and sell their stock. It was amazing! I'm not quite sure how animal rights activists would feel but personally it was brilliant fun. All the locals come in traditional dress; a long skirt, blouse and colourful sash for women and a ponytail and dapper hat for men. Then they bring their pigs on leads, which scream like girls by the way, their chickens in baskets and their guinea pigs in sacks. I shrieked at the beginning as I was very unsure as to why sacks should be wriggling away on the floor!




After the animal market we went to the Artisan market which has been slightly ruined by the crowds of day tripping tourists who are on route to the Galapagos. Unfortunately prices are quite high as these tourists don't seem to understand the concept of bartering and therefore the initial price of items is very high. Luckily we are expert barters (or rather Matt keeps his mouth shut and allows me to barter, he is no longer allowed to help as he gives up and pays asking price the moment they bring a child into the room, hmmm.) We got some cool buys but as our Bolivian purchases have their own bag we were unable to justify another bag to carry around.


Our lunch, Matt very nearly died on the spot and had to have two servings!


Traditional Panama Hats, which do not come from Panama but from Ecuador. I tried to persuade Matt he looked good in one but unfortunately he knew the truth- he looked like a moron.


On another note, we are now flying out of Buenos Aires on 21st June! We have a wonderful 3/4 day bus from Lima to Buenos to contend with but it shall all be worth it to visit our Uruguayan friends for a week before coming home!

We finally found Jaguars!!!!!!!!!!!

Admittedly they were in Lima's zoo but we had had enough. After six months of searching and spending many pennies and pounds on going to the pantanal, pampas and jungle we have officially given up with seeing a Jaguar in the wild.


Instead we were able to sit and watch the Jaguars, Pumas, Panthers and various other native wild cats with an ice-cream. Matt was able to take photos and tried his best to make them seem like they were taken in the wild....



A photo of the 'Cock-of-the-rock', a bird from Ecuador which apparently we will be seeing this week in an old man's bird sanctuary Matt is taking me to.


Lima Zoo was actually very impressive for a zoo and incredible for a zoo in South America. I'm pretty sure that we have both seen worse Zoos' in England!

Thursday, 12 May 2011

Gringo Porter coming through.....


So we have finally done the Inca Trail and seen Machu Picchu. We were both surprised to find that the hype was not overdone and that they were both incredible!

The Inca Trail is 3 nights, 4 days and many people had terrified me by telling me that it would be the hardest thing I have ever done. We begun the trek, me very apprehensively and Matt doing his utmost best to race the porters. The Porters or Chuskies, are truly amazing men, they are around 5:5 and weigh 60 kilos but run up and down the Inca Trail with 25-30kilos of equipment on their backs. The Chuskies have a race every year, the winning record for the trail is in 3hours and 45 minutes. Last year the trek was done in 7 hours and it takes us Gringos four days!!! Matt had decided that he was going to carry our bags and that he would keep up with the Chuskies. I think he managed to impress a few as on the final day they weighed his bag (20 kilos) and let him try one of their bags on for size! (I also think they were fed up with him, hurling himself down mountains to catch up.)


Matt imitating the Chuskies by running down stairs, I had to look away till he was out of sight as it was terrifying! Below a Chuskie and his ridiculous bag!


I also did surprisingly well at the trek and even jogged on the last day to get to the Sun Gate within half an hour of Matt. I know, I was worried about me too but I think Matt's 6 month boot camp may have finally paid off! Below, me still smiling during the Trek!

We had an amazing group and guide. Our guide Wilfreddo, would play the flute to help us get up those tricky mountain passes! On the way to Machu Picchu we saw quite a few ruins, learnt a lot about Inca Culture and passed through mountains, cloud forest and jungle.


Wilfreddo, playing the flute to get us up the Dead Woman's Pass, the highest point on the Inca Trail. To prove how competitive both Matt and I are, we were told it would take 1 hour and a half to reach the top. Matt did it in 35 minutes and I did it in 45 minutes.


A woman in traditional dress at the start of the Trail.


Ruins on the way to Machu Picchu


Machu Picchu was crazily rammed with tourists in comparison to our nice jaunt to get to it. However, we did our best to forge a path through the million exhausted tourists who had only walked for 5 minutes to find the best parts of the city. Incas were crazy, they built a city on the top of a mountain when there was a perfectly good valley below!!!!

Sunday, 8 May 2011

Semana Santa in Arequipa


The streets of Arequipa with Misti, a huge volcano in the distance. 

Easter celebrations in Arequipa Peru turned out to be very understated. However, it was a pretty cool city which  we used to chill out and drink coffee at 'Cusco Coffee Company', its embelm looking dangerously similar to Starbucks.


Cactus Fruit 


Cusco Coffee Company where we spent a few hours of our time until we discovered the Starbucks next door.  Turns out there is only so much Chicha Morada or Inka Cola you can drink before you need a Frappacino.


Easter Celebrations included processions and statues. As you can see this one is Christ himself in a glass box.

Saturday, 7 May 2011

Colca Canon

In a pre-Inca trail warm up we decided to do a 3 day trek in apparently the biggest Canon in the world. To us the Canon looked suspiciously like a valley and its depth was measured from the highest mountain point which made the rest of it quite a bit smaller!


Colca Canon is also the best place in the world to see Condors, Matt went crazy taking photos and was very upset to learn that the rangers feed them to make sure that there are always Condors for the tourists!


The trek was quite good but the severe lack of food supplied by the company saw our group resorting to desperate measures of eating Cactus fruit to stay alive.

I may have slightly chickened out on the final day of trekking and got a mule up the hill. For the record, this was the biggest mistake of my life and I have never been so scared! I got the crazy, competitive mule (which I named Matthew) who tried to overtake every other mule to be at the front. This was not ok as the path was too small for two humans to walk next to one another let alone two mules, especially as there was a nice cliff drop on the other side. Matt (human) was stupidly competitive too and reached the top of the cliff in first place, in front of the other groups who had left an hour before hand, he was a bit too proud of himself.



Sunday, 24 April 2011

Peruvian SIde


The gateway to Taquille Island on the Peruvian half of Lake Titicaca. Apparently this island still follows traditional customs, for example all the men wear nightcaps, various colours, sizes and style of wearing show their martial status. Another example of following customs is their notion of a three year trial marriage, where man and woman live together but the man has the ability to break it off after three years. Wonderful.


The Peruvian half of the lake also has floating islands made from reeds, the islands are maintained by putting more reeds on top of one another when ever they rot away. There have been many suggestions that the islanders are planted for tourists, I myself remain unsure of these islands. They are hugely commercialised but they desperately want tourists. The photo above shows the women waiting at the edge of their island to see if they get tourists that day, it is a lottery. The islands are very basic but have solar power and TV. Not completely sure about them but they were very cool and it was interesting to learn about them and their traditions, even if they no longer exist.


Part of the commercialisation is that I had to dress up in their clothes, yes I look amazing, the hat is incredible.


 View over the islands, there are around 60 in total, each containing 3 to 5 families.

Lake Titicaca- Bolivian Side


So after La Paz we went to Lake Titicaca which is the highest lake in the world. It is also the closest that Bolivians come to the sea so their Navy likes to ride about the lake on boats. Yes, the land locked country of Bolivia does indeed have a Navy, I thought it was a joke too. Bolivians are also taught at school that they have a national duty to reclaim their lost coast line from Chile, good luck Bolivia.

The lake is amazingly blue and has lots of islands on it, we spent a few days on the Bolivian side seeing their island, Isla del Sol. The altitude is pretty damn high on this island but we went for a walk across the whole of it, we learnt that Inca ruins are quite dull and that the Malaria tablets we are on really do cause you to burn in the sun!



Matt's cool camouflage gear. 


Nice path way across Isla del Sol.


One of the traditional reed boats that sail Lake Titicaca.