Machu Picchu Tops Writer’s List for Most Interesting and Most Difficult Adventure

Magic Carpet Journal’s Barbara Kingstone takes you to the mountainous jungles of Peru to see the legendary “lost city” of Machu Picchu.

Story and Photos courtesy of our friend and fellow traveller, Barbara Kingstone.
View of The Lost City of the Incas, Machu Picchu, Peru
View of The Lost City of the Incas, Machu Picchu, Peru

If the truth were told, there is no easy way to get there. The easiest way to get to the lost citY”, Machu Picchu, Peru from the capital Lima, is a series of transport vehicles. While there is a direct flight from Lima, you’d be missing some of the remotest frontiers, ecological reserves, and exotic wild life, in a country where three fifths are jungle and the area abounds in folkloric tales.

When I look back on this trip, it stands out as one of the most difficult but also tops the list as the most interesting. Landing in Lima, a colonial city also known as the “cement jungle”, left me under whelmed. It looked like someone up-chucked a mass of undistinguished architecture among the older, finer Barroco Coloco style buildings. The exceptions are the glorious Plaza Mayor and the Cathedral which both have the backdrop of the towering St. Christopher Hill. A water spewing fountain and people fill the Plaza. My guide said most of the people are unemployed. The cream-coloured Cathedral is decorated with 3 million Venetian mosaic tiles.

An overnight stop at the newly renovated Country Club Hotel and a fine typical Peruvian dinner at Huaca Pucllana which included Pisco Sour, a “must” Peruvian drink, lima bean and Andean cheese soup, swordfish with brown bean tacu, was a great introduction to the upcoming “real? part of the journey.

After the two-hour plane trip to the small city of Puerto Maldonado, then transfer by bus to the city pier, it’s here that we start seeing unparalleled diversity in a country with 28 of 32 types of weather. Suddenly, roads are rivers and the vehicles are motorboats and canoes. Depending on the speed of the current (it usually is a 45-minute motor boat ride), we travel on Tambopata River, which turns into Madre de Dios River, all leading into the Amazon River.

Our accommodation at Reserva Amazonica Inkaterra, Peru
Our accommodation at Reserva Amazonica Inkaterra, Peru

Our accommodation at Reserva Amazonica Inkaterra, sitting on 10,000 hectares, seems like Jungle 101. Suddenly there’s massive, thick rainforest and the fusion of colour and sound. (Inkaterra is a Peruvian organization, which promotes and practices environmental conservation while interacting with the locals.) Even the fact that the 41 private suites don’t have electricity and only three have hot showers, didn’t faze this city loving scribe. Perhaps that’s because I had one of those three cabins!

With daylight quickly disappearing, I quickly take the 1-2 hour trail tour. The wonders of nature while roughing it on narrow, often muddy, hilly paths, gives me the feeling of being the first to discover this inhospitable area as I stumble over tangled vines and view dense shadows from the depths of the jungle.

Train travel en-route to Machu Picchu, Peru

There are various levels of difficulty and walking slowly is recommended. Since the foliage may be home to poisonous, often minute bugs, our guide, Aldo, is adamant about not touching any of the leaves. Iron and Garlic trees, Fire flies and Owl butterflies, and a few of the 600 different bird species are spotted. However, the most adventurous enterprise is the (work in-progress) 410 metre long, 90-metre-high Canopy cable suspended bridge, partially funded by the World Bank. It will be another ecotourism adventure activity giving guests an outstanding and different view. Reserva Amazonica is a place to learn, not to relax. But the swinging hammocks on each balcony suggest a different experience.

Although it’s not often seen on the guided nocturnal water trips, we manage a sighting of a baby caiman (white crocodile), which is brought into the boat, mouth taped and body tagged for future reference and sent back into the catfish-filled brownish river.

The typical Amazonian dinner of fish grilled in a bamboo tube served with traditional gruel quinoa is served in the cathedral ceiling pavilion, the only area with electricity.

With flashlight in hand, I decide that the three lit kerosene lanterns left on the steps would be more practical in my suite where the mosquito netting is snuggly tucked into the mattress of the bed. During the night, along with the sounds of the forest, is loud rhythmic roaring which has me wondering, in my tired haze, whether I am in Africa. With controlled laughter, I realize it is a heavy snorer in the next cabin.

Another view of Machu Picchu amongst the mist in the mountains of Peru.
Another view of Machu Picchu amongst the mist in the mountains of Peru.

Wake-up call is not an option since thousands of birds, including loud macaws and multi- coloured parrots, start their riot of tweeting at about 4.30 AM. Nature is never too far away. Greeting me in the shower is a very large frog, which I opt to ignore since washing in this humid climate takes priority.

To acclimatize to the elevated heights, which we were yet to reach, we fly to Cusco. (I do suggest taking anti-altitude pills). But before leaving, we visit Japipi, a butterfly farm, just 2 minutes from the airport. Among the 2000 species, some are endangered.

Cusco, 3,399 metres above sea level, with a history dating back 3000 years, is “The Oldest Existing City of America” and deserves more time than I had planned. This city with narrow, cobblestone streets, was declared a World Cultural Heritage Site in 1978. It’s a dizzying experience both literally and figuratively.

The “piece de resistance”, Machu Picchu, the Incas best kept secret, is a 3-hour train ride away. The sleek Hiram Bingham luxury train service to Machu Picchu Village (Aguas Calientes) includes white linen restaurant service, live musicians and the unforgettable passing landscape from rushing white waters juxtaposed to colossal mountains, some snow capped.

Another spectacular view of Machu Picchu amongst the Peruvian mountains. A 10-minute walk from the station along the tracks and flanked by vendors selling wonderful colourful woolen items, is well organized by the 85-room ecological-involved Machu Picchu Pueblo Hotel. The waiting staff transfers our luggage to our rooms. On this 5-hectare, rocky terrain in the Peruvian Andes, 2,020 metres above sea level, the owners of the Inkaterra chain have built an authentic five-star standard boutique hotel decorated with original Inca objects and framed woven fabrics. Immediately, my sense of smell is inundated with the scent of plant life. This area is situated amongst one of the world’s largest diversity of native plant species.

Although the rooms have the relevant needs including a wood-burning fireplace essential for the very cold evenings, there is little time to relax and enjoy. Since it was already late afternoon, I take the on-site hotel guided orchid walk and see some of the still budding 372 different native species including one new orchid specie. “In all probability it is also the world’s largest orchid species collection set in a natural environment in a private facility”, I quote from the American Orchid Society Magazine.

Humming birds, Highland Motmot long tail birds, two caged indigenous Spectacle bears, 400 fern species, herb plants with a cure for everything from blood pressure and varicose veins to antiseptics and impotency, 2000 tea plants and the sacred rock Petroglyph from pre-Inca period, are also included on the hotel’s site.

The Lost City of the Incas, Machu Picchu, Peru

And finally, the day we have all been waiting for: seeing Machu Picchu, the lost city of the Incas from the 1400s. The Incas were a civilization with no written records but a heritage of greatness, Machu Picchu, a legacy of the Inca Empire.

Within a 30-minute ride our bus is at the entrance and the citadel of Machu Picchu. Rediscovered in 1911 by Hiram Bingham (a Yale University archeologist), this enigmatic ancient site means “old peak”. This “sacred place’ is located on the eastern slopes of the Vilcanota mountain range and is 2,350 metres above sea level, high in the Andes Mountains.

On first sighting of the Inca citadel, with dramatic, rugged mountains, some snow capped with mist raising from the Urubamba River 2000 metres below; is a startling sight, no matter how much one has read about Machu Picchu. The huge perfectly arranged terraces, which were for agricultural purposes, seem so modern. On these 32,592 hectares of land there are150 roofless houses and temples. Originally, there was a community of approximately 800 inhabitants. They were self-contained and with their knowledge of agriculture, they fed the entire population.

The cloud shrouded ruins have many granite rocks weighing 50 tons, which have been perfectly fitted together where even a knife blade can’t be inserted. Most are finely sculpted, rounded and tightly fitted masonry, which, unbelievably, is earthquake proof. The entire area is connected by alleys, a multitude of stairways and narrow watercourses. (My serious recommendation is to prepare for this trip by exercising for a few months). The question, never adequately answered, is how these gigantic, mortar-less rocks were carved, carried, placed so close together that it’s impossible to squeeze even a knife blade between them and also have managed to remain stable all these years. No two answers are the same. The primary function of the site is also open to speculation. Was it an astronomical observatory and/or a site for training brides or priestesses?

The perfect example of mathematics and artistry is at the Sacred Plaza and the Temple of Three Windows with huge perfected shaped rock walls and trapezoidal shaped windows. From Huayna Picchu you can see the valley of the mountains and slopes, which were invisible from below. The Gate of the Sun., Royal family suite where the rocks are smoother and finer than the others, the High Priestess’ two-story rooms, Choir Room (with perfect acoustics), Sun Rock and Cardinal Rock, and the mysterious carved Condor, are only some of the important stops on this mountain top sanctuary.

It may be a pun, but it was a downer to leave Machu Picchu. However, awaiting us at the Machu Picchu Pueblo Hotel was a pre-arranged massage at UNU Spa (means water in Quechua language). Sergio’s technique of combining shiatsu, reflexology and using 100% natural based botanical extract oil, proved to be the perfect ending to the Peruvian experience.

Story and Photos courtesy of our friend and fellow traveller, Barbara Kingstone.

IF YOU GO:

Country Club Lima Hotel
Los Eucaliptos 590, San Isidro, Lima
611 9000

Reserva Amazonica
Rio Madre de Dios Km 15,
Tambopata
082-572283

Machu Picchu Pueblo Hotel
Km 110 Linea Ferrea
Aguas Calientes, Cusco
084 211122

Restaurant Huaca Pucllana
General Borgono Cdra.8
445 4042
Hiram Bingham Train

Approx. $450 round trip from Cusco
Entrance to Machu Picchu was US$20 and guides were available for US$15 per hour

I had flown with Lanchile Air, which leaves from Toronto and New York’s JFK Airport


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