From Brazil to Peru |
Stickering the Brazil-Peru border |
Border money changers |
Cow tuk-tuk in Peru |
Our destination was Puerto Maldonado, Peru’s gateway to the Amazon jungle. The lashing rain we’d had for the past few weeks had hit Peru too and we arrived in the city to find much of it underwater and we realised that this was NOT a normal rainy season.
We arrived in Puerto Maldonado to find much of it underwater! |
Amphibious tuk-tuk |
All off on the jungle bus to explore Puerto Maldonado |
Tee makes friends at the zoo |
Donna |
Odyssey's fearless crew - Emma & Si |
Hannah doing a snake photoshoot |
Maddie |
Ellie finds her new pet - the Kinkajou (not pikachu) |
Beautiful Ocelot |
Sometimes the wildlife visits the town too - crowds "help" to extract a very nervous monkey from the phone wires in town |
Local ducks laugh in the face of the flooding (and our very stuck Ithaca) |
Extracting Ithaca |
Our lovely hosts in Puerto Maldonado |
We were back on the Trans-Oceanic Highway, the Peruvian side was quite a feat of road construction and in excellent condition going from marshy jungle through unfeasibly steep passes to the soft sandy deserts beyond. This was brought home to us when we saw the landslides that had washed out big parts of the road, but of course being Peru they didn’t see any need to close it, which is a good thing really or we’d probably still be in Puerto Maldonado!
Open for business... |
Change in scenery |
Llama farmers |
Life at altitude |
A loo stop turns into dressing up with the locals |
High! |
Llamas (or possibly alpacas) |
Cusco - the Naval of the World... |
Pachacutec, Incan King who conquered vast swathes of South America to create the Inca Empire |
Cuy (guinea pig) in Cusco |
Hannah, AJ and Joanna at the Chocolate Museum |
The shopping begins |
Gringos in Cusco |
Danielle can't resist the baby animals |
Paddy's - the highest Irish Pub in the world |
Cusco market |
Fusion food |
Maddie and Johnny quad biking in the Sacred Valley |
Johnny |
Ellie & Hannah make the most of being in the continent where chocolate came from, breakfast cake |
Sacred Valley |
Lou at Pisac |
Pisac |
Ollantaytambo |
Triona marvels at the Inca stonework |
Ollantaytambo - the face in the stone |
Ken |
Group in Chinchero |
Shopping in Chinchero |
Maddie went shopping |
With our purchases back at the hotel in Cusco |
Poncho time |
Leaving Cusco |
Green and pleasant |
...over winding steep road...
A "toddler let loose with a crayon" road |
Crossing the high plains in the snow |
AJ gets comfy |
Then we finally started dropping and the change in scenery was probably the most
dramatic yet. From damp, cold and green up in the hills to this...
We were heading to the sand dunes of Huacachina but en route we stopped to get a sneak preview of something we would get to experience as we headed back South in a couple of months: The Nazca Lines. They are a series of drawings and geometric shapes out in the desert made by no one knows who and for no conceivable purpose as the people would have had no way of seeing them. We stopped at a view tower to see a tiny corner of them and many people decided they’d love to get a better view on the way back down by plane, they are amazing, mysterious and beautiful things.
Then to Huacachina, a little rough and tumble oasis in the sand famous on the gringo trail
for its sandboarding and sand buggies. We were heading to spend the night out in the vast
dunes but not before the mad Peruvian buggy drivers took us out a breakneck speed
across the slopes, eliciting more than a few screams from most of the group. By the time
we stopped we were giggling like idiots but there was no time to rest as we were all
handed a snowboard and told to throw ourselves headfirst down the dunes. We did, it was
brilliant!
Then the drivers put together a wonderful BBQ for us out on the sand gave us free access
to the 5 gallon tub of pisco sour (Peru’s local drink) and a great night was had by all before
falling asleep under the stars on the soft warm sand.
After a brief roller coaster ride back down on the buggies with the surreal sight of a pack of
dogs chasing the buggies across the sand we set off towards Peru’s modern capital Lima.
It was a big birthday for Kelly, and Tee and Le had managed to find wonderful chocolate
cakes so we stopped at the exotic location of a fuel station in the outskirts of Lima to eat
cake and wish Kelly a happy birthday. Also it was to be the last time the whole group were
together as Ken had decided to fulfill his life dream and head off to go on a boat on the
Amazon.
Then on to Lima, built by the Spanish as their main port during Colonial times it lacks the
history of Cusco, not helped by the constant earthquakes that don’t allow any buildings to
get all that old. Lima is often derided by people as not being as interesting as the rest of
Peru, however Lima is still a South American city, and by default that makes it a fun place
to visit by any standard! Some of the group headed off to The San Francisco Monastery
one of the few old buildings left, and their remarkable catacombs stuffed with human
bones. On the other end of the scale some headed to the fountain park to see the
remarkably tacky but ridiculously amazing water, light and music show. Lima won many
people over.
We were heading to the sand dunes of Huacachina but en route we stopped to get a sneak preview of something we would get to experience as we headed back South in a couple of months: The Nazca Lines. They are a series of drawings and geometric shapes out in the desert made by no one knows who and for no conceivable purpose as the people would have had no way of seeing them. We stopped at a view tower to see a tiny corner of them and many people decided they’d love to get a better view on the way back down by plane, they are amazing, mysterious and beautiful things.
A sneak peak at our journey south in Nazca |
Extreme selfie |
Team Sandboarding - shortly before AJ on the right slid down the side of the sand dune! |
Triona & Kelly |
Sandboarding |
Ellie takes the plunge |
Buggy |
Glenn shows us how it's done |
Hardcore Extreme Sports Team |
Sunset on the dunes |
Wayne shoots another timelapse |
Pisco in the sand |
Waking up on the dunes |
Le organises Kelly's amazing birthday cake enroute to Lima |
Leaving Lima we said goodbye to Ken and a last minute addition of Steve who would
rejoin us in Colombia.
Then headed North!
We travelled through kilometres of desert with hot, dusty little towns.
Before camping up near the town of Casma in the desert hills for out first campfire dinner
in a long time (it’s been too hot for a fire since Northern Argentina!)
In the morning we popped down the road to visit the Sechin ruins, recently discovered they
tell the story of a race of warriors who lived in the area 3000 years ago. We visited their
temple which was decorated with pictures of brutal killings and body parts to frighten their
enemies, our guide delighted in telling us about all the disembodied heads and limbs.
Then heading North again we finally reached the Pacific! From Rio back in January we
had crossed from one ocean to another.
We stopped at a little beach camp near the town of Pimentel, a cross between a festival
and a hippy commune, it was a lovely little place, helped by the welcome sushi its kind
owners made for us!
Then North again following the mighty Pacific along stopping in Lambayeque for a visit to
the fantastic Royal Tombs of Sipan museum, a collection of artifacts found in the area from
pre-inca peoples) or for a trip to the brilliant market to stock up on food for the evening.
Our stop for the night was Mancora, the beach resort town and surfers paradise. We would
be visiting this area again in more depth on our way South, we were pushing North to get
to the Caribbean in time for Carnival so were moving pretty rapidly, but we did get the
chance to check out the beach and the famous Mancora nightlife.
The next day we left Peru behind for a little while and headed to our next destination:
Ecuador! Another border another massive change in scenery, from deserts and sand to...
well, bananas, millions of them.
A sad goodbye to Ken |
We travelled through kilometres of desert with hot, dusty little towns.
Desert driving |
Hannah |
Desert towns |
Bushcamp near Casma |
Frisbee at bushcamp |
Johnny and Maddie use their machetes to crack Brazil nuts, a little piece of the jungle in the desert |
At Sechin ruins |
Body buried in the foetal position at Sechin Ruins |
Bloodthirsty Sechin drawings |
Head totem |
We reach the Pacific! |
Beach camp |
The brilliant Royal Tombs of Sipan museum |
Mancora fishermen |
Mancora sunset |
Sunrise at Mancora camp |
Ecuador produces more bananas than anywhere in the world, if you’re eating a banana
while you read this chances are it’s from Ecuador! They are all different shapes and sizes,
it’s banana heaven!
But it soon changed as we headed back up in to the Andes (it’s all highs and lows this overlanding lark!) for a night in the town of Riobamba after a very slow winding drive through the hills and another late night arrival (well, another dark arrival, but this close to the equator we are always fighting 6pm sunsets!)
The next day we passed a big milestone, a first for most of the group, we crossed the Equator!
We celebrated our crossing in to the Northern Hemisphere with a cheeky beer on the truck
and pushed on through to Otovalo.
Much like Cusco, Otovalo is a cradle of indigenous culture, it is famous for its markets and we managed to time our arrival with the biggest and best Saturday markets. Our camp was just outside town in the little village of Peguche, set up and hand built by a Dutch lady and her Ecuadorian husband it’s a little haven of peace and perfect corners for secluded camping. We were the first group of foreigners to stay and everyone loved it, especially its pizza oven, which cook group, led by Wayne and Danielle made full use of, repeating their fantastic Ushuaia pizzas by popular request. We also raised a glass of bubbly to the Odyssey owners Pete and Kirsten the night before their wedding day over in South Africa.
The next day was market day and time to spend some more dollars on lovely things from
hammocks to ponchos to jumpers to fabrics with stops to try the wonderful Ecuadorian
food on the way.
That evening we had a group meal at the camp’s lovely restaurant of traditional foods while the village children danced and sung for us, it was a great evening thoroughly enjoyed by all!
But it soon changed as we headed back up in to the Andes (it’s all highs and lows this overlanding lark!) for a night in the town of Riobamba after a very slow winding drive through the hills and another late night arrival (well, another dark arrival, but this close to the equator we are always fighting 6pm sunsets!)
The next day we passed a big milestone, a first for most of the group, we crossed the Equator!
Ecuador equator |
Much like Cusco, Otovalo is a cradle of indigenous culture, it is famous for its markets and we managed to time our arrival with the biggest and best Saturday markets. Our camp was just outside town in the little village of Peguche, set up and hand built by a Dutch lady and her Ecuadorian husband it’s a little haven of peace and perfect corners for secluded camping. We were the first group of foreigners to stay and everyone loved it, especially its pizza oven, which cook group, led by Wayne and Danielle made full use of, repeating their fantastic Ushuaia pizzas by popular request. We also raised a glass of bubbly to the Odyssey owners Pete and Kirsten the night before their wedding day over in South Africa.
Beautiful camp |
A wedding toast to Pete & Kirsten |
Otovalo pizzas in the pizza oven |
Otovalo markets |
Banana split with cheese |
Preparing the pork... |
Whittling, building a new cricket set to replace the one that fell apart in a dog-based incident back in Argentina |
That evening we had a group meal at the camp’s lovely restaurant of traditional foods while the village children danced and sung for us, it was a great evening thoroughly enjoyed by all!
Dinner at our campsite |
Hot spiced Otovalo mulled goodness |
It was a flying visit to Ecuador that gave us a taste of what we would see on the way
South, but we were all thoroughly smitten with the Andean people, their food, their
handicrafts, their kindness and culture and all very much looking forward to coming back
after our next destination: Colourful Colombia!
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