Monthly Archives: August 2007

The Pisac Ruins

July 25, 2007
Day 665

Picture of people.

Tina, me, Q, and Helen in front of an Inca tunnel.

Zach, Tina, Q, Helen and I all piled into a taxi before sunrise this morning and went to the Pisac ruins, far above the town. Nobody was there yet, including anyone checking for tickets. It was great walking around the ruins as the sun came up and not having to waste the little precious energy I had on walking from town. The houses, terraces, and urinals seemed incredibly well-preserved, but when I followed a flowing stream of water back to its source, I found a rubber hose. I don't think I was supposed to see that. My favorite part of the ruins was the door with the dish next to it for leaving your keys and cell phone when you came home. Those Incas were great future thinkers.

The photo album for this entry is here.

Holistic Healers With Money

July 24, 2007
Day 664

There is one more set of ruins near Ollantaytambo called Pumamarca, and you don't even need the tourism ticket to see it because it's not on the radar of the big tour groups yet. I went there this morning, but there was a problem: I barely had the energy to make it there, despite it being only a short walk from town. As I tried to catch my breath while looking at the ancient terracing, I realized there was no way I could do a long trek in my current condition. I think I still had giardia, the nemesis of my entire trip. You get it by drinking contaminated water, which is practically impossible to avoid sometimes in the Third World. You can kill it with antibiotics, but if you don't eradicate it 100%, eventually it will gain strength and take over your body once again. I think that's what has happened with me. I simply would have to wait a few more days to recuperate before attempting the Choquequirao trek.

After returning from Pumamarca, I took a bus across the Sacred Valley to Pisac. On the bus I met an interesting group. Zach from Afghanistan, Helen from the Dominican Republic, and Q from Barcelona were all living in New York and on summer break from teaching at the UN school there. Q's sister Tina was working in Lima, and the four of them were traveling around Peru together. They told me there was a conference for the native population this afternoon, so I decided to tag along.

The conference was at the Royal Inca Hotel, the nicest hotel in town. I thought it was going to be about preserving the local native culture, but something seemed amiss when the first presenter to speak was a fat white American woman. She started talking about contributions that have helped build schools where kids were taught Spanish to go along with their native Quechua. That sounded fine, but then she mentioned that the kids were being taught how to heal with musical instruments, and soon they would make fine "doctors of sound."

Next, another white man came out and started playing a conch shell while the woman went around the room shaking a pile of dried leaves in everyone's faces. Exactly which disease was this supposed to cure? Between songs they talked about how the world was coming to an end and women shouldn't cross their legs because they are the key to new life. A lot of the presentation was of a strange, no-so-subtle sexual nature. Whenever I looked around the room, I saw a bunch of rich-looking white people dressed in nice clean clothes nodding in approval. The few local people in the audience were dressed in the jeans and t-shirts that they normally wear and had confused expressions on their faces.

There were a few Indians presenting, but they were of North American ancestry. One guy played a tambourine and started humming a tune that sounded authentic until we realized it was "The Itsy Bitsy Spider." The audience soon caught on and sang right along. Then a boy started singing a song about Mickey Mouse and Donald duck being stars in Disneyland. The bizarre performances continued for three hours.

After the conference, as we were walking out, the audience members started talking amongst themselves about how amazing it was. Someone told me that these people all paid big money for this retreat from the US to get back to their native roots. That sounds fine on the surface, but I saw nothing having to do with the local Quechua culture at the conference. We were all invited to a bonfire afterward, but the UN teachers, who were as baffled by it all as I was, decided they had seen enough.

Later at night in the center of town, we ran into the white guy who was dressed as an Indian and played a mad conch shell. He was standing in the threshold of his holistic healing shop talking to a few of the conference's participants. The light from the shop was glowing on his face like someone telling a scary story with a flashlight under his chin. His eyes were wide, his pupils dilated, and he wore an impish grin across his face. "Come on in, the water's warm," he said as we walked past. Uh, no thanks, maybe I'll join your cult some other time.

Ripping Off the Tourists

July 23, 2007
Day 663

Picture of fortress.

The fortress outside of Ollantaytambo.

I decided on a change of venue for a few days. Last time I was in the area, I briefly went to the Sacred Valley of the Incas on my way to the Inca Trail, but I wanted to see it more thoroughly this time around. I took a bus to Ollantaytambo, a small town with hundreds of hour groups visiting every day. It was more laid-back than Cusco, but so small that I had already seen it all shortly after arriving.

For me, the main attraction in Ollantaytambo was the Inca fortress just outside of town. I walked to the entrance, but learned that I would have to buy a tourism ticket, at a cost of $22, just to enter. Ah yes, I remember the good old tourism ticket. The government claims that you only have to buy one ticket to see all the attractions around Cusco, but then you learn that if you want to visit any of the best museums, churches, or ruins in the area, they're not even included in the ticket. What is included in the ticket? A couple museums the size of living rooms, one or two churches that you can enter for free anyway, and some of the crappier ruins, most of which don't even have anyone checking for tickets at the entrance. It's a big rip off. I bought the stupid ticket last time and was hugely disappointed. This time I decided to give it a miss and took a few pictures of the fortress from afar.

The photo album for this entry is here.

An Olinda Reunion

July 21-22, 2007
Day 661-662

Today I met up with Katie, a French girl I originally met through Couchsurfing back in Olinda, Brazil. She was traveling around with several of her fellow countrymen and happened to be passing through Cusco at the same time I was there. We got caught up and all of us went out for some laughs in Cusco's thriving, if freezing, nightlife.

I still haven't gotten any takers from my trekking offer. It's really frustrating because I spent two full days planning the entire trek, but I can't find anyone to go with me. On top of that, I've been sick lately, first with a head cold, then likely another bout with my old friend giardia. I've barely been able to eat anything the last few days, and tonight when I finally tried to force down some food, I had to excuse myself from the Frenchmen to empty the contents of my stomach and bowels. I've decided to take a short trip into the Sacred Valley while I'm recovering, then if I still don't have anyone to go with, I'll do the trek on my own.

A School Parade

July 20, 2007
Day 660

Picture of soldiers.

Young soldiers getting ready to march.

This time of year is graduation in Peru, and today there was a large parade in the central plaza of Cusco to celebrate it. The director of the private schools in town began the proceedings with some announcements, and then the kids began marching. Their uniforms were either military style or more traditional, and a band constantly played while they marched. The parade drew a large crowd of gringos, parents, vendors, and bored siblings. It was great to watch.

The photo album for this entry is here.

Trek Preparations

July 18-19, 2007
Day 658-659

I saw an article about Choquequirao a few weeks ago and decided it was somewhere I wanted to go. The ancient Inca site has been known about for a long time, but archaeologists have only recently discovered how important it really was. In fact, people are now calling it a sister city of Machu Picchu. Only a small amount of it has been excavated, there's no road or rail line to the site, and only a few thousand tourists go there each year, so it still has an adventuresome feel to it, and I'd love to see it before it's discovered by the mainstream tourists. The problem was how to get there.

I did a lot of searching and found a decent topographical map of the area in a bookstore. I talked to a guy at my hostel named Jose who has been to Choquequirao as a cook, and he figured that most people walk there from the nearest town for two days, stay for a day, then walk back on the same path. That sounded a bit boring to me, but I soon discovered that it is possible to continue walking all the way to Machu Picchu.

Jose gave me a lot more info about the region, and now I definitely want to do the longer trek. I've already been to Machu Picchu, but it's been a year and three quarters, so I figure it's worth another look as long as I'm already in the area. The only major task remaining was to find some people to go with me. I printed up a dozen notices inviting anyone interested and put them up on message boards and in bars around the city. The waiting game has begun.