A friend of mine and myself are in the early planning phase when it comes to a trip to Peru and Bolivia. I have bought the Lonely Planet Guide for Peru and I have started reading and Peru looks like fun I guess we will start out in La Paz (visiting family) and then the route might be something like Lake Titicaca, Cuzco, Machu Picchu, Nazca, Arequipa...does this sound doable in 2 weeks? Is September a good time to go? I would love to see trip reports from others, advise on places that are worth visiting and place that I can avoid etc. I'm not really a backpacker so I'm also wondering on how lost I will be there :-) Thanks in advance for any tips.
Premium account Joined: Jun 02 Points: 12835 Posts: 215
Posted: 2005-09-29 01:57:00  
Hi Gard,
What you propose is probabley "doable" - just... the main concern is that you don't have the iteinary too tight that you miss ongoing connections. When we travelled a similar route but in reverse we were blockaded in La Paz & nearly missed our flight out to Brazil and we were literally stuck in Puno(Lake Titicaca) for an extra couple of days because they blockaded the roads.
I think you need to allow at least 3 or 4 nights (more if poss) in Cuzco because there are so many other fabulous ruins to see and at least 2 nights in Aguas Calientes to have a full day up in Machu Picchu. I didn't make it to Arequipa or Nazca so I can't comment on that section of the journey.
I am not a backpacker neither, that is I carry a backpack but I stay in decent hotels and there are plenty of these at a reasonable price. If you need recommendations I am happy to help out with where we stayed. I am sure there are loads of travel tips on globo as well.
I was there in March so I am not sure of the weather in September, chilly I would imagine.
Good luck,
Kerrie
<p>[ This Message was edited by: downundergal on 2005-09-29 01:57 ]
[ This Message was edited by: downundergal on 2005-09-29 01:58 ]
Premium account Joined: Aug 04 Points: 34825 Posts: 171
Posted: 2005-09-30 21:53:00  
Gard,
I concur with Kerrie, it is possible to achieve all of that in two weeks, however I would just be careful not to crame too much in, without having sufficent time to see all the sites which was what happened to me last year. Another concern would be allowing a couple of days in the beginning of your journey to acclimatise. Davidx will be back shortly so he might be able to give you a few tips.
I wrote a couple of reports not sure whether they will be of any use but check them out:
Premium account Joined: Aug 04 Points: 34825 Posts: 171
Posted: 2005-09-30 21:58:00  
PS, I stayed in Casa Andina in Cusco and Puno and was pleasantly surprised; the rooms were nice and clean, and they were renovated last year. A very reasonable 3* hotel with great service; not sure whether its listed in the Lonley planet, but I'm quite fussy and I was impressed.
Premium account Joined: Aug 03 Points: 12905 Posts: 153
Posted: 2005-10-02 00:08:00  
Hi, I really enjoyed hiking the Inka Trail - it was a spectacular experience, in large part because you see so many ruins along the way. That said, it required two days to acclimatize in Cusco, four days to reach Machu Picchu and we spent an extra day, taking the 4pm train back, so that we could explore the ruins fully. I agree with Kerrie - don't limit Machu Picchu to one day up and back on the train. We were able to go up to the ruins at 6am and be there almost alone. The experience was incredible. I do admit to paying for a porter to carry my gear on the trail - it's cheap ($40) and well worth it. We went in July - the middle of winter - and were fine weahter wise. I posted a slide album of the four days on the trail.
There are a number of Sacred Valley tours available from Cusco that take in Pisac, Ollentaytambo and Chinchero, along with every open air market in between. I think we paid $30 for the full day tour and it was well worth it.
We went on to Puerto Maldonado (near the Bolivian border) and up the Madre de Dios River to stay a week on an Ecological Reserve. I highly recommend that experience too.
Eire
--- Life is not measured by the breaths you take but by the moments that take your breath away.