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10 Through 8 and Honorable Mentions
5. Spend the Night on a Man Made Island in Lake Titicaca
Lake Titicaca is the world’s highest navigable lake, straddling the border of Peru and Bolivia. It’s a huge, beautiful, blue placid surface dotted with tiny islands that have been inhabited for centuries.
Lake Titicaca is at an even higher elevation than Cuzco, so take adequate precautions.
Lake Titicaca is ringed by incredibly unimpressive towns–Juliaca and Puno, Peru and Copacabana, Bolivia. They should be avoided at all costs as they have nothing interesting and are more dangerous than other cities in the region. It should only take a few minutes in either of the Peruvian cities to book a tour of the lake.
The Peruvian tour of the lake will usually hit three main areas: islas Uros, Amantaní, and Taquile. The most impressive are the man made islands of the Uros.
The Uros islands are made out of the lake’s tall reeds. They are constantly rotting away and need to be replenished by their inhabitants’ work. The inhabitants make everything from the tortora reed–their islands, their houses, and their boats. Their ancestors have lived on the islands for centuries, supposedly to get away from bellicose mainlanders.
If you’re persistent, you can find a tour operator who can get you a night on one of the islands. There will be nothing to do but watch the stars and talk to some of the most cut-off people in the world. Their only contact with the outside world is with the daily tourists and maybe a weekly trip to the small city of Puno. The family I was staying with only knew one thing about America, that it contained Utah. (The islands feature Mormon and Seventh Day Adventist churhces dueling for souls.)
Amantaní is an interesting island with old religious ruins at the top of a hill with the best view of the lake. The tours usually include a night on the island, staying with a family, and a dance where they let you put on some interesting local dress. Most tours end with a day on Taquile to buy the local handicrafts.
The lake is too cold to swim in, the islands are all trying to become tourist traps, and yet the charm is unmistakable. The blue waters on a cool day at 2.5 miles above sea level are one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever seen. The people are some of the least corrupted I’ve met. And sitting on a man made island watching the starry sky is one of my favorite experiences in Peru.
Getting there: 4,500 Avios and a few dollars tax each way on LAN from Lima-JUL airport which is an hour from Puno, the main gateway to the lake
Hotels: hahahahahaha, you’ll be sleeping on a bowed mattress inside of a reed hut
Time needed to visit: 3 days
4. Hike into Colca Canyon
Cañon de Colca is marketed as the deepest canyon in the world, twice as deep as the Grand Canyon, and who am I to dispute it. I love everything about the canyon except the wake up call. The canyon is only 100 miles from Arequipa but that equates to a four hour bus ride, with most buses leaving Arequipa before 4 AM. That’s why in every picture I look like I’m asleep.
Once there, trips usually start at Cruz del Condor, a lookout where Andean condors float effortlessly above thermal drafts.
From there, I think it’s best to make it to Cabanaconde, from where you can easily hike to the bottom of the canyon. At the bottom, you’ll find three cheap hostels next to each other. (Bed $3, liter of beer $3, liter and a half of water $3, dinner $3).
If possible hike through the small agglomerations of people that just got power in the last decade or two. The whole area was only connected to a road in the 80s, so the people are not living too much differently than they always have.
The canyon is a good place to relax, read, write, and reflect. The vistas at the top are incredible, and the way of life on the bottom is amazing. Just plan at least double the time to get back up as it took to get down.
One food tip: when you get to the Colca area, and your bus is boarded to sell you the mandatory $25 tourist ticket, some ladies may get on selling vicuña empanadas. Buy them! You will be buying a fried pastry filled with potatoes and vicuña meat, the wild cousin of the llama.
Getting there: a few hours by private or tour bus from Arequipa
Hotels: the lodging is not particularly comfortable on the canyon floor, but it’s a place I want to return to for a third time
Time needed to visit: 2+ days, “+” recommended
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What’s the most practical way to pay for things down there? Did you carry USD or Peruvian currency? And what’s a good amount to take where it’ll be enough to cover the few days of expenses but not enough to worry about getting robbed while sleeping? I imagine there’s no ATMs down there 🙂
There are ATMs in almost all the places mentioned, check a guidebook for specifics. I carry USD to convert because like most (all?) poor countries, there are tons of moneychangers offering rates with tiny sub 1% spreads. Whether to carry cash or ATM cards is really a matter of preference and your comfort level carrying a lot of cash.
Ok thanks. If there are ATMs then it’s not a big problem.
Glad to see I made the posts 🙂
you’re lucky the pictures not the stories made the posts. we were so young. my hair hasn’t been that long in years.
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