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27 May 2009

Inca Trail Guide Francis Casapino

Daniel and I went to Peru to hike the Inca Trail and to see Machu Picchu in May. We booked our trip through REI Adventures and the guide (from Trek Peru), Francis Casapino was great! He was knowledgeable about both the physical nature of our trek and the cultural history of Peruvians making our vacation fun and informative. There is no better guide. None.


On our third day, we met Francis. During our first meeting, while sipping on coca tea, he asked us how we were acclimating and how we would feel about a mini hike around Sacsaywaman and down an Inca Trail through the Cusco. Since the group was feeling pretty good, he advised that we continue to minimize alcohol consumption and eating heavy foods until after our hike to Machu Picchu to avoid stomach problems. His advice was very effective; all of us enjoyed a smooth hike through the Andes to Machu Picchu.

On our fourth day, Francis took us to a local market, on an off-road ride through the countryside and through a small town called Maras on our way to the salt pans. In Maras, Francis told us that the plastic bags on a stick outside some homes meant that the household has prepared corn beer and is available for purchase. He spoke to the woman of the house, Juana, and we were able to take a rare tour of their courtyard home.


The grandmother was eager to show off her cow and goats grazing in the tiny courtyard. The grandfather waved me into their kitchen that had guinea pigs scuttling around on the dirt floor. This was an extremely unexpected treat to see a functioning Peruvian Andes home.
On the fifth day, we began our 4 day hike on the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu. Francis offered anthropological insights about Inca life based on the landscape we were walking through. He led us off the main trail so that we could visit additional ruins. We were free to explore the trail on our own and at our own paces while Francis ran up and down the passes to let the teams ahead know which fork to take and down to the last teams to make sure they were doing ok.

It was sad to leave Francis. He was entertaining, knowledgable and exciting and I'm sure, made the trip 500 times better than it would have been with any other guide.

14 May 2009

Target's Bullseye in Machu Picchu Peru

I brought my little Bullseye dog with me to Machu Picchu. Here is the view of Machu Picchu from the top of Wayna Picchu.




We rushed to the line at the bottom of Wayna Picchu at 5:30 am in the morning for tickets. They only let the first 200 people onto the mountain. We were numbers 152 and 153. We waited until about 8:00 am before they let us start climbing. I was a little apprehensive about the climb because we had been climbing for the past four days and this was the most vertical climb of the whole trip. It was completely worth the 1,000 ft ascent!!

We climbed up the sunny side of the peak in the photo below. It's hard to believe that the Incas put winding stairs all the way up!