KNOCK KNOCK KNOCK, “It’s 5am!” Bloody hell, am I ever going to get some sleep? We get out of bed and head to the dining area for some free breakfast. Bread, jelly, and tea. Nothing like a hearty breakfast before a long day of hiking in high altitudes. I had a piece of bread, a banana, and some water.
I grabbed my bag, and we walked down to the bus station to catch a ride to the top of a mountain where machu pichu is. That’s when we realize the price is listed in dollars, not soles. Back to the ATM. Got cash. Back to the bus station, bought our tickets, and got onto the bus. The bus ride to the top took about 15 minutes and was a winding, back and forth road (like that really curvy one in San Francisco), except up a freaking mountain with shear drops straight down with no railings. Some of the older people on the bus were a little worried as to how close to the edge the bus got.
At the top was a really nice, modern, lounge / cafe / thing. Wasn’t really expecting that. I guess they’re trying to cater to all the elderly / rich people that come here, and there’s a lot. I would say it’s about 70% over 40, and half of that is easily over 60.
I got my entrance ticket stamped and went through the turn styles to get into Machu Picu. Kinda reminded me of the turn styles used in Rome to get into the colosseum. Just weird to use them as gateway to some 2000+ year old outdoor area.
Anyway, describing what I saw is a little to difficult, so I’ll have to refer you to the photos for the majority of Machu Pichu.
There was one apparent rule, don’t cross into the roped areas. There was another, not so apparent, rule. Don’t climb on some stuff. I say some, because some things you have to to get to other places (ie higher terraces). But there are others, small walls that you’re not. Guess how I found this one out =)
I was trying to get the perfect photo of Machu Pichu, and it required me to stand up on a wall thing. I took stairs to get to it, so I didn’t think anything of it. Well, this bothered some little Peruvian guy that worked there. From about 50 yards away, this guy starts blowing a whistle, yelling something in Spanish, and running tops speed towards me while waving his arms in the air. My spanish isn’t so hot, but I was pretty sure that he was upset that I was on something I wasn’t supposed to be. I jumped down (after I took the photo of course) and apologized. He didn’t understand english. He kept yelling at me in Spanish, and I tried to look concerned. It was pretty hard not to laugh, but I did my best because I didn’t want to get kicked out yet for something this lame. I think I wasn’t supposed to be standing on it because there was a 10-15 foot drop on the one side. Still didn’t make too much sense, because the path from there has a sheer drop off the side of a mountain about 1000+ feet. Ah well… on with the tour.
More walking, more ruins, and a couple llamas here and there. The path came up to the entrance to Wynapichu (the big mountain in the background of all the Machu Pichu photos. I told Nicole that I would meet her back at the entrance when I was done. The sign said that it was about an hour hike. Nicole knew she wouldn’t make it, so she went off to check out the rest of the place and take some photos of the llamas. There was a baby llama, so I knew she’d be entertained for a while.
I entered the gate and had to sign in, I was number 64 for the day. I tucked my sweater into my bag, hooked up my ipod, selected some High on Fire, and jumped into the jungle.

I had no idea what I was in for. This hike was up the mountain on the original Incan stones used as stairs. In the beginning it wasn’t so bad. A couple wobbly steps and a dirt path. That ended pretty quick. Pretty much the entire way up, it was climbing on pieces of rock the jutted out from the mountain about 2 and a half feet and curved back and forth all the way up. It was a pretty simple design. Mountain face on one side to lean against, and absolutely nothing (except drop to the bottom of the mountain) on the other. So as long as you move upward and don’t lean the wrong way, slip, slide, loose balance, or something of that nature, you’re fine. Sometimes, the route got a little tricky and the stairs were either missing, only 6 inches or so wide, or covered in mud. Sometimes when that was the case, there were steel cables bolted to the side of the rock to hold onto for extra support. I took some photos of various places on the path to show a good example of what I was climbing.




I also took some photos of the amazing views that I saw as I ascended. It brought back memories of the wild cave tour I did in Mammoth Caves. It was really difficult (but fun), and because I took the hard route, I got to see some spectacular things that most humans will never see. That’s the kind of stuff that I find exciting.



I tried to scale the thing in one shot, but after about a half hour of the craziest stairmaster exercise ever, I needed a break. Also, the high altitudes with the lack of oxygen thing didn’t help either. A couple minutes of panting and sitting on the edge of a cliff, I continued on. I stayed focus on the ground for pretty much the entire trip up (didn’t want to take a bad step), but every once in a while, I’d look up to see how much I had left. I never saw the top. The foliage always blocked the view. At about 45 minutes of climbing, I came to an area that was all built out by the Incans. There were terraces, walls, and a couple building structures. It was amazing. All I could think of was, “Who the hell would want to live way up here?” and “How’d they get all the stones up here?” Each brick had to of weighed 60+ pounds, and there were thousands of them. Not a job I would volunteer for.

There was one area where there was a large stone jutting out over the edge. Seemed like a great photo-op. I asked a fellow hiker to take my picture and handed him my camera. I went out on the ledge, turned around, and squatted down. The guy went to take the photo, then asked if I wanted Machu Pichu in the background or the mountains. When I turned around to look, I lost my balance a little and almost went over the edge. I secured myself and told him that I really don’t care and to just hurry up. Click!

Now that I had some good adrenaline pumping through my body, I proceeded on with the hike. I figured I had to be near the top. The stairs were normal stairs again (well, respectively anyway), and I wasn’t on the edge of a cliff the whole time, so it was a little easier. Then I turned a corner and couldn’t believe where the path went. Into the mountain! There was a little cave to go through! And "little" is being generous. The entrance wasn’t too bad, I could squat / waddle through, and it was only about 30 feet deep. The exit on the other hand was a different story. I packed my camera and everything else on my into my bag and reached up the exit hole to put it outside. Then I laid on the ground / wall and slowly inched my way out, pushing with my left arm and trying to balance with my right. My legs were mainly for support as there wasn’t really any room to bend them. About a minute of squirming around, I popped out the other side. I thought that this is something that maybe they should tell people about before the set off on the hike. How pissed would you be if you get almost all the way to the top and then there’s a cave you either can’t fit through, or physically unable to get through. I enjoyed it, but on the way down I warned those that I thought needed it (fat people, elderly, and the couple that were wearing designer clothing… wtf?).
Once out of the cave, there were only a few stairs left to the top (100+ ish). Once the stairs ran out, there was just a wooden ladder that took you to the peak of the large pointed boulder that sat at the summit. It didn’t look so sturdy, but I wasn’t about to turn around this close. You’re reading this, so you know it held up. When I got on top of the rock, I just sat and stared off into the mountains. The view was breathtaking, and I was so excited to have made it. It was way more difficult than I ever imagined. Right before I left to start my descent, I asked a guy that was up there as well to snap a photo. This is my favorite photo, and I didn’t even take it.

The way down was actually more difficult than the way up. Not in the energy / endurance way, but in the balancing without falling of the edge of a cliff way. When I got back to the entrance, I was thrilled and had that feeling of just accomplishing something I didn’t know I could do. I had done it. Up and down in 1 hour 45 minutes (I guess the sign meant 1 hour each way). The last thing I wanted to do before leaving was check out the llamas. I got lost as hell trying to find them, and wound up jumping over a wall to get there (I made sure there were no little Peruvian people around). When I got to the llamas, they were all sleeping. How boring. I wanted to get a neat photo of a llama, but it just wasn’t going to happen. At this point, I didn’t really care. What I cared about was getting some water and food. That piece of bread and couple swigs of water about 5 hours ago just wasn’t lasting as long as I thought it would. Maybe that climb had something to do with it.
My new goal was to find the exit. The place is a freaking maze though once you’re in it. Thankfully I came across a stone arrow with "Salida" (Exit) painted on it. Following the arrows, I was out of Machu Pichu 10 minutes later. I met up with Nicole at the snack bar reading a book. I told her about the climb, and then bought some water and Doritos (luch of champions). While shoving chips in my mouth and downing water like a frat boy proving his manliness, I showed some of the photos I took.
It was time to head home. All the way home. That was officially the end of the trip. I must say that it was a perfect accidental ending to this vacation around South America. We boarded the bus and headed back down to the village around noon. We retrieved our bags from storage at the hostel, and went to the town square so I could mail a couple post cards and then grab some lunch. The place we ate at served up fresh guinea pig. Head and all. Deep fried I think. Not too sure, because I didn’t order it. I did order a Pizza, 3 cokes, and an Alpaca kabob. Nicole got a veggie lasagna.

1) The pizza was great. 2) The coke in a glass bottle is awesome! 3) Alpaca tastes similar to beef, but not quite the same. Still good though. 4) They have no clue how to cook lasagna. It looks like they took the noodles out of a box, boiled them for about 5 minutes and then through it into a stove for on high for another 5. Burned, crunchy, mostly uncooked veggie mess. Since I did have my credit card (thankfully I brought it in case of emergencies… like this), I paid the bill and then we headed for the train station to catch our 3:30pm train to Cuzco. No cabbie intervention this time.
This train wasn’t as nice as the last one, but I didn’t really care. I was tired and figured I’d just sleep the whole way. About ten minutes into the ride, they announce the details of the ride over the PA. This train ride was going to be 4 and a half hours. WHAT?! Yeah… I didn’t plan for that at all. My computer and ipod were dead, and I was too tired to read. I was also sitting across from two dutch people that we shared a table with, so I couldn’t sleep. Arg.
About half way through the ride, the train staff put on a skit and a fashion show with all the things you can make from Alpaca fur. The skit was a guy dressed up in an Ican clown outfit(?) dancing around with his stuffed pet alpaca. It was pretty entertaining. Not something you expect. The fashion show was also pretty interesting. Turns out, you can make a lot of clothing from alpaca fur. A lot of clothing. The show went on for about a half hour. If it wasn’t for the crazy Japanese tourist behind me freaking out every time the girl walked by I would have had to drugged myself asleep.
When the fashion show ended, I felt awake, so I started to read my book to kill some time. That’s when the train did something I didn’t think ever happened… It stopped, then started going backwards. What the hell? Did the train make a wrong turn somewhere? Is that even possible? A few moments later, the train continued in the forward direction. I’ll never know the mystery of the backwards train.
We arrived in Cuzco at 8:30pm, jumped in a cab to get to the hostel (about 5 minutes), checked in and dropped off our bags. We had to get cash to pay the bill (because South America doesn’t like credit cards), and grab some dinner. So, Nicole and I headed out into town. It was pretty cold and hard to breath (altitude again). We found an ATM a couple blocks away, and a nice restaurant across the street from it. Nicole had a shrimp fetichinni in a spicy alfredo sauce, and I had a pan seared steak spiced with 4 different types of peppers, banana chips, and a side of whipped fried potato barrels (fancy tater-tots), and a citrus fused salad. We didn’t order any wine because I didn’t want to have to deal with a headache tomorrow. So I ordered a couple gimlets, and Nicole a dirty martini. Dinner was delicious and well worth the $45 it costs. The us dollar sucks, but the Peruvian Sole is worse =).

When the bill came, I was going to pay it with my credit card, but I left my wallet back at the hostel. Crap. I told the waiter I’d be right back and Nicole stayed at the table. The hostel was only two blocks away, so it wasn’t a big deal. I tried to run to the hostel, but the high altitude canceled that one pretty quick. So I just walked fast. I returned, payed the bill, and then we both went back to the hostel to check out the bar there.
There were some, um… lively people… yeah. At the bar. Depending on your level of drunkenness, they ranged from "really cool people", to "damn you’re annoying" I chatted it up for a little while, but then just couldn’t take it anymore. I jumped on a computer for a little while to see what was going on in the world, and then headed downstairs to our room for the night. I think it was somewhere around 1am when I finally got to sleep.