Day 67-69:
Cusco & The Sacred Valley, Peru. “I can't even place a
credit card between them”, I said to Karen in amazement, as we
wandered around the peaceful ruins at Sacsaywamán
just a couple of miles north of Cusco's main plaza. Two year
previously, Karen and I had been fortunate enough to visit the Giza
plateau where we had marvelled at the astonishing engineering skills
of the ancient Egyptians in the construction of the Great Pyramids.
Now, in the heart of South America, we were witnessing similar
unbelievable craftsmanship; the legacy of the continents greatest
pre-Columbian civilization. Huge 70 ton boulders, cut with laser
precision and skilfully assembled without the need for mortar, to
form great walls, temples and cities; dominating the land as far as
the eye can see. For 700 years ago, the place where we were now
standing was at the heart of the Inca Empire.
The 12 hour
overnight bus from Arequipa had brought us northwards to the ancient
city of Cuzco, our base for the next few days as we explored this
fascinating city and the myriad of ancient archaeological sites that
litter the 100 miles of the Sacred Inca Valley.
Cuzco itself
effortlessly enchants, bombarding the senses with a swirl of art,
religion, music, architecture, food, and fiestas – every possible
manifestation of the syncretic Inca-Spanish culture that makes the
Andes so fascinating: Ladies with llamas walk cobbled streets.
Coca-chewing local honchos parade to church in ceremonial regalia for
Mass in Quechua. Cuzco’s proud pagan past collides with solemn
Catholic rituals in parades that stop traffic at the drop of a hat.
Despite it's obvious
charm though, Cusco is one of the most relentless tourism-dominated
towns on the face of the earth, sitting as it does just a stones
throw from the Sacred Valley and a (relatively) short train journey
to one of South America's main events: Machu Picchu. Walking
through the Plaza de Armas we felt a little bit like walking
ATM's! There's people here hawking massages, finger puppets,
paintings, CDs and tattoos – if you want it (or even if you don't!)
you can get it here!
Fortunately though,
it was easy enough for us to escape the commercial madness, and
become totally absorbed by the history and ambience of the lost Incan
cities that lay just a short hike or bus ride from the centre of
town. Magical, spiritual and mystical; even their very names like
Pukapukara and Ollantaytambo, seem to have sprung from the gods
imagination.
All that remains now
is for me find enough room in my rucksack for the couple of mystical
and magical acquisitions that I made whilst in Cusco like my alpaca
wool tea-cosy and my Incan warrior snow storm. Classy eh?

So, how did those poor ladies get a dose of the llamas? Not only that, then they have to parade them down the cobbled street:-)
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