Camera gone, Laptop gone. Stolen in the nightbus from Cuzco to Arequipa.
Another sad fact: Just before those things got stolen, I had typed another 10 pages of blog entries, that would have updated you up until our trip to Cuzco & Macchu Picchu, talking of more pyramids, sandboarding and my first oasis experience.
Sorry guys - next blog posts won't be written too soon...
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
More Mochi. Way more Mochi. Too much Mochi.
Lucky
enough that I had forgotten my camera in the bus, so at least we had something
to do trying to get it back. A helpful lady at the ticket office of the bus
company called the bus, some service staff there found it, and it would be send
back on the next bus. So they said.
We
had breakfast, visited the local market and read in the newspaper that Bayern
Munich had kicked Real Madrid’s ass 2:1 in the first game of the Champions
League semi-final. Good job. :) As our two internet-free weeks had not passed
yet, we were absolutely out of date regarding world news. But it’s a great
feeling to not having to care about internet etc., just fully concentrate on
the journey. Maybe one should switch of the internet in general every now and
then.
The
tour was pretty interesting: We started off at the pyramids in Túcume, the
burial site of the former ruler of the Mochi, el señor de Sipan. And his daddy,
the old señor de Sipan.
The
sad thing is, the Mochi, unlike the Egyptians or the Inca, built their pyramids
with clay, as it was the easiest accessible material nearby. And this clay has
taken a lot of damage from the rain over the centuries. So the pyramids aren’t
anymore what they must have been once upon a time. But hey, with a little
imagination they a still quite stunning.
Next
stop: The museum of Sipan in Lambayeque. In this
three-story high building one gets all the background information about the
excavation of the pyramids. Furthermore, all the findings are exhibited,
including a lot of gold, weapons, jewelry and the bones of the old señor and
his son. And, of course, one can buy hundreds of replicas of those findings in
the on-site museum shop.
The
restaurant the tour guide had chosen for lunch was way above our price
expectations, so Julez and I sneaked of to eat for half of what a menu would
have cost at the other place. Together. Plus we could watch the first half an
hour of Chelsea vs. Barcelona, an intense and interesting match – unfortunately
we left only minutes before Didier Drogba would score the decisive goal…
Another
excavation site had to be visited. Not as big, not as thrilling as the first
one. And hence maybe a bit redundant, as the eyelids and legs got heavier and
the head was just too pumped with information to process any more. After some
20 minutes or so the tour was over, and we had a bumpy ride back home coming up
– including a beautiful sunset.
After
those hammock-nights for the last two weeks, Julez and I opted for a two-star
hotel this night. Including Wi-Fi. Internet diet was over. LAN party was on.
*g*
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Kuélap: They call it the second Macchu Picchu…
There is no bus heading straight to Chachapoyas, so we stopped in Tarapoto. No bus from there to Chachapoyas either, not after 4pm. But at least we could still make it to Pedro Ruiz, a little village placed in a stunning setting, surrounded by green mountains. Even at 1am we still found an open hostel, slept a few hours and booked two seats in the colectivo to Chachapoyas. Finally, there we were.
As
the organized tours to Kuélap had already left, we had to pay for a private cab
to bring us to the ruins. It wasn’t that much more expensive than an organized
tour, the transportation would cost us 140 S. A tour would have been 50 S per
person. Not too bad.
Unfortunately,
no one had told us to take our student cards with us; they would have saved us
some 7 S on the entrance fee to Kuélap. But well, a normal adult pays 15 S,
plus 20 S for a guide. At least we had our rain coats with us; we would need
them later on.
Kuélap
is advertised to be the second Macchu Picchu, but not as well in shape as its
big brother. The walls are still intact and pretty fascinating with their
height of up to 21m.
The
ruins are to be found next to the village Maria, at an altitude of 3.000 m, and the overall space taken is supposed to be bigger than Macchu Picchu. They
were built once upon a time by the Mochi,
a tribe ruling the North-Western coastal region of Peru for some 700 years
between 100 and 800 past Christ, before they were defeated by the Chimús. Those
again were beaten by the Incas in the 15th century. (Btw.: Did you
know that the Incas only ruled for around 100 years? Not really much time,
but obviously enough to build up an impressive empire…)
Today,
there is not much left of the fortress. But our guide knew to interpret the
remaining stones pretty well: Three different levels could be explored within
the surrounding walls. The more important you were the higher up you lived. The
Mochi lived in round houses, the foundation stones of which could still be
seen. Some of the houses have been partly, one has been even fully restored.
The
Inca would later on add their quadratic buildings
to the remaining Mochi constructions.
The
three entrances into the fortress were pretty wide, but narrowed down to a
meter the higher you got up the stairs. Attackers could easily run up the first
steps, but would squeeze together after a while, making it easy to holding them
back. Somehow, the Chimú still took the place over.
Two
thirds into the tour we met one of the organized tours, some 20 tourists
following one single guide. Guess who was amongst those tourists? Sarina! She
had decided not to travel with us through the Amazon basin as she had a flight
from Lima to catch on the 23rd of April, and thought our jungle
adventure would take longer by far. Well, she was wrong. But anyhow, it was an
exciting pleasure seeing her again. If one does always meet twice in life, this
would have been the second time. But sometimes, I guess, paths cross more
often. :)
We
learned a little more about Mochi gods, their habits and their way of life. But
after an hour and a half fully packed with information, it just becomes more
and more difficult to listen and save all that information. And one gets tired
of listening. The llamas standing around were a welcome distraction. ^^
Our
cab driver Marco was expecting us down at the ticket office, and the ride home
wasn’t any less spectacular than what we had just seen.
Back
in Chachapoyas, we didn’t waste any time to organize a bus ticket for that same
night. We’re in travel mode at the moment, loads of sightseeing has to be
accomplished.
A
really delicious dinner at a local polleria (roasted chicken restaurant) was
digested in our bus towards Chiclayo…
Monday, April 16, 2012
Yurimaguas and the Ayahuasca experience
Yurimaguas is a pretty, little city. Smaller, greener and less noisy than Iquitos. And cheaper.
We
found a double room for 8$ per night, left our luggage and headed out to
explore the village. Again, Plaza de Armas was probably the main attraction…
…until
we discovered the riverside. And a cozy, little eco-guesthouse, where its
friendly owner offered us a unique Ayahuasca experience. We accepted.
Ayahuasca
is a plant, traditionally used by indigenous shaman people to cure various ill-
and sicknesses. Our Lonely Planet states, that it can also cause hallucinations
of about three to four hours. Sounded like an interesting thing. We agreed.
We
returned to our hostel, packed a little bag full of essentials and paid a
tuk-tuk-driver to bring us out to the shaman’s farm.
Upon
arrival we found a beautiful property of about 25 acres, which was actually
inhabited by more dogs (18, five pure-bred German shepherds amongst them) than
human beings at that point of time. The shaman told us, at times they cure up
to 33 guests simultaneously with their natural herbs and essences, but
currently there were only around six other guests, mainly of Russian
derivation.
We
sat around the rest of the afternoon, waiting for the ritual to begin. We
hadn’t expected to wait that long, so all we found to entertain us were some
pieces of paper and a pen. Enough to play “Käsekästchen”. ;)
After
the sun had set, we were finally called in for what we hoped to be a massage,
some therapeutic body treatment to later on allow the positive energies to flow
easier through all of your body, as we were told. The “massage” turned out to
be pretty painful, as Julez and I obviously both have a lot of negative energy
floating through our bodies. Could be a result of (excessive) red meat
consumption, as the shaman explained.
Somehow
we survived the treatment, to then sit down on a table with three other
patients to begin the ceremony: We all had a bucket standing on the ground in
front of us, where our reliefs from the interior should go in. We all had a
bowl of hot water on the table in front of us, as drinking as much as possible
is absolutely essential to prevent that really painful “dry-vomiting”. And we
all had nothing else to do on a mild Sunday night, than sit in a round together
and vomit our guts out.
The
first two began to throw up right after having drunk the first portion of
Ayahuasca. It tasted disgusting. I was tempted to throw up right away as well.
But I resisted.
Around
20 minutes later, Julez was the next one to start filling up his bucket. A
Russian guy and I hold on to it for another 10 minutes, in which I desperately
wished I would start emptying my stomach out – the pain and the feeling were
way worse than the actual relief of getting everything out.
We
hadn’t eaten dinner that night. Julez and I had had lunch, as that was before
we decided to opt for the Ayahuasca trip. It is recommended to not eat anything
all day long, as food only further contaminates your body – and the original
sense of Ayahuasca was/is to clean your body from any negative energy by simply
emptying it totally out and therefore not leaving any negative stains behind.
In fact, leaving nothing behind. Not inside your body. That’s what it felt
like.
The
shaman explained that human beings should throw up every now and then anyway,
as cats for example eat their own fur to then vomit it out once a month or so.
I guess, the cleverness of evolution had a deeper insight into the matter
before stopping human beings of throwing up naturally every once in a while.
It’s no fun. But we couldn’t go back.
Julez
and I were the only One-Night-Stands, everyone else was around for between two
weeks and three months, some of them came repeatedly. We were told that
Ayahuasca had already cured prostate cancer and made a disabled guy walk again.
I am not too sure, how much we should believe the tales of those people, but on
the other hand, the shaman made a really professional impression on us, so I
guess trying to cure an illness modern medicine can’t handle is always worth a
try.
So,
there we sat. Six persons around a table, small-talking about heritage, purpose
of the cure and anything else that came into our minds, approximately every
half an hour breaking the conversation for some ten minutes to lustfully throw
up into our buckets. The shaman kept the conversation going and encouraged the
excessive consumption of water, which I found to be at least a little helpful
to lower the pain.
Julez
lay down after having eaten backwards the first time; a Russian guy ordered a
second and a third Ayahuasca treat. After the second throw-up, I felt as weak
as rarely before, but forced myself to stay seated, keep drinking and making up
topics which to discuss.
The
ceremony lasted about three hours. We did not hallucinate, but after having
thrown up four (!!!) times I barely found the power to make my way to the
toilet, where I emptied out my almost overflowing bucket, before heading to
bed. I was incredibly happy to finally lie down and let the sleep overcome the
pain I felt in my stomach. My bed was out on the veranda, but neither mosquitos
nor pouring tropical rains nor screaming cocks the next morning could disturb
my sleep…
It
was still raining when we finally awoke the next morning. The breakfast was not
my favorite, but supposed to be healthy, and after feeling turned inside out I
would have eaten almost anything to just restore a little energy.
The
tuk-tuk-driver answered our call, but ignored our pledge to pick us up from the
farm. We finally flagged down a colectivo (shared taxi) to get back to Yurimaguas.
The trip had, indeed, been unforgettable. But by far not the way we had
imagined it to be…
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Rolling down the river: Iquitos to Yurimaguas
Iquitos was not our city. After we had walked over to the Plaza de Armas (that’s what basically every main plaza in any Peruvian town is called) we felt like we had seen it all. The rest of our backpacker friends left for a hostel, we went to the harbor to buy an onward ticket down to Yurimaguas.
The
only problem in Iquitos is: There ain’t “the harbor”, there are about seven of
them. And of course no one has a clue where the boat to Yurimaguas might leave
today from. The second problem is: Everyone pretends to know it. We’d figure
that out in detail tomorrow. Today we were told at the second harbor that the
boat was already booked out. It only took around half an hour to elaborate
that. We got dropped off at the hostel. Reunion with the cargo boat crew.
Iquitos
is dirty and noisy. Somehow run-down, I know it has seen better days: Around
the 1920s, when the world economy was till booming and did not fear the massive
breakdown it would face in 1929, Iquitos was a buzzing city, where the newest
fashion was worn. Today it is the biggest city (around 400.000 inhabitants)
without road connection to the outer world, but is still crowded with cars and
mainly tuk-tuks. We didn’t find anything appealing about the city.
It
is meant to be a great starting point for jungle trips and Amazon basin
excursions, but as we had just spent a couple of days in jungle, imagined the
trips to be cheaper in Bolivia and were warned by Lonely Planet that there are
obviously a lot of black sheep operating amongst the herd of travel agents in
town, we refrained from taking a tour.
We
spent the afternoon eating, watching kids playing soccer and volleyball in the
park and planning our escape, which would successfully follow the next day:
After driving around in a tuk-tuk for harmless 1,5 hours and checking basically
every harbor that Iquitos features, we finally found the cargo boat supposed to
leave for Yurimaguas. We were on. (When we left, I somehow thought of a great
musical we had played once upon a time back in high-school: Rags. A story about
immigrants fleeing to America. Their goodbyes must have looked a little similar
to what we saw from our first deck…)
This
time, it was more the local way of travelling: Instead of 7 backpackers there
were around 170 people aboard, Julez and me being the only non-Peruvian
travelers. The price was local-friendly, we paid 40 S per head for a
four-day-trip, including three meals a day – which would turn out not to be as
disgusting as I had presumed. But the activities stayed the same: Chill out,
talk to your hammock neighbors, eat, read, play card and dice games. My
personal favorite: Lie in the hammock, marvel at the unique landscape pass by
and let my thoughts escape into space…
While
floating on Rio Marañon for the first two kilometers or so, we were still in
Iquitos. Houses along and in the river, bars, shops and even a floating
discotheque passed by! As well as many, many motorized canoes…
Once
we got out of town, the landscape became greener. Palm trees, bushes, jungle.
Stunning.
Everyone
now and then, around three times per day, we would stop at an indigenous
village to deliver goods, drop off some people, take new people on board etc. pp.
While doing so, approximately 20 inhabitants would run around the boat selling
any kind of goods, from dead fish, half-alive chickens to lively parrots,
fruits, veggies, pre-cooked meals, sweets, plants and whatever else they had in
store. It always felt like a 10-minute-market that ended as suddenly as it had begun.
I had the impression it was these guys’ highlight of the week. And, pretty
sure, it in fact was. What else could they do out here all day long?
We
didn’t have too much to do either. Besides above-mentioned activities, we had
our daily highlights as well, may that have been a spectacular sunset…
A
crystal-clear, starlit sky (hard to take a picture of, though) or a colorful
rainbow (or even two) after having watched heavy raindrops fill up the river.
It
was not the most eventful adventure we ever had, but it was a fantastic
experience that I can recommend to everyone who ever sets foot on South
American soil!
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