|
|
ACCOMMODATIONS:
ON TRAIL: Tent supplied and erected.
Sleeping bags may be rented. Mattresses included but
carried by hiker unless extra porter services are hired.
Recommend: Pack very
light for hike. Hire extra porter services to carry
heavier items including sleeping bag and mattress, if not for
all days, at least for 2nd day.
CUZCO: Before and after hiking the Inca Trail:
Inkarri Hostel
(Sherrie stayed on at Inkarri while Terry, Angela and Stephen
hiked the trail.)
Recommend: Inkarri Hostel is
well located in Cuzco on a narrow one-way street off the high
priced tourist squares. Well sized rooms are simple and
clean with tv. Quiet rooms face inner courtyards. If
wanting WiFi be sure to ask as it is not available to all rooms.
Complementary use of guest computers. Small breakfast
included. Arrangements may be made to keep luggage while hiking
the trail.
|

|
ARRANGEMENTS:
Bookings for the Inca Trail were made with
Wasai Lodge &
Expeditions (booked Peruvian Amazon Jungle
adventure at same time).
|

|
FOOD & DRINK:
MEALS: Breakfast (other than first day),
lunch (other than fourth day), dinner (other than fourth day)
was included with our package. Coca tea was available first
thing in the morning and at all meals. The meals were plentiful, tasty (ie: trout,
chicken, pizza, soups, salads),
designed for rigorous trekking and catered to dietary needs
(ie: vegetarian, allergies). After
breakfast our team of porters and cook would breakdown camp, pass us
somewhere on the trail, and have tent and table set up and be
cooking by the time we reached our lunch stop.
SNACKS: Snacks and drinks
available for purchase from locals set up at rest stops until lunch
the second day. At camp on the third night there is a lodge
with snacks, simple meals and beer available.
DRINKS:
Taking in lots of fluids is necessary for such a climb.
Water, and often Gatorade can be purchased where they sell
snacks.
Recommend: Water is heavy so
only carry what you will drink that day.
Coca tea and coca leaves: Drinking of coca tea, as well as
chewing coca leaves, increases the absorption of oxygen into the
blood, which helps combat altitude sickness and aids the
digestive system. On the trail, it is usually served at
every meal.
An article from
The Sydney
Globalist 2009 reads "The coca leaf - small, dark green and
relatively unremarkable would probably not be noticed by an
untrained eye. Tourists arriving in La Paz eagerly take photos
of Indigenous women selling the plant, while bewildered locals
look on. As you chew the coca leaf your mouth numbs, your
headache clears and breathing becomes easier at the extreme
altitude. Apart from these humble side effects, the leaf is
used for another purpose: as the base ingredient in the
manufacture of cocaine. It is this fact that has caused an
international legal, political and economic war for over 48
years. |

|
FOOTWEAR:
Take seriously the recommendations of your guiding company on
footwear.
Recommend: The trail goes up and
down, for hours, often on uneven stone steps of differing height,
depth and degree of steepness which can be treacherous when
wet from rain or damp in cloud forests. Comfortable,
worn-in hiking boots with good gripping tread and ankle support are
recommended.
Recommend: Hiking poles are
of great help on the trail ... especially going down to help
keep balance and take some pressure off knees. Wood poles
with material grips and wrist bands can be purchased cheaply
(under $2 US) at the start of the trail. (If you want to take them home
as a souvenir, be prepare to pay extra at the airport.)
|

|
TO & FROM:
TRAIL:
Our guide, Maria, picked us up at our Cuzco hotel by van at
4:45am for 2 hour drive to Km82, the trail's start point.
At conclusion of hike and Machu Picchu tour, we returned to
Cuzco by bus, train and bus which were included as part of our
hiking arrangements with Wasai.
CUZCO:
Arrived in Cuzco
from Puno by
PeruRail's Andean Explorer.
Departed Cuzco by
LAN airlines and flew to Puerto Maldonado
to begin our Peruvian Amazon
Jungle adventure with Wasai. |
|
|
|