Posts Tagged Peru tours

Peru’s Machu Picchu wins award as best ecotourism destination in South America

The Inca city of Machu Picchu in Peru has won the 2010 World Travel Award as the best ecologic tourism destination in South America.

Winning the award was equal to winning the Oscar for best picture the Peru’s Promotion Commission for Export and Tourism (Promperu) said in a press statement.

Machu Picchu in Peru

Machu Picchu in Peru

After more than 185,000 tourism operators in the world nominated Machu Picchu, the World Travel Award’s jury chose the city over other destinations such as Brazil’s Pantanal and Argentina’s Patagonia and Iguazu falls.

Peru will receive the award on Nov. 7 in London in the World Travel Market and hope that the success of Machu Picchu will bring tourists to Peru and encourage them to visit the less popular places particularly in the north of the country.

Machu Picchu is located in a mountain of Urubamaba Valley, some 110 kilometers from Cusco city, capital of the ancient Incan empire and is famous also for the Inca trail – the hike which leads to Machu Picchu from the Sacred Valley.

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Nazca Lines, Peru: Who, what and why?

Ancient religion? Aliens from outer space? Ancient astronomers? A megalomaniac artist? Water sources?nazca

Since discovery by American scientist Paul Kosok in 1939, the lines on the rocky Peruvuan Pampa San Jose near the small desert town of Nazca have perplexed scholars. Originally thought to be the remains of irrigation lines beyond the verdant Nazca valley, it wasn’t until they were seen from the air that the lines were recognizable as figures.

The lines are a variety of geometrical figures, trapezoids, triangles and lines, plus marine, animal and bird figures of hummingbirds, a whale, a monkey, a spider, a bird likened to a pelican, another like a condor, and one called the astronaut. They range in size up to 1000 ft (300m) across and are about 2000 years old.

The lines are thought to have been etched on the Pampa Colorada sands by three different groups: the Paracas people 900-200 BC, Nazcas 200 BC-AD 600 and the settlers from Ayacucho at about 630 AD. The Nazca were potters, like the Moche, and their pottery shows their daily life.

The drawings drew the attention of German mathematician Maria Reiche, who worked as Kosok’s translator. She studied the lines from the 1940’s to her death in 1998 and developed the theory that the ancient Peruvians drew the lines to please the gods and secure their good will. She called the desert an astronomical calendar to remind the gods that the desert was dry and needed water; that crops needed blessings; that the seas needed fish. There are theories that the figures correspond to constellations and the annual change of the seasons. Other theories contend that the figures represent a pantheon of gods and goddesses and were the site of religious ceremonies.

naz2Other theories, such as Erich von Daniken who argued in “Chariots of the Gods?” that they are the remains of a giant extraterrestrial airport, brought a flurry of students of the paranormal to the area. Though they have survived 2000 years of wind and occasional rain, the lines on the desert floor cannot withstand pedestrians, horses and vehicles. The Nazca Lines are now a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the most popular tourist destinations in Peru.

You can see the lizard, hands and the tree figures from the Mirador, a viewing platform along the side of the Pan American highway, but the best overall sight is from a small airplane, early in the morning.

The lines aren’t the only things to see around Nazca. The museum in town has archaeological artifacts. Maria Reiche’s house, in the nearby village of San Pedro, now also a museum, is filled with her personal belongings, her maps, photos, camera, and hand-drawn sketches. She is buried in the garden. The museum charges admission and is closed on Sunday.

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Painting the Andes – A New Measure Against Global Warming?

An inventor has set out to paint the peaks of the Andes white in an attempt to combat the effects of climate change.

By painting the mountains, Eduardo Gold hopes to replicate the effect of Andean glaciers in Peru, which reflect back sunlight and hence heat back through the atmosphere.

The technique is scientifically plausible and, according to some scientists, may be the only method of lowering global temperatures in a crisis.

It is believed that painting the Andean Peaks will slow down the glacier melting

It is believed that painting the Andean Peaks will slow down the glacier melting

“A white surface reflects the sun’s rays back through the atmosphere and into space, in doing so it cools the area around it too,” said the 55-year-old activist. “In effect in creates a micro-climate, so we can say that the cold generates more cold, just as heat generates more heat.”

It is hoped the project will slow the melting of the glaciers and keep in tact the beautiful Andean peaks for tourists on a Peru highlights tour or the Inca trail.

Four workmen have been given the task of painting three peaks, starting with Peru’s Chalon Sombrero peak, which lies 4,756 metres above sea level.

Chalon Sombrero, like many of the Andean peaks in Peru, has seen its glacier disappear within living memory.

The painters who have already completed two hectares of a planned 70 have been recruited from Licapa village, which depends on the run-off from the mountain for its water.

The project is a low technology remedy for global warming. The workers use an environmentally-friendly mix of lime, industrial egg white and water, which is known to have been used since Peru’s colonial times

The whitewash is slopped out on the slopes from jugs.

If the underlying theory, which is known as Solar Radiation Management, works the glacier should re-emerge in a cooler micro-climate.

The £135,000-project is funded by the World Bank after Mr Gold won a “100 Ideas to Save the Planet” competition last year.

The World Bank last year estimated that 22 per cent of Peru’s glaciers have melted since 1980 and there are projections that all the country’s glaciers could disappear in the next 20 years.

While novel the painting scheme is not the only outlandish way of tackling global warming proposed. Firing mirrors into space to reflect the sun’s rays, or feeding cattle garlic to reduce methane emissions have been mooted.

Locals who have witnessed the destruction of the glaciers are strong supporters of Mr Gold’s scheme. “All the peaks here should be painted in this way,” said Pablo Parco Palomino. “That way there would be as much water as there was before the glacier disappeared, and that would mean more pasture to support more livestock.”

But Antonio Brack, Peru’s Environment Minister, told the World Bank that its funding would be better spent on other “projects which would have more impact in mitigating climate change.”

Mr Gold believes he can put the theory into practice and get results. “I’d rather try and fail to find a solution than start working out how we are going to survive without the glaciers, as if the situation was irreversible,”

Steven Chu, the US Energy Secretary, has endorsed installation of white roofs to help prevent climate change, an idea seen as more logistically feasible than painting mountain peaks.

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Full reopening of railway between Cusco and Machu Picchu

28th June 2010, London: Ferrocarril Transandino has announced the full re-opening of the railway from Cusco to Machu Picchu on schedule for the peak season.

Ferrocarril Transandino has announced that as of the 25th June the complete railway line from Cusco to Machu Picchu has opened, with all tourist train services returning to a normal service from 1st July.  PeruRail is commencing all operations on its tourist trains including a refurbished Vistadome, an upgraded backpacker service which is now named Expedition and the luxury Hiram Bingham train. The only restriction will be on the speed limit of the trains from the stations of Cusco, Poroy and Ollantaytambo.

The complete re-opening follows months of intense work on the route, after many parts of the track were severely

Machu Picchu - One of the seven wonders of the world

Machu Picchu - One of the seven wonders of the world

damaged during flooding at the end of January 2010.  Visitors have been able to reach Machu Picchu since the end of March from a temporary station in Piscacucho at km 82 (a station beyond Ollantaytambo).

Machu Picchu is one of South America’s major tourist attractions and was given the title of one of the new Seven Wonders of the World in 2007.   2011 will mark 100 years since the rediscovery of Machu Picchu when the American explorer and politician, Hiram Bingham rediscovered the lost city of the Incas in 1911 and brought its attention to the rest of the world.

Chimu Adventures offers many tours to Machu Picchu including the Inca trail, highlights of Peru and South America Circle tours. Visit our website for more details.

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Inti Raymi Festival – A Highlight of Peru

Before the Spanish Viceroy in Peru banned the annual ceremonial events at the Winter Solstice in Cuzco, the native residents gathered to honour the Sun God, and sacrifice animals to ensure good crops and to pay homage to the Inca, as the first born Son of the Sun.

The ceremony traditionally has taken place at the winter solstice, when the sun is farthest from the earth. Fearing the lack of sun and ensuing famine, the ancient Incas gathered in Cuzco to honour the Sun God and plead for his return. The celebrants fasted for days before the event, refrained from physical pleasures and presented gifts to the Inca, who in return put on a lavish banquet of meat, corn bread, chicha and coca tea as they prepared to sacrifice llamas to ensure good crops and fertile fields.

In 1572, Viceroy Toledo banned Inti Raymi celebrations as pagan and contrary to the Catholic faith. Following the edict, the ceremonies went underground.

Today, it’s the second largest festival in South America. Hundreds of thousands of people converge on Cuzco from other parts of the nation, South America and the world for a week long celebration marking the beginning of a new year, the Inti Raymi, the Festival of the Sun.

Every day has its events, from daytime expositions, street fairs, and people milling and dancing in the streets. In the evenings, live music from the best of Peruvian musical groups draws the crowds to the Plaza de Armas for free concerts. During the preceding year, in preparation for Inti Raymi, hundreds of actors are chosen to represent historical figures. Being selected to portray the Sapa Inca or his wife, Mama Occla, is a great honour for the local people.

The centrepiece of the festival is the all-day celebrations on June 24, the actual day of Inti Raymi. On this day, the ceremonial events begin with an invocation by the Sapa Inca in the Qorikancha, also spelled Koricancha (pictured) square in front of the Santo Domingo church, built over the ancient Temple of the Sun. Here, the Sapa Inca calls on the blessings from the sun. Following the oration, Sapa Inca is carried on a golden throne, a replica of the original which weighed about 60 kilos, in a procession to the ancient fortress of Sacsayhuamán, in the hills above Cuzco. With the Sapa Inca come the high priests, garbed in ceremonial robes, then officials of the court, nobles and others, all elaborately costumed according to their rank, with silver and gold ornaments.

They walk along flower-bedecked streets, to music and prayers and dancing. Women sweep the streets to clear them of evil spirits. At Sacsayhuamán , where huge crowds await the arrival of the procession, Sapa Inca climbs to the sacred altar where all can see him.

Once all the celebrants are in place in the grand square of the fortress, there are speeches by Sapa Inca, the priests and representatives of the Suyos: the Snake for the world below, the Puma for life on earth, and the Condor for the upper world of the gods. This follows the ancient beliefs of the Inca, which held these animals sacred.

A white llama is sacrificed (now in a very realistic stage act) and the high priest holds aloft the bloody heart in honor of Pachamama. This is done to ensure the fertility of the earth which in combination with light and warmth from the sun provides a bountiful crop. The priests read the blood stains to see the future for the Inca.

As the sun begins to set, stacks of straw are set on fire and the celebrants dance around them to honour Tawantinsuty or the Empire of the Four Wind Directions. In ancient times, no fire was allowed that day until the evening fires.

The ceremony of Inti Raymi ends with a procession back to Cuzco. Sapa Inca and Mama Occla are carried on their thrones, the high priests and representatives of the Supas pronounce blessings on the people. Once again, a new year has begun.

June 24 is also celebrated throughout Peru as Indians Day or Peasants Day. This is a festival not to be missed, and a highlight of this fascinating continent.

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‘Cricket? Is that the game with horses?’

Playing and promoting cricket in Peru is not without its challenges: 99% of the population has little or no idea what the game is about, hence the confusion with polo, croquet, or more understandably, baseball; there is only one cricket pitch in the entire country (albeit 150 years old), and football is played over it for eight months of the year; the nearest away game is some 2,400 km away in Santiago, Chile and the nearest shop selling cricket equipment is in the USA.

So, it was with a sense of awe and wonder that in June, 2009, I found myself at the spiritual home of cricket, Lords Cricket Ground, in London, attending the International Cricket Council (ICC) Centenary Conference, as the lone representative of Cricket Peru. This was the first time in history that all 104 member countries of the ICC had been invited together to discuss and celebrate the game of cricket, and some people had made a Herculean effort to get there: two representatives from the Atlantic island of Santa Helena had made a five-day boat journey to South Africa in order to catch a flight to London!

Peru Cricket Team - Sponsored by Chimu Adventures

Peru Cricket Team - Sponsored by Chimu Adventures

It was a chance to reflect on the global expansion of the game of cricket, which can now confidently claim to be the second biggest sport in the world. The powerhouse of cricket is now India, whose vast population has a fanatical adherence to the game, and whose economic rise and human diaspora is further evangelizing cricket.

Meanwhile, the growth of women’s cricket was being feted and promoted: for the first time a Women’s Twenty20 World Cup was held in conjunction with the Men’s, culminating in a joint finals day at Lords on June 21st. I was by no means the only one to be very impressed by the skill levels on show in the female game.

As we learnt of strides being made by USA, and even China, to promote cricket in their countries, Cricket Peru’s progress in developing an annual, domestic competition and re-introducing cricket to a handful of British schools in Lima seemed rather insignificant, but it was a real privilege to be allowed to sit at the top table, if only briefly; and the goodwill towards Peru was tremendous, bringing home the fact that this country captures the imagination of people from a wide variety of nationalities.

It was also a great pleasure to be able to sing Lima’s praises as a destination for cricket teams to visit, highlighting the fact that no play has ever been lost to rain, along with the well-known tourist attractions.

Chimu Adventures is a proud sponsor of Cricket Peru. Visit our website for more details.

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Unspoilt Latin American Beaches

A look at some of the beautiful unspoilt beaches in Latin America!

José Ignacio, Uruguay

Drive east from Uruguay’s Punta del Este peninsula and you’ll come to José Ignacio. Until a few years ago, it was little more than a tiny fishing village, but overseas visitors are beginning to wake up to its low-key charms and it is fast gaining a reputation as the Hamptons of South America (Naomi Campbell and Ralph Lauren are both regular visitors). In spite of its growth, it still remains a small village – you will find no tourist information booths, no obvious sightseeing attractions (though there is a long, fine beach) and only a few shops, restaurants and hotels. There are definitely no nightclubs – most goings-ons happen inside the exclusive private houses but it is a worthwhile stop on a Uruguay highlights tour.

Los Roques, Venezuela

Hop on a 35-minute flight from Caracas to Los Roques, an archipelago of some 350 islands, cays and islets off the northern coast of Venezuela. You will land on El Gran Roque, the only permanently inhabited island. It has just a handful of grocery stores, restaurants and dive shops (the archipelago is home to the world’s third-largest coral reef). Visitors can stay in inns called posadas, converted from fishermen’s homes, many of which include transfers to the nearby islands in their prices. The Francisquis are three islands joined by sandspits with calm lagoon waters to the south and rolling surf to the north (you can swim from one cay to the other). The return flight from Caracas costs around $250.

Máncora, Peru

Mancora in Peru

Mancora in Peru

Máncora, a fishing town in Peru’s northwestern Piura Region, has thriving nightlife, gorgeous beaches and the largest left hand point break in the world, making it one of Peru’s most popular surfer hangouts. But it is still relatively undiscovered by British tourists. The surfing is at its best from November to March, and boards and suits can be hired locally for around US$1.5 an hour. But if that sounds like far too much effort, pack your beach towel and head 22km north to the lovely Playa Punta Sal, which boasts a 3km-long white sandy beach, or take a taxi to the natural thermal mud baths of Poza de Barro, a few miles inland.

Pipa, Brazil

This small hilltop village is popular with young, trendy Brazilians from the nearby cities of João Pessoa and Natal, who flock each weekend to its semi-deserted beaches – including Bahía dos Golfinhos (bay of dolphins), where dolphins come to mate – and its lively clubs. As well as several bars and restaurants on the beach, there’s a nightclub in the village, which has a sand dance floor.

Corn Islands, Nicaragua

Some 70km off the Caribbean coast of Nicaragua lie the Corn Islands, consisting of Big Corn Island and Little Corn Island. Both are well off the beaten track, especially Little Corn Island, where you can still get a room in double cabaña for around US$35 and buy a good-quality seafood dinner from a street vendor for just US$1.50. The island measures 2.9 square km and has no roads (most of the island is covered with forest) Electricity is only available during certain hours. While away days on its deserted beaches, hiking the narrow trails through the hills or snorkelling. If you’re lucky, you might see barracuda, mackerel, pompano and reef sharks.

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Fly from Sydney to Santiago from AUD $1,550!

South America is one of the fastest-growing holiday destinations in the world – and now LAN is offering the opportunity to fly from Sydney to the gateway city of Santiago, Chile, from just A$1550 per person, including taxes.

And from only A$1599 per person, including taxes, LAN can take travellers deeper into South America, to destinations including Buenos Aires, (Argentina), Lima (Peru) and Rio de Janeiro (Brazil).

These fares, and others to additional destinations, are on sale until 16 May, for travel between 1 June and 31 August, 2010.

Santiago - The thriving capital of Chile

Santiago - The thriving capital of Chile

LAN offers daily one stop flights from Sydney to Santiago, via Auckland, using two-class Airbus A340-300 aircraft. Flights depart Australia mid-morning and arriving in South America early afternoon, in time to connect with onward services throughout the continent.

“South America is one of the hottest holiday destinations of 2010, with growing interest in iconic destinations including the spectacular lakes, mountains and glaciers of Patagonia, the ruins of the ancient Inca settlement of Machu Picchu, Peru, the breathtaking Iguassu Falls on the border of Argentina and Brazil and the carnival city of Rio de Janeiro,” said Rodrigo Contreras, LAN’s General Manager Australia, New Zealand and Asia. “Not only do we fly to these destinations – we serve many others in South America, with services to over 50 locations.”

The prices quoted are subject to availability, and some conditions apply.

For flights and great packages to Santiago, Buenos Aires, Rio and much more visit Chimu Adventures.

Source: Asia Travel Tips.com

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Luxury Hotels in Cusco

Cusco, the previous capital of Peru during the Inca Empire, is a unique and attractive city. Today its main attractions, include Machu Picchu, The Sacred Valley, and of course, Cusco itself.

Any holiday in Peru is sure to include a visit to Machu Picchu, as well as Lake Titicaca and Lima which all lie with in easy reach from Cuzco.  A great way to capitalise on experiencing the city of Cuzco and to limit the constant move of travelling and endless tour buses, is to use Cuzco as a home base.

Cuzco streetsTake advantage of beautiful Cuzco and book a room or suite at one of its three best luxury hotels for the week. Cusco itself is a fascinating city and by using it as your base you are able to actually experience the city itself, its people and its culture whilst staying in comfort but still seeing the sites of the rest of Peru. Take time to explore Machu Picchu and the Sacred Valley, Lake Titicaca, with the assurance of having a luxury bed at the end of the day. The three top luxury hotels in Cuzco, Peru:

  1. Hotel Monasterio Cuzco - Conde Nast Traveler awarded the Hotel Monasterio “Best Hotel in South America” in 2006 and it’s easy to see why! Built within a monastery circa 1592, the hotel is beautiful, with luxury amenities that are both modern, and true to the Inca and Spanish cultures that influence much of Peru’s history. It’s located by Main Square, in downtown Cuzco. Machu Picchu lies with in an easy 3 hour train ride which is both safe and a beautiful scenic trip. Back at the Hotel Monasterio, the Bath Butler Service helps tired travelers relax in the luxury of a long soak. The 126 rooms include 20 suites. The hotel goes to every length to accommodate their guests; they even pump extra oxygen into most of the rooms to help acclimate guests to the high altitude of this part of Peru.
  1. Libertador Palacio del Inka Cusco Hotel – Like the Hotel Monasterio, the Libertador Palacio del Inka is right in the centre of Cusco. Also like the Hotel Monasterio, the Libertador Palacio del Inka Cusco Hotel possesses an interesting history; the manor house was once a meeting room for important dignitaries of the Inca Empire, renovated first for the arriving Spaniards, and only much later (1976) was it converted into a hotel. The Peruvian Ministry of Industry and Tourism has named it “Best Luxury Hotel in Cusco“. The 240 rooms and 14 additional suites also make the Libertador Palacio del Inka Cusco Hotel, the largest luxury hotel in the city. There are a couple of interesting hotel activities here: One, the Market Dinner, which is a staged activity that simulates an Inca market like those a tourist would see in the Sacred Valley. The other, the Inti Napaykuy Dinner, also a staged reproduction, this one of a sun ceremony of the ancient Incas. Both activities come with a buffet dinner.
  1. The Garden House, Cusco - The Garden House, although a luxury hotel, offers something different in the form of a small, boutique hotel. It is located just 10 minutes from downtown Cusco away from the noise and congestion that surround the city centre. With all the high-end amenities that travel buffs expect in a hotel, The Garden House is the most affordable of the hotels in its class. The management here goes above and beyond expectations in terms of friendliness and availability. They help guests arrange sightseeing and bike tours, as well as trips to Machu Picchu and the Sacred Valley. There are only 7 rooms in this luxury boutique hotel which makes for a relaxing and peaceful stay.

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Highlights of South America

A recent article in the Sydney Morning Herald discusses the beauty and history of the South American continent. An increasing mecca for tourists, South America is one of the fastest growing tourism destinations on the planet.

Easter Island Sunset

Easter Island Sunset, South America is growing in popularity, and is one of the fastest growing tourism regions on the planet.

To stand in front of the 15 gigantic stone statues at Ahu Tongariki on Easter Island is to marvel at, and be moved by, humankind’s inventive powers. Some visitors weep here and at nearby Rano Raraku. Many more rejoice in the power of the place.

UNESCO described these and other statues in the island’s national park as “a masterpiece of creative genius”. Jared Diamond, the scientist, wrote: “No other site that I have visited made such a ghostly impression on me as did Rano Raraku, the quarry on Easter Island where its famous gigantic stone statues were carved.”

The earth’s most remote inhabited island is full of ghosts. The statues, or moai, are visible reflections. There are 887 in various positions, from defiant, vertical prominence to impassive, horizontal repose. Those standing measure up to 12 metres tall. The longest, 21 metres, known as Paro, still lies at Rano Raraku, in the volcanic rock from which it was carved but never separated.

The moai represent old Polynesian kings and clan leaders. The ghosts of thousands more ordinary people hover here, a small civilisation that virtually committed suicide. The long, prone Paro must have been shaped when the carving had to stop. He was stillborn.

There is a terrible irony about Easter Island, or Rapa Nui, as the islanders know it. Although the moai are the main reason why tourists come all this way – Chile is 3700 kilometres to the east and Pitcairn, the nearest populated land mass, 1900 kilometres west – the moai were most probably the main cause of the civilisation’s collapse. The island’s economy now relies on tourists who witness the folly of the former islanders and of humankind in general. That is why admiration for what was achieved more than 500 years ago so stirs the emotions.

Some trees grow now on Easter Island but none of the Rapa Nui palm that once made a forest. The 15th century, around the time Paro was abandoned, marked the end of the forest. The islanders had cut it down to build canoes, to burn, to plant gardens and to transport their moai.

According to legend, the moai walked from the quarry. Yet, without the wheel or draft animals, palms must have been used to make ropes and sleds for islanders to manhandle the moai into place.

With the woods destroyed native birds, that had pollinated the trees’ flowers and dispersed their fruit, disappeared. Wooden fishing canoes could not be built, good soil blew and washed away, clan wars erupted over the last of the wood and the dwindling population took to caves for shelter and to cannibalism. The stone giants fell over, or were pulled down by fighting clans.

Archaeological estimates of the population at its peak are between 10,000 and 20,000; in 1877, only 111 people lived here and only 36 had offspring. The population is now back to about 5000, mainly Polynesians and Chileans. The legacy of loss has brought the people recognition disproportionate to their population.

The first Polynesians came here in canoes about 4000BC. We come from Machu Picchu, the lost city of another lost civilisation. This journey around South America provokes questions about civilisations, empires and how beauty and nature can endure but do not always do so.

Archaeologists generally agree that the first civilisations were those of Sumer and Egypt, both emerging about 3000BC. The Sumerians lived in city states with the first irrigation systems, invented the wheel and set down the first written stories. Sumer was part of Mesopotamia, the Persians made it part of their empire in 538BC and, through war and the British Empire’s redrawing of borders, Sumer is now in Iraq and the irrigated farmlands have become saltpans.

Ronald Wright, the historical philosopher, doubts in A Short History of Progress whether civilisation is a story of inevitable progress. The civilised British invented the concentration camp during the Boer War, for example; the circuses held by the civilised Romans involved slaughter for entertainment; the Spanish Inquisition, Aztec sacrifices, the atom bomb and Nazi death camps were conducted or invented by civilised societies. Argentina, where the Captain’s Choice journey begins, was a neutral country until World War II was virtually won, after which Juan Peron’s government protected refugee Nazis.

Spanish conquistadors had arrived in the River Plate in 1536, the people of Buenos Aires staved off British attacks nearly three centuries later and General Jose de San Martin declared Argentina independent in 1816, proceeding to free Chile and Peru from the colonial yoke and joining forces with Simon Bolivar, the other major liberator of South America. Travellers in Buenos Aires watch the tango in varying degrees of sexiness, visit the colourful, poor district of La Boca, buy football shirts with the number 10 worn by Argentina’s troubled champion Maradona and eat huge slabs of meat. Yet history is everywhere. The people once flocked to the presidential building, the Casa Rosada, to hear Peron lecture them. Now they stand reverently before the family vault of his second wife, Eva Duarte, who died at 33 but has become at least as famous as her husband on account of the musical Evita. And they still talk about their people – up to 30,000 – who “disappeared” during the rule of the generals between 1976 and 1983.

Such human folly has not touched Iguacu Falls, higher than Niagara, wider than Victoria and one of South America’s greatest sights. Yet the name itself speaks of lost civilisations. The falls are on the border between Argentina, settled by Spain, and Brazil, by Portugal. The name, however, comes from the local Guarani Indians, meaning “Great Waters”. There are 275 falls altogether.

The statue of Christ the Redeemer towering over Rio de Janeiro speaks, too, of the rise and fall of belief systems. Ninety-five per cent of Brazilians claim a religious faith, mainly Roman Catholic. While Catholicism declines in parts of the Western world, 45 per cent of the world’s Catholics are South Americans.

Brazil is one of the world’s four fastest growing economies – one of the BRIC nations, with Russia, India and China. Growing affluence has pushed many Cariocas, Rio’s poorer inhabitants, into favelas, or shanty towns, on the city’s steep hillsides. The biggest, Rocinha, houses up to 150,000 people and is an urban slum rather than a shanty town. Successive governments vow to clear the favelas and move the residents but the people stay.

Living is cheap, only a kilometre or so from the beach, and the infrastructure in favelas includes banks with ramps for the disabled, schools, health services, cable television, fresh produce shops and well-stocked butcher shops. The garbage-strewn streets are unsightly but there is no obvious malnourishment and no begging. An entrepreneurial local offers visitors the wonderful view from his sturdy three-storey home, for a modest fee. Mikhail Gorbachev came here during the 1992 Earth Summit, held in Rio largely because of the threat to the Amazon; Michael Jackson shot a music video for his They Don’t Care About Us. Bono had his hair cut here.

Other travellers are more interested in traditional Rio delights: a mini carnivale with samba show; the cable cars to Sugarloaf Mountain; a lunch of feijoada, the meat stew with black beans; the beaches of Copacabana or Ipanema, although those looking for the mysterious girl from Ipanema are likely to be hustled into jewellery shops.

Manaus, on the Amazon, is accessible only by air or the river. It is best known for its opera house, built by rubber barons early last century. The city decayed when the rubber ran out, until the government made it a free port. Now, apart from the opera house, the only reason for visiting is to explore, at least in a small way, the Amazon, which produces about one-third of the world’s oxygen and is the planet’s most diverse botanical garden.

Manaus is named after the Indians who inhabited the region but Brazilian Indians are a declining population. In Peru, dozens of Amazonian Indians died in June while protesting against government decrees facilitating oil exploration, commercial farming and logging. In Brazil, a guide tells us the annual rise in the height of the River Negro, a tributary of the Amazon, had reached 30 metres, against the previous record of 29 metres in 1953. He blames deforestation.

We arrive in Cuzco, the old Inca capital and the oldest continuously inhabited city in South America, after sailing through half of the Panama Canal and spending two nights in Panama City, where Donald Trump is adding his tower to the growing number of skyscrapers and the traffic makes Sydney’s look free-flowing.

Francisco Pizarro arrived in Peru in 1532, captured the Inca leader Atahualpa, held him to ransom and, although the ransom was paid, had him killed. The Spaniard then marched on Cuzco, near the Urubamba Valley, the Sacred Valley of the Andes. He wrote to the king: “We can assure your majesty that it is so beautiful and has such fine buildings that it would even be remarkable in Spain.” Francisco de Toledo, a Spanish viceroy, wrote that the Incan capital showed the work of the devil because “it does not seem possible that the strength and skill of men could have made it”.

The conquerors built a new city on the foundations of the Inca architecture; temples became churches. An earthquake in 1950 badly destroyed the Church of Santo Domingo, built on top of the Coricancha, which had been covered in gold, but the Inca architecture survived. Cuzco is a UNESCO world heritage site.

The Spaniards didn’t make it to Machu Picchu, high up between the Andes and the Amazon; a cathedral does not sit on top of the Temple of the Sun. We arrive on the afternoon of the winter solstice and the sun shines on the temple. If we had been in place at precisely 7.45am, we would have witnessed the extraordinary sight of the sun’s rays shining through a particular window at a particular angle.

The Incas, inspired by their sun god, built Machu Picchu’s temples, plazas, dwellings and workshops, overseeing agricultural terraces stretching down towards the valley. Although the Incas had no written language, nor the wheel, they knew about the sun and had a sense of engineering that enabled them to carve huge stones and fit them into place on top of a mountain. Yet their empire lasted barely a century.

Dutch explorer Jacob Roggeveen arrived at Rapa Nui on Easter Island in 1722. When Captain James Cook arrived in 1774, he found the Easter Islanders poor and miserable and the moai toppled. European diseases came later and Peruvian slave raiders, stealing men to work for British industry.

Now the islanders have escaped poverty through tourism. Cheerful staff at the Hotel Gomero offer fine food and smiling service, making the most of their ghosts and asking that we come back to try for deeper understanding.

source: www.smh.com.au

Chimu Adventures offers a host of tours accross South America. From Iguacu and Brazil to Patagonia and everywhere inbetween. Chimu Adventures are proudly associated with Boomers on the go – A travel club for over 45’s, offering discounted tours for baby boomers on tours all over the world.

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