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Cuzco Hotel - Monasterio HotelThe Weavers’ Way to     Machu Picchu (4D/3N)
Cuzco Hotel - Monasterio HotelChoquequirao
    (5 Days / 4 nights)

Cuzco Hotel - Monasterio HotelChoquequirao & Machu     Picchu 12d/11n
Cuzco Hotel - Monasterio HotelMollepata/Inca trail to     Machu Picchu 8d / 7n
Cuzco Hotel - Monasterio HotelSalcantay to Machu     Picchu (5days / 4nights)
Cuzco Hotel - Monasterio HotelThe Inca Quarry Trail
    (4 days / 3 nights)

    Cuzco Hotel - Monasterio Hotel Predeparture        information
       Choquequirao



Cuzco Hotel
Hotels in Cuzco: Casa Andina Cuzco Plaza Hotel
Choquequirao 12 days/11 nights.
cuzco hotel

Choquequirao 12 days/11 nights.


Day 1. to Cachora / Chiquisca


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Choquequirao 12 days/11 nights.











Choquequirao 12 days/11 nights.












Choquequirao 12 days/11 nights.












Choquequirao 12 days/11 nights.












Choquequirao 12 days/11 nights.













Choquequirao 12 days/11 nights.













Choquequirao 12 days/11 nights.









Hotel in cuzco
Departing from Cusco in the early morning, we take a spectacular drive across the farmlands of the Anta Plateau, surrounded by the snow-capped peaks of the Andes. The winding road plunges more than 1,800m./6,000ft. to a bridge over the Apurimac Gorge, then climbs through lush fields and orchards before making a final descent to the village of Cachora, at 3,400m./11,100ft., where we encounter stunning close-up views of the snow-capped Cordillera Vilcabamba. Here we meet our crew and horse pack train and begin our hike, catching our first glimpse of distant Choquequirao at the Capuliyoc lookout before dropping steeply through dry cactus and orchid country into the Apurimac River Canyon. We camp at the small oasis of Chiquisca, 2000m./6,550ft.


Day 2. to Choquequirao
Hotel in cuzco
We descend the last fifteen hundred feet of elevation to the Apurimac River –“Great Spirit Speaker” in the Quechua language of the Incas – and cross the mighty river on a suspension footbridge, at 1550m./5,100ft. A broad trail makes a zig-zagging ascent, which takes us out of the dry canyon zone past small sugarcane plantations to green upland meadows where, across a deep valley, we meet our first panoramic vista of the buildings and terraces of Choquequirao. The final leg of today’s hike passes through the cool shadows of a native cloud forest as we approach the wooded ridgetop (3000m./10,000ft.) where the Incas built their remote ceremonial center. We camp near the Inca ruins.


Day 3. in Choquequirao
Hotel in cuzco

We have the entire day to explore this stunning Inca settlement. As mysterious as Machu Picchu, its name means “Cradle of Gold”. Early Spaniards knew of this place, yet its remoteness protected it. French explorers visited it in the 19th century, and in 1909 explorer Hiram Bingham was the first to scientifically investigate the site. Some speculate that the emperor Topa Inca had it built as a personal spiritual retreat, to rival his father Pachacuti’s magnificent estate at Machu Picchu. Whoever built this place, it was undoubtedly an elite settlement, built for ceremonial purposes and occupied by Inca nobility.

The Apurimac river roars distantly 1,450m./4,800 ft. below, visible on either side of a steep ridge to which clings the Inca city. As we approach the heart of the city, a sweep of enormous curved terraces leads our eye to an artificial hill and ceremonial platform overlooking the main plaza. Here afternoon thermal currents bring Andean Condors soaring over the complex of temples, mausoleums, royal residences, ritual baths and water channels, great gathering halls, storehouses, hidden gardens and a giant stairway, all still standing as testimony to the careful planning of Inca engineers. Excavation work at the site is very recent, and archaeologists are continually uncovering hitherto unknown areas and structures. South and east, below the main plaza, lie several clusters of newly-discovered buildings, including the so-called Ridge Group, and the Waterfall Temple, an intriguing ceremonial complex facing the cascades of a steep ravine. Other investigations have revealed more than 130 terraces on the precipitous drop-off to the west, some of them faced with white stone friezes featuring zig-zag and checkerboard patterns, along with 22 llama figures.


Day 4. to Pincha Unuyoc
Hotel in cuzco
We climb a narrow trail through bamboo thickets and dense cloud forest, spotting exotic bird and plant species as we round the mountain spur above Choquequirao and cross a moderate pass, before descending broad, grassy slopes into the Yanama river basin. Spanning the skyline ahead of us to the north we see the massive blue-green ridge of Qoriwayrachina, once home to an Inca farming and mining complex which supplied Choquequirao. The looming heights of Cerro Victoria upon this ridge feature a sacred platform where the Incas once observed the winter solstice. With the Yanama river gorge visible far below, the sheer scale of the landscape here , is breathtaking. By lunchtime we reach the outlying site of Pincha Unuyoc -- “Water Gushing Forth” -- a fan of carefully-built stone farming terraces, topped by a small temple complex. Camping near the terraces, we enjoy the views and the relaxation offered by this short day’s hike.


Day 5. to Maizal
Hotel in cuzco
We begin the steep switchback descent into the Rio Blanco ravine, threading our way through a dry micro-environment of gnarled, ghostly trees draped with lichens and epiphytes; this is a day for spotting unusual orchids, tillandsia flowers, and varieties of cactus. Leaving the torrid, boulder-strewn ravine behind, we ascend once more to cloud forest and fresher altitudes, as we reach our camp at the small farm of Maizal.


Day 6. to Yanama
Hotel in cuzco
We ascend through ever-changing layers of cloud forest, soon passing the first of many abandoned mine-shafts -- the remnant of a once-prosperous lode of silver first worked by 17th-century Spanish Jesuit missionaries and their native flock. As we climb beyond the tree line we find ourselves following the remains of an Inca road which crossed the ridge ahead of us, at Minas Victoria pass (4,400m./14,500ft.) At the pass we face startling views of the Cordillera Vilcabamba, with the 6,000m./19,800ft. peaks of the Pumasillo range dead ahead of us and Choquetacarpo pass off the north-west. This spot is right on the flight path for Andean condors soaring the north slope of Qoriwayrachina, and we usually see them here. After the pass the trail descends past dozens of shafts and piles of mine tailings rich with glittering minerals, following a broad path carved into a dramatic cliff face. The trail penetrates thickets of giant lupin and weaves through small farming plots as we approach Yanama, where friendly villagers may trade weavings or farm produce at our streamside campsite.


Day 7. to Totora
Hotel in cuzco
Our route ascends a of valley broad pastures between the snow capped ranges of Pumasillo to the north, and Padreyoc to the south. The climb is gradual but continuous, until finally we leave grassy meadows behind and cross the stony, windswept slopes of Puerto Yanama (4,700m/15,500ft). At this pass, as we cross the watershed between the Apurimac and Urubamba river systems, we can gaze down into the Santa Teresa valley, and across to dramatic vistas of Salcantay (6,270m/20,565ft) and Humantay (5,917m/18,760ft), the last great peaks of the Vilcabamba range, beyond which lies Machu Picchu. We make a winding descent to our camp by a stream near the village of Totora.


Day 8. to Collpapampa
Hotel in cuzco
We take a dramatic trail that traverses the steep south bank of the Santa Teresa river. Bird and plant life teem along the banks of tumbling side streams as we enjoy this short and easy day. We camp in a meadow at the tiny village of Collpapampa, where we can take some rest time, or descend a footpath to soak in a delicious hot spring pool by the Santa Teresa river.


Day 9. to Playa
Hotel in cuzco
We cross to the north bank of the Santa Teresa and take an undulating path downriver through delightful cloud forest and then coffee plantations and tropical orchards of passion-fruit, papaya and avocado, with towering mountains to either side of us. We meet schoolchildren and the mule trains of local farmers as we approach the roadhead at the village of Playa. Here we camp by the schoolhouse and enjoy a dip in the river.


Day 10. to Patallacta
Hotel in cuzco
After a short walk we leave the dirt road and start to climb a well preserved Inca highway to a ridgetop that divides the Santa Teresa from the next valley east, the Aobamba. The ridge is forested with tall trees, a rare example of pristine climax cloud forest, and here we encounter a broad Inca road running along the ridgeline. We take this for a short way, so that we can glimpse our first views of Machu Picchu, perched on a mountain saddle far to the east. Then we descend through the ruins of Patallacta, a site first discovered by Hiram Bingham in 1915, subsequently lost to science, and then rediscovered in the 1980s. This extensive site seems to be an outlier of the main Inca city, with ceremonial significance relating to the winter solstice sun, which rises over Machu Picchu, as seen from here. We explore these ruins as we descend towards our campsite, a grassy and secluded meadow with stupendous views toward Machu Picchu, the Urubamba river, and the snow-capped peaks of Salcantay and Wakay Willka.


Day 11. to Machu Picchu
Hotel in cuzco
We take a zig-zagging trail through the forest to reach the Aobamba river, just upstream of its confluence with the Urubamba. After passing a hydro-electric power station and crossing a bridge we meet the railroad and follow its tracks along the banks of the river to the town of Aguas Calientes. Here we can rest at our hotel, enjoy shopping or the hot springs in this cramped and bustling community, or choose to take the bus for an afternoon visit to spectacular Machu Picchu itself.


Day 12. to Machu Picchu / Cusco
Hotel in cuzco

We leave early to catch the first bus to Machu Picchu, the mysterious Inca settlement scientifically discovered by Hiram Bingham in 1911. Here we tour the highlights of the Inca site, and then take time to explore and discover the hidden corners of the Inca city for ourselves. Mistakenly identified by Hiram Bingham as the last Inca refuge of Vilcabamba, Machu Picchu is now known to have been a private royal estate of Pachacuti, the emperor who launched the Inca imperial expansion in the mid-15th century. It is still not known exactly why Pachacuti chose to build such a large and complex settlement in this place, remote from the major centers of the Inca world. In all likelihood it was the site’s encirclement by the Urubamba river and the concentration of nearby snow peaks -- powerful and sacred elements in the Inca religion -- that drew the Incas here, just as the stunning natural beauty of the place attracts visitors from all over the world to this day.

In the afternoon we take our leave of Machu Picchu, boarding a bus to the train station, and then our train back to Cusco.




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Prices per person
Hotel Category
2/3
4/up
 





Notes
cuzco hotel
Hotel in cuzco

What we include:

- A licensed, well-trained, English-speaking guide, who visits the clients the evening before departure to explain the trek and answer any questions
- Camping Equipment: spacious North Face tents, dining tent, toilet tent, tables and chairs, oxygen bottle and cooking equipment. Trekkers need only bring a sleeping bags and sleeping pads!
- Chef and Assistant Chef preparing healthy, hearty meals cooked with fresh, local ingredients.
- Well-paid and well-treated porters. We supply the appropriate duffel for you to pack and them to carry. You carry only a light daypack.
- Round trip car transportation from Cusco to the start of the trail and vice versa.
- Entrance tickets .
- Maps


WEATHER.

The Andean weather can be unpredictable, despite the sharp divide between dry and wet seasons. The dry season runs from May to October or November; the rainy season goes from December through April. Nevertheless, Choquequirao lies in the forested fringes of the Amazon basin, where showers can occur at any time of year. Therefore, even in the “dry” season, your daypack should always include full rain gear (both jacket AND trousers).
Daytime temperatures can vary greatly, with daytime highs ranging from 10ºC/50ºF to 32ºC/90ºF and nightime lows ranging from 10ºC/50ºF to a cold 4ºC/40ºF, though seldom much lower. The floor of the Apurimac Canyon gets very hot during the day. Bring your swimsuit for a delicious dip in the river.


Cuzco Hotel - Monasterio HotelMore Information

  
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Cuzco Hotel - Hotels and Tours.
Cuzco Hotel - Hotels and Tours.
Cuzco Hotel - Hotels and Tours.
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