Monday, February 27, 2012

Bono visits Machu Picchu after using alternative route

Rock legend Bono visited on Saturday the Inca citadel of Machu Picchu along with his family and members of his security team.

The U2 frontman entered said new world wonder this afternoon using an alternative route known as ‘Tercera Curva’ to avoid the impressive number of journalists and fans waiting for him at the main entrance.
After his visit, the Irish icon noted that didn’t expect Machu Picchu to be like that and that he would love to come back.

“I love Machu Picchu,” Bono told Andina news agency.
Bono visited many places such as the Intihuatana, the Temple of the Three Windows, the Sacred Rock and the Temple of the Sun.

The rock legend arrived at the citadel at 13:27 hours (18:27 GMT) in a private bus. Nearly one hundred people, mostly tourists, where waiting for him with video recorders and cameras.

After waiting for five minutes, the tour guide and a member of Bono’s security team got out of the vehicle and said that Bono will not enter the citadel as long as there are so many people.

On Friday, the Irish icon said “Gracias, muchas gracias amigos (Thank you very much friends). I am here with my "familia" (family) to discover this beautiful country for the first time. I am very excited, but I am here with the family so I hope you understand I can’t say hello to everybody. For the next time. Thank you.”

Source: Andina

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Machu Picchu Family Adventure



Around the globe, the word's top adventure travel outfitters are busy unveiling more new trips than you can shake a hiking stick at. And whether your particular brand of adventure involves walking, biking, kayaking, rafting, sailing, or just kicking back and discovering an emerging destination, these new trips will leave you feeling like a real explorer

When Hiram Bingham III discovered the Lost City of the Incas a century ago, he could never have imagined that Machu Picchu would someday become the world's most popular adventure destination. He might have had an even harder time imagining it as a family vacation spot.

This adventure Inca Trail trek it doesn't skimp where it counts: on the cultural immersion, You'll raft alongside pre-Inca cities on the Urubamba River, haggle for treasures at one of the largest traditional markets in Peru.

More info about 
Cusco and Inca Trail

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

It's Chilcano Week!


The flag beverage of Peru , the noble Pisco, has many ways it can be consumed. Traditionally, the Pisco Sour is the most populat cocktail and it is diffused as much inside as outside of the country, nevertheless, there is another pisco native preparation that has many followers: the Chilcano.  The Chilcano of Pisco is a simple drink that is characterized for its delicious flavor and resfreshing qualities. 

This drink is consumed generally by young people during the warmest seasons of the year during social or nocturnal meetings.  The simplicity of its preparation makes it the preferred drink by many hosts, and many bars have developed their own variant.  The Chilcano is prepared combining generous measures of Pisco, rubber syrup, Ginger Ale and lemon juice in a glass with abundant buckets of ice, it is adorned then with slices of lemon.  Some experts mix it also with the increasingly more scarce cherry liquor.


In Lima we can find many places that offer it on their menu.  The varieties are immense, but on this occasion we will touch upon some of the more famous ones.  One of them is the Pisco Bar, located in Miraflores, in the street Cantuarias.  This is a welcoming place to have a few drinks after the office or to celebrate a social event.  Their classic Chilcano is very good, but the main attraction are their creative varieties such as the Chilcano of Chili Pepper, Chilcano of Coke, Chilcano of Anís and many more other ones.


In the Bar Inglés del Hotel Country Club, A traditional bar in one of the oldest hotels of San Isidro, located in front of the Golf of San Isidro, we can enjoy one of the better prepared Chilcanos of the city, moreover it will be able to delight us with its luxury and history


La Antigua Taberna Queirolo It is one of the best-known localities to drink Chilcano.  In the Queirolo the beverage is called “Animal” and the ingredients are carried to the table so that the client prepare it themselves at their own judgment.  The additional ingredients of the “Animal” are the drops of Bitter of Narrowness that is known to have.  The Old Bar Queirolo has two establishments, one in Pueblo Libre and another in the center of Lima, to one block of the Plaza San Martin.

Other info:


Thursday, February 16, 2012

A visit to a Peruvian mountain village


The village of Kygygy is as hard to travel to as it is to pronounce. Pronounced Ki-ji-ji, and located in the mountains of Chachapoyas, the village can only be reached by horseback. For five hours, you have to sit on a horse and look at the trees, and the view from the valley below. Sometimes the path is so bumpy that you have to get off the horse and walk.
As you go up the mountain, you pass a village that is two hours’ travel from the main road. Then you pass another village which is three hours’ travel from the main road. Kygygy is five hours from the main road. It is the highest village on that side of the Utcubamba valley.
By the time you reach Kygygy, you feel as if you have arrived at the end of the earth. There are no traces of modern life, only fields, dirt houses, and dirt roads. People grow corn and potatoes in the fields because that is the way they get their food. They work with their hands and use simple tools such as hoes and shovels – there is no modern machinery. Their lives are very similar to their ancestors’ lives two hundred years ago – and many of them dress the same way their ancestors did. Watching people work the fields in ancient clothing makes you feel as if the modern world has vanished. And, until you can muster the strength to spend another five hours climbing back down the mountain, it has.

Kygygy is a village where people greet you warmly even if they haven´t seen you for years, or don´t know you. They will serve you a plate of food and chat you right up. As a guest, you will not be expected to work. To pass the time, you sit on a porch with an old woman and shuck corn.
Shucking corn is a popular pastime here. You use your hands, particularly your thumbs, to loosen the corn kernels from the cob and drop them into a cloth sack. It is surprisingly fun. As you shuck corn, you watch the smoke from the house across the road disappear into the sky. You look at the hens walking around the yard in their scatter-brained way, and at the horse tied in the distance. It all seems preternaturally calm and beautiful. And, for once, you do not check your email, because there is no wireless signal.
Night falls and it is truly night-time. The darkness is complete: there are no city lights to soften it. After a few days, your eyes adjust. You spend your evenings sipping hot tea around a fire, and perhaps listening to the radio. Besides that, there is nothing to do, and you go to bed at 8:30 like everyone else. You wake up at hours that you didn’t know you were capable of and anxiously wait for dawn so the day can start. Daylight seems like a miracle.
As the days pass, little events begin to take on more significance. A hen caught stealing eggs, or a pig breaking free from its post, will serve as the afternoon´s entertainment. The weekly market, held in one of the lower villages, seems like a huge social event. When a communal chicken barbecue is announced, people talk of little else.
When it came time for me to leave, my boyfriend´s great-aunt led me down the trail to the highway below. I went on horseback; she guided my horse with a rope.
It was a stubborn horse, who liked to walk at its own pace and chew grass. Aunt Rosa, however, was a woman of purpose. Her voice was soft, and then loud, as she cajoled the horse in her mountain dialect: shoo-blathar-blathar, SHOO! The horse was not impressed. Rosa continued with her chant. When all seemed hopeless, she took the rope and hit the horse lightly with it. She gave the horse a few light whacks with a rope, and then one that was harder, and meant business. The horse gave a yell that was more fright than pain, and finally began walking faster.
This happened several times during the journey. Each time the horse slowed down, Aunt Rosa would start to chant, and eventually wind up hitting the horse with the rope a few times.
After several hours, my thighs burned from the saddle and I had to get off the horse and walk. The weather was hot, and I was soon panting and sweating.
Aunt Rosa, however, showed few signs of tiredness, even though she was almost seventy. I marveled that she would go to all this trouble for a near-stranger such as myself.
When we finally reached the highway, I had to adjust my eyes to the strong sunlight, and to the passing cars. The spell of Kygygy had been broken. I bought Aunt Rosa a soda from the store by the side of the road and bid her farewell. She mounted the horse and made a speedy ascent up the side of the mountain.
As long as I live, I will never forget the sound of her voice leading that horse.

Source: Lauren Bulfin - Peru This Week
More info about: Chachapoyas, Kuelap and Cajamarca and Chachapoyas and Kuelap Tour Programs

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Peru: close to 20k tourists travel to Puno for Virgen de la Candelaria


About 20 thousand tourists traveled to Puno to witness the feast of the Virgen de la Candelaria.

According to the Regional Chamber of Tourism (Caretur), the number is up, from the 11 thousand that visited in 2011.

"This year we noticed more domestic tourism from Junín, Cajamarca and Lima; in previous years we mostly saw tourists from Tacna, Moquegua, Arequipa, Cusco, and Apurimac," Caretur president Manuel Quinones Leon said to Andina news agency.

Quinones said that was coupled with the increase of airlines flying to Puno.

"Until a year ago we only had an airline and we now have three, so there is healthy competition that has led to better rates and service," he said.

Presumably many were motivated to travel during the long weekend, after the government declared Monday and Tuesday to be a holiday.

Quinones said it was the first time a long holiday "so directly benefits us, as it coincides with one of the biggest festivals in the country."

"The arrival of visitors from various parts of the country, such as Junín, Cajamarca and Lima, fills us with pride, because thanks to them Candelaria is becoming a national holiday," he said.

Source: Peru This Week

More info about:

Thursday, February 09, 2012

Eco-Lodge to operate in pomac forest by 2013



An eco-lodge which will be constructed and equipped in the buffer zone of the Pomac Forest Historic Sanctuary in northern Peru will start operating by the middle of 2013.


The construction is funded by Fondo de las Américas (Fondam-Peru) and will be executed by Centro Eco.

Maria Vasquez, head of Centro Eco, noted that the construction will start in the next days using traditional materials of the region such as mud, wattle and daub.


“The lodge will have 20 rooms decorated with paintings of Sican’s culture and will provide basic services to foreign and domestic tourists,” Vasquez told Andina news agency.
In addition, Vasquez stressed that this initiative came up after constants requests from tourists, especially foreigners, who wanted to spend the night in this forest so that they could wake up very early and watch endangered birds.

More info about:

News Eco-Lodge in Pomac
The Coast: Chiclayo and Trujillo - Peru 
Birding Tours - Endemics Fanatics


Wednesday, February 08, 2012

Over 360 undocumented species found in peru's national park



The Wildlife Conservation Society’s (WCS) Peru program announced today the discovery of 365 species previously undocumented in Bahuaja Sonene National Park (BSNP) in southeastern Peru.

Fifteen researchers participated in the inventory focusing on plant life, insects, birds, mammals, and reptiles.


The discovery included: thirty undocumented bird species, including the black-and-white hawk eagle, Wilson’s phalarope, and ash colored cuckoo; two undocumented mammals – Niceforo’s big-eared bat and the Tricolored Bat; as well as 233 undocumented species of butterflies and moths.

According to Eurasia Review, this expedition was especially important because it was the first time that research of this scale has been carried out in Bahuaja Sonene National Park since it was created in 1996.


WCS Director of Latin America and Caribbean Programs, Julie Kunen, said the discovery of even more species in this park underscores the importance of ongoing conservation work in this region.

"This park is truly one of the crown jewels of Latin America’s impressive network of protected areas," she said.


BSNP contains more than 600 bird species including seven different types of macaw, more than 180 mammal species, more than 50 reptiles and amphibian species, 180 fish varieties, and 1,300 types of butterfly.

Since the 1990s, the Wildlife Conservation Society has been working in Tambopata and Bahuaja Sonene Parks in Peru, and Madidi, Pilon Lajas, and Apolobamba Parks in neighboring Bolivia.


The tranboundary region, known as the Greater Madidi Landscape, spans more than 15,000 square miles of the tropical Andes and is considered to be the most biodiverse region on earth.


WCS has helped form more than 20 community-based enterprises in the area that promote the sustainable use of natural resources, such as native honey, subsistence hunting and fishing, ornamental fish cultivation, cacao, handicrafts, and timber. More than 3,000 local people benefit from these community initiatives.

Other info:
Tambopata Photo Gallery

Source: Andina

Thursday, February 02, 2012

Cajamarca’s carnival aims to become one of the most important in peru



The carnival of Cajamarca, which is celebrated from February 9 to 22, aims to become starting this year into one of the most important tourist and cultural events in the country, noted its mayor Ramiro Bardales.

Bardales told Andina news agency that Cajamarca is the capital of Peruvian carnival and added that “we must keep this tradition and improve the event with the participation of every Peruvian.”

“The carnival of Cajamarca is one of the most expected events because we all have fun with no distinction at all. Furthermore, all security measures are guaranteed, so I want to invite the people of Lima to take part in our activities,” he said.

Moreover, Bardales noted that every thing is ready regarding the accommodations for visitors, as well as the advertising support which was guaranteed by Prime Minister Oscar Valdes during a meeting held in Lima.

Cajamarca’s mayor reiterated his invitation to the public to participate in the Carnival of Cajamarca, adding that the city is going through a time of peace and tranquility

Other info about Cajamarca and relationed:

Info about Cajamarca and other highlights
Photo Gallery Cajamarca