• Isa and Ulf
Dec 2014 – Apr 2015

SouthAmerica Touring

A 113-day adventure by Isa Read more
  • Trip start
    December 15, 2014

    Frankfurt Airport

    December 15, 2014 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 5 °C

    Once again the starting point for a marvelous journey of Isa&Ulf.
    1. Check in successful :)
    2. Camera checked for drugs: unsuccessfully :) (of course!!!)
    3. Watching the plane getting ready while we get pampered with good beer at the business lounge, as last minute Miles-upgrade surprise from Lufthansa ;)
    So...we're ready to kick off 3.5months of adventure!
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  • Buenos Aires

    December 17, 2014 in Argentina ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    First breakfast in our cozy Buenos Aires (airbnb) home!. Slowly, very slowly getting started for the secrets of South America.
    Our first destination is Buenos Aires, capital city of Argentina and we're thrilled to discover their famous beef and the unique melancholy of the once the richest city in South America back in the 20's, one of the foundation of Tango.

    Although expensive we liked it a lot, especially Isa, but as always people made it really unique; we had the chance to meet old friends from the past we didn't see for many years who showed us their city from different perspectives: an old friend from Ulf`s Erasmus times in Madrid, an economist from BsAs university, who now works by the university trying to unravel the mysteries of the Argentinian economy, a colleague from Bayer, who after his retirement bought an island in the famous neighborhood 'Tigre' (Porteño's holidays destination) and transformed it into an ecological resort paradise, and friends from Isa's university, who work and live there for already a while, and took as to experience a real Milonga (dancing tango proved to be far to difficult due to being too inflexible (Ulf) or too tropical (isa)).
    So, after getting rid of the heavy jetlag we're happy to start our adventure!
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  • Ushuaia, the end of the world

    December 23, 2014 in Argentina ⋅ 🌬 4 °C

    Traveling to the end of the world...not just as a saying, but literally!
    A dream comes true for us, spending Christmas with a local family here only 1000 km away from the Antarctica at the very southern tip of this beautiful continent!
    Hiking through an extraordinarily beautiful, almost bewitched appearing-untouched landscape, sailing on the stormy south Atlantic and enjoying endless days under the midsummer southern sun.
    And after the shock of 34 degrees in Buenos Aires , the 9 degrees of Ushuaia tropical summer, with bitter-cold Antarctic winds, snow on the mountains around and the Cristal clear air...actually really got us in Christmas mood ! Only concern for us...for Santa Clous, traveling from the north pole, it will probably take quite a while to get to us; but indeed our biggest gift for this year has already started ;-)
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  • Strait of Magellan, Chile

    December 25, 2014 in Argentina ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

    Really! who ever thought we could be there? Picture yourself as a kid in one of those endless geography lessons, thinking of those places that you'll never get to know.
    Well that was our first thought when we saw this sign!Read more

  • The Calafate & Perito Moreno glacier

    December 26, 2014 in Argentina ⋅ ☁️ 2 °C

    After 20 hours of a bus travel, starting at 4:30am and arriving to final destination at 1:30am we can say we've seen the vast topography of this not-so-small island named 'Firelands' or 'tierra del fuego' in Spanish. As we started our journey (fighting not to fall asleep), we crossed the last row of the Andes and its majestic tips and lakes, and then suddenly after couple of hours the showcase of the sudden change of landscape, completely flat and desert, from deep blue and savage green to yellowish hues of desertic isolation. While crossing the strait, we got the chance to see few penguins and their kind of black and white dolphins following us while we arrived to the main land of South America.
    Final destination: el Calafate, a small town best known to the world because of its big glacier, the most famous in south america: Perito Moreno glacier. In the area we also got to visit another small town 'el Chalten', both touristic destinations during austral summer.

    And we both had a similar feeling experiencing the impact of this wild nature. Our impression is the magnificent force of nature, and thoughts on how amazing is to be able to get to see how after 5000millions years, the forces of nature still shaping our landscape and how still humans are surrender to its wildness.
    We are totally happy with this highlight of the trip, totally worth to visit if you ever get the chance :-)
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  • Bariloche

    December 30, 2014 in Argentina ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

    It took us two days, one sleep stop (Warning: Don't go to hotel Belgrano in Perito Moreno ;-) and about 1000 km to reach this destiny traveling the famous Route 40, where we were able to see more adventurous bikers and hitch-hikers wanting to achieve the route as well without the bus.

    An image of one far-away mountain chain on our left (The Andes) and the endless desert and isolation on the right, mastering all Argentinian Patagonia almost until the Atlantic coast, nothing more than wind and sun compasses this mystically beautiful landscape.
    And then getting closer to Bariloche was the big surprise; a north-nature-like microclimate, where forest and multiple lakes make this town a must- destiny for all tourists and backpackers.
    Despite knowing that we arrived during high season (New year's Eve) we got charmed by the friendly spirit of the town, so we kept delaying our check out day for a week or so. But not in vain since we had been invited (since Buenos Aires) to join a couple of Isa's university friends, David and Ximena, who were renting a car and doing the 7lakes district circuit, by chance, at the same time we were there! so what a coolest way to spend few days, with the great companion, camping and riding around this awesome area. Because the plan was to go with no plan or destination we even had to get a tent to camp, what we didn't know was that in Bariloche and surroundings temperatures can drop below cero at night =-O But nothing better than a good fire, Argentinian barbecue and friends to keep ourselves warm and inspired!
    Thank you, David and Xime, for making this part of the trip extra-special for us!
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  • Osorno

    January 7, 2015 in Chile ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    From the very beginning, one idea of the trip was finding the Latin roots of our relationship. Yet, as a big surprise, the trip to Osorno revealed the other part of our relationship, the German roots!

    The entire region has excellent beer (Kunstmann, slogan: "das gute Bier", yes, in German!), small villages have churches that are exact copies of churches in the black forest or the local Spanish word for cake is "Kuchen" and the last 10 bishops of the region were all of German origin. Yet also from an indigenous point the region is very interesting: it is the land of the Mapuche Indians, the only indigenous people in all over Latin america that resisted the Spanish. cities like Osorno were founded in the 16th century by the Spanish,but where destroyed by the Mapuche and abandoned. Actually the Spanish evacuated the entire region and signed a treaty with the Mapuche that it would be their territory, while the Spanish would remain in the north. only 300 years later, Chile finally conquered the south and Germans and other European immigrants colonized the land and re-founded the cities that were abandoned 300 years before. The conflict between modern Chile and the Mapuche yet is ongoing.
    in order to discover more of Chile, we made the quick decision to not take the bus but to rent a car and give us a week to advance to the north and go to santiago de chile, stopping wherever we would feel like doing so and visiting off the beaten path.
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  • Villarrica and seven lakes district

    January 8, 2015 in Chile ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    We had two options where to spend the night, either Pucon, renown town in the Chilean seven lakes district, or Villarrica.
    Of course Isa's family would immediately understand why we chose to stay in Villarrica.
    (There's also a town in Colombia named Villarrica, which happens to be Isa's mom parents town, where they grew up and raised their family).
    But this one is one of the oldest town yet almost totally renovate due to earthquakes and as soon as you get closer to the region you know why everyone loves it!
    A 2840mt volcano by a crystal-clear lake named Villarrica or beautiful town in Mapundun, the Mapuches language.
    And we didn't miss the chance to enjoy like the locals in a sunny-summer Sunday, having a picnic by one of the lakes and also go to the "geometric" thermas; a nicely design pools dredged into the volcano with icy cold pools and hot waters of almost 85• Celsius!
    Woww, we couldn't even resist 39•!!
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  • Santiago de Chile

    January 15, 2015 in Chile ⋅ 🌙 21 °C

    Arriving around midday, elegantly dropping the rented car off with German punctuality; then a 3h walking tour to get a first glance of this marvelous city under 35 degrees heat! Its inner city is absolutely flawless and Chile is certainly on its way towards becoming the first world, yet remaining a profound and pleasant Latin country.
    In fact we found it more Latin and less European than Argentina from its culture and customs, despite its more modern infrastructure and appearance. And as a special highlight, wherever we went, always the impressive mountain range of the Andes, like a wall 4-6000 meters high.

    Santiago allowed us to really get to know it well, including even a 5.0 earthquake waking us up at 2:00a.m; well, what would be a Chile visit without one?!
    Getting to know Chile's dreams and hopes by visiting Pablo Neruda's house and getting to know Chile's nightmares, visiting the Museum of Memory and Human Rights, dedicated to the victims of the dictatorship of Pinochet...yet what a remarkable country, building a museum like a big wound in their inner city, to constantly remind itself of the darkest moments of its past.

    Emotional highlight certainly was the wonderful dinner invitation by the parents of Ulf's Erasmus friend Pablo, who tragically died four years ago at age 29...We were invited as part of the family, and the friendship that started between Ulf and Pablo will go on between the families.
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  • Mendoza and Los Libertadores crossborder

    January 16, 2015 in Argentina ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    We just wanted to add this footprint to show you how amazing this piece of the Andes actually is.
    Starting in the morning crossing the Andes at their highest point, close to the Aconcagua, America's highest mountain, we took the Libertadores pass in one of the most impressive mountain landscapes of the world.Read more

  • Salta and entering Bolivia

    January 17, 2015 in Argentina ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

    So far, we had seen an Argentina that was very dry, almost without vegetation and flat...leaving a green Chile that was green and became dryer to the north until turning into desert. Therefore we expected the same crossing the Andes again in Argentina..yet, we were surprised to see the exact opposite: while 50 kms west across the Andes lies the worlds driest desert The Atacama, Argentina suddenly became greener and humid...until we reached after 17 hours in bus the paradise of Salta.
    The city is, due to its proximity to Bolivia, more Latin than other Argentinian cities. A rich colonial city from where we made a trip to the Humahuaca gorge, the highlight of northwest Argentina, slowly moving up to the Altiplano, to get a first glimpse of what will expect us for the next weeks.
    We frankly regret not having spent more time in Salta 'la linda', because already at midnight, we boarded the bus to the northern border to the heartland of Latin america...Bolivia!

    The midnight bus was a real backpacker experience: Stopping at every village, getting lights on and off, and everybody coming in, waking us up. At the border, waiting in line to leave Argentina and entering Bolivia over the border bridge (maybe for a European rather strange to see below the bridge, people moving goods over the small river from Argentina to Bolivia back and forth, with police and border patrol watching from the bridge but not seeing any reason to interfere)...well, seems we have really arrived in Latin america ;-)

    After crossing the border we took a small minibus for 2,75 euro to Tupiza, to start exploring the almost primeval beauty of the Bolivian southwest!
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  • Bolivian Southwest and Salar de Uyuni

    January 20, 2015 in Bolivia ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    Forget all that we said before: best landscapes so far are here!
    Starting the adventure: a Toyota Land cruiser, 200 liters of gasoline, a driver\guide, a cook, an Argentinian guy, a French woman and a thousand kilometers and four days of adventure on the Altiplano at 4000 meters.
    The landscape was absolutely incredible, between prehistoric and the Mars-like dunes...Llamas, condors and hardly any people only ghost towns at 4500 meters, in which first the Inca and later the Spanish were mining for gold, silver and a bunch other minerals that pop out of earth spontaniously, in cities so high that the first Spanish families were unable to have children, because the babies died of altitude...only when the Spanish were changing to local woman, the next generation of exploiters could be born;-)

    We can actually understand the problem....sleeping at night at our camp at 4300 meters is anything but easy...it's was literally breath-taking.

    Ps. Tupiza was the starting point of this trip, and apart from that it was important because Ulf got rid of his 7weeks beard.
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  • Potosi

    January 26, 2015 in Bolivia ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    Another mystic place from the history book, where one never thought one would be standing personally...the spanish conquistadors never found el dorado,but they found a mountain that consisted almost entirely of silver: The cerro rico, the rich mountain of Potosí. Here at 4080 meters they founded their first city in south america,and started to exploit incredible wealth. A place of glory for the spanish and place of terror and suffering for the indiginous people, who were forced to work under terrible conditions and millions died over the next 300 years, when it was called the "mountain that is eating humans".
    The mountain is still towering 4800 meters over the city, and looks like on the old spanish paintings from the 16. century,when Potosi was the largest city in the Americas and had about the size of Paris. And still today the e city lives from its mountain, and still thousands of miners work under terrible conditions and with pre-industrial techniques inside the mountain. We wanted to understand this place of glory and suffering, therefore we did not only visit the marvellous palaces and impressive churches of the old town,but also bought coca leaves and dynamite ( no joke) and entered the mountain to visit the miners working....difficult to describe this experiene, seeing the suffering and poverty, like the only 17 year old miner, to whom Isa gave a new pair of gloves as a present. Yet this is also an integral part of latin american history that may not be denied, and belongs to a trio that is destined to get to know the reality of the continent.
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  • Sucre & Tarabuco sunday market

    January 27, 2015 in Bolivia ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    Sucre is officially Bolivia's capital city and also known as the white city because it's colonial and neo-classical archicture, which gave them honor to be in the Unesco list. Most of bolivians like it a lot due to "warmer" weather and beauty and we actually agree with both!.
    But the highlight of this trip was Tarabuco; a small town 60km away from Sucre where we had to take a mini-van where everyone except us spoke Quechua and guess who was the only white, blue-eyed person of the crowd?
    The trip got us to see more of the bolivia's rural landscape with small villages of houses made of adobe and clay tiles on the roofs.

    Obviously a bit touristic but worth a while, a market where local peasants and natives come to sell their handy crafts, and where Ulf found a curious statue celebrating an uprising of local tribes in the 19th century by presenting a super-realistic scene of an indigenous warrior standing on top of a spanish soldier laying on the ground, ripping his heart out with bear hands...great motive for a "only in Bolivia picture". ;-)
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  • Quiz post! Odd observations:

    January 29, 2015 in Bolivia ⋅ ⛅ 13 °C

    1.) why do many streets in La Paz have street signs in Chinese?
    2.) why is the "museum of bolivian coast" so hilarious?
    3.) just a funny picture ;-)

    Leave a comment to win a souvenir, best post wins! We promise to send it anywhere in the world... even personally.Read more

  • La Paz

    January 30, 2015 in Bolivia ⋅ ⛅ 7 °C

    Well, quite frankly, we had no idea what to expect: maybe another gray, dodgy, overcrowded Latin american metropolis. A little gray indeed, but different than expected: A peculiar city, drenched into a narrow desert valley with up to 500 meter high walls on both sides, so narrow in some places, that only one street and the river fit in, overlooked by snow covered 6000 meter high mountains. Luckily we got the chance to use the brand-new 'Teleferico' (cable car) definitely the easiest way to get around above a unique mix of colonial buildings, modern skyscrapers, featuring all kind of markets, including the witch market where one can even buy dried baby lamas and everything else for pre-christian rituals.
    we walked around but after decided to organized a city tour for the next day, really interested to get to know the secrets and the history of this weird city; we learned that the Bolivians had kicked out their former president with a serious of strikes and violent confrontations, and that after Evo Morales emerged ten years ago as the new leader taking Bolivia and its people into a new era of fairness and equality in a country where 60% of its population is native.
    after all this history we decided to go wild last day in La Paz we rented mountain bikes and went to the famous "Death road" (sorry parents for not telling you in advance, probably better this way ;-) this gave us a chance to drive down from 4600 to 1000 meters in deadly speed, getting to know also the tropical side of Bolivia.
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  • Lake Titicaca

    February 5, 2015 in Peru ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

    Even travelers deserve a relaxed weekend every once in a while, so we decided to leave La Paz behind and travel north to the Titicaca lake. So this post resumes Isla del Sol in Bolivia and Uros, Amantina and Taquile islands in Peru.
    the bus ride was rather entertaining when a group of travelers from Chile critized the bus driver, which ended in a police involvement, and after all the bus driver decided to drive at 50km\h, excusing himself with the passengers.
    Nevertheless, we managed to get the ferry to the island of the sun where we decided to spend 3 nights in the middle of the lake under a bright star spangled sky. the island is the point where the Incas believed the god of the sun, their ancestor, touched the earth for the first time, making the island a big pilgrimage destination back in Inca time; and because we liked it so much we decided to go to the neighbor country and visit their side.
    we crossed to Peru and started from Puno, small border town rather friendly during this time of the year due to its 'fiestas' which are celebrated during an entire month. with our heavy backpacks we arrived at a gorgeous family run hostel in an old Spanish colonial building. we were received like part of the family, and enjoyed an excellent Altiplano dinner cooked by the grandma. when we realized we were the only guests, the family confessed to us that the hostel was closed during the fiestas, but they didn't want to send us away when we knocked at their door....we must have looked very exhausted from the voyage.
    from Puno one can take a public boat and head off to the islands; when they see you're a tourist they stop at 'Uros' the floating islands and explain to you exactly how they build them. hundreds of years ago, their ancestors used this lifestyle to escape the invading Incas, and managed to resist them....against the Spanish, it was no salvation though.
    On Amantani Island, we stayed the night in the house of a native family, receiving excellent local food and exploring the island. it has a magnificent view from its 300m mountain top all across the lake....we could even see the island of the sun, 100 km away in Bolivia, where we had stayed only 3 days before.
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  • Arequipa

    February 8, 2015 in Peru ⋅ 🌫 12 °C

    Taking a super-slow bus from lake Titikaka down to Arequipa, passing the altiplano and entering the land of the canyons. After more than three weeks around 4000 m high, Arequipa almost feels tropical at 2400 meters. la ciudad blanca, the white city with 360 days of sushine and everblue skies received us with rain and clouds for the 6 days of our stay. Nevertheless, it will be one of the highlights of the trip. That is to large extend the "fault" of the casa de melgar hostel. Due to a communication error among their staff, the hostel offered us one of their best rooms, a honeymoon suite about the size of our entire apartment in Cologne, with four meter high ceilings and walls of massive, castle-like volcanic stones inside an old Spanish colonial townhouse for 28 euros a night...which we accepted gladly for three nights, and even managed to convince the hotel to extend another night. Every morning and evening with a big smile, we walked the almost a hundred meters from our cozy realm to the reception, crossing 5(!) interior courts and a flower garden, making every day in Arequipa automatically very special! apart from that, we celebrated halftime of our sabbatical with the excellent Peruvian kitchen,with Arequipa being one of its culinary centers and took a pisco sour mixing class, in order to not repeat the terrible result that we achieved when trying to prepare one for Ulf's family four years ago :-(
    In order to not only spend the days sleeping long, enjoying excellent food and prepare drinks, we decided it was time to do some hardcore sports: climbing the Chachani, a 6085 meter high volcano, overlooking the city and the canyon land. at the end, together with a lovely swiss couple, Samuel and Michaela, and Ivan, our mountain guide traveled up to our base camp at 5200 meters, where we all spend half of the night in tents, before starting to attack the summit at 1:00 o'clock in the morning. Isa decided after some climbing, that she would rather go back and wait for the group in the base camp, and also the swiss couple stopped at 5700 meters...kind of sad because it was Samuels plan to propose marriage to Michaela on the summit...but a proposal in the base camp with champaign was almost as nice. so in the end, out of the four, only Ulf arrived at the summit together with the guide. since then, we know, that "one of the easiest" 6000 mountains, does not mean "easy"at all. isa waited in the base camp for the completely exhausted Ulf, who returned after 10 hours from the summit...while she also broke her record, carrying for 5 hours almost 15 kilogram of equipment up to 5200 meters...after that, we slept almost 14 hours in our cozy hotel room.
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  • Nasca

    February 12, 2015 in Peru ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

    Honestly, Nasca really had a kind of a difficult start.
    We arrived with the overnight bus from Arequipa at 7:AM and it was incredibly dry and hot, (obviously after 9 weeks in the mountains). A friendly guy accepted not only to store our backpacks but also warned us not to get scammed by a bunch of people selling fake tours by the entrance door of the terminal and with the help of a friend of his' we went to the airport and took a flight over the famous nasca lines...

    The nasca lines from above are really impressive and our plan was to return and take a bus further north directly... but the maneuvers of the pilots trying to show us all caused Ulf to vomit in the plane- so, quite frankly we were too sick to take a bus and move on...and very happy we didn't. After a heavy "chaufa rice" lunch and a little siesta, we accepted an offer from an agency for an archeological tour. it turned out to be a tour to the pyramids and tomb fields of the Nasca: the pyramids extremely impressive, the tombs very sad. For an archeology-lover like Ulf, it was heartbreaking seeing skulls, bones, some even with human hair still attached after 1000 years, textiles laying around in the open sand as a result of looting and artifact trade...yet interesting and unique.
    The second part consisted in driving around at 90km\h on the sand dunes with a gigantic-open jeep and sandboarding in the dunes...hehehe honestly, it was big fun, and a great day after a-not-really promising start.
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  • Huacachina and Peruvian desert

    February 15, 2015 in Peru ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    Still surprised by the heat and dryness of Nasca, we realized we just had a blurry idea of what would come next on the coast on the way to Lima. What we certainly didn't expect, was spending two relaxing nights on a palm-tree covered oasis between high sand dunes, in the middle of the desert. Huacachina is a 'lover's resort' just perfect to warm up after the Andes ;-) and although not-so-clever arriving this time of the year at this very romantic place on Valentine's day, we managed to relax a lot in the first pool (on this trip so far) and under the palm trees...but didn't forget to climb the sand dunes, enjoy the marvelous view and the dusk across the desert...when we realized, that none of us has ever been to a desert, and we had not expected to change that during our voyage.Read more

  • Lima

    February 18, 2015 in Peru ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    A city where transit police are mostly women (because men are easily bribed), cats are kings in all parks and the statue of one independence heroine has a "Llama" on top of her head due to the miss interpretation of the Indian (in Spanish the word "llama" does not only mean Llama, but also flame....as the Spaniards had originally intended ;-)

    We knew Lima from short visits and business trips before, as a crowded city of 9 mill inhabitants where fighting with constant fog, pollution and a never-ending traffic jam. this time, we were extremely positively surprised by the huge improvements that have been achieved over the past 5 years. this time we stroll around enjoying Mediterranean weather, admiring the new bicycle lanes, the speed-bus system and the metro, and finally found time to discover the incredible colonial beauty of its old-town...for the first time understanding why Lima was the capital of colonial south america and the richest city on the continent. in order to understand the city in all its facets, we took a bus to the Inca and pre-inca ceremonial center of Pachacamac, crossing the entire city, including areas you certainly never see as a tourist...and probably wouldn't want to see anyway. needless to say that we crowned our trip with more joys of the excellent Peruvian cuisine: we went shopping at the local market and took a private class with a Peruvian chef who taught us how to prepare a delicious ceviche and other delights from the rich local kitchen. all and all as the saying goes: ''The way to the heart is through the stomach'' <3
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  • Huaraz and White cordillera

    February 21, 2015 in Peru ⋅ ☁️ 19 °C

    After the short coastal 'intermezzo', we reminded ourselves that we wanted to get to know the Andes during our trip and took the next bus back to the mountains. The target was Huaraz, the capital of a region called the Peruvian 'Switzerland'; we thought we actually had seen the Ande's most spectacular face in Chile and Argentina, but the Andes surprised us again with the most beautiful mountain range one can imagine, containing 22 summits over 6000mts and 55 over 5700mts, making it the highest mountain range outside the Himalaya. So we put out our trekking shoes again, and started trekking again; on the first day to start to ''acclimatize'' we went up to 5050mt to touch a glacier... something very special only 1000km away from the equator, yet sad when they told us that it is melting so fast, that they give the glacier only 13 more years (serious global warming).
    Next day we returned to hardcore hiking and went to the Huascaran Peru's highest mountain and went up to 4800mt to a beautiful lake, all the time being watched by the majestic 6768mt high summit...the highest mountain we have ever seen in our lives!!
    But the area is not only a fantastic from a nature point of view, it is also home to Peru's most ancient civilization. to honor that (and chill a bit) we visited Chavin, a 3500 year old complex of pyramids; what makes this place special and unique is that it has a statue of Peru's oldest god. while the Spanish destroyed all Inca gods they could find, and no statues are left anywhere in the entire continent, this impressive carved block, the mother of all Andean gods, remains still in the chamber where it was erected and has not been destroyed nor moved since 3500 years.
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  • Trujillo and Northern Peru

    February 23, 2015 in Peru ⋅ ☁️ 22 °C

    After two and a half months of no time pressure and complete freedom to choose how long long we want to stay in one place and where to go next...the clock now is really ticking: on the 27.02 we have to catch our flight from Guayaquil to the Galapagos Islands. That's why we have decided for a small serious of overnight buses to cross northern Peru, spending our nights on the road trying to catch some sleep and spending our days fighting the sleep and discovering the unknown territory. in Trujillo we arrived at 5:00am in the morning, waiting for the sun to come up. We organized our escape to the north for the next night, and headed out to city center to find the so called tours, we decided for a hit-and-run- archeology experience.
    first we traveled to the pyramid of the moon, built by the Moche culture and between 200 and 600, an extraordinary complex,that impresses with 30 meter high walls, painted with bright colors and exquisite figures. in the afternoon, we traveled to Chan Chan, a city that was built between 600 and 1450. the area is more than 22 square kilometers big, making it the biggest ancient city on the entire american continent, and the largest adobe city in the world. the palace of the governor, beautifully restored amazes with sheer size and unique architecture. After the hardcore archeology program we even had a bit of time left to go to the beach and watch the sunset, while some Peruvians where riding primitive surfboards made of dried grass, like their ancestors had been doing for hundreds of years. a quick, light dinner in the beautiful colonial old town of Trujillo...and back to the terminal, for another night on the road...always up north.
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  • Máncora

    February 26, 2015 in Peru ⋅ ⛅ 5 °C

    Time for vacation! After hardcore archeology and serious high mountain trekking, the last two days of Peru have been beach, pool and the Pacific ocean in the marvelous town of Mancora, close to the border of Ecuador. vacation needed while traveling??? may sound strange for everybody who have not done a big backpacking yet (to some even unfair). But traveling is not holiday, and sometimes one simply needs some time to rest and simply reflect on the hundreds of things one has seen and the people one has met on the trip...well, we ourselves wouldn't have thought so before the trip...but we actually realize, we are not getting any younger :-( So, here we are, getting strengths before flying out to the pacific on to the Galapagos islands, before returning to the Andes to complete it with the northern parts in a Ecuador and Colombia!Read more