4 more images of Peru and a look-back post

Not quite ready with the selections from October's edit but this should wrap up Peru (and September).

Peru 2.4

Peru 2.4
Near our fishing village, a pre-Incan ruin that is layers and layers deep after generations of kings buried the monuments of the previous generation, then decorated the new larger monument in their own motifs. Fascinating, with superb, well-preserved art.

Peru 2.3

Peru 2.3
Yes. Wall-sized. See Peru 2.2 below.

Peru 2.2

Peru 2.2
Really looking forward to seeing this image of Huanchaco life projected to wall-sized.

Peru 2.1

Peru 2.1
The markets of Peru are alive with colour. It was our first month of our year-long tour so tried desperately not to shop. Mailed a box home as soon as we left Peru.

Peru was the right place to begin a year's travel

Peru was an eye-opener of a place to launch our trip. It’s a little difficult to remember all the things that went through our minds as we settled into our year off during that first month of leisure. But I recall being sharply aware of the need to travel differently than any previous travel we’d done. This was a year off, and there was no way any person could spend that many days in full-on explorer mode. You have to stop and let the time pass you by. And you have to do that surprisingly frequently. You can bully your way through the strenuous two days of climbing Mount Putukusi and neighbouring Machu Picchu after a big bad bout of altitude sickness, but there are serious physical limits in the longer term. I speak now from a position of clearer understanding. Our first major steps on returning home were health care – Karen to a naturopath to fix her digestive tract, me to the family doctor to treat a knee injury. Now the knee MRI data is in and it turns out that a year of stress to one’s knees doesn’t necessarily cause ligament damage. At least not in my case. Instead, a year of daily strain (and about a dozen mountain climbs) results in bone injuries – extensive bruising and a small fracture to my left femur. My knee may take as long to heal as it took to cause the damage. And Peru was a powerful dose of knee wear with which to begin our year’s adventure. About two-thirds of the way through our year off we began to look back at Peru and comment that it was a good thing we’d done Peru first, because at that point we didn’t feel capable of the mountain exploits we’d done back in September. Now, a full year later, I have similar thoughts regarding the year off. I don’t think I could do it again. I certainly can’t do it again in the condition I’m in now. The effects of aging isn’t the point of this piece but I had to get past that to get to the wind-down in Huanchaco. While Machu Picchu was one of the icons that we built our year off around – the others were Easter Island (up next) and Angkor Wat (towards the end) – the lazing away of days and weeks in Huanchaco is the travel style that we wanted to perfect. Later, we executed a nearly perfect down-time dropout on the island of Koh Phangan, where we spent 33 days doing as close to nothing as two people can manage. In Peru, we spent almost half our month in Huanchaco. It is a small fishing village, with little going for it but charm, and we made it our home. By the time we had wandered every street I knew we were successfully living in the moment. That’s a sensation that we are striving for in our travels and, as much as Machu Picchu was a miracle in the mountains, Huanchaco was its own miracle on the seashore. I am more likely to go back there, but that may just be the bad knee talking. We could always bus it up Machu Picchu.

Re-living our tour in photos

A totally unexpected result of travelling for a year (unlike any other number of months) is that we are re-living the experience month by month as we sort photos. It's September now so we have spent weeks sorting and editing our Peru pictures. As we build a slideshow of our month in Peru, we are choosing from photos that weren't available for posting during our trip. We carried two cameras but only blogged from a backup point-and-shoot. So, here's the result, a handful of our Peru favourites. We might find a few more before the end of September when we switch to reminiscing about Chile. But first we'll have an essay on Peru, which will be our next text post.



Best of Peru 5

Best of Peru 5
Machu Picchu, Peru: Our second climb in two days began at 3:30 a.m. Fortunately, we stayed near a hot spring where we soothed our legs while waiters brought fruity drinks.

Best of Peru 4

Best of Peru 4
Lima, Peru: Saint Day celebration parade.

Best of Peru 3

Best of Peru 3
Moray, Peru: Terracing at Inca agricultural research site. The varied altitudes of the terraces created micro-climate zones in which the Incas did crop-suitability experiments.

Best of Peru 2

Best of Peru 2
Salinas, Peru: Salt flats in the land of the Incas, still active after 4 centuries.

Best of Peru 1

Best of Peru 1
We took two cameras with us but only downloaded from the backup. So we have 1,000s of unseen photos. Here's one from Sacsayhuaman. This 15th century Inca fort is a 2 km walk above Cusco so Karen is trying to absorb some of the energy from a 7-sided building block. At least it's a distraction from her love affair with her aerosol oxygen can.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Keep those cards and letters coming

First off, we wanted to let everyone know how much your comments and greetings meant to us as we tried to get through the holiday social season without our friends and family. We kind of knew it would be hard. It was.

Back to the bloggy bit. We wrapped up Australia with a week in Sydney, mostly because we had to hit the Thai embassy, but also because we wanted to see the New Year's Eve fireworks at the Harbour Bridge. That was fun, if a bit weird. Sort of like one of those big all-day rock concerts - without the music. For us it was 12 hours of waiting around, drinking expensive beer and chatting with lots of other foreigners. I think most locals decided been-there-done-that and the crowd was tourists, just like us. All that waiting and spending $120 on beer seemed like a lot for 15 minutes of fireworks, but it was quite a spectacle. Our favourite bit was the hundreds of little rectangles of blue light underlining the splashy lightshow on the bridge as nearly everybody filmed it with a cellphone or camera. Us too. We'll post a photo if we hit a better internet cafe. Other than that big night out, a twisted ankle has forced us to take it a little easy in Sydney. However, we did manage a bit of sightseeing and ended up at the oldest pub in the city, Lord Nelson's Brewery Pub, where we tried many of their made-on-premises pints and got a little looped. We shared a table with a really nice bunch of Aussies - hi Steve, Steve, Steve*, Stephanie*, Sequel and their friends whose names we drank from our memory. (Actually, Karen might remember a few more names, but, unusually, Bob is writing this post alone while Karen rests her sore ankle.) When some of the Aussie gang first sat down half of them were named Steve so we just called them all Steve. Double-clinks to Steve and Steve. All in all, we're a bit down on big-city Australia (except for our drinking pals) because it's so much like big-city Canada. Bangkok will certainly be a change. Wish us luck.

4 comments:

Kris aka Steve said...

Hi, Kris here (one of the Steves)

Great to run into you guys and hear about your travels. I'm enjoying the photos and commentary for your previous stops along the way.

Best of luck for Thailand and the rest of the trip. Keep the photos coming!

K (S)

Teresa and Peter said...

Drinking beer in Sydney while waiting for fireworks sounds sooo horrible, how do you manage?
Back in reality (that would be Kitchener on a Saturday night) Pete was off to the boat show for a bit of dreaming and Teresa was mopping up after a cat with a bloody nose. Cats are not like humans when they get a bloody nose and there was lots of mopping to be done. Look at all the fun your missing!
Karen, hope your ankle is well enough so that you and Bob can fully enjoy Thailand. Have fun and we look forward to your next entry.

Anonymous said...

Happy New Year Guys!!
We spent new years in box seats at a Senators game (won in a shoot out) with Carrie Underwood. Well, o.k. she was in a box a few down from ours actually, but it was still a really great night.

Love you both

Lisa

Unknown said...

Hey B&K
Just wanted to note I spent a quiet New Years at Selu's watching the fireworks on the TV. But it was with family!
Hope Thailand is great - put up some pics when you can. (I swear you two are looking thinner already!)

Deni