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BEYOND THE INCA TRAILMollepata and Inca Trail to Machu Picchu Trekk
8 Days / 7 Nights |
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Day 1: Cusco – Soraypampa – Salcantaypampa
We drive from Cusco across a high plateau, descending spectacular switchbacks into the warm valley of Limatambo, where we visit the ruins of Tarawasi, a tiered Inca ceremonial platform featuring some of the most elegant and delicate Inca stonework. Continuing up a side road we come to the attractive highland village of Mollepata. A short way beyond here we reach the meadows of Cruz Pata, where we meet our trail crew and pack animals, and make our first camp.
Day 2: Salcantaypampa – Incachiriasca - Sisaypampa
A day of gentle hiking takes us over a ridge through scattered forest, where we meet the Rio Blanco valley. We follow its upper slopes high above the river through diminishing shrubland until we cross the rim of Soraypampa and meet the open grasslands of the highland puna.
Here, at 4,000 m/13,120 ft, we cross a broad plateau at the foot of the spectacular snow-capped spire of Humantay (5,910 m/19,385 ft). The massive ice-covered south face of Salcantay — one of the great peaks of the Andes, at 6271 m/20570 ft — fills the skyline ahead of us as we make camp.
Day 3: Sisaypampa - Paucarcancha
We begin the most challenging day of our trek, winding our way past a gigantic terminal moraine left by a receding glacier as we begin the zig-zag ascent to the mighty pass of Incachiriasca (4900 m). Around mid-day we cross the pass, a bare, windswept landscape of rocks and ice, close to cracking glaciers and the ridge spot known to climbers as Japanese camp. From here we descend into the valley of Sisaypampa, catching glimpses of Palcay (5,422 m/17,785 ft), the "hidden peak" just north of Salcantay. We camp at Sisaypampa.
Day 4: Paucarcancha – Huayllabamba
An easy day downvalley leads us below the slopes of Salcantay, along a river channeled into a straight canal by the Incas at Pampacahua. We camp by the Inca site of Paucarcancha, a tambo and checkpoint controlling access to the Inca Trail and Machu Picchu in ancient times.
Day 5: Huayllabamba - Pacaymayo
We proceed northwards a short way downvalley, reaching the village of Huayllabamba, where we turn west up the side valley of Llullucha. Now we climb through shifting native microclimates of tropical cloud forest then high altitude queńua or polylepis forest, all draped with bromeliads and orchids, before crossing a brief belt of native dwarf forest, filled with hummingbirds. We break through the treeline, crossing the rim of Llulluchapampa, a 3,800 m/12,460 ft plateau.
We pick up the trail which traverses a steep, grassy mountainside to the second high pass of our journey – and first pass of the famous Inca Trail to Machu Picchu – Warmiwańusca (Dead Woman’s Pass) – at 4,200 m/13,775 ft. Here we can look back on a vast panorama of sweeping snowpeaks and valleys of the Huayanay massif, or gaze ahead to the deep Pacaymayo valley and the climb to our third high pass, the Abra de Runkuracay (4,000 m/13,120 ft), which awaits us tomorrow. One and a half hours of descent from the pass on a paved trail, with a waterfall to our left, brings us to our campsite in the forested Pacaymayo valley (3,600 m/11,800 ft).
Day 6: Pacaymayo - Phuyupatamarca
As we climb out of the Pacaymayo valley up an orchid-strewn mountain
slope past the Inca site of Runkuracay, we follow an Inca stone
stairway and encounter awe-inspiring views across the Urubamba gorge
to the glaciers of Wakay Willka (5,750 m/18,860 ft).
As we reach the next pass we confront a sweeping panorama of the
snow-covered Vilcabamba range ahead of us, dominated by Choquetacarpo
and Pumasillo (5990 m/19,650 ft). We descend, making a stop to visit
Sayacmarca, the first of several intricate and beautiful Inca ceremonial
sites along the trail. Continuing along a winding stone highway
along the upper fringes of the Andean cloud forest, we pass other
small Inca sites and platforms, and enter a tunnel cut from living
rock, before reaching our camp above another Inca ruin, the site
of Phuyupatamarca.
Day 7: Phuyupatamarca – Machu Picchu
We leave early on this final leg of the magical journey to Machu
Picchu. After pausing to explore the maze of towers and terraces
that spill down the mountainside at Phuyupatamarca we descend an
Inca stone staircase through ever-changing layers of cloud forest,
with the sites of Inti Pata and Wiñay Wayna ahead of us in
the distance. After a visit to the breathtaking clifftop site of
Wiñay Wayna, discovered only in 1941, we complete the traverse
through an enchanted forest filled with giant ferns that leads us
to Intipunku, the Sun Gate. Here we catch our first magnificent
view of Machu Picchu. Arriving mid-afternoon, we descend the final
section that leads us into the legendary Lost City of the Incas.
We overnight in Aguas Calientes, the small town in the Urubamba
valley below Machu Picchu.
Day 8: Machu Picchu to Cusco
We return to Machu Picchu early, spending most of the day at this
bewitching place, with both a guided experience of the highlights
and then time to explore the ruins on our own. In the afternoon
we complete our journey, traveling by train to Cusco.
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