Posts Tagged ‘Peru Travel’
Peru Travel – Link Directory
Dos Manos Peru
Based in Cusco, the former capital of the Incas we have a direct link to the diverse aspects of the culture and the history of our Country — and the best local contacts.
Our link URL is http://www.dosmanosperu.com/
Travel Links Directory – Hotels Flights Destinations
Directory of travel related web sites with links to – flights hotels vacations destination guides travel agents agencies and travel information.
Our link URL is http://www.travellinksdirectory.com
Description: PERU ADVENTURE TOURS is authorized adventure tour operator by the Peruvian government. PERU ADVENTURE TOURS features a variety of private and luxury excursion all over Peru; Peru Cycling, Peru Trekking, Peru Climbing, Peru Horseback Riding, Peru Birding, Peru Rent A Car, Peru 4×4 Tours, leisurely jungle tours, private and backpacker Inca Trail to Machu Picchu, Salkantay trek, Lares Llama Trek, Ausangate Trek, Trekking to Choquequirao, Trek in the Colca and Cotahuasi Canyon and more amazing outdoor activities on the high Andes of South America.
Our link URL is http://www.peruadventurestours.com
Email: info(at)peruadventurestours.com
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The links to the companies above are for reference. We are not personally familiar with all of these companies, so further research may be required before using their services.
YouTube Video – Peru Tours
Travel throughout Peru. For more information on customized tours to Peru, check out our website at www.panam-tours.com or e-mail us at info@panam-tours.com
Duration : 0:3:12
Interesting Facts About Peru
Listed below are a number of sites which provide some interesting (and some bizarre) facts about Peru.
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Peru Travel Deals Tips: Travel Documents
Your passport must be valid for six months from the date of travel. If your passport is about to expire you will not be granted entrance to Peru. It is also worthwhile checking whether you need a visa (www.peru.visahq.com/).
Make two copies of all your travel documents (tickets, flights details, itineraries, passports) and leave one copy at home with friends or family. Keep any copies you carry with you separate from your other documents.
We also scanned our documents into a Word document which was then password protected and e-mailed to ourselves, so we could access them quickly if necessary. Bear in mind that Internet Cafes are not necessary secure places to access this information.
When travelling between towns always have your passport with you as legally it needs to be ready for inspection at any time.
Carry your money, passport, and credit card with you at all time – don’t rely on the safety of the hotel safes. A concealed pocket within our trouser pockets once kept our cash safe (not in Peru I hasten to add) during an armed robbery.
Peru Travel Deals Tips: Flights to Peru
Before you begin your search for a good travel deals to Peru, there are some guidelines we suggest you follow to secure the best travel deals.
1. Be flexible with when you can travel. If you can travel Monday-Thursday, you may be able to get a cheaper flight. Non stop flights to Lima are the most expensive. Breaking up the long flight with a connecting flight (eg Quito in Ecuador) may save you money.
2. Booking flights on-line generally saves you money.
3. Last minute travel deals are becoming increasingly scarce. It now seems that booking early ensures you get the best deals.
4. Book your travel for off-peak season (avoiding, for example, the Northern Hemispheres key summer holiday periods) to find exceptional travel deals and getaways.
5. Travelling on holidays, such as Christmas Day, New Years Eve or July Fourth could save you quite a bit of money, as people will generally be reluctant to travel on these days.
6. Compare prices from several airlines to determine which will offer the best price or provide specific travel deals.
Listed below are the main Airlines and Flight Agents operating flights to Peru.
Flights from the US and Canada to Peru
Airlines with flights from the US and Canada
Air Canada www.aircanada.com
American Airlines www.aa.com
Continental Airlines www.continental.com
Delta Airlines www.delta.com
LAN www.lan.com
United Airlines www.ual.com
Flight Agents
STA Travel www.sta-travel.com
www.cheaptickets.com
www.exitotravel.com
www.travelcuts.com (from Canada)
Flights from the UK
Airlines with flights from the UK
KLM www.klm.com (flights via Amsterdam)
Iberia www.iberia.com (flights via Madrid)
Lufthansa www.lufthansa.co.uk
American Airlines www.aa.com (via USA)
Continental Airlines www.continental.com (via USA)
Delta Airlines www.delta.com (via USA)
United Airlines www.unitedairlines.co.uk (via USA)
Flight Agents
Bridge the World www.bridgetheworld.com
STA Travel www.statravel.co.uk
Trailfinders www.trailfinders.co.uk
Journey Latin America www.journeylatinamerica.co.uk
Travel Bag www.travelbag.com
Flights from Australia and New Zealand
Airlines with flights from Australia and New Zealand
Aerolineas Argentinas www.aerolineas.com.au
Air New Zealand www.airnz.com
LAN www.lan.com
Quantas www.quantas.com.au (Australia) or www.quantas.co.nz (New Zealand)
United Airlines www.unitedairlines.com.au (Australia) or www.unitedairlines.co.nz (New Zealand)
Peru Travel Deals: The Sacred Valley – Ollantaytambo
From Urubamba we caught a collectivo to Ollantaytambo, a few miles up the road. Famed for its extensive Inca terraces and ruined temple-fortress, Ollantaytambo marks the lowest end of the SacredValley. Whilst in use, its function is thought to have been an administrative centre, but following the Spanish “invasion” it was also used as an Inca stronghold after the fall of Cusco in 1536.
The village itself could be referred to as ‘quaint’. A high proportion of the buildings are built on huge granite Inca foundations, with the distinctive, closely-knit, stonework that we became accustomed to seeing. The layout of the village still retains characteristics inherited from the Incas, including the notion that if you look at it from the air it supposedly resembles a piece of maize. Although Ollantaytambo is quite small it is really geared up for the tourists and is full of extortionately priced cafés, restaurants and shops. It is the nearest village to the start of the Inca trail and it is also a popular place to catch the train from to go to Machu Picchu. The number of hostels far exceeded those in Urubamba, as did their costs.
A couple of minutes walk from the central plaza we were wowed by an incredible set of grand terraces. The tall stone terraces probably acted as protection from possible invasions, but their primary function was most likely to have been agricultural. Like huge steps, they led to a temple/fortress construction on the top. One of the amazing things about these ruins were the massive red granite megaliths that were located way up the hillside, about 80 metres from the level of the village. It looked like the Incas had grand ideas for Ollantaytambo and were in the process of building a temple before the Spanish scuppered their plans. The smoothly cut stone faces imply that the temple would have had a significant religious status – the rule of thumb being, the better the stonework, the more important the building was. The huge slabs, weighing at least 100 tonnes each, originated from a quarry about three miles from the village. It would have taken some manpower to move them, but the Incans weren’t stupid and supposedly diverted the river to help them get the slabs across the valley. How they got them up the hillside to the top of the site was probably not so easy.
On reaching the top of the terraces we sat and enjoyed commanding views of the whole village and up the Sacred Valley. It was easy to distinguish the smaller terraces along the valley and hillsides, many of which are in very good condition and still in use. We didn’t get a chance to visit the salt terraces, which are still used today, or the nearby experimental agricultural terraces that form an amphitheatre, but the terraces were enough to show us that this valley was important agriculturally. The Incans developed complex irrigation schemes, setting up drainage systems and canals to help expand their crop resources. The highland areas today produce little more than potatoes, wheat and maize, but the Incans added to this list tomatoes, cotton, peanuts and coca among the many crops they grew.
Perched high on the hillside opposite the fortress are even more ruins. Bearing in mind that prisons during the Incan rule were of no use because their punishment usually consisted of death, the theory that they were used as granaries rather than prisons is more feasible. In fact the Incas had a particularly violent punishment system. If someone stole, murdered, or had sex with a Sapa (high priest) wife or a Sun Virgin, they were either thrown off a cliff, hands cut off, eyes cut out, or hung up to starve to death. “Ama Sua, Ama Quella, Ama Lulla”, “Don’t lie, don’t steal, don’t be lazy” was the philosophy of the Inca Empire, where laziness was a capital offence punishable by death. Funnily enough, this excluded priests and royalty. This philosophy is still apparent and despite being very poor, begging on the streets was not a common a sight as we had expected. It seemed to be restricted to very old, wailing women, all of whom were totally ungrateful of any gifts of food or money.
Unemployment was non-existent during the Inca rule, everyone taking part in building roads, fortresses, temples, drainage and agricultural systems. Rather than paying taxes, each Inca citizen was required to spend 7 weeks in the service of their Lord.
We clambered up the mountainside to try and reach the other ruins, but the main route was mostly impassable as most of it had slumped down the hillside many years ago.
Huge amounts of grain would have been collected from the along the valley and stored in these buildings. Kept well away from the river would prevent it from getting wet and being so far up the mountainside meant there was little chance of it being stolen either. From this point we could see back across the village and to the ruins, which looked even more imposing. Our guidebook suggested that the terracing formed the image of a mother llama, with one of its young. If we squinted hard enough we could make out some agricultural terraces with a fortress/temple on the top and came to the conclusion that the author may have been under the influence at the time. This theory was more than possible and our reasoning was not unfounded.
Article taken from Inca Hoots by Caius Simmons & Vicky Brewis.