Peru // Inca Trail: Machu Picchu

Peru // Inca Trail: Machu Picchu

You know how I have been saying all along that the Inca Trail is not a sprint but a marathon?  Yeah, the last and final day of hiking pre-Machu Picchu is more like a sprint.  Literally.  You wake up at approximately 3:30 am to get in line to wait to start the hike.  It is basically like the Hunger Games -- except you aren't killing anyone for food, you are instead trying to out speed walk everyone so that you can be among the first people to get to Machu Picchu.  What a lot of people don't tell you is that while you are enduring the pain of shin splints and other people's body orders, there are buses already pulling up to the Machu Picchu with bright-eyed and bushy-tailed hoards of individuals who didn't earn the right to be there before you.

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Peru // The Inca Trail: Part Two

Peru // The Inca Trail: Part Two

I was certain that Day Two would break us; it's the most dreaded day of the hike.  Not only is it the longest and hardest day, but it's the only day that doesn't include any stops at Inca sites.  None.  That means there are no real reasons to stop other than your standard fifteen second pit stops every 100 steps or so.

The start of day two brought us through some lush vegetation -- some parts looked like a scene out Lost.  If I hadn't been so focused on my breathing I'm sure I would have been worried that the smoke monster was out to get me.

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Peru // The Inca Trail: Part One

Peru // The Inca Trail: Part One

The Inca Trail (or Camino Inka) is undoubtedly one of the most famous hikes in the world.  The standard four-day/three-night hike is twenty-six miles long starting at Kilometer 82.  Thought twenty-six miles doesn't necessarily sound like much when you spread it out over four days, the real killer is, you guessed it: the altitude.  The maximum altitude reached on the second day of the hike is about 13,500 feet above sea level.  And while climbing vertically isn't that awesome, to begin with, going in the opposite direction is even worse -- especially down the 1,300 plus wet and slippery stone steps.

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Peru // Cusco: The Imperial City

Peru // Cusco:  The Imperial City

We flew from NJ to Lima directly and opted to spend our first evening in a not-so-touristy suburb of Lima given we were catching an early morning flight to Cusco.  I will spare you the gritty details but let's just say that our journey from the airport to the hotel included views of isolated roadside fires and deserted neighborhoods.  During this time some (read: one) of us was praying for the safety of their organs.  You know who you are.

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