From the Mountains to the Capital
- Posted by paulbroom120@hotmail.com
- Posted on November 4, 2019
- Peru
- Comments Off on From the Mountains to the Capital
After a cultural start to Peru, we moved into a more physical mode by going to Huaraz. This is quite a way into the mountains and in fact the Cordilleras Blancas is the second highest mountain range after the Himalayas with 22 peaks over 6,000 metres.
The first trip from Huaraz was to the Pastoruri Glacier. This involved passing through a long valley which is famous for the Paya Raimondi, a plant that takes 100 years to grow. But at the end of the valley we took a path up to 4,955 metres where the Pastoruri Glacier reaches down to a lake.
There are signs which show how the glacier has retreated in the last twenty years, and highlights the effects of climate change. In fact ice is apparently retreating faster in Peru than elsewhere. Despite this, it was great to get up close to a glacier, as well as seeing the snow-capped mountains in the area.
The second trip was much more dramatic as we took the trek to Laguna 69. In a different part of the Cordilleras. This involved a vertical climb of around 700 metres to a lake surrounded by snow-capped mountains and glaciers.
We started at 3,850 metres at the wonderful Laguna de Llanganuco, which was deep blue and at the bottom of a steep valley. From there we took a path up the valley which was overlooked by Huascaran, Peru’s highest mountain. Passing waterfalls and lakes we eventually reached the last trek up to the magnificent lake.
Arriving in sun, it soon turned to snow and hail, and back again. It was a fantastic place to stop and have a packed lunch before trekking back down, at a much quicker rate. It was a wonderful day, and highlighted the beauty of the region.
We followed up with a few days in the capital Lima. This is the second driest city after Cairo, and we were fairly lucky to enjoy mainly sunny days. The historical centre is beautifully preserved, but apart from that there is not much to see. However, we loved the time chilling in the smart Miraflores and more Bohemian Barranco districts.
We enjoyed some downtime before sweeping into the south of the country, and the main tourist areas, which we guessed might be much busier than we had seen to date.
Paul and Tim
These are our pages:
- Home
- Blog
- Contact Us
- Puerto Natales
- Travelling Pages
- Southern Chile
- Argentina
- Uruguay
- Brazil
- Peru
- Ecuador
- Bolivia
- Northern Chile
- Australia
- New Zealand
- Thailand
- Myanmar
- Laos
- Cambodia
- Vietnam
- Our Second Stay in India
- Bangladesh
- Nepal
- Bhutan
- India
- Morzine 2017/18
- Home
Recent Posts
- Wonderful Uruguay
- Brazil’s Wild, Wild West
- From Modern Art back to Colonial Times and on to the Metropolis
- From Rio to Praia
- From South to North in One Go
Recent Comments
- paulbroom120@hotmail.com on An Introduction to Laos
- JIM and Janice on An Introduction to Laos
- paulbroom120@hotmail.com on An Introduction to Laos
- Charlie on An Introduction to Laos
- paulbroom120@hotmail.com on Beautiful Green Bangladesh
Archives
- February 2020
- January 2020
- December 2019
- November 2019
- October 2019
- September 2019
- August 2019
- July 2019
- June 2019
- February 2019
- January 2019
- December 2018
- November 2018
- October 2018
- September 2018
- August 2018
- July 2018
- June 2018
- May 2018
- April 2018
- March 2018
- February 2018
- January 2018
- December 2017
- June 2017