From Lima we spent
three more days of dismal coastal cycling with a view that changed
sporadically from sand dunes to industrial plants to slums. The
weather was an indecisive and unchanging brand of wet, dry, hot and
cold whilst being at the same time oppressively none of the above. It
was an ugly section that changed almost the moment after taking the road
inland, leaving the shrouded ocean behind us and climbing climbing
climbing back up to the beautiful heights of the Andes. Two slow days
of upward grind took us back up to above the 4000metre mark and another down to Huaraz, the tourist destination famous for hiking,
climbing and every outdoor pursuit that can be enjoyed in the
Cordilleras Blancas, the picturesque snow capped mountain range of
central Peru.
Our attempt at hiking was a three day, turned two day adventure that involved getting lost, getting blisters, getting wet, being saved by some professionally clad Germans, failing to save a cow that was stuck in a hole and seeing some breathtaking mountains, glaciers and lakes.
We left Huaraz with aching bodies and headed North. The traffic thinned out as we entered the canon del pato (canyon of the ducks), a road chiseled out of the mountain, a single lane dirt track with huge drops down to the river bed below and over 40 pitch black tunnels.
The road passed through the canyon and continued back down towards that gloomy coastline from which a vicious wind slowed our progress towards Trujillo. The warnings of roaming gangs and the fact that we no longer have that luxury of time forced us to take a bus back inland. We arrived next day in Chachapoyas, a small town on the fringes of the Amazon jungle that stretches on almost uninhabited for thousands of miles towards Ecuador, Colombia and Brazil.
Just a days cycle away
we visited a small village, put on the map in recent years by the
discovery of a the Gocta waterfall, a cascade that measures 771
metres in height which, depending on who you ask is pinned
at somewhere between the 3rd and 14th highest
in the world. The locals of the village, with just two family names
between them are the very embodiment of close knit and were friendly enough to let us stay in their community hall. The
following morning we decided that after our recent hiking failures we
would rather be carried. We organized a couple of not particularly enthusiastic horses and set of at a canter/slow walk
through the rainforest. I can confidently say that 1 hour on a horse
has done far more damage to my nether regions than any amount of time
on a bicycle ever could.
From that little excursion we set off along an empty jungle road, the weather hot and humid with the inevitable daily rain a cooling relief. These were some of the best cycling days of Peru, back to the countryside and camping reminiscent of the open expanses of Chile and Argentina. Our final two nights left us with some fond memories of Peru, first being invited in to stay with an elderly couple who fed us three meals grown and produced on their little farm and then a chance camping spot with a motorcylist that entertained us with stories of the world.
And so the Peruvian
chapter of the trip was closed as we crossed the border a couple of
days ago, dragging the border guard from his game of volleyball to
stamp our passports. Not such a busy crossing.
No comments:
Post a Comment