Hiking to Gocta Waterfall

Today we hiked to Gocta waterfall. It is 2,529 feet tall and is one of the tallest waterfalls in the world.

To get to the trailhead we took a collectivo to the junction of the dirt road leading to the trailhead then a taxi from there. Our collectivo had a flat tire so Duke got to have a discussion with the other passengers while the driver changed the tire. One of the passengers asked Duke “Is Donald Trump a racist?” Duke said” I believe so.” Then I got to use the two phrases I’ve been practicing. “Él es una vergüenza nacional” and “Tenemos que volver para votar!”

The hike was Just over there miles esch way. The weather was very humid and I think I sweated about a quart. My hair was dripping wet at the end of the hike.  But the rain forest and the falls were worth it.



When we got back to Chachapoyas first priority was a shower. Then a steak and fries really hit the spot.

Our Adventure to Kuélap

Yesterday we consolidated our stuff into one suitcase, checked out of our hotel, left our second suitcase with the people at the hotel and caught a collectivo (essentially a shared van) towards the ruins at Kuélap 45 miles south of Chachapoyas. 

Kuélap is an immense pre Inca city built 1000 years before Machu Picchu. The ruins sit on a ridge at 10,000 feet. They have a commanding view in all directions. It’s about a three hour ride to get there and two thirds of the ride is on a narrow steep dirt road. 

When Duke was here in 1979 the road didn’t exist. He and another guy climbed up for five hours to get to the ruins and when they got there they were the only ones there, no tourists, no locals, no one!

We decided to break the trip up and spend the night at Choctamal Lodge about half way up the dirt road. We were the only ones staying there. We could see Kuélap in the distance. It at the top of the far ridge in this picture. 


These are pictures of the lodge and our room. 


We knew there was no food service at the lodge so we bought bread, cheese,  crackers and peanuts before we left Chachapoyas. We walked about 20 minutes down the road to a village and bought two bottles of beer. Then we sat an a blanket and had a picnic outside our room. 


This morning we had to wait a couple of hours but we finally got a ride the rest of the way up to the ruins. From the parking lot we walked up about a mile. 

The first thing you see is the walls. Fodor’s Peru says “the city of Kuélap is surrounded by a massive defensive wall ranging from 6 to 12 meters (20 to 39 feet) high.”


There are only three narrow entrances to the city. Here we are climbing up one entrance with our guide. 


Inside our guide showed us the different areas of the city and stressed that none of Kuélap has been reconstructed.



After walking back down to the parking lot we managed to get a ride with a tour going back to Chachapoyas. On the way there was discussion between the young man who was the guide in the van and some German tourists about whether the cable car they are building to allow visitors to avoid the long dirt road is a good thing. 


Now we are back in Chachapoyas at our hotel. We will decide our plan for tomorrow when we see if it is still raining in the morning. 

Chiclayo to Chachapoyas 

Last night at nine we caught an overnight bus to Chachapoyas. There was a stewardess welcoming us onto the bus. After we left she served tea and box dinners of chicken and rice.  Our seats were on the top level. The bus was full but the seats reclined to 140 degrees so they were pretty comfortable. I slept, listened to music on my phone, read, and woke up periodically to look out the window. There were a lot of trucks on the windy road. This morning we woke up in the mountains. 


Chachapoyas is at 7600 ft and we started at sea level so we were going up all night. We arrived at Chachapoyasat about 7:30 got our bags and walked to our hotel. The roads were muddy so we might have been wiser to get a cab even though it was only about eight blocks. 

The Hotel let us have a room immediately and after settling in we went out to find coffee. While we were sitting on a bench in the park a nice looking young man sat on the branch across from us. You could tell he wanted to practice his English. He was sixteen. He said he wants  to visit the United States and he loves English. He was in Chachapoyas to take a math exam. If he did well he will be able to go to Lima for school next year. 

We made plans for tomorrow. We went to the collectivo (van) station to figure our how we could get  to the ruins at  Kuélap tomorrow.  It sounds like we can get a van at 2 in the afternoon. We will spend the night in a guest house near the ruins. I’m guessing we won’t have Internet. 

We also explored Chachapoyas. We bought some bread. The vegetables in the market were beautiful and I found a great yarn store. 


Our hotel is beautiful and our room is impeccably clean but it is cold. The  weather is overcast and rainy. When we are walking around it is warm enough but our room is like a cave and it is cold! We napped and read all afternoon snuggled together to stay warm. 

We had dinner at a great restaurant Duke found on Trip Advisor. We talked to a lady from Switzerland who is on an extended trip through Peru exploring on her own. In the picture below you can see Duke’s beef hanging from a little clothesline. We had great soup and as an appetizer a plantain cooked with peanuts and cheese.  They also gave us complementary test tube drinks. While we ate we watched a kitten dart from place to place as she surveyed her territory. 


Chiclayo

Thursday morning we went hat shopping. When Duke was in this area in 1979 he bought a straw hat that was so durable he could roll it up then open it later and it would pop right back into shape. He had the hat for years. We found a new hat in a little shop not far from the hotel. 


After checking out of our hotel at noon and storing our bags in the hotel luggage room they called us a taxi.  The taxi driver took us to a nearby town to see the Museo Tumbas Reales de Sipán. In 1987 an archaeological exploration found three undisturbed tombs near the town of Sipán. They are attributed to the Moche culture and are dated to about 300 AD. 

I saw the Tutankhamen exhibition in San Francisco many years ago and the gold work, ceramics, bead work and exhibits. here were even better! The tombs were found in a giant Adobe pyramid and the museum is shaped like a pyramid. No cameras were allowed in the museum. The museum has exhibits of the artifacts found in the tombs. It is all original. It was fascinating because everything was displayed with big pictures of what it looked like in place as it was excavated. 


 Some of the highlights were a gold ceremonial necklace with about 12 finely worked gold spiders in there webs, an intricate gold statues of the King with a slave and beautiful ceramic pots and dishes. A lot of the gold had inlays of brilliant blue turquoise. There were big collars made of thousands of tiny beads. How the archaeologists removed it all and cleaned and preserved it is hard to imagine.  There was so much gold and silver and so many beautiful pieces. 

After getting back from the museum we went to a movie. It was a Peruvian romantic comedy La Peor de mis Bodas. I really didn’t need to understand all the Spanish to be entertained and to laugh at the jokes. It was fun and very relaxing. 


Our bus to Chachapoyas left at 9 pm so we had pizza and went to the bus station. 

Piura to Chiclayo

Today we caught a 10 am bus from Piura to Chiclayo. Our drive was through barren desert. According to Wikipedia the Sechura desert is “one of the most arid on Earth”.


Our bus for this three hour trip was pretty cool.  It was double decker and we were in front on the top deck. The air conditioning worked so it was a pretty comfortable ride. 


Chiclayo is closer to the ocean than Piura was. I assume that is why the temperature and humidity here are pretty comfortable. Piura was unbearably hot and humid. 

On the ride I finished listening to season one and the updates of the podcast Serial. I think I am really late to talking about this podcast. Everyone else has already listened to it. I found it fascinating. I still can’t decide if I think he did it or not. If you haven’t listened to it I recommend it. 

This afternoon I also finished my third book of the trip. Book two was a nonfiction book – There’s a Fish in my Ear – about translation. It was interesting but a bit long winded.  The book I finished today was Where’d You Go Bernadette by Maria Semple. I thoroughly enjoyed it and would say it is of the same caliber of another light entertaining book I really enjoyed, The Rosie Project. 

After getting to Chiclayo, as we do in every new town,  we walked around a bit. 


Tomorrow we don’t leave Chiclayo until 7 pm. We will be catching an all night bus to Chachapoyas. We still don’t have a plan for what to do during the day tomorrow.