13 days travel The Classic tour of Peru

13 days travel The Classic tour of Peru

Cusco, Peru
$3,775
 0
 Online: more than a week ago
Chat directly with the vendor to discuss and customise package details
Pay only 50% to secure the booking, fully refundable within 14 days
Secure transactions and protected personal data

The Classic brings together Peru's best: ancient ruins, colonial architecture, fantastic food, and a thriving, bewitchingly colourful folk culture – all set against the incredibly scenic background of the High Andes. The variety of experiences will astound you. Wander through graceful plazas, cobbled alleyways, farmland paths and jungle tracks. Descend from a glacial high pass to a rainforest oasis. Soak in natural hot springs. Drink coffee under the tree it was harvested from.

This is one of the most rewarding tours you can do anywhere – and did we mention it also includes Machu Picchu, Cusco, the Sacred Valley and Lake Titicaca?!

Day 1: Explore Cusco
Welcome to Cusco, capital of the Inca Empire and one of the most beautiful cities on Earth! We’ll meet you at 1pm for a traditional Peruvian meal at a local favorite restaurant. In the afternoon your guide will lead a relaxed walking tour around Cusco’s stunning historic centre – it’s important to take it easy if you’ve arrived from sea level today, as you need to acclimatize to Cusco’s 3,400 meter (11,200 feet) altitude.

Accommodation: Comfortable hotel in Cusco
Meals: Lunch and dinner included

Day 2: Stunning scenery in the Sacred Valley
The sunny, incredibly scenic floodplain between Pisac and Ollantaytambo in the valley of the Urubamba River is known as the Sacred Valley of the Incas. Pisac is a tiny, cobbled Inca village which is home to the largest handicraft market in the region and a huge Inca fortress. We’ll explore both, then set off into the Sacred Valley. We’ll need frequent photo stops as we pass still-working Inca terracing, irrigation canals, and awesome mountain vistas. Our destination is Ollantaytambo, perhaps the most perfectly preserved of all Inca towns, a maze of cobbled alleyways and sun-drenched plazas presided over by a spectacular, llama-shaped ruin.

Accommodation: Cosy, family-run Ollantaytambo hotel
Meals: All meals included

OPTION A: JUNGLE TRAIL TO MACHU PICCHU

Day 3: Ruins, weavers, and a functioning inca factory
Today starts with Chinchero, best known for its outdoor weaving studios and extensive Inca terracing with incredible views. Next we’ll explore Moray – a mysterious complex of massive amphitheaters of incredible engineering precision and stern, magnificent beauty.

Then an easy stroll (or ride in the bus if you prefer), through rolling farmland and views of the high Andes, brings us to Salineras – a surreal and beautiful patchwork of pools and paths that still produces salt using Inca technology and is our favourite site in the Cusco region.

Accommodation: Family-run hotel in Ollantaytambo
Meals: Lunch and dinner included

Day 4: Adventures in the amazon basin
Today we cross one of the world’s more drastic topographical divides: from the arid, Pacific side of the Andes to its lush western slope and the uppermost reaches of the Amazon Basin. The differences become more and more obvious as we descend from the icy high pass of Abra Malaga (4,350 meters/14,000 feet), all the way down to the steamy heat of the ceja de selva (“eyebrow of the jungle”).

Our destination, sleepy Santa Teresa (1,550 meters/5,085 feet), is home to one of our favorite places in Peru, the Baños Termales de Cocalmayo, natural mountain hot springs beside a raging river. It’s the perfect place to soak away the road dust of today’s journey from one side of the Andes to the other.

If you’re into biking, you might want to ride some or all of the day’s long descent to the high jungle – it’s an incredibly fun, freewheeling, downhill and is suitable for anyone who can ride a bike. We provide bikes so you can ride as much or as little as you like.

Accommodation: Rustic eco-lodge near Santa Teresa
Meals: All meals included

Day 5: Meet coffee growers and sample their wares
Coffee, grown at cottage-industry level and exported to the world through growers’ co-operatives, is the backbone of this area’s economy. This morning a local coffee producer will show us around their plantation, and the operation where they harvest and mill coffee.

In the afternoon we’ll take a short (seven kilometer/five mile) train ride to Aguas Calientes. There’s time this afternoon to explore the market and admire the scenery all around and above us – the isolated little town has one of the most beautiful settings you’ll see in Peru, in a jungle gorge by a rushing river.

Accommodation: Comfortable hotel in Aguas Calientes
Meals: All meals included

OPTION B: INCA TRAIL HIKE TO Machu Picchu (add US$250)

Day 3: Tuesday Start hiking the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu!
We’ll get up very early this morning to take the bus to Kilometre 82, the start of the Inca Trail. The hike begins in the Sacred Valley as we follow the Urubamba River, climbing ever higher and eventually heading off up the Cusicacha Valley, through semi-arid forest and farming villages, to Wayllabamba, where we’ll camp for the night.

Accommodation: Luxury camping on the Inca Trail
Meals: All meals included
Walking: 12 kilometers (7.5 miles)
Min. Altitude: 2,700 meters (8,860 feet)
Max. Altitude: 3,100 meters (10,170 feet)
Altitude of camp: 3,100 meters (10,170 feet)

Day 4: Hike over Warmiwayñusca Pass
Most of our walking time today is taken up by a stiff 1,200 metre (3,940 feet) hike up to Warmiwayñusca (Dead Woman’s Pass), the highest point of the Inca Trail. From here if it’s clear we’ll enjoy incredible views back the way we came, and onwards towards the distant, snowcapped Vilcabamba Range. Then we descend steeply into Pacaymayo, our campsite for the night with one of the best views in the Andes.

Accommodation: Luxury camping on the Inca Trail
Meals: All meals included
Walking: 11 kilometers (6.8 miles)
Min. Altitude: 3,100 meters (10,170 feet)
Max. Altitude: 4,200 meters (13,780 feet)
Altitude of camp: 3,600 meters (11,810 feet)

Day 5: Runkurakay, Sayacmarca and Wiñaywayna
Today’s hike takes us through some of the most stunning scenery in Peru, with cloud forest, orchids, hummingbirds and mountains on all sides, and to three gorgeous little ruins – Runkurakay, Sayacmarca, and Wiñaywayna, next to the evening’s campsite. Along the way we cross the watershed of the Andes – this is one of the best days trekking in the world.

Accommodation: Luxury camping on the Inca Trail
Meals: All meals included
Walking: 12 kilometers (7.5 miles)
Min. Altitude: 2,670 meters (8,760 feet)
Max. Altitude: 3,900 meters (12,800 feet)
Altitude of camp: 2,670 meters (8,760 feet)

Day 6: Machu Picchu
An early start rewards us with sunrise at Machu Picchu – a peak moment for anyone. A spectacular stone city surrounded by incredibly steep, incredibly green mountains, Machu Picchu needs no introduction and is deservedly one of the new Seven Wonders of the World. Your trip leader will take you on a guided tour – a necessary start to orient you in this massive site – then you’ll have plenty of time to explore the site and some of the surrounding peaks on your own before we catch the train back to Cusco for the night.

Accommodation: Back at our home-base Cusco hotel
Meals: All meals included

Day 7: Free day in Cusco
There are things to do in Cusco to suit every mood and personality: churches, museums, and art galleries; adventure activities like rafting and horse riding, and organized tours. This is also the perfect day to just wander around and enjoy the spectacular mountain views, traditionally dressed locals, excellent cafes and charming architecture that characterize the historic centre of Cusco.

Accommodation: Cusco hotel
Meals: Breakfast included

Day 8: Local lifestyle and fabulous food in the South Valley
The Valle Sur just outside Cusco is a popular weekend destination for Cusqueños, who flock here to specialist restaurants offering local favourites like chicharrones (deep fried pork chunks with corn and mint) and cuy (guinea pig), as well as plenty of more conventional and equally delicious options! We’ll fit a very local lunch in between visiting Tipón and Pikillacta, two of Peru’s most charming archaeological sites, and the church of Andahuaylillas, whose interior is so ornate that it’s known as the Sistine Chapel of the Americas.

Late this afternoon we’ll arrive at the village of Raqchi, home to a group of gracious, funny people we’re proud to call our friends. For the next couple of days, they’ll open their homes and lives to you, giving you a unique insight into traditional Andean life.

Accommodation: Raqchi homestay
Meals: All meals included

Day 9: Pottery making, a volcano, and ruins in Raqchi
Today we’ll strike off into the countryside, wandering to breathtaking lookouts, and the nearby (extinct!) volcano of Kimsach’ata. Later we’ll try our hand at pottery-making – the people of Raqchi are professional potters and will show us how to make a pot on a pedal-powered potter’s wheel.

We’ll also have the privilege of attending a ch’alla (payment to the Earth) – a ceremony of propitiation of Pacha Mama (Mother Earth) held regularly by an ostensibly Catholic community, and a very good example of the paradox at the heart of Andean religion.

Accommodation: Raqchi homestay
Meals: All meals included

Day 10: Welcome to the Altiplano
This morning we’ll explore the enormous adobe ruin that dwarfs the humble homes of Raqchi, before heading off into the altiplano - one of the highest inhabited places on Earth, and home to some of its most unlikely attractions.

We’ll take the plunge at Marangani: a surreal and improbable complex of five natural hot pools linked by steaming streams and populated by locals enjoying the only hot water for miles around.

We’ll spend the night at a historic hacienda. Established as a convent in the 18th century, it’s now home to a dairy farm where we’ll have the opportunity to sample delicious high-altitude cheese and yoghurt.

Accommodation: Historic hacienda near Ayaviri
Meals: All meals included

Day 11: Forgotten riches in Lampa
Today we’ll explore Lampa. Once one of the richest towns in Peru, it’s now all but a ghost town, making the grandeur and scale of its cathedral all the more striking. Impressive from the outside, inside the cathedral is simply incredible. Among many other marvels, it houses a catacomb, a collection of skulls and skeletons, and a full-scale reproduction of Michelangelo’s Pietá.

We’ll arrive to the shores of Lake Titicaca in time for a memorable dinner at one of Puno’s excellent restaurants.

Accommodation: Family-run hotel in downtown Puno
Meals: All meals included

Day 12: Lake Titicaca’s south shore
The tourist map ends at Puno. Past it lies a land of ancient burial monuments dedicated to dwarves, half-buried ruins drowsing in farmers’ fields, and layer upon layer of human history and belief, built up over thousands of years: it’s one of the weirdest and most wonderful places in the world and today we’ll take our pick from many strange sights.

Amaru Meru is said to be a stone-carved door into another dimension. Even if interdimensional portals aren’t your thing, you’ll enjoy the windswept majesty, imposing rock formations, and views of Lake Titicaca around it. We’ll also visit Chucuito, where 86 huge stone phalluses are buried every which way in what is said to be an Inca fertility temple – though some locals passionately argue it’s a hoax. Either way, it’s quite a sight!

Accommodation: Puno hotel
Meals: All meals included

Day 13: Taquile island on Lake Titicaca
This morning we take to the waters of Lake Titicaca. We’ll stop briefly at the Uros – the famous floating reed islands of Lake Titicaca – but our main destination is Taquile, one of the most fascinating islands in the world. It was isolated until the 1950s and still follows a very different way of life. Decisions are communal, economic activity is co-operative, and society is based on the fundamental Inca principles:  "Ama sua, ama llulla, ama quella" (don’t steal, don’t lie, don’t be lazy). There are no cars, few dogs, and little electricity, because the Taquileños want it that way.

Taquile is also the most famous textile centre in the Andes. Colorful, storytelling textiles, designed and woven by Taquile’s women from thread spun by its men, draw aficionados and investigators from all over the world to this amazing island. On top of all this, the scenery is stunning and the peace and tranquility is like nowhere else on Earth. Taquile is just magic.

Accommodation: Puno hotel
Meals: All meals included

Day 14: Departure day
You can book your flight out for any time you like today – do allow for the fact that Juliaca airport is just over an hour’s drive away. If you’re staying on in Peru, we’re delighted to help out with suggestions and assistance for the rest of your time here.

Meals: Breakfast included

What’s Included:
All accommodation (based on twin share. Single supplement available for US$400)
All ground transport (private vehicle, train and boat)
All activities specified in itinerary
Entrance to all attractions specified in itinerary
Extra permit to climb Huayna Picchu at Machu Picchu if available at time of booking (with Option A)
Dedicated Aspiring Adventures guide
All meals except lunch and dinner on free day
Drinking water with meals

What’s not included:
Tips for your guide(s) and driver
Option B only (Inca Trail hike): sleeping bag and mat (hire for US$40 per item or bring your own)
Option B only (Inca Trail hike): tips for your porters and cooks
Private trip for just you and your party, plus your guide (add US$400 per person)

ACCOMMODATIONS:
Accommodations on our Peru trips are our favorites in each town. In Cusco and Puno we stay in clean, comfortable hotels of three star standard. In Ollantaytambo, Aguas Calientes, Santa Teresa and Ayaviri we stay in quirky, interesting, family-run lodgings. In Raqchi we stay in humble family homes. Here, conditions are basic and hygiene may not be what you are used to at home, but any slight discomfort you experience will be well compensated for by this incredible insight into a very different way of life. The Inca Trail hike entails three nights of camping in tents.

The Classic brings together Peru's best: ancient ruins, colonial architecture, fantastic food, and a thriving, bewitchingly colourful folk culture – all set against the incredibly scenic background of the High Andes. The variety of experiences will astound you. Wander through graceful plazas, cobbled alleyways, farmland paths and jungle tracks. Descend from a glacial high pass to a rainforest oasis. Soak in natural hot springs. Drink coffee under the tree it was harvested from.

This is one of the most rewarding tours you can do anywhere – and did we mention it also includes Machu Picchu, Cusco, the Sacred Valley and Lake Titicaca?!

Day 1: Explore Cusco
Welcome to Cusco, capital of the Inca Empire and one of the most beautiful cities on Earth! We’ll meet you at 1pm for a traditional Peruvian meal at a local favorite restaurant. In the afternoon your guide will lead a relaxed walking tour around Cusco’s stunning historic centre – it’s important to take it easy if you’ve arrived from sea level today, as you need to acclimatize to Cusco’s 3,400 meter (11,200 feet) altitude.

Accommodation: Comfortable hotel in Cusco
Meals: Lunch and dinner included

Day 2: Stunning scenery in the Sacred Valley
The sunny, incredibly scenic floodplain between Pisac and Ollantaytambo in the valley of the Urubamba River is known as the Sacred Valley of the Incas. Pisac is a tiny, cobbled Inca village which is home to the largest handicraft market in the region and a huge Inca fortress. We’ll explore both, then set off into the Sacred Valley. We’ll need frequent photo stops as we pass still-working Inca terracing, irrigation canals, and awesome mountain vistas. Our destination is Ollantaytambo, perhaps the most perfectly preserved of all Inca towns, a maze of cobbled alleyways and sun-drenched plazas presided over by a spectacular, llama-shaped ruin.

Accommodation: Cosy, family-run Ollantaytambo hotel
Meals: All meals included

OPTION A: JUNGLE TRAIL TO MACHU PICCHU

Day 3: Ruins, weavers, and a functioning inca factory
Today starts with Chinchero, best known for its outdoor weaving studios and extensive Inca terracing with incredible views. Next we’ll explore Moray – a mysterious complex of massive amphitheaters of incredible engineering precision and stern, magnificent beauty.

Then an easy stroll (or ride in the bus if you prefer), through rolling farmland and views of the high Andes, brings us to Salineras – a surreal and beautiful patchwork of pools and paths that still produces salt using Inca technology and is our favourite site in the Cusco region.

Accommodation: Family-run hotel in Ollantaytambo
Meals: Lunch and dinner included

Day 4: Adventures in the amazon basin
Today we cross one of the world’s more drastic topographical divides: from the arid, Pacific side of the Andes to its lush western slope and the uppermost reaches of the Amazon Basin. The differences become more and more obvious as we descend from the icy high pass of Abra Malaga (4,350 meters/14,000 feet), all the way down to the steamy heat of the ceja de selva (“eyebrow of the jungle”).

Our destination, sleepy Santa Teresa (1,550 meters/5,085 feet), is home to one of our favorite places in Peru, the Baños Termales de Cocalmayo, natural mountain hot springs beside a raging river. It’s the perfect place to soak away the road dust of today’s journey from one side of the Andes to the other.

If you’re into biking, you might want to ride some or all of the day’s long descent to the high jungle – it’s an incredibly fun, freewheeling, downhill and is suitable for anyone who can ride a bike. We provide bikes so you can ride as much or as little as you like.

Accommodation: Rustic eco-lodge near Santa Teresa
Meals: All meals included

Day 5: Meet coffee growers and sample their wares
Coffee, grown at cottage-industry level and exported to the world through growers’ co-operatives, is the backbone of this area’s economy. This morning a local coffee producer will show us around their plantation, and the operation where they harvest and mill coffee.

In the afternoon we’ll take a short (seven kilometer/five mile) train ride to Aguas Calientes. There’s time this afternoon to explore the market and admire the scenery all around and above us – the isolated little town has one of the most beautiful settings you’ll see in Peru, in a jungle gorge by a rushing river.

Accommodation: Comfortable hotel in Aguas Calientes
Meals: All meals included

OPTION B: INCA TRAIL HIKE TO Machu Picchu (add US$250)

Day 3: Tuesday Start hiking the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu!
We’ll get up very early this morning to take the bus to Kilometre 82, the start of the Inca Trail. The hike begins in the Sacred Valley as we follow the Urubamba River, climbing ever higher and eventually heading off up the Cusicacha Valley, through semi-arid forest and farming villages, to Wayllabamba, where we’ll camp for the night.

Accommodation: Luxury camping on the Inca Trail
Meals: All meals included
Walking: 12 kilometers (7.5 miles)
Min. Altitude: 2,700 meters (8,860 feet)
Max. Altitude: 3,100 meters (10,170 feet)
Altitude of camp: 3,100 meters (10,170 feet)

Day 4: Hike over Warmiwayñusca Pass
Most of our walking time today is taken up by a stiff 1,200 metre (3,940 feet) hike up to Warmiwayñusca (Dead Woman’s Pass), the highest point of the Inca Trail. From here if it’s clear we’ll enjoy incredible views back the way we came, and onwards towards the distant, snowcapped Vilcabamba Range. Then we descend steeply into Pacaymayo, our campsite for the night with one of the best views in the Andes.

Accommodation: Luxury camping on the Inca Trail
Meals: All meals included
Walking: 11 kilometers (6.8 miles)
Min. Altitude: 3,100 meters (10,170 feet)
Max. Altitude: 4,200 meters (13,780 feet)
Altitude of camp: 3,600 meters (11,810 feet)

Day 5: Runkurakay, Sayacmarca and Wiñaywayna
Today’s hike takes us through some of the most stunning scenery in Peru, with cloud forest, orchids, hummingbirds and mountains on all sides, and to three gorgeous little ruins – Runkurakay, Sayacmarca, and Wiñaywayna, next to the evening’s campsite. Along the way we cross the watershed of the Andes – this is one of the best days trekking in the world.

Accommodation: Luxury camping on the Inca Trail
Meals: All meals included
Walking: 12 kilometers (7.5 miles)
Min. Altitude: 2,670 meters (8,760 feet)
Max. Altitude: 3,900 meters (12,800 feet)
Altitude of camp: 2,670 meters (8,760 feet)

Day 6: Machu Picchu
An early start rewards us with sunrise at Machu Picchu – a peak moment for anyone. A spectacular stone city surrounded by incredibly steep, incredibly green mountains, Machu Picchu needs no introduction and is deservedly one of the new Seven Wonders of the World. Your trip leader will take you on a guided tour – a necessary start to orient you in this massive site – then you’ll have plenty of time to explore the site and some of the surrounding peaks on your own before we catch the train back to Cusco for the night.

Accommodation: Back at our home-base Cusco hotel
Meals: All meals included

Day 7: Free day in Cusco
There are things to do in Cusco to suit every mood and personality: churches, museums, and art galleries; adventure activities like rafting and horse riding, and organized tours. This is also the perfect day to just wander around and enjoy the spectacular mountain views, traditionally dressed locals, excellent cafes and charming architecture that characterize the historic centre of Cusco.

Accommodation: Cusco hotel
Meals: Breakfast included

Day 8: Local lifestyle and fabulous food in the South Valley
The Valle Sur just outside Cusco is a popular weekend destination for Cusqueños, who flock here to specialist restaurants offering local favourites like chicharrones (deep fried pork chunks with corn and mint) and cuy (guinea pig), as well as plenty of more conventional and equally delicious options! We’ll fit a very local lunch in between visiting Tipón and Pikillacta, two of Peru’s most charming archaeological sites, and the church of Andahuaylillas, whose interior is so ornate that it’s known as the Sistine Chapel of the Americas.

Late this afternoon we’ll arrive at the village of Raqchi, home to a group of gracious, funny people we’re proud to call our friends. For the next couple of days, they’ll open their homes and lives to you, giving you a unique insight into traditional Andean life.

Accommodation: Raqchi homestay
Meals: All meals included

Day 9: Pottery making, a volcano, and ruins in Raqchi
Today we’ll strike off into the countryside, wandering to breathtaking lookouts, and the nearby (extinct!) volcano of Kimsach’ata. Later we’ll try our hand at pottery-making – the people of Raqchi are professional potters and will show us how to make a pot on a pedal-powered potter’s wheel.

We’ll also have the privilege of attending a ch’alla (payment to the Earth) – a ceremony of propitiation of Pacha Mama (Mother Earth) held regularly by an ostensibly Catholic community, and a very good example of the paradox at the heart of Andean religion.

Accommodation: Raqchi homestay
Meals: All meals included

Day 10: Welcome to the Altiplano
This morning we’ll explore the enormous adobe ruin that dwarfs the humble homes of Raqchi, before heading off into the altiplano - one of the highest inhabited places on Earth, and home to some of its most unlikely attractions.

We’ll take the plunge at Marangani: a surreal and improbable complex of five natural hot pools linked by steaming streams and populated by locals enjoying the only hot water for miles around.

We’ll spend the night at a historic hacienda. Established as a convent in the 18th century, it’s now home to a dairy farm where we’ll have the opportunity to sample delicious high-altitude cheese and yoghurt.

Accommodation: Historic hacienda near Ayaviri
Meals: All meals included

Day 11: Forgotten riches in Lampa
Today we’ll explore Lampa. Once one of the richest towns in Peru, it’s now all but a ghost town, making the grandeur and scale of its cathedral all the more striking. Impressive from the outside, inside the cathedral is simply incredible. Among many other marvels, it houses a catacomb, a collection of skulls and skeletons, and a full-scale reproduction of Michelangelo’s Pietá.

We’ll arrive to the shores of Lake Titicaca in time for a memorable dinner at one of Puno’s excellent restaurants.

Accommodation: Family-run hotel in downtown Puno
Meals: All meals included

Day 12: Lake Titicaca’s south shore
The tourist map ends at Puno. Past it lies a land of ancient burial monuments dedicated to dwarves, half-buried ruins drowsing in farmers’ fields, and layer upon layer of human history and belief, built up over thousands of years: it’s one of the weirdest and most wonderful places in the world and today we’ll take our pick from many strange sights.

Amaru Meru is said to be a stone-carved door into another dimension. Even if interdimensional portals aren’t your thing, you’ll enjoy the windswept majesty, imposing rock formations, and views of Lake Titicaca around it. We’ll also visit Chucuito, where 86 huge stone phalluses are buried every which way in what is said to be an Inca fertility temple – though some locals passionately argue it’s a hoax. Either way, it’s quite a sight!

Accommodation: Puno hotel
Meals: All meals included

Day 13: Taquile island on Lake Titicaca
This morning we take to the waters of Lake Titicaca. We’ll stop briefly at the Uros – the famous floating reed islands of Lake Titicaca – but our main destination is Taquile, one of the most fascinating islands in the world. It was isolated until the 1950s and still follows a very different way of life. Decisions are communal, economic activity is co-operative, and society is based on the fundamental Inca principles:  "Ama sua, ama llulla, ama quella" (don’t steal, don’t lie, don’t be lazy). There are no cars, few dogs, and little electricity, because the Taquileños want it that way.

Taquile is also the most famous textile centre in the Andes. Colorful, storytelling textiles, designed and woven by Taquile’s women from thread spun by its men, draw aficionados and investigators from all over the world to this amazing island. On top of all this, the scenery is stunning and the peace and tranquility is like nowhere else on Earth. Taquile is just magic.

Accommodation: Puno hotel
Meals: All meals included

Day 14: Departure day
You can book your flight out for any time you like today – do allow for the fact that Juliaca airport is just over an hour’s drive away. If you’re staying on in Peru, we’re delighted to help out with suggestions and assistance for the rest of your time here.

Meals: Breakfast included

What’s Included:
All accommodation (based on twin share. Single supplement available for US$400)
All ground transport (private vehicle, train and boat)
All activities specified in itinerary
Entrance to all attractions specified in itinerary
Extra permit to climb Huayna Picchu at Machu Picchu if available at time of booking (with Option A)
Dedicated Aspiring Adventures guide
All meals except lunch and dinner on free day
Drinking water with meals

What’s not included:
Tips for your guide(s) and driver
Option B only (Inca Trail hike): sleeping bag and mat (hire for US$40 per item or bring your own)
Option B only (Inca Trail hike): tips for your porters and cooks
Private trip for just you and your party, plus your guide (add US$400 per person)

ACCOMMODATIONS:
Accommodations on our Peru trips are our favorites in each town. In Cusco and Puno we stay in clean, comfortable hotels of three star standard. In Ollantaytambo, Aguas Calientes, Santa Teresa and Ayaviri we stay in quirky, interesting, family-run lodgings. In Raqchi we stay in humble family homes. Here, conditions are basic and hygiene may not be what you are used to at home, but any slight discomfort you experience will be well compensated for by this incredible insight into a very different way of life. The Inca Trail hike entails three nights of camping in tents.

Show more
Cusco, Peru
$3,775
 Online: more than a week ago
 0
Similar packages in Peru
Show details
1
Trip for couple to Cusco: 5 days 4 nights