Entrancingly off the increasingly trod track, Choquequirao
(“Cradle of Gold” in Quechua—“The Other Machu Picchu,”
a recent article in the New York Times called it) is an amazingly
preserved Inca outpost, four times the size of Machu Picchu,
dramatically perched on a promontory nearly 6000 feet above
the roaring Apurimac River Gorge. Though its existence has
been known for some time, Choquequirao has only recently
been accessible to nonacademics, and has quickly joined the
ranks of the world’s great Lost Cities.
Our strenuous and splendidly rare mule-supported trek, created by our Peru monarch Clark Kotula, takes us over high passes, along perfectly preserved Inca trails lavished with magnificent Andean views, to the newly famous, but still littlevisited Choquequirao. These wondrous ruins, only 40 percent excavated, get a few hundred visitors in a year, as opposed to Machu Picchu’s 2,500 daily visitors, in large part because it takes some effort to get there—about 20 miles on foot across a 10,000-foot deep gorge from the nearest trailhead, to be precise.
After dallying in the ruins—“Twenty-five years ago Machu Picchu must have looked much like this,” the Times said— we cross the Vilcabamba Range from Choquequirao to Machu Picchu in five days, passing through remote indigenous villages and over a 15,900-foot pass between glaciated peaks to finally descend into the lush, orchid-profuse cloud forest that surrounds Machu Picchu, where we will wander extensively before heading to the Incan capital of Cusco (see Machu Picchu and the Urubamba), and on to Lima and home.
Our strenuous and splendidly rare mule-supported trek, created by our Peru monarch Clark Kotula, takes us over high passes, along perfectly preserved Inca trails lavished with magnificent Andean views, to the newly famous, but still littlevisited Choquequirao. These wondrous ruins, only 40 percent excavated, get a few hundred visitors in a year, as opposed to Machu Picchu’s 2,500 daily visitors, in large part because it takes some effort to get there—about 20 miles on foot across a 10,000-foot deep gorge from the nearest trailhead, to be precise.
After dallying in the ruins—“Twenty-five years ago Machu Picchu must have looked much like this,” the Times said— we cross the Vilcabamba Range from Choquequirao to Machu Picchu in five days, passing through remote indigenous villages and over a 15,900-foot pass between glaciated peaks to finally descend into the lush, orchid-profuse cloud forest that surrounds Machu Picchu, where we will wander extensively before heading to the Incan capital of Cusco (see Machu Picchu and the Urubamba), and on to Lima and home.
Day 1: USA to Lima •
Day 2: explore Cusco •
Day 3: day hike in the Sacred Valley
•
Day 4: to Cachora •
Days 5 & 6: trekking across Apurimac Gorge to Choquequirao
•
Day 7: full-day exploration of Choquequirao •
Days 8–12: Choquequirao to Machu
Picchu •
Day 13: Machu Picchu •
Day 14: to Cusco •
Day 15: fly to Lima, day tour of city,
depart for USA •
Day 16: arrive in USA.
Choquequirao to Machu Picchu
Trip Details
2009 Departures:
16 days
Activity Type:
Touring
,
Trekking
Trip Price:
From $5550
- May 16 - May 31
- September 5 - September 20
Activity Type:
Trip Price:

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