Subscribe now

Machu Picchu and the science of the Inca: Peru

Let's chat. Contact an expert to book your Discovery Tour

Email us

+44 (0)203 3089 917

17 September 2024 - 10 days for £3,599

Immerse yourself in the Inca civilisation’s most important archaeological sites, including Machu Picchu as you discover how the story of the Incas is so much more than Machu Picchu. Explore the science and history while exploring the beautiful Sacred Valley. With the opportunity to extend your time in Peru and explore the mysterious Nazca lines and Chachapoyas, known as the "Warriors of the Clouds". 

Full of mystery and culture dating back millennia, Peru is an stunning land of deserts etched with ancient geoglyphs, soaring peaks harbouring secret cities and stunning landscapes. From the fertile verdant valley floor and wetlands, through cloud forests and onto the imposing mountains that overlook the Sacred Valley. 

Begin in Cusco, the historic heartland and former capital of the Inca Empire. Spend time exploring the museums, archaeological remains and Spanish colonial architecture. From here, travel through the spectacular landscapes of the Sacred Valley, with time spent exploring local communities and other ancient inca sites. You will then have two visits to explore Machu Picchu, with plenty of time at leisure built-in to allow you to immerse yourself in these remarkable ancient ruins. Continue to the lesser-known but equally impressive ruins of Waqrapukara, with its spectacular monumental structures unhindered by staff, fencing or other visitors. You can literally explore the whole site unfettered.

Get to the heart of how Hiram Bingham "discovered" Machu Picchu and several other sites just over 100 years ago. Accompanied throughout by Peter Getzels - Emmy award-winning director, producer and cinematographer plus anthropologist, explorer and mountaineer. Plus, Dr Jean-Jacques Decoster, Professor of Anthropology at the Universidad Nacional San Antonio Abad del Cusco.

For those wishing to examine this fascinating culture further, we have created a pre-tour extension to the Nazca lines. These geoglyphs cover an area of about 450 kilometres squared and were scratched on the surface of the ground between 500 B.C. and A.D. 500. They are among archaeology's greatest enigmas because of their quantity, nature, size and continuity. In addition, we have also created a post-tour extension travelling to northern Peru's best kept secret, Chachapoyas. Hidden in a remote corner of the high Andes, these stunning archaeological ruins, including Kuelap are three times older than Machu Picchu and are the largest ancient stone-city in Pre-Columbian America.

In partnership with Intrepid Travel. 


DAY 1: ARRIVE INTO CUSCO

Please note: you have to fly via Lima to get to Cusco, as such, we have included this flight from Lima to Cusco in the main tour price. If you wanted to spend a few days in Lima at your own leisure, or join our pre-tour extension visiting the Nazca lines and Ballestas Islands or arrive in Cusco a few days earlier to allow yourself time to acclimatise, all these options are possible. Please speak to the team at Intrepid Travel who can help with these arrangements. 

You will be met at the airport by your tour leader and transferred to the Hotel San Agustin International, your base for the next four nights, located just 10 minutes away from Cusco’s historic main square. Cusco is the historic heartland and former capital of the Inca Empire. The city itself is one of South America's oldest continuously inhabited cities and was the home of the Inca Empire for two centuries before the Spanish built their first capital here. Today, Cusco is a fascinating combination of both cultures. 

This unique expedition through Peru offers an insightful anthropological and archaeological experience. You will learn how the Incas developed a complex society and used their extensive grasp of science and technology to expand rapidly. They displayed a mastery of stone-cutting, astronomy and mathematics as they created buildings for living and worshipping, and their irrigation, aqueducts and precision control of water supported their high-altitude farming on steep slopes. In addition, explore how the Incas arranged their religious sites, called Huacas, along a system of astronomically and calendrically informed lines, called Ceques, with the city of Cusco, as the sort of centre of this massive “calendar on the ground”. In turn, this “calendar on the ground” affected the location of their towns, ceremonies, the social interactions of their elite groups, and their highly advanced architecture.

In the evening, you will meet your fellow guests and accompanying expert Jean-Jacques Decoster for a welcome meal at the Calle Del Medio restaurant. To help you acclimatise to the altitude, there will be no talks until tomorrow.

DAY 2: EXPLORE CUSCO INCLUDING THE CASA CONCHA MUSEUM AND QORICANCHA TEMPLE

After breakfast, you will meet with the group in the hotel for a 90 minute talk with Peter Getzels and Jean-Jacques Decoster, both experts will join the group for today's activities and lunch. 

Later on, you will explore the highlights of the city of Cusco. You will take a short visit of the museum of the Palace of the Archbishop, a colonial house built on the foundation of the Inca Roca Palace and formerly owned by the Archbishop of Cusco. Today it houses a collection of colonial religious paintings. The museum is in a narrow pedestrian walkway that features Inca stone walls. Here you’ll see the famous stone of the twelve angles on Hatun Rumilloc Street.

Afterwards, visit the Qoricancha temple, considered the most sacred Inca building. According to archaeologists it housed over 1000 priests and attendants. It was built over an Inca palace dedicated to the worship of the Sun. Continue to the heart of the city, “the Plaza de Armas”, surrounded by colonial arcades and four churches. Here you’ll visit the beautiful “Cathedral” of Cusco, built in the XVI. This enormous Cathedral was built in the XVI. It contained nearly 400 colonial paintings, including many from the Cusco School, which was prominent in the 17th century. The cathedral is a fine example of colonial baroque art. Visit the Coca Museum and learn about the Inca's Sacred Leaf.

You’ll also visit the Casa Concha museum, home of the largest collection of Machu Picchu artefacts in the world, which were returned by Yale University in 2011.

Lunch will be included at Nuna Raymi, a sustainable restaurant whose philosophy is to support and work with local producers and organic products. 

The remainder of the day will be free to continue discovering this beautiful city.

DAY 3: SACSAYHUAMAN, QENQO, TAMBOMACHAY AND THE PLANETARIUM OF CUSCO

This morning, you will visit the huge Inca ceremonial structure Sacsayhuaman that overlooks the city of Cusco. Its construction is complex and precise with megalithic rocks perfectly fitted together without the aid of mortar. The site has the characteristics of a fortress, but also contains temple-like structures, and may have served for astronomical observations, typical of Inca sites that tend to combine those functions. 

You will then continue to the Inca site known as Qenqo with its subterranean passages and carved stone channels in a zigzag pattern. In its inner section, there is a carved stone table, which may have been used for Inca rituals. 

Afterwards, you will travel the short distance to Tambomachay, a beautiful archaeological site, consisting of aqueducts, canals and waterfalls. The high quality of the stonework indicates that it was likely to have been an important Inca shrine, dedicated to religious functions involving water veneration.  Although its function is uncertain, it may also have been a military outpost or ancient spa, as indicated by findings that show a high degree of water control.

A box lunch will be provided today.

In the evening, you will head to the Planetarium of Cusco. Here you will explore Quechua and Inca astronomy and the relationship between Andean people and the universe. The Incas had a complex cosmological system, and along with that you will learn about Quechua cosmological ideas, about the dark areas of the Milky Way, (called the dark-cloud constellations) and how they are just as important as the bright constellations. Then you will be treated to a virtual projection of the southern hemisphere stars and constellations in the planetarium dome. The experience concludes outside, where (weather permitting) there will be guided stargazing using the centre's telescopes. 

DAY 4: TIPON AND PIKILLAQTA

Today, you will visit the valley to the south of Cusco, well away from the tourist haunts. Your first stop is the Inca complex of Tipon, a royal estate with an elaborate set of terraces, stone-lined canals and fountains. Its design makes it both an agricultural and hydrological masterpiece.

You will then drive through Oropesa (the bread capital of Peru), on to Pikillaqta, one of the few existing pre-Inca ruins in the Cusco area. This adobe complex was built around 700 to 900 years AD by the Wari Culture. Nearby, you will see Rumicolca. Current theory suggests that this huge structure was originally built as a Wari aqueduct to supply water to Pikillaqta, and was then reinforced with Inca stonework, because it is located on one of the main south-north Inca roads that crisscross the Andes.

After lunch at a local restaurant, you will return to Cusco for an afternoon of leisure time.

DAY 5: THE SACRED VALLEY INCLUDING MARAS SALT PONDS, MORAY AND CHINCHERO

After breakfast, you will travel up the Sacred Valley and visit some of its most scenic spots accompanied again by Dr Jean-Jacques Decoster. First, a private guided trip to the ancient Maras salt ponds, where salty springs emerge from the hillside and the Incas built pools to capture the flows and harvest salt. Those are still being used by inhabitants of the communities of Maras and Pichingoto.  As a heritage expert, Jean-Jacques has worked on the proposed nomination of the salt ponds as a UNESCO World Heritage Site and will be on hand to discuss the process.  

You will continue to Moray, where huge circular agricultural terraces were built by the Incas on limestone sinks that served to plant various crops. It is thought that the Incas used the terraces as an agricultural laboratory to determine the optimum conditions for each species, testing varying altitudes and soil conditions.

Lunch will be at the Umasbamba community, where you’ll learn about local food, traditions and herbal medicine. If time permits, you will enjoy the sunset from high up over Chinchero.

After lunch, you will head to the small rustic town of Chinchero, which is missed by many but has a great display of Inca architecture, ruins and megalithic art carved into rocks. Chinchero is home to Andean weaving and has a colourful market. You will visit its ruins, where it is thought that Inca Tupac Yupanqui, heir of Pachacutec, used Chinchero as a sort of country resort. He ordered the construction of many aqueducts and terraces, many of them still in use today. 

The cultural landscape and spectacular viewshed of Chinchero are being rapidly transformed by the ongoing construction of the future international airport for Cusco. Jean-Jacques is currently involved in a study of the impact on the cultural heritage of the new airport and will be able to reflect with you on this topic. 

Then check into the Inti Punku Sacred Valley Hotel, where you will enjoy an evening meal together.

DAY 6: THE SACRED VALLEY INCLUDING PISAC, THE INKARIY MUSEUM AND OLLANTAYTAMBO

After checking out of your hotel, you will travel further into the Sacred Valley. The valley was a key settlement area for the Incas, because its combination of agreeable climate and fertile plains was unusual for the high Andes. Here, the Incas sculpted the mountain flanks with vast contour terracing and irrigation channels, and there will be plenty of opportunities to stop and photograph these. Pisac, in particular, has great examples of these plus fine stone works allowing it to also act as a mountainside fortress defending the southern approach to Machu Picchu.

Afterwards, you’ll visit the Inkariy Museum, which uses artistic representations to explain eight Peruvian civilisations, from the Caral to the Quechuas. Here you will discuss with Peter and Jean-Jacques questions of representation and folklore and how that impacts the understanding and contemporary use of ancient cultures, ethnography and archaeology.

After lunch at the Tunupa Sacred Valley Restaurant, you’ll drive along the Urubamba River towards the town of Ollantaytambo, which has some of the oldest continuously occupied dwellings in Peru and was one of the few places where the Incas defeated the Spanish. The ruins of Ollantaytambo include temples, terraces, storehouses and defences. There are also spectacular rock formations that have been the source of much poetic speculation in contemporary times regarding them representing the Inca god Wiracocha.

You will then check into El Albergue, a small but hugely atmospheric hotel inside the train station, where you will have dinner.

DAY 7: EXPLORE MACHU PICCHU

After breakfast, you will step out of the hotel restaurant straight onto the train platform thus avoiding the queuing lines outside the station. You will board the “360° Machu Picchu” train towards Aguas Calientes, a modern little town close to the sanctuary of Machu Picchu. The train ride is a beautiful journey. After passing the Sacred Valley, the train starts to descend gradually along the edge of the Urubamba River, until it finally reaches the cloud forest. After approximately 1 hour 45 minutes you will have arrived in Aguas Calientes town, where you will be taken to the Machu Picchu ruins starting with a short bus ride up the steep, zigzagging road to the impressive Lost City of the Incas. 

This is one of those genuinely magical places, and your first glimpse of these ruins in the mist is something to remember. The site is perched high in the Andes, surrounded by verdant cloud forest, with the river Urubamba running through the gorge far below. Hidden away on a ridge, Machu Picchu is invisible from below, so it's no surprise it remained a secret for so many years (until 1911). 

In the late 1970s, Peter would hike up to Machu Picchu and camp in the grounds. Nowadays access to and around the site is carefully managed to ensure the condition of the site is protected for generations to come. Your ticket grants access to the site for 4 hours and the predetermined routes through the site are carefully planned, so take your time and enjoy it. A local guide plus Jean-Jacques and Peter will take you exploring first the upper terrace, then across the ruins, learning more about the 200 or so structures, houses, warehouses and temples. It's fascinating to be able to gaze down on the city from above and imagine how it would have looked during the height of the Inca empire. 

Then, enjoy lunch at Sanctuary Lodge Hotel, located just outside the site and then catch the shuttle bus into Aguas Calientes town and check into the El Mapi by Inkaterra Hotel. The rest of the day is free to explore this beautiful town and visit the open-air market, filled with displays of local Andean curios and clothing. Dinner will be at the hotel.

Today will be the final day with Jean-Jacques Decoster.

DAY 8: A SECOND VISIT MACHU PICCHU AT DAWN

After an early breakfast, you will take a private shuttle 20 minutes up the mountain to be one of the first to enter Machu Picchu just after 7am. You will be able to explore the site unguided taking one of the defined circuits. These are in place to allow guests to enjoy the site whilst still protecting it for generations to come.

After returning to Aguas Calientes for lunch, you will take the train back to Ollantaytambo and make the rest of the journey to Cusco by coach where you will return to the San Agustin Internacional Hotel.

DAY 9: DISCOVER WAQRAPUKARA

Today, you are completing the tour with a visit to the lesser-known ruins of Waqrapukara. These spectacular monumental structures are perched high in the mountain peaks above the Apurimac River, yet are not yet on the tourist trail and you have complete freedom to roam the site. In 2023, this was the highlight for several of our guests.

The day begins with a pre-dawn pick-up from the hotel at 5am. After stopping for breakfast, you will be transported close to Waqrapukara by vehicle, thus requiring just a short return walk of about 2 hours to this remote site.

During the trek, as you ascend to 4,300 metres high, you will be able to appreciate how the flora and fauna differ from those you saw on the other days. At Waqrapukara, you will enjoy a relaxed guided tour visiting the main square, towers, terraces, enclosures and cave paintings, including representations of llamas. The name Waqrapukara translates roughly as "horn-shaped fortress" in Quechua, as the peak of the mountain looks like two horns (or upright Llama ears). 

The site is surrounded by Andean mountain ranges as far as the eye can see and, due to the small number of visitors, it is a place of rare tranquillity. In some parts, it is hard to tell what features are human-made and which are geological, due to the skill of Inca builders in integrating structures to the landscape. There are still many aspects to the site yet to be deciphered by archaeologists, which is why the site is so intriguing.

The trek will be fully accompanied by the tour leader.

Afterwards, you will descend by coach back to Cusco. Then in the evening, there will be a farewell dinner at the Pachapapa restaurant.

DAY 10: FAREWELL TO CUSCO

Your tour comes to an end today and there are no activities planned. At the appropriate time, you’ll be transferred to the airport to take the flight back to Lima, followed by the international flight home.

Please note: As with the start of the tour, you will have to fly via Lima prior to your onward international flight travel. As such, we have included this flight from Cusco to Lima in the main tour price. If you want to spend a few days in Cusco at your own leisure, or join our post-tour extension visiting Chachapoyas, these options are possible, but the flight from Cusco to Lima is included in the main tour package. Please speak to the team at Intrepid Travel who can help with these arrangements. 


PRE AND POST TOUR EXTENSIONS (supplement costs required)

Nazca lines and Ballestas Islands (pre-tour) 

14 September 2024 - 4 days for £899 per person

Monkey geoglyph, Nazca or Nasca mysterious lines and geoglyphs aerial view, landmark in Peru

Before the main Inca tour, we have created a pre-tour extension visiting the Nasca lines and the Ballestas Islands, located in the southwest of Peru.

The Nazca lines are known as geoglyphs which depict a collection of giant trapezoids, and figures of humans, plants and animals in a desert 400 kilometres south of Lima, Peru. They were created between 400 BC and AD 650 by the removal of reddish oxidised stones from the desert pavement to reveal the lighter sand beneath. These ancient, intricate geometric patterns are stamped on the surface have long been thought of as messages to the gods, or as markers that tracked celestial objects. This tour offers a unique chance to view the lines from a spectacular flight over them, allowing you the opportunity to take in their true wonder and expansiveness from above. Afterwards, travel to the Ballestas islands, home to spectacular bird and marine life that rival that of the Galapagos in number.  

DAY 1: ARRIVE INTO LIMA

Upon arrival into Lima airport, you will be transferred to your hotel. 

While Peru's capital officially began life in 1535, when Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro founded the city on the Day of the Three Kings, settlements had been scattered through the valley since before the Incas. The city was built on top of an existing palace and temples that belonged to the local chief who had little choice but to move on. Lima was in its prime during the Spanish colonial days and much of the city's attraction now lies in its well-preserved historical center.

The remainder of your first day will be free to explore this city at leisure. 

No meals are included today.

DAY 2: TRAVEL FROM LIMA TO PARACAS NATIONAL RESERVE. VISIT NAZCA OBSERVATION TOWERS.

After breakfast, depart your hotel and travel south to Paracas National Reserve accompanied by a local guide from the region. The name of this beautiful place is derived from a Quechua word meaning “sand rain” probably due to the strong winds that hit the evenings here. The Paracas National Reserve is also very important since its waters contain abundant quantities of zooplankton and phytoplankton, which support a diverse range of fish and artisanal fisheries. This is a very important activity in the town. The Paracas National Reserve is in an area of 335,000 hectares and is considered one of the most important ecosystems on the planet. During your visit, you will see the beautiful cliffs and beaches along this tour.

From here, travel to the Nazca Lines observation tower, offering your first opportunity to get a glimpse of these incredible geoglyphs. The tower gets you 13 metres off the ground which is enough for you to see the basic outline of three of the Nazca figures. Your photos won’t be as impressive as when you get on the plane, but this is a much more up-close-and-personal way to see the lines. 

Afterwards, you will be transferred to your hotel in Nazca.

DAY 3: FLIGHT OVER THE NAZCA LINES AND ANTONINI MUSEUM

In the morning, you will be transferred to the aerodrome in Maria Reiche to board your small light aircraft which will take you over the Nazca lines. The flight will last around 30 minutes. The Nazca lines are an enigma. Since their discovery, the Nazca lines have inspired fantastic explanations from ancient gods, a landing strip for returning aliens, a celestial calendar created by the ancient civilization, used for rituals probably related to astronomy, or clans who made up the population and to determine through ritual their economic functions held up by reciprocity and redistribution, or a map of underground water supplies. Flying over the area you can marvel looking at the perfect shape of animals, flowers, plants, objects, and anthropomorphic figures of colossal proportions made with well-defined lines.

Afterwards, you will visit the Antonini Museum where you can learn more about Nazca culture and its importance in the history of the Americas. The museum houses a large quantity and diversity of Nasca archaeological materials.

You will then be transferred back to Paracas for your final night in this region.

DAY 4: PARACAS TO BALLESTAS ISLANDS AND ONTO LIMA 

In the morning, you will be transferred to the local harbour. We would suggest that you wear a good jacket or windbreaker as it gets very windy once the boat embarks. You will head towards the Ballestas Islands. Along the way you will see the famous figure known as The Candelabro, an enigmatic design etched on the desert floor hundreds of years ago. 

The Ballestas Islands are a collection of rocky islets, just a few kilometres off the western coast of Peru. These islands are inhabited by an amazing marine life, with over 200 types of migratory and resident birds, including Peruvian Pelicans, Belcher’s gulls, Humboldt penguins, guanay cormorants, red-legged cormorants, Inca terns, Peruvian boobies, turkey vultures, among others. In addition, you will also see around the Islands hundreds of sea lions resting at the beaches, sleeping on the rocks or swimming nearby. The islands also provide shelter to the shy Humboldt penguins which are usually seen at the entrances of small caves near the cliffs. These islands are known as 'Peru's Galapagos'.

After touring around the islands for about 1 hour you will return to the harbour followed by a private transfer back to Lima airport. On arrival, you will be transferred to your hotel to meet with the group and Peter for your tour welcome meeting.

WHAT’S INCLUDED

  • Arrival transfer from Lima airport to hotel
  • Accompanied by English speaking local guide throughout
  • Entry into all sites and museums
  • Nazca lines flight and observation tower visit
  • Ballestas Islands excursion
  • Accommodation in 3* hotels
  • All road and boat transport
  • Breakfast every day

WHAT’S NOT INCLUDED

  • Travel insurance
  • Meals not mentioned in itinerary
  • International flights to Lima
  • Single supplement - £120

Please note; Peter Getzels and Jean-Jacques Decoster will not be joining this pre-tour extension to the Nazca lines and Ballestas Islands.

Let's chat. Contact an expert to book your Discovery Tour

Email us

+44 (0)203 3089 917

Let's chat. Contact an expert to book your Discovery Tour

Email us

+44 (0)203 3089 917

Highlights

  • Explore Machu Picchu UNESCO World Heritage Site twice.
  • Multiple archaeologically important Inca sites and museums in Cusco and the Sacred Valley.
  • Including Sacsayhuaman, Tambomachay, Tipon, Moray and the hidden gem that is Waqrapukara.
  • Accompanied throughout by filmmaker and archaeo-anthropologist Peter Getzels.
  • Guest lectures and walking seminars from Dr Jean-Jacques Decoster.
  • Walking tour of the Inca capital town of Cusco.
  • Inca cosmology and stargazing evening.
  • Local culture and culinary experiences.
  • Tour extensions to the Nazca Lines and Chachapoyas available.

Meet the expert

New Scientist Default Image

Peter Getzels is an Emmy-winning documentary producer/director who comes to filmmaking as an anthropologist, explorer, and mountaineer. As a Thomas J Watson Fellow and PhD candidate at the LSE, Peter conducted fieldwork among remote Quechua-speaking highlanders in Peru, tracking myths about the return of a messianic figure called Inkarri, which had innuendos in Peruvian politics. His first films took up religious syncretism during the largest pilgrimage in South America, as well as power relations between Quechua and Spanish speakers during rituals on Peruvian Independence Day. As a staff producer for National Geographic, Peter brought his Peruvian knowledge to a film about wide-scale human sacrifice at the Moche pyramids on the northern coast of Peru, where extensive evidence was uncovered by archaeologists. He also helped develop the South American portion of the long-running series called Taboo, about indigenous life and rituals.

Peter has been on three expeditions in the Himalayas, and has scaled nearly every major peak in the Andes, opening new routes for the American Alpine Institute with a number of first ascents. As one of the creators of new climbing and trekking itineraries for the American Alpine Institute’s South American strategy, Peter has guided tours of all the major archeological sites, including ancient Inca trails and sacred roads in the Cuzco region. As a kayaker, he has explored the Amazon and Patagonia on long expeditions. Focusing on stories rooted in anthropology, science and adventure, Peter has made documentaries in Antarctica, Iraq, Cambodia, Solomon Islands, China, Ladakh, Jammu and Kashmir, Andaman Islands, Greenland, Guyana and more. 

While working on his PhD in Anthropology, Peter and his partner Harriet Gordon were offered MFA places at the National Film and Television School of England, which launched their careers for British television. They lived in the UK for sixteen years, where Peter was a staff producer in Science at the BBC, and made films with his partner for C4, ZDF, Canal Plus, Discovery and more. For twelve years Peter was a member of the Film Committee of the Royal Anthropological Institute, and an early member of the South American Explorers Club. Recently he became a Fellow at the Explorers Club in New York.

Now based in Washington DC, Peter runs Getzels Gordon, a small production company dedicated in part, to a long-standing philosophy and science series for PBS called Closer to Truth. He holds dual US/UK citizenship. 

New Scientist Default ImageDr Jean-Jacques Decoster is a native of France. After studying Literature in France and Anthropology in the US (MA Virginia; Ph.D.  Cornell), he earned a Doctorate in Social Sciences from U. N. M. San Marcos, Lima (Peru) and an MA in Museum Studies (U. Leicester, UK).  

Based in Cusco, Jean-Jacques is Professor of Anthropology at the San Antonio Abad University, where he lectures on Inca History and South American Ethnography. 

From 2012 to 2014, he directed the Machupicchu Museum, and during his tenure there, was responsible for receiving the Hiram Bingham/ Machu Picchu collection from the Yale Peabody Museum. 

Foremost among his current interests are the defence and promotion of cultural heritage in the Andes. At this time, Dr Decoster is involved in a study of the heritage impact of the Chinchero airport, and in an assessment of the Maras Saltpans for the UNESCO list of heritage sites.  

He is a member of ICOMOS, a National Geographic expert and a World Monuments Fund external advisor. 

When not lecturing or leading groups, Jean-Jacques enjoys hiking with his dogs over the Andean mountains, and cooking for friends at his home. 

He also serves as the French Consul in Cusco.

WHAT’S INCLUDED

  • 24-hour tour support, tour manager and trekking guides
  • Entry into all sites and museums
  • All talks and walking seminars
  • Planetarium evening
  • All accommodation and road/rail transport
  • Return internal flights between Lima to Cusco
  • Breakfast every day plus 4 lunches, 3 picnics and 5 dinners

WHAT’S NOT INCLUDED

  • Travel insurance
  • International flights
  • Single supplement - £415
  • Nazca Lines pre-tour extension

PACE & PHYSICALITY

The tour is paced to allow you to acclimatise. You will be at altitudes above 2000 metres and the first few days will be at a more relaxed pace.

A lot of the time will be spent on uneven ground, trails and archaeological sites, so hiking boots are essential as is the ability to hike for a few hours at a time.

On day 6 you will have to trek some of the way to Pisac, at altitude and along steep uneven paths. On day 9, after a 5:30am start and coach journey, you will be trekking for approximately 5 hours to reach Waqrapukara. 

Walking poles are highly recommended but metal-tipped poles are strictly forbidden at Machu Picchu.

You should also bring a small backpack, breathable hiking clothes, sweaters, waterproof clothing and a hat to protect you from the sun. Plus two waterbottles.

Accommodation

Hotel San Agustin Internacional, Cusco

This hotel is just 10 minutes walk from the main town square and is in the style of Gaudi. It has all the amenities of a modern hotel including wi-fi, an excellent restaurant and highly praised customer service. 

Inti Punku Sacred Valley Hotel 

A tranquil hotel with extensive gardens in the heart of the Sacred Valley. Surrounded by rolling green plains and some impressive mountains. Contemporary accommodation housed and balconies with views across the mountains.

El Albergue, Ollantaytambo

First opened in 1925, this historic and charming small hotel is located within the Ollantaytambo train station yet remains peaceful and secluded with its own private gardens and views of the surrounding mountains. Its restaurant is next to the platform, where you will catch the train up to KM104 for your trek to Machu Picchu. While others are queuing in a long line outside the station, you can literally finish your breakfast and step aboard the train.

El Mapi by Inkaterra Hotel, Aguas Calientes

A stylish and comfortable at the foot of the climb to Machu Picchu and near the river Urubamba. A heart breakfast is served from 5am for your early visit to Machu Picchu.