Mom and I reached the ruins sometime after 6 a.m., and had some time to wander the grounds before our guided tour at 8 a.m. Theoretically, at this hour of the day, there are less tourists and thus more opportunities to take photos unmolested by large groups of people. We still had to be creative with our camera angles, but I was pretty pleased with the results. And sometimes, you just have to say to hell with it and blast away with the photos in order to capture the scale of the ruins.
Machu Picchu really is everything you expect it to be, which is breath-taking, awe-inspiring, mysterious, beautiful. It is an architectural wonder. It is surrounded by wild mountains and jungle vegetation. The site is richly green. The stones are perfectly formed. Wandering the ruins in (relative) solitude, you can feel the weight of history as you marvel at the Inca's achievements. I wish I were an Inca. The Inca terracing, which we had seen in many other areas, was so beautiful at Machu Picchu, practically clinging to the slope of the mountain. The Incas apparently used the terracing to study the microclimates of each terrace and perfect their crops and farming techniques.
After wandering the site at our leisure, we took a guided tour with a darling and informative guide and were able to learn more about the secrets and marvels of Machu Picchu. I had not known that the site was actually a work in progress when construction was stopped due to the threat of the conquistadores. In places, there are huge piles of boulders that the Inca would shape and use for constructing their buildings. In one area, there was evidence of how the Inca cut the large stones. They would carve niches along natural cracks in the rocks, and then place beams of wood in the niches. Next, they would put water on the wood. As the wood expanded with the moisture, it would split open the rocks. While, standing by the guardhouse overlooking the site, it seemed impossible that a site like Machu Picchu could be built with relative speed, our guide informed us that Incas payed taxes through manual labor, and thus work forces of 20,000 could be mobilized at a time. We stood in the doorway to the site, where the official Inca Trail ended, and learned that the Inca had at one time over 55,000 kilometers of paved trail, stretching from northern Argentina up into Ecuador. We also learned more about their mummies, rituals involving sacrifices to the sun, and the importance of the condor in their worldview. At one place in the site is a ceremonial condor carved out of an existing boulder. Mummified bodies were place on its wings and offerings were made to its carved beak. Other places on the site contained rocks carved and angled to form compasses. We visited the top of a structure that served as an oratorical platform and witnessed the mastery of Inca acoustics, looking down on the field where spectators would stand to listen and where centuries later Che Guevara played a soccer match. Standing among the shadows of the past, Mom and I were mesmerized by the passage of time, the intricacy and achievements of a fallen empire, and our own utter insignificance.
Different views of the living quarters.
So yes, basically, you need to go to Cusco and Machu Picchu. I ended up wishing I hadn't wasted my first three days there being pissy and missing out on all the site-seeing, since Mom and I were unable to do and see it all. Fortunately, it gives me a good reason to go back! I want to try again during the much more popular dry season, which is more crowded but also promises clear skies!
2 comments:
Awesome photos Tiff! I definitely want to see M.P. some day.
Andrea
Wow!! Really an Excellent collection of snaps like walking in another world. Machu Picchu is everybody's first preference for traveling on Peru Tours South America.
Post a Comment