Friday - 12 April 2024 - Our hotel, Aranwa Sacred Valley Hotel, had huge grounds with trails, ponds, streams, and
feeding stations to attract birds - including hummingbirds.
A Blue-and-yellow Macaw in a tree over a pond.
Sparkling Violetear hummingbirds were battling each other for the feeders.
Beautiful little metallic blue birds.
The huge Giant Hummingbird - he was big - maybe 10 inches long.
Interesting succulent near the pond.
After breakfast, we headed up into the Andes for our explorations.
Along the way, we spotted a sheep herder with the Andes in the background.
The high Andes peaks with snow (their summer over long ago as we were here during their fall).
The snow is on the peak called Sahuasiray that rises to 19,000 feet.
Our next visit would be the Maras salt pans. There, a spring heavy in salt emerges from the rocks.
The salt pans are in a small valley.
Over 5,000 saltwater pools where the water evaporates to leave the salt - a practice used here prior to the Incas.
The water from the spring is routed along small streams into the complex. Rocks are used to move water
into a pond or bypass.
It takes more than a month for the water to evaporate - typically the pond is filled up a few times to gather enough
salt at the bottom to harvest.
Each of the ponds has a clay lining to stop the water from seeping back into the ground.
The nearby town owns and controls the ponds. Each family from the village is assigned ponds based on family size.
Virginia Ann and Cal at Moray.
Archaeologists are also not certain what the purpose of the structural foundation surrounded by the terraces.
The flow of the terraces.
We were intrigued by the flowing lines of the stonework.
A smaller depression is nearby - not as grand in scale - still pretty large.
There would need to be further excavation to recreate the walls.
The piles of stones are those that it can't be determined exactly where they belong in the walls.
We then drove to the village of Chinchero. Where we had a short walk to the Chinchero Archaeological Site.
A door along our route.
Decorations along the front wall of a home.
Looking into a yard we spotted an alpaca with fancy earrings.
At the Chinchero Archaeological Site, the Spanish built a church over the Inca Temple.
When the Spanish discovered an Inca city, they always established a church where the temples once stood.
A local woman carrying a burden of greens - maybe feed for cuy?
Long rear wall of the complex.
Beautiful terraces traveling down the mountain hills. These were interesting because they zig zagged.
Virginia Ann and Cal at Chinchero Archaeological Site.
A corner of a wall with random rocks - not sure why they were left on the ground.
The long wall with niches.
The ruins are thought to have been a summer retreat for Inca Tupac Yupanqui,
the son of Pachacutec, and feature Inca stonework, terraces, and aqueducts that are still in use today.
We had seen the corn stands along the road and outside the site was a woman selling the corn. Our guide purchased one
corn cob for us to sample later at lunch.
Virginia Ann and Cal with the Sacred Valley in the background.
A Spanish Hacienda with an Inca set of terraces just above. The hacienda is abandoned and the site is managed by the
Peruvian state.
Cal taking a picture of Huaypo lake.
Huaypo lake.
A ceremony to Mother Earth performed prior to our lunch. Various objects are buried in a small hole including coca
leaves, bananas, and flower petals.
A shepherd - the sheep were traveling close to where we stopped for lunch.
Rain threatened all day but we avoided it - a great day for hiking around the sites.
Cal and Virginia Ann having lunch with guide Chris and our driver.
The Andean peak Veronica and the rain clouds.
Pretty light on the foothills.
Corn laid out to dry in a village.
The Andean peaks from our hotel.
The day ended as it started with Cal taking pictures of Sparkling Violetear hummingbirds.