Float Down To Peru


Start at bottom (DAY ONE) and scroll up for
a proper chronologically correct day-by-day

Sunday, June 13, 2010

The Reed People

So, these are the Huros (Indians) who live
on the highest navegable lake in the Western
Hemisphere (Lake Titicaca). Yes, the people
actually live ON these floating reed platforms
and live in theses huts made out of reeds; and,
as you can see by the little girl, peel back the
outer part and chew on the white fiber and eat it
(kind of like what you would do with sugar cane...).
They speak their own Indian language, Aymará.

Day Two, Thursday, 27 May

Arrive Cusco -- our pick-up, Pepe (little Joe), arranged by me through Jorge (hotel owner of three Eco(logical) hotels we end up staying in/ social activist/helper) is not here.
Oh, no. Lucky for the rental phone the young woman pushed on me at the Lima airport
last night -- could have sold me anything at that point, of course ... our resistance was way down as fatigue set in ...
We call the driver -- no luck. try. try. try. nada ...
Then we think to call Jorge himself -- yes! the protector of our endeavor scold/calls one of his guys -- within minutes we're greeted by not only his guy but Jorge himself who wants to see with his own eyes that we have transportation and are secure.
Cusco Hotel -- upscale digs, ( we've just come from our Lima stay). Seems weird, in a way, lots of hot coca tea, (yes it's legal and which we need for the altitude sickness we now know we are fighting --shortness of breath, hard to breathe, kind of dizzy, really, really tired). We take a walk to the Plaza -- it's dark -- we end up buying Alpacan Indian hats and gloves and scarves from some street market stalls . My bartering skills, not practiced in the Latin style
for a while, aren't at all bad ...
Back to the hotel -- dinner, laughs, and we decide "What happens in Peru stays in Peru" ...
for some reason we really laugh, it's not that funny, but we are in hysterics.
Then, at 9:30 pm we decide to take them up on 1/2 hour massages for $20 American money. I'm in Wonderland, I also tack on a manicure for around $9 American money ...
my hands are a mess -- nails torn and jagged due to the trip prep and travel ..the delay, though
pleasant, has exhausted me. We sleep, arise and leave the hotel at 8 am to go to Puno --port of Lake Titicaca where the reed people live. Arrive in the dark -- stop along the way to
see some small, pretty unexciting 'ruins' -- some shored up by old boards -- but a good place for
drivers to stop with tourists so locals can sell wares --. So, o.k., we do buy. Little tchatkes
like Andean wood flute (quena) for my music-major son. My companions deliberate on
some textiles and ceramics and end up with little ceramic birds that whistle with one tone when you blow into them and then a different tone when filled with water. ¡Preciosos!
Back in the car, the ride with Pepe is a blast -- great conversations in Spanish .. great Incan
music on his CD player and finally Louis Armstrong (he wants to surprise his American friends) with "What a Wonderful World."
Arrive Lake Titicaca (Puno) in the dark ... check into another Eco Hotel. Crash.