Archive for the ‘Peru’ Category

Inca Trail, Part 1–Background

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

Finally, it’s time to move on to my primary reason for traveling to Peru–hiking to Machu Picchu via the Inca Trail.  Usually some version of this walk makes any list of the top treks in the world, so it’s no surprise that it has been on my bucket list for a long time.  Since I’m not getting any younger, it was time to go.  I chose the classic version of the trek, 45 km starting from Km. 82 in 3 1/2 days.

First, some background about the trail.  The Inca were great road builders.  Just like the Romans, they needed the means for moving troops around and for communicating with their far-flung administrators in an empire that stretched some 2,400 miles from Quito south to the Maule River in Chile.  By the time the Spanish arrived, an estimated 40,000 km of roads existed, and, also like Roman roads, these roads were built to last since the Inca expected to be around awhile.  On the other hand, none of the Andean peoples had developed the wheel, so there were no wide carts or wagons moving along the roads, just men and llamas.  Of course, without horses or oxen to pull something with wheels, there had been no reason to invent such a conveyance.  Thus, Inca roads tended to be narrower than Roman roads.  Moreover, the engineers who laid them out had no need to worry about creating smooth, gradual inclines to insure horse-drawn wheeled vehicles could make it over the mountains.  Thus, steps were obviously the best way to get up or down steep inclines.  And why would you use switchbacks which require more linear distance than steps to achieve the same change in elevation, especially when the trail is being carved out of bedrock? 

The roads were paved with flat stones.  When necessary, retaining walls and culverts were used to insure the road could survive the summer monsoons, and, occasionally, a tunnel was somehow hand-carved through a rocky outcrop that could not be circumnavigated.

Most of what we call the Classic Inca Trail was the road built by the Inca Pachacuti to provide access for building his new retreat at Machu Picchu.  It was built so that the bearers who carried the Inca on his litter to his retreat could give him a smooth ride.  (As a person prone to motion sickness, I just can’t imagine that riding would be better than walking.)

Classic Inca Trail Schematic Map

Classic Inca Trail Schematic Map

Classic Inca Trail Map

Classic Inca Trail Map

Another version with North on top

Another version with North on top

Today’s classic trek usually begins near kilometer 82 of the rail line between Cusco and Aguas Calientes.  While the tracks hug the bank of the river through the narrow gorge on the last leg of the trip, the road stops at Piskacucho.

Access to the trail is restricted; only 500 people, including guides, cooks, and porters, can enter the trail per day, and one cannot travel solo without a licensed guide.  My group of three trekkers was accompanied by a staff of nine.  If that ratio of 1 to 3 were consistent across trekking companies and group size, only 125 trekkers could start the trail per day.  Reservations are a must!

Not all trekking companies are equal.  Nina booked me with Llama Path.  The staff are treated very well by the companies’ owners, which include a former porter.  On the trail, they are easy to recognize as they wear red uniforms, carry real (red) backpacks (not baskets or tarps or blankets loaded with gear), and have real hiking boots (not sandals).  Moreover, their loads seem to be lighter.

Llama Path Staff

Llama Path Staff

The evening before departure, we three trekkers met for the first time at the Llama Path office.  My companions were a young couple from West Los Angeles–Andrew and Yvette.  They were one month into an 8+-month around-the-world tour.  Our guide was Romero.

Not all versions of the Classic Inca Trail are equal in difficulty.  There are multiple campsites along the first section of the trail, and where your company chooses to pitch its tents effects how far you will hike and how much elevation you will gain and lose in a day.  If you have done any training at all for the trek, it is easier to walk further the first day so that on day 2, which has the most elevation gain,  you start higher and have less distance to travel.  We camped the first night at Ayapata after a 14-km walk with a gain of 1,900 feet.  As a consequence, we had a 3,000-ft climb to the highest point on the trail the next morning rather than a 4,000-ft climb.  Friends who took the trek a few days later with another company spent the first night at the lower camp and found that climb an exhausting way to start the day.

Our Inca Trail itinerary was as follows:

Day 1: Km 82 (8,923’) to Ayapata (10,829’) with lunch at Wayllabamba (9,842’).  The 12km to the lunch spot was estimated to take 5 hrs; the 2 km from there to Ayapata 1.3 hrs.

Day 2: Ayapata (10,829’) to Dead Woman’s Pass (13,779’) and then down to Pacaymayo (11,700’) for lunch—8.5km, 7 hrs; Pacaymayo over 2nd pass (13,123’) to Chaquicocha camp (11,800’)—7.5 km, 4 hrs.

Day 3: Chaquicocha (11,800’) to 3rd pass (12,073’)—2 hrs, and then another 3 hrs down to Wiñay Huayna at 8,792’, a total distance of 10km.

Day 4: Wiñay Huayna to the Sun Gate (8,956’) and Machu Picchu (7,873’), a total distance of 5km.

Not all guides are equal.  My guide for the trek into the Colca Canyon, Omar, was far superior to Romero in terms of interests.  We had really interesting discussions about birds, geology, culture, history, religion, etc.  While Romero knew his history, he clearly had his prepared spiel and had trouble with interuptions and interjections.  On the other hand, he had lots of experience in dealing with clients of all levels of trekking ability and experience.  He was an excellent coach.

Not all porters are equal.  Ours appeared to be a happy bunch.  They joked and laughed among themselves and were quick to smile.  Since we were a small group, they set up the kitchen in half of the dining tent with just a partial cloth wall partition.  That meant we could watch them cook and talk to them while they were preparing meals if we stood up.  Unfortunately, only one of the porters, a student, spoke English very well; some of the others understood at least some English.  While my companions spoke Spanish, some of the porters only spoke Quechua.

Every other year the guides and porters can participate in a race along the 27-mile Inca Trail.  Just a few years ago someone broke the 1997 record of 3 hrs 45 min with a spectacular run of 3 hr 24 min.  The typical tourist trekker takes 3 1/2 days!

Peruvian Weaving–2

Friday, January 29th, 2010

As I mentioned in my last post, Nina Fogelman of Ancient Summit works with a group of weavers in the Sacred Valley.  By taking her clients to meet them and learn about how they ply their craft, she reinforces the importance of their weaving in the ancient manner while providing them a means for earning money without turning their village and themselves into a spectacle or just another stop on the tourist circuit.  Clients are encouraged to make their visit a learning stop, not a shopping stop.  No tips are allowed.  If one wants to help the village, bring school supplies.  At my hotel, I met another of Nina’s clients; he was spending the week as a volunteer in the school.

When I arrived just after lunch, about a half dozen women were working and chatting in the open plaza in front of the village church.

Village Church in the Sacred Valley

Village Church in the Sacred Valley

 

Weavers in the Village Plaza

Weavers in the Village Plaza

One of the women took me, with my translator guide, for a stroll into the countryside where she pointed out various plants, explaining their medicinal and other practical uses such as in dyeing wool.  Along the way, we met a woman moving sheep, although I had a hard time figuring out who was leading whom.

Shepherdess

Sheep were introduced by the Spanish and are the primary source of wool in the Sacred Valley, not llamas or alpacas.  This little one didn’t want to move along.

Lamb

Back in the village, another woman demonstrated how they clean the wool using the root of the plant Sacha paraqay.  Sheep’s wool is very greasy and needs to be washed several times to get it clean.

As in most of Peru, these women use a drop spindle for spinning.  According to Nilda Alvarez (see my last post), children begin to spin when six or seven years old, and, by the age of ten, are expected to produce usable yarn.

Using a Drop Spindle

Using a Drop Spindle

This child was “helping” to dye a skein of yarn.

Dyeing Yarn

Traditional Andean weavers use a backstrap loom that produces a warp-faced weaving.

Using a backstrap loom

Using a backstrap loom

 

Warp-faced weaving

Warp-faced weaving

 

Weaving on a Backstrap Loom

Weaving on a Backstrap Loom

As I noted in my post about the reed-weaving Uros, working outdoors as these women were is typical throughout Peru.

The Spanish also introducing knitting to Peru.

Note the details of the hats

Note the details of the hats

The book being examined by the woman above appeared to be a notebook of patterns.  Documenting patterns and their meaning is a recent phenomenon.  As more and more people leave their rural communities of birth for consumer-focused city life, weaving traditions are being lost.  These women are doing their part to insure their traditions are not lost to the future.

Peruvian Weaving

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Peru has the longest continuous textile record in world history. “ 

The earliest fragments of Peruvian textiles date from about 8600 BC; that’s 10,000 years ago.   Peruvian pottery can only be traced back to between 1500 and 1000 BC.

It would be impossible to visit Peru today without recognizing that weaving and textiles more generally play important roles in the tourist trade.  In Cusco, the tourists’ mecca, the streets are lined with shops selling all types of woven items, everything from chullos (those knit hats with ear flaps and tassels) to exquisite alpaca sweaters.

 

Just one of many types of woven hats for sale in Cusco

Just one of many types of woven hats for sale in Cusco

In the Sacred Valley, most tour operators make sure you visit at least one site or shop related to weaving.  In a previous post, I mentioned my visit to Awana Kancha, a weaving collective.  In addition to viewing the raw ingredients on the hoof, the visit included an introduction to how the hair was transformed into yarn and then woven.

 

Examples of Naturally-dyed Yarn

Examples of Naturally-dyed Yarn

My tour company, Ancient Summit, also takes clients to a village where one gets a chance to learn about textile production one-on-one in a non-commercial setting, but I’ll talk about that visit in a later post.

Weaving was also highlighted during my visit to Taquile.

What I want to discuss in this post is what wasn’t discussed by any of my tour guides–the historical role of Andean textiles.  Two excellent books on this subject are: 

Woven Stories: Andean Textiles and Rituals, by Andrea Heckman, a trekking guide who earned a Ph.D. in Latin American Studies based on her anthropological-art history research, (2003), and

Weaving in the Peruvian Highlands, Dreaming Patterns, Weaving Memories, by Nilda Alvarez (2007).  Nilda, a weaver from Chinchero, established the Center for Traditional Textiles of Cusco.

During the 100-year reign of the Incas, most adults had to pay a tax in labor, the mit’a.  Men typically served in the military or worked on public construction projects.  Women wove, and a percentage of their output became the property of the Inca.  The finest pieces became his personal property, but most of the cloth was stockpiled in storehouses and used to reward government service and clothe the army.  In an economy without money, cloth was a highly-valued commodity.

In a society without the written word, textiles played a vital role in communication.  “Weavings were a metaphorical presentation of the world” in which they lived. (Heckman, p. 8)  Each village had its own cloth patterns and clothing styles.  Even today it is possible for the knowledgeable to pinpoint someone’s hometown if he or she is wearing something made of homemade cloth.

Most of the weavings were arrangements of various geometric designs.  Both the pattern and arrangement had meaning, making it possible to convey complex ideas.  Unfortunately, as women migrate to urban areas in order to move beyond subsistence living, the traditional stories and meanings that were passed orally from one generation to the next along with the craft of weaving are being lost.  Efforts to stem the loss of craft and knowledge vary from the skill-based efforts of the Center for Traditional Textiles of Cusco to the knowledge-based efforts of  AI researchers at the London Knowledge Lab.

 

Typical Weaving Patterns

Typical Weaving Patterns

The inclusion of animals and birds in chullos and sweaters for tourists is a modern adaptation in response to market demands.  The weavers on Taquile have gone further than just adding non-geometric units to their weaving; they invented a cloth object just for the tourist trade–the calendar belt.  For a discussion of the history of weaving on Taquile and the effects of tourism, see anthropologist Elayne Zorn’s Weaving a Future: Tourism, Cloth and Culture on an Andean Island (2004).

A Taquile Weaving in Progress

A Taquile Weaving in Progress

Taquile Design Details

Taquile Design Details

Having studied the effects of tourism (via Fred Harvey) on the arts and crafts of the Navajo and Hopi, I found Zorn’s work particularly interesting.  Unfortunately, I’ve not been able to find a scholarly study that addresses the issue of  how tourism and commercialization of crafts effect native cultures.

 

Some additional resources:

The Cultural Significance of Andean Cloth and Implications of Its Decline

Taquile and Its Textile Art

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ollantaytambo–Part 2

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

When the first-time visitor arrives at the base of the Ollantaytambo terraces, the structures which capture the eye are not on Cerro Bandolista; they are across the valley on Cerro Pinkuylluna.

Inca Storehouses on Cerro Pinkuylluna

Inca Storehouses on Cerro Pinkuylluna

Perched on the steep slopes of the hillside, these buildings were the Inca’s personal storehouses for the produce of his estate. 

Cerro Pinkuylluna as seen from Cerro Bandolista with the village of Ollantaytambo in between

Cerro Pinkuylluna as seen from Cerro Bandolista with the village of Ollantaytambo in between

The hillside is littered with the ruins of these storehouses, many of them in seemingly inaccessible locations.

Storehouse Ruins, Ollantaytambo

The most visible ruins are of three identical, but separate buildings.  Each had six tall windows on the downhill side, ten on the uphill side, and a doorway and a window in each gable end.  The rear section of each floor was raised, and there were covered drains or ventilation channels carved into the raised sections.

Protzen conducted some experiments on airflow using a scale model of these buildings in a wind tunnel.  He found that the closeness of the buildings with  their high-pitched roofs created negative pressure zones between the roofs and at the back of the uphill building making the buildings quite aerodynamic.  Ventilation even improved when the buildings were filled.

For details, see Jean-Pierre Protzen, Inca Architecture and Construction at Ollantaytambo, Oxford University Press, 1993.

Ollantaytambo–Part 1

Saturday, December 12th, 2009
Ollantaytambo, like Pisac, was built by Pachacuti for his own private use at the other, northern end of the Sacred Valley.
Ollantaytambo Terraces and Temples

Ollantaytambo Terraces and Temples

Unlike Pisac, the residential quarters were in the valley.  The structures atop the rocky spur, which was drastically modified to create the appropriate setting, were ceremonial, religious buildings, and they were never completed.  Since Pachacuti died around 1471, some fifty years before the arrival of the Spanish, the estate was technically owned and managed by and for his panaca or descendants.  At one time, there were around 1,000 workers on the estate, but none of the sources I’ve read speak to its status before Manco Inca arrived after initiating his rebellion in Cusco and retreating to here in July 1536 when Sacsayhuaman was lost to the Pizarros. 

Agricultural Terraces at Ollantaytambo

Agricultural Terraces of Pumatallis at Ollantaytambo

Remember my post on the battle over Cusco (November 19th)?  Here, I take up that story again.

Manco Inca set up his headquarters at Ollantaytambo while part of his army continued to lay siege to Cusco and one of his best generals, Quizo Yupanqui, set about insuring Francisco Pizarro could not send reinforcements from Lima with an ultimate goal of routing Francisco Pizarro out of Lima.  Manco quickly turned the rural estate into a fortress.

Ollantaytambo Fortifications

Ollantaytambo--Funerary Sector

Note the incredible amount of work that must have gone into carving out the steps and smoothing the walls.

Hand-smoothed Walls at Ollantaytambo

Hand-smoothed Walls at Ollantaytambo

When Hernando Pizarro pursued Manco to Ollantaytambo with 100 Spanish soldiers (70 calvary and 30 infantry) and 30,000 native allies, his forces encountered a stronghold filled with 30,000 soldiers, many of them Antis from the jungles armed with bows and arrows.  Using  slingshots and bows to hurl rocks and arrows from terraces about a quarter-mile to the east of those shown here, Manco’s warriors fought off the Spanish.  Meanwhile, he had the dams used to channel water from the river into the valley’s irrigation system destroyed, so that the Spanish horses lost their maneuverability in the rising water.  They barely managed to escape from the valley and never re-attempted a takeover of Ollantaytambo.

Of course, within a few months, Almagro returned to Cusco, and both he and Hernando were more interested in wooing Manco’s support in their struggle to gain control of each other.  Sometime in 1537, Manco decided neither faction could be trusted and that his situation was so precarious he’d be safer in the jungle at Vilcabamba and abandoned Ollantaytambo.  Once the Pizarros eliminated Almagro, they pursued Manco, who again managed to escape, but his wife did not.  The Pizarros took her back to Ollantaytambo where they tortured and killed her, and then sent her body down the river to let Manco know what they had done.

For some reason, perhaps because the residential area was on the valley plains and not in a defensible, hillside position, Ollantaytambo remained inhabited and now proudly boasts that it has some of the oldest continuously occupied dwellings in South America.

The following view, taken from the funerary sector looking across the terraces to the temple sector, depicts several features worthy of further discussion–the Enclosure of the Ten Niches on the uppermost terrace level and the incomplete Temple of the Sun at the upper right where the people are standing.  Note the massive, partially cut stones that litter the unfinished site.

View of Temple Sector at Ollantaytambo

To the right of the ten niches is the Wall of the Unfinished Gate.

Enclosure of the Ten Niches and the Wall of the Unfinished Gate

Enclosure of the Ten Niches and the Wall of the Unfinished Gate

No one knows where the doorway would have led.

Wall of the Unfinished Gate

Wall of the Unfinished Gate

This wall and those of this set of terraces were constructed using a unique form of masonry not found anywhere else.  Named scutiform masonry by Harthe-terre, many of the stones have tails that project into the joint in the course below.  Compare these walls with those of the Enclosure of Ten Niches, where there are no such tails.

Note the difference in masonry between the Enclosure of the Ten Niches and the other walls

Note the difference in masonry between the Enclosure of the Ten Niches and the other walls

As Jean-Pierre Protzen notes in his book on Inca Architecture and Construction at Ollantaytambo, this site, due to its work-in-progress nature, provides an unparalleled opportunity for studying Inca construction methods.  Many of the stones that appear destined for the Sun Temple were being re-cycled, but there is nothing to indicate what the original structure was or where it was located.

Partially worked stones and the north wall of the Sun Temple

Partially worked stones and the north wall of the Sun Temple

Here’s an even closer look at the really odd north wall.  Note the crude rubble fill between the obviously recycled stones,

North Wall of Sun Temple

North Wall of Sun Temple

and compare it to the exquisite, cyclopean Wall of Six Monoliths which faces towards the people standing on the left.

Wall of Six Monoliths

Wall of Six Monoliths

I don’t remember where I saw the following stockpile of building material, so I can’t connect them to Protzen’s diagrams.

Niches in Waiting? Discards? Leftovers?

Niches in Waiting? Discards? Leftovers?

On the plain below the Fortress, I found this beautiful fountain, which is still working.

 

Fountain at Ollantaytambo

Pachacuti’s Country Estate at Pisaq

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

The prevailing theory seems to be that Pachacuti had Pisac (and Ollantaytambo) built after he defeated the Cuyos (and Tambos) in the Vilcanota (or Sacred) Valley.  They were his private estates, designed to both protect the valley from attack and to provide food and other resources necessary to support his family and descendants. (MacQuarrie, p. 439)

Pisac Terraces

Pisac is huge.  The ruins here are unique in that there are four distinct building areas: P’isaqa, Qanchiracay, Intihuatana, and Q’allaqasa for the elite, agricultural, religious, and military inhabitants of the complex.

Pisac map

I like the following view because it gives the viewer an idea of what the terraces looked like before and after restoration following about 400 years of non-use.Pisac Terraces

Look carefully at the slopes in the background.  It looks as if the terraces extended almost to the peak.  Given all the easily accessible good farmland in the valley, the amount of  land cultivated on the mountainsides during the time of the Incas would appear to be unnecessary unless there were a whole lot of people living here. 

Looking up the hillside from Intihuatana

Not all of the terraces were for farming.  More than 3,000 burial places stud the hillside.

Ransacked burial sites at Pisaq

Ransacked burial sites at Pisaq

And here’s a view from across the valley.

Pisac terraces as seen from across the valley

Each of the “villages” has its own character with the religious sector having the finest architecture and the Intihuatana or Sun Temple having the best of the best.

Pisaq religious sector

Pisaq religious sector

The Intihuatana and other temples
The Intihuatana and other temples

Like the Intihuatana in other locales, it is the building with the curved walls encasing a natural stone outcrop.

Intihuatana or Sun Temple

Intihuatana or Sun Temple

Also note the crude stone building to the right of the Intihuatana in the middle image.  It seems very out of place, but if there is a theory about its purpose and location, I haven’t found it yet.
Rough stone building in religious sector

Rough stone building in religious sector

Compare the workmanship to these buildings.

Temple at Pisaq

The Q’allaqasa or military citadel sits strategically above the confluence,

Q'allaqasa or military sector at Pisac
Q’allaqasa or military sector at Pisac

while the elite lived lower down on the hillside at Pisaqa.

Q'allaqasa or military district of Pisac

Pisaqa

 The peons had the crudest building works, at least as reconstructed.

A rebuilt structure at Qanchiracay

A rebuilt structure at Qanchiracay

Qanchiracay

Qanchiracay

Given the reconstruction and restoration of all but the best walls that have withstood the tests of time, it is hard to know where the reality of the 16th century has been usurped by the imagination of the 20th.  For example, look closely at the steps in the following image.  Rarely did any of the thousands of steps on the Inca Trail look this even or of such uniform height.  Obviously, some changes have made made for visitor safety, but once one begins to question, one doesn’t know where to stop. 

Was this really what it looked like around 1500?

Was this really what it looked like around 1500?

This dilemma on the part of both the caretaker and the visitor is not unique to Incan ruins.  I’ve encountered it time and time again in the American Southwest where the National Park Service (and other custodians of American Indian ruins) struggle to make places like the Cliff Palace at Mesa Verde National Park both safe and true to the past when starting with not much more than a pile of rocks and no written records.

Cliff Palace, Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado

Cliff Palace, Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado

The Roads from Cusco to Pisac and Incan Agriculture

Saturday, November 28th, 2009

sacred-valley-map-cusco-peru

The direct road from Cusco at 11,000+ feet to Pisac at about 9,000 feet goes up before it goes down. To get a better feel for the change in topography, check out the terrain version of this map.  My first view of the Sacred Valley was from the viewpoint above Taray.

Taray and the Sacred Valley

The Urubamba River, which from its start near Puno was called the Vilcanota by the Inca, has carved a wide, fertile valley from this point to Ollantaytambo, giving rise to the alternative name for this stretch–the Wilcamayu or Sacred River.  Sheltered by the mountains on both sides, the valley’s temperate climate is ideal for the growing of maize, beans and barley.  The valley is a checkerboard of mostly small farms which continue to be worked with oxen and foot plows.

The return route via Urubamba and Chinchero includes a long stretch on a high plateau,

Along the road from Urubamba to Cusco

with stunning views of moutain peaks

Mountain peak from Urubamba to Cusco Road

and hillsides filled with ruins of Incan granaries.

 

Granary ruins between Urubamba and Cusco

Just a short drive from the road near Urubamba are the remnants of what I call the Incan Agricultural Research Center as its purpose was similar to that of the USDA’s Beltsville facility. 

Moray from Google Earth

Incan agronomists used the 30-degree (F) temperature differential between the top and bottom of the 90-foot deep natural depressions at Moray to hybridize seeds–to improve plant productivity and  increase zone hardiness.  For example, the coca plant, which was native to the lower altitudes of the Amazon basin, was acclimatized to grow near Cuzco.

Moray Ag Station Panorama

Reconstructed terraces at Moray

Nearby at Maras there are extensive salt mines.  When I saw this stop on my itinerary, I was initially very surprised.  You see, I grew up in the Finger Lakes region, where most of this country’s salt is mined–underground, and there are NO tours.  (See Salt Mines and Brine Wells in the Finger Lakes for a history of salt mining in the US.)

Maras Salt Mine

Then I remembered that I had taken a tour at least 30 years ago of what might be called the world’s oldest salt mine at Hallein, Austria.  After approximately 6,000 years, mining ceased in the mid-1990s when the underground mine was no longer profitable.

A Man working his salt mine at Maras

Surprise!  The Maras salt mine is on top of the ground.  More than 200 families from two villages work one or more of these small pools which are filled from one small trickle of water that is channeled as it exits the mountainside.  To get the best quality salt, someone must came and walk the pools regularly as the water evaporates.  Talk abut labor intensive!  Compare this method with the ones now used in the Finger Lakes.

Salt-cicles?

Salt-cicles? Stalactites?

To Market, To Market, To Buy …

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Well, in my case, I go to markets to take photographs of the fruits and vegetables. 

Let’s start with Peru’s most famous export–the potato.  Thousands of varieties are grown in Peru.  Some are the size of ours, but there are many that are no bigger than your finger.   They come in all colors, including purple.  Here’s an interesting article on the Peruvian potato seed-bank.

Potatoes in Cusco Market

Despite it being winter, the variety of vegetables was not that different than what we find in our grocery stores.

Vegetable Medley

On the other hand, there were some unknown items.  Processed items like these shavings were not unusual, and they were rarely prepackaged like the small bag of peas lying atop the carrots.

Mystery vegetable

Some exotic fruits seem to be more popular in Peru, like the star fruit.

Star fruit

This seller seems to be more attuned to where the tomato belongs botanically.

Tomatoes, Pears, Pepino Dulce, Grapes

The fruit with the purple stripes is the pepino dulce or tree melon.  It doesn’t travel well, so don’t look for it in your local market.

Pepino Dulce

Along with the fruits and vegetables, one could buy anything else one might think of buying in a grocery store.  But grains aren’t very colorful and, since I was with several vegetarians, we avoided the butchers.  Bread was not usually served with lunch or dinner, just breakfast.  With lots of potatoes and rice, it was unnecessary.

Bread in Cusco Market

One could also buy all kinds of kitchen ware.

Baskets in Cusco Market

In the end, I did buy one item–a wooden spoon, for $1.

Wooden spoons in Cusco market

A Little Moorish Influence

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Lima is known for its Moorish-style balconies enclosed by intricately carved wooden panels.  Cuzco has lots of balconies, and some of them even have fairly intricately carved wooden panels.  But, overall, the Moorish influence in Cuzco is pretty minimal.

More on Inca Walls

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Even though all the Incan temples and palaces in Cuzco were destroyed, there are remnants of Inca masonry to be found in the city, in places other than Saqsaywaman and Qoricancha which I’ve already discussed.  The following walls are all within a few blocks of my hotel.  Some are essentially original, some have some restoration, and some are just bits incorporated into a more modern building.

Inca Wall in Cuzco

 

Inca Wall in Cusco

 

An Inca Wall incorporated into a more modern building

The polygonal block masonry in the first two photographs is similar to that used in Saqsaywaman, just on a different scale.  Generally, this style was used for solid structures, such as terraces and canals.  The rectangular blocks laid in even courses was a style generally used in freestanding walls, as seen at Qoricancha, or interiors.

Here are several other examples from outside the city.  While the exact purpose of Tambomachay is unknown, it is known as “The Baths of the Incas” because of its series of aqueducts, canals and waterfalls.

Tambomachay

Tambomachay

Wall at Ollantaytambo

Wall at Ollantaytambo

At Ollantaytambo, which I’ll talk about in another post, there is a wall unlike any other Inca-built wall I saw.

Wall at Ollantaytambo

Wall at Ollantaytambo

It may not be obvious, but these stones are very tall, way taller than my 5 1/2′.  Huge polygonal stones were used in the walls of Saqsaywaman, but these are rectangular.  Moreover, the narrow vertical courses are truly unique.