Thursday, November 11, 2010

Machu Picchu









Machu Picchu is Peru's No 1 photographic icon. Our group made evening and early morning visits to MP. The unforgettable memory for me was the incredible stone masonry skills of the Incas. You could barely fit a cigaretrte paper between the stones and the tapered leaning walls to strengthen buildings was a sign of advanced engineering.
When we arrived for the morning visit mists swirled around the ruins and the mountains. Its a good place to shoot alone as their is a spiritual feel to this mountain top.

The Sacred Valley & Ollantaytambo









Our group was getting used to moving slowly and breathing deeply. Fabulous landscapes with volcanic backdops greeted us around each hairpin. National costumeis important and HATS are very important. Hats signify geographical origin and social status.
One of the highlights was lunch witha local family in The Sacred Valley. They met us on the outskirts of their isolated village in national dress and drummed us through the dry, dusty laneways. In the cloistered enclave they presenred a panotomine and then served us lunch.

Cusco - Lima





When you land at Cusco airport you are literally transported to another world - you are at 3310 metres. The first thing I noticed was how bright everything seemed. I wanted to put on two pairs of sunglasses. There were bottles of oxygen for sale in the airport. When I walked up the 4 flights steps at the Cusco Plaza 1 Hotel I wished I had bought some O2! Wow, it hit me like a ton of bricks. But aftere 5 muins laying breathless on my bed I was ok to walk around VERY slowly.

Lima - Peru



On landing at Lima Airport we were met by our guide Anna Maria Meneses. Lima is the commercial centre and capital of Peru.
Our welcome dinner was at an upmarket seaside restaurant chosen by Peter Lambert. We had our first taste of Peru's famous Pisco Sour - a 48% proof grape brandy based rocket fuel!

Argentina







Its so easy to fall in love with Argentina and Buenos Aires. There's the tree-lined boulevardes wide enough to land 4 jumbos side-by-side, the warm-hearted Spanish and Italian based peoples and of course the TANGO.