...and lady and llama on lookout...
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I can relate when my sister questions over Skype ¨When are you ever going to get out of Peru? We should reach the border of Chile the exact day our visa expires...90 days in Peru! Our 1.5 weeks here in Cuzco has been good for the bodies, minds, and spirits. AND a great place to celebrate our 10th wedding anniversary...and 10 months on the road!
We had about 5 of these passes, then down to a river, the week preceding our arrival into Cuzco, (3 of which were on gravel). I´m not sure why there was a lookout built here...we´re high enough already at about 13,000 ft, then we need to climb a ladder?
And when we´re pedaling at 4 to 5 mph for 30 miles, there are days we only climb and never reach a town to sleep. We met this family when I asked to fill our water bottles on the way up and they invited us to sleep in their house (food seller on the floor...and we were thrilled). Great family dynamics and fun to watch food prep including grinding corn for flour to make tamales while the Guinea pigs (called cuy) scurried about on the dirt floor of the kitchen.
Long climbs equal amazing lookouts and a chance to stop cursing the climb and thank God for His awesome creation!
Following a river valley.
Early morning chores...all corn is planted and harvested by hand.
High on a pass, the day was nearing an end and it was time to rest. We spotted this abandoned building that was a perfect place to set up camp. We counted sheep grazing as we closed our eyes dreaming of the downhill in the morning.
We have visitors arriving...time for a hair cut...the pull and chop technique is Eric´s signature styling method. The top of hostels have multiple purposes...besides salon...vista, cook area, and laundry drying.
Cereal is bought out of bags taller than me (come on...I´m 5´3!) and put into SMALLER ones like this for a price of $1.50. Oh and don´t miss my cute hubby in the background sporting his biker tan lines.
A fabulous dinner with our new German friends. The couple on the right with their kids (15 mo and 4 years) are volunteering in a hospital for 1 year, the couple on the left came to Peru for 3 months so their 5 year old boy could learn Spanish while going to Kindergarten. Pretty inspirational young families! Thank you for inviting us for the night...the peanut butter was a long awaited treat!
On to PAVEMENT...HURRAY!...and another climb up. (Our road into town is seen on the far mountain range, which turned out to be the straw that broke JoJo´s back...2 rims failed on one of the roughest gravel and steepest downhills yet).
Checz cyclist started in NY a month before we set off in MN. We have been on a similar route the whole way and finally met up on a climb.
Eric doing the only thing he could with the cracking front rim...epoxy glue...everyday for 4 days before Cuzco UNTIL....
...our last downhill when I starting having flashbacks of our Baja blowout...shooting sparks as we screech down to a halt. I flagged down this truck and held on for 20 miles into Cuzco...not necessarily safer than riding on bad rims it turns out...eeeeasy does it around those mountain curves...YIKES!
CUZCO, we´ve arrived! A lookout from a hillside near our hostel. In the foreground school kids at recess, in the background reads Vive el Peru (Live Peru). A town of 400,000 people.
Taking the ¨donut¨ off for a new rim meant being creative with an iron worker.
A parade to promote Peru´s biggest festival at the end of this month. This is a lively place!
The colors of Cuzco at attention.
I caught this lady´s beautifully proud smile at the start of the parade...isn´t she lovely!Welcoming dad and taking in Cuzco´s central plaza.
Our day to Machu Picchu started with a 4:15am alarm and 5:15 bus for 2 hours, then hopped on the train for 1.5 hours. Normally the train goes all the way to MP but because of the landslide earlier this year, it´s bus, train, bus. Beautiful full moon and snow capped, rugged mountains to frame our ride along the river.
Stunningly perfect day with our visitors: Greg (Eric´s dad), Denny (Dotson's chairman), and Jean (President of Dotson).
AMAZING AMAZING AMAZING! Couldn´t believe there were ruins even built on the very top of the steep mountain in the distance. I´m glad I wasn´t an Inca...geewiz that´s a lot of work!
Struck up a conversation with a great family from Montana. Fun to meet so many travelers and surprising when we saw a Twins t-shirt strolling down the cobble stone streets!
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A write in author to our blog....the following words are from Greg: Two North Americans surviving in South America on two wheels and prayer. Through the ups and downs of the roads and the emotions...through the close calls and the distant vistas...through the break downs and the break throughs...through the welcome gestures and the uncertain stares...these two pedal on with the challenge of engaging people in meaningful ways.
Witnessing these 2 curiously engage the child on the street or ask where to find bread thrills me each time. Simple acts of grace acknowledging that we share this earth as one people. What a wonder to experience Peru and Machu Picchu with you, Eric and Christie! Love, Dad
Christie: So our long list of bike parts were delivered and Eric has overhauled JoJo. A big thank you to Charley at Mankato Scheels and our delivery boy with the 60 lb suitcase! We also need to wish our 5th grade class followers a happy summer and wonderful last day of school tomorrow! Give Mrs. Nelson a big bear hug for us please. Dad G., it was an absolute thrill to have this week with you!
We will be powered tomorrow morning on alpaca pizza, cuy, Dove chocolate, Twizlers, PB, and power bars as we head towards the highest lake in the world, Lake Titicaca. We plan to be at the Chile border in about 2 weeks and then are looking forward to taking a month for volunteer work on an organic farm in Argentina around July 10. For those who are wondering the general plans after that...we should be at the tip of Argentina around mid October, fly into LA and spend some time with the Strecker family, the pedal into Mankato around Thanksgiving. We still understand the wonderful gift of time with each other we have been given, so we pedal on. Each day growing in our marriage, individually, spiritually, and from the kindness taught to us by others. We are definitely looking forward to the changes a new country always brings (and most likely less gravel!). Cheers.
2 comments:
Thanks for the continued updates. My best friend and her boyfriend were at M.P. this past week as well!
We are so glad that we were able to help. We'll pass this on to Charley!
Matt L.
scheels.com
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