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Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Legacy of the Incas
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises

Peru:
Machu Picchu - Lake Titicaca

(11 days/10 nights)

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Sacred Sites of the Incas
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises

Peru:
Machu Picchu - Lake Titicaca
(12 days/11 nights)

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Empire of the Sun
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises

Peru:
Machu Picchu - Lake Titicaca
(14 days/13 nights)

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Ancient Civilizations of Peru
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises

Peru:
Colca Canyon - Machu Picchu
Lake Titicaca

(16 days/15 nights)

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Archaeological & Ecological
Treasures

Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises

Peru & Ecuador:
Galapagos - Machu Picchu
Lake Titicaca (or Amazon)
(18 days/17 nights)

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Grand Tour of the Inca Empire
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises

Peru:
Colca Canyon - Amazon
Machu Picchu- Lake Titicaca

(22 days/21 nights)

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Ancient & Colonial Capitals
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises


Peru:
Machu Picchu
(10 days/9 nights)

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Inca Trail to Machu Picchu
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises

Peru:
Machu Picchu

(13 days/12 nights)

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Machu Picchu & Galapagos
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises


Peru & Ecuador:
Machu Picchu - Galapagos
(15 days/14 nights)

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Galapagos & Machu Picchus
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises


Ecuador & Peru:
Galapagos - Machu Picchu
(18 days/17 nights)

 

Luxury Galapagos Cruises

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Enchanted Isles of the Galapagos
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises


Ecuador:
Galapagos
(11 days/10 nights)

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Galapagos & the Kingdom of Quito
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises

Ecuador:
Galapagos - Andes

(16 days/15 nights)

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Galapagos & the Amazon
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises

Ecuador:
Galapagos - Amazon
(16 days/15 nights)

 

Luxury Ecuador Tours & Travel

 

luxury Peru tours travel

Historic Haciendas of the Andes
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises

Ecuador:
Cotopaxi - Antisana - Otavalo
(7 days/6 nights)

 

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luxury Peru tours travel

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Lima - Amazon - Sacred Valley - Machu Picchu - Cuzco - Quito - Galapagos

Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Ritual fountains of Tambomachay, Cuzco.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Travel back to ancient empires and the origins of nature...

-- Kimberly Fay, LuxuryLink.com

 

Land & Cruise Price (22 days/21 nights)

De Luxe US$ 18,300 per person

The prices shown include a Premium Stateroom aboard the luxurious yacht Grace. Our tours also are available with other yachts or with a 4-night Galapagos cruise, instead of 7 nights. Please select a yacht to view details about each vessel and its itinerary.

When considering a Galapagos cruise, note that the islands are distinct in their flora and fauna. Certain islands provide a greater or unique opportunity for observing certain species. Thus, landings on more islands reveal more species and, importantly, the amazingly different adaptations each species has made to its own insular world. Accordingly, a 7-night cruise is preferable. It also offers a greater choice of luxury vessels.

The land and cruise price includes escorted transfers, private excursions with professional guides and chauffeurs on the mainland and semi-private excursions with a certified naturalist on the Galapagos Islands, entrance fees, selected category of accommodations, gourmet cuisine, all land and water transportation, and travel insurance for guests through the age of 59 years (over that age, there is a supplementary fee). All prices are per person based on two people sharing a guest room. For a detailed description of our services, see Opulent Itineraries.

MapMachu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruisesHotelsMachu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises18 Nights

 

Intra-Tour Flights & Fares

Air fares are in addition to the land and cruise price.

Lima - Cuzco - Lima, Cuzco - Puerto Maldonado- Cuzco, Lima - Quito
& Quito - Galapagos - Quito:
US$ 2,215
per person

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruisesuxury travel

Luxury Galapagos Cruises.

Select a Yacht

Luxury Galapagos Cruises

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First Class Galapagos Cruises

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Grace: Elegance, Beauty & Prestige...

In 1951, this motor yacht was acquired by Aristotle Onassis, who later gave her as a wedding gift to Prince Rainier and Princess Grace of Monaco. It was onboard this vessel that Prince Rainier and Princess Grace spent their honeymoon getaway. She has been rechristened with a name that takes her years' back into her history, to the very best of her times. Named after her late owner, Her Serene Highness Princess Grace of Monaco, the name is a representation of her elegance, beauty and prestige. Reservations for The Grace Experience, a seven-night journey in one of her nine spacious cabins, are now being accepted. We invite you to download a brochure and a deck plan.

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Grace, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: Quasar Expeditions.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

In the imperial city of Cuzco, fabled Machu Picchu and the Sacred Valley; you will experience the glory of the Inca Empire. Archaeology, art, architecture, folklore and cuisine compose a cultural adventure to forever cherish. Before and after discovering the Empire's archaeological treasures, you will explore its two greatest ecological treasures on an expedition to the Amazon Rainforest and a cruise of the Galapagos Islands. If you prefer, choose Lake Titicaca, instead of the Amazon.

All international flights arrive in Lima, a five-century-old Spanish colonial city and home to the country's major museums. The next morning, enter the historic district's crown jewels. In the afternoon, discover the treasures of the Incas at the Museo Larco.

Continue with an Amazon expedition. After a flight to Puerto Maldonado, riverboat to the Reserva Amazonica, where you will explore the Tambopata National Reserve. At beautiful Sandoval Lake, paddle across the lake in a dugout canoe and board a catamaran to drift through flooded Mauritia palm forest and listen to the babbling of Red-bellied Macaws overhead. On the western end of the lake, see Giant Otters, Black Caiman and the Paichi, a 10-foot-long Amazonian fish. On the eastern end, see Capuchin, Squirrel and Titi Monkeys. Other excursions are included and all are guided by trained professionals, who will enhance your experience of the rainforest.

A morning flight into the Andes takes you to Cuzco, the ancient capital, where you will have two days to explore its Inca and colonial monuments, two days in the "Lost City" of Machu Picchu, with a chance to hike a part of the Inca Trail, and two days for the reknowned archaeological sites and native markets of the Sacred Valley of the Incas.

 

A true return to the golden age of exploration...

 

Grace Yacht Overview.
Video: Quasar Expeditions. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Take a flight back to Lima for your connection to Quito. Upon arrival, you will be escorted to the palatial Casa Gangotena, then dine on fusion cuisine at Zazu. In Ecuador's capital, founded in 1534, walk along the cobblestone streets through centuries-old parks and plazas to churches filled with gold. Contemplate Gothic, Baroque, Moorish and Neo-Classical architecture, all blended with the mestizo sentiment, and imagine you've gone back in time to the astonishing colonial world. In the evening, take a horse-drawn carriage past the beautifully illuminated facades of the Spanish monuments, and savor vanguard Mediterranean cuisine at Theatrum.

A flight the next morning takes you from the peaks of the Andes to the Galapagos Islands. While yachting this extraordinary archipelago with a naturalist, go ashore amid volcanic landscapes, hike among Marine Iguanas and lava lizards, and have the rare opportunity of snorkeling among penguins and marine tortoises. On these enchanted isles, each with its unique wildlife, you can compare the adaptations of the species to their differing environments that inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution. Returning for your last night in Quito, experience the finest in Criollo cuisine at Astrid & Gastón.

 

What Luxury Link has to say about Archaeological & Ecological Treasures.

What You Could Add: Galapagos Safari Camp.

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Facade, La Iglesia y Convento de San Francisco, Lima.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Highlights

Lima

Day 1: Flight to Lima. International arrival in the afternoon or evening, reception and transfer to your hotel. Overnight in the Orient-Express Miraflores Park.

Day 2: Lima. Morning walking tour in the colonial quarter, visiting the Plaza de Armas and entering La Casa de Aliaga and La Iglesia y Convento de San Francisco. View the exterior of La Iglesia y Convento de Santo Domingo, Lima's oldest convent, and enter La Catedral for a short visit. In contrast to the religious structures, the Torre Tagle Palace is the city's best surviving example of secular colonial architecture. Lunch at the Café del Museo. Afternoon at the Museo Larco. Dine at Astrid & Gastón, one of the highest notes in the Peruvian culinary scene. Overnight in the Orient-Express Miraflores Park.

Amazon

Day 3: Lima - Puerto Maldonado -- Reserva Amazonica. Transfer to the airport for the flight to Puerto Maldonado. Meet at the airport and drive to the Tambopata River port. Travel 45-minutes downriver to the Reserva Amazonica, where you will explore the Tambopata National Reserve and its beautiful Sandoval Lake. Excursions are included and are all guided by trained professionals. Their knowledge and interpretive skills combine to provide understanding, insight and an enhanced experience of the surrounding environment. Full board at the lodge. Overnight in the Reserva Amazonica.

Day 4: Reserva Amazonica. Your selection of jungle explorations. An excursion to Sandoval Lake is recommended -- disembark at the trail head, walk through the forest, paddle across the lake in a dugout canoe and board a catamaran to drift through flooded Mauritia palm forest and listen to the babbling of Red-bellied Macaws overhead. Explore the western end of the lake in the catamaran or canoe. See Giant Otters, Black Caiman or the Paichi, a 10-foot-long Amazonian fish. Later, your naturalist guide will lead a hike through the forest. In the late afternoon, board the catamaran or canoe and set off to explore the eastern end of the lake. Capuchin, Squirrel and Titi Monkeys often forage along the lake's edge. Full board at the lodge. Overnight in the Reserva Amazonica.

Day 5: Reserva Amazonica. Your selection of jungle explorations. Full board at the lodge. Overnight in the Reserva Amazonica.

Sacred Valley

Day 6: Reserva Amazonica - Puerto Maldonado - Cuzco - Sacred Valley (Chinchero). Riverboat to Puerto Maldonado for the flight to Cuzco. Reception and drive to the Sacred Valley of the Incas. Visit to the Chinchero market and church. Private weaving demonstration. Continue to the Moray archaeological site and the ancient salt pans of Maras. Chef-prepared picnic lunch. If you like, walk down rural paths to the Urubamba River. Arrival at your hotel. At a nearby hacienda, an honored shaman will conduct an ancient ceremony still observed by the indigenous people of Peru to obtain health, well-being and luck. After this memorable experience, you will return to your hotel. Dinner and overnight in the Orient-Express Rio Sagrado.

Day 7: Sacred Valley (Pisaq - Ollantaytambo). After a short visit to the Pisaq market, hike in the Pisaq ruins. Lunch at 3 Keros. Tour of the Ollantaytambo ruins. Dinner and overnight in the Orient-Express Rio Sagrado.

Machu Picchu

Day 8: Sacred Valley - Orient-Express Vistadome - Machu Picchu. Transfer to the train station to meet your guide. Vistadome to Machu Picchu. Transfer to the ruins. Day entrance. Buffet luncheon. Private guided tour in the afternoon. Dinner and overnight in the Orient-Express Sanctuary Lodge.

Cuzco

Day 9: Machu Picchu - Orient-Express Vistadome - Cuzco. Entrance into the ruins. Sunrise over Machu Picchu. Morning exploration with your guide or on your own. Lunch in the hotel. Afternoon exploration with your guide or on your own. Transfer to the train station. Vistadome to the Poroy Station, on the outskirts of Cuzco. Reception and transfer to your hotel. Dinner at the Restaurante El Tupay. Overnight in the Orient-Express Monasterio.

Day 10: Cuzco (Inca & Colonial Monuments). Morning walk to Inca monuments in the colonial quarter, including the Stone of Twelve Angles, Huacaypata (now called the Plaza de Armas and dominated by the Spanish colonial Cathedral), the fine Inca walls of Inti Q'ijllo, Ajlla Wasi (House of the Virgins of the Sun) and Qorikancha (Temple of the Sun). Lunch at Pacha Papa before a visit to an artisan's workshop and the Church of San Blas.

Afternoon stroll around Cuzco with your guide. Facing the Plaza de Armas, you will find notable Spanish religious monuments, such as the Compañia de Jesus and the Iglesia y Convento de la Merced. The convent is famous for its jeweled monstrance, encrusted with diamonds and precious stones, including rubies, topazes and emeralds. Finish at the Convento y Museo de Santa Catalina and the Palacio Arzobispal. Return to your hotel. This evening, you will see pre-Inca and Inca art at the Museo de Arte Precolombino, with a dinner of nouvelle Andean cuisine in the courtyard. Overnight in the Orient-Express Monasterio.

Day 11: Cuzco (The Collasuyu Road - Awana Kancha - Nearby Inca Monuments). Morning excursion beyond the ancient fortress that guarded the Valley of Cuzco. Coming back from the colonial village of Andahuaylillas on the Collasuyu Road, follow the route of early travelers from the southern quarter of the empire. Pass through the ancient gate of Rumicolca, gaze at the pre-Inca ruins of Pikillaqta and admire the royal garden of Tipon before your arrival in the Imperial City of the Incas. Lunch at Limo. Afternoon drive to Awana Kancha, where you will see all four species of South American camelid. Proceed to the nearby Inca monuments of Tambomachay, Puka Pukara, Qenqo and Saqsaywaman. This evening, dinner at chef Gastón Acurio's Chicha. Overnight in the Orient-Express Monasterio.

Quito

Day 12: Cuzco - Lima - Quito, Ecuador. Transfer to the airport. Flight to Lima and connection to Quito. Reception and transfer to your hotel. Dine at Zazu. Overnight in the Casa Gangotena.

Day 13: Quito. This morning, drive to the top of El Panecillo. Its summit overlooks Old Quito. Begin your walking tour of the colonial quarter, highlighted by La Plaza de la Independencia, the Cathedral, La Compañia de Jesús, La Iglesia de San Francisco and La Iglesia y Convento de la Merced. At the City Museum, see what daily life was like in colonial Quito.

Lunch at El Crater, inside the crater of the Pululahua Volcano. Our afternoon destination is Rumicucho, a late 15th century Inca fortress, observatory and temple of the sun. It was built near the equator, which the Incas called Intiñan (Path of the Sun). Before returning to Quito, go to the equator, where you can stand with one foot in the southern hemisphere and the other in the northern hemisphere.

As an alternative, you may choose an afternoon excursion to the Central Bank Museum.

This afternoon, a lunch at Café Tianguez. To complete your insight into the country's archaeology, history and cultures; investigate Ecuador's ancient past in the galleries of the Central Bank Museum.

This evening, return to El Panecillo for a panorama of the beautifully illuminated colonial quarter. Though not of colonial vintage, the neo-Gothic La Basílica is the place to see bizarre and fascinating gargoyles. Admire the night view of the Spanish monuments along Calle de las Siete Cruces, on the way to La Plaza de la Independencia, where you will board a horse-drawn carriage for a romantic ride through the narrow streets of Old Quito. Arrive at Theatrum to savor vanguard Mediterranean cuisine. Afterward, return to your hotel. Overnight in the Casa Gangotena.

Galapagos

Day 14: Quito - Galapagos Cruise. Transfer to the airport. Flight to the Galapagos. Entrance into the National Park, reception and transfer to your yacht. Afternoon island landing and excursion with a naturalist. Back on board. Guides' briefing on the next day's activities. Overnight on the Grace.

Days 15 - 20: Galapagos Cruise. Morning and afternoon island landings and excursions with a naturalist. Back on board. Guides' briefing on the next day's activities. Overnight on the Grace.

Quito

Day 21: Galapagos Cruise - Quito. Morning island landing and excursion with a naturalist. Transfer to the airport. Flight to Quito. Reception and transfer to your hotel. Dinner at Astrid & Gastón. Overnight in the Casa Gangotena.

Home

Day 22: Quito - Home. Transfer to the airport for your flight home.

Exceptions to the itinerary:

The Galapagos cruise itinerary described and illustrated below is typical but varies by yacht. Therefore, it should be used only as a guide for learning about the different islands and their wildlife.

 

Details

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Wooden balcony of the Torre Tagle Palace, Lima.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

At ancient Peru's most exalted pilgrimage site, eroded temples speak of the pre-Columbian cultures that worshipped the earth god Pachacamac ("he who gives life to the universe"). When the Incas arrived, they respected the temples and religion of those people, allowing them to worship that god alongside the Incas' own god, the Sun. For their deity, the Incas erected a great stone temple on a cliff above the sea. When the Spaniards arrived, they destroyed the holiest place in their lust for gold but found that the only treasure it contained was spiritual.

Nearby Lima, founded by the conquistador Francisco Pizarro in 1535, came to be the capital of the New World for a period of three hundred years. It reached its grandest splendor in the 17th and 18th centuries. The city has two principal attractions: the colonial quarter, where a visit to La Casa de Aliaga is to go back in time to the earliest years of the Spanish conquest, and the archaeological museums, which display gold, ceramic and textile masterpieces of Peru's pre-Inca and Inca civilizations. The country's independence movement was led by Jose de San Martin of Argentina and Simon Bolivar of Venezuela. San Martin proclaimed Peruvian independence from Spain on July 28, 1821, marking the end of the colonial period and the beginning of the republican era.

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Huaca de Huallamarca, Lima.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 1: Flight to Lima

International arrival this afternoon or evening in the five-century-old colonial city of Lima, "City of the Kings" and the capital of Peru. Reception and escorted transfer to your hotel in the garden district of Miraflores, high above the Pacific Ocean and home to the city's grand 19th century mansions. Overnight in the Orient-Express Miraflores Park.

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Entry door of the Casa Aliaga, Lima.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 2: Lima

Breakfast. This morning, walk with your guide in the heart of the city, which preserves its Spanish colonial heritage of the 16th-18th centuries. It was Francisco Pizarro, the founder of Lima, who determined the area for the Plaza de Armas as well as the location of the structures around it. In the center of the plaza is a splendid bronze fountain of 1650. Around the plaza and originally dating back to the city's beginnings in 1535 are the Cathedral, destroyed in the earthquake of 1746 and rebuilt in 1758; the Archbishop's Palace, rebuilt in 1924; and the Presidential Palace, rebuilt in 1937. Surviving intact is La Casa de Aliaga. Built in 1535 by Don Jeronimo de Aliaga, a member of Pizarro's conquering forces and co-founder of the city, it is still inhabited by the original family. Your visit to this antique-filled mansion is to go back in time to the earliest years of the Spanish conquest of Peru.

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

17th century library, La Iglesia y Convento de San Francisco, Lima.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

On your walking tour, enter the 1674 La Iglesia y Convento de San Francisco, the most spectacular of Lima's colonial-era churches. It features cloisters and interiors of Spanish tiles; Moorish-style, carved-wood ceilings; a fine museum of religious art; a 17th century library of twenty-thousand books, many dating from the first years of the city's founding; and catacombs begun in 1546. View the exterior of the 1599 La Iglesia y Convento de Santo Domingo, Lima's oldest convent, and enter the 1758 La Catedral for a short visit. In contrast to the religious structures, the 1735 Torre Tagle Palace, with its gorgeous baroque stone doorway and carved-wood balconies, is the city's best surviving example of secular colonial architecture.

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Mochica, 500 AC.
Photo: Museo Larco, Lima, Peru. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Lunch of traditional Peruvian cuisine at the Café del Museo, located in the gardens of the Museo Larco and directed by Peru's most prestigious chef, Gastón Acurio. Founded in 1926, the Museo Larco exhibits the world's largest private collection of pre-Columbian art -- a treasure trove of gold, silver, semi-precious stones and textiles. The collection's predominant strength is in Mochica ceramics, of which the erotic ones are the most famous. Their notariety ought not to obscure the fact that the museum presents a complete view of the cultural development of ancient Peru through a selection of its 45,000 pieces, housed in a colonial building of the 18th century.

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

"Huaco" depicting Spondylus shells, Northern Huari culture, c. 800 AD.
Museo Larco, Lima. Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Return to your hotel to relax. This evening, dine at Astrid & Gastón. When the restaurant was founded a decade ago by Gastón Acurio and Astrid Gutsche, the restaurant's cuisine was largely French. Both chefs had studied in Paris' Le Cordon Bleu. Gradually, though, as they rediscovered Peruvian flavors and culinary traditions, the kitchen began to incorporate local dishes and ingredients, moving towards the current sophisticated Criollo concept that characterizes the restaurant today and makes it one of the highest notes in the Peruvian culinary scene. Overnight in the Orient-Express Miraflores Park.

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Madre de Dios River, Tambopata National Reserve.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 3: Cuzco - Puerto Maldonado - Reserva Amazonica

Breakfast. Transfer to the airport for the flight to Puerto Maldonado. Meet at the airport and drive to the Tambopata River port. Travel 45-minutes downriver to the Reserva Amazonica, where you will explore the Tambopata National Reserve and its beautiful Sandoval Lake. Excursions are included and are all guided by trained professionals. Their knowledge and interpretive skills combine to provide understanding, insight and an enhanced experience of the surrounding environment. Overnight in the Reserva Amazonica.

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Choro Monkey, Tambopata National Reserve.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 4: Reserva Amazonica

Breakfast. Your selection of jungle explorations. An excursion to Sandoval Lake is recommended -- disembark at the trail head, walk through the forest, paddle across the lake in a dugout canoe and board a catamaran to drift through flooded Mauritia palm forest and listen to the babbling of Red-bellied Macaws overhead. Explore the western end of the lake in the catamaran or canoe. See Giant Otters, Black Caiman or the Paichi, a 10-foot-long Amazonian fish. Later, your naturalist guide will lead a hike through the forest. In the late afternoon, board the catamaran or canoe and set off to explore the eastern end of the lake. Capuchin, Squirrel and Titi Monkeys often forage along the lake's edge. Overnight in the Reserva Amazonica.

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Black Caiman, Tambopata National Reserve.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 5: Reserva Amazonica

Breakfast. Your selection of jungle explorations. Full board at the lodge. Overnight in the Reserva Amazonica.

 
 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Terraces of Pisaq, Sacred Valley.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

But the favorite residence of the Incas was at Yucay, about four leagues distant from the capital. In this delicious valley, locked up within the friendly arms of the sierra, which sheltered it from the rude breezes of the east, and refreshed by gushing fountains and streams of running water, they built the most beautiful of their palaces. Here, when wearied with the dust and toil of the city, they loved to retreat, and solace themselves with the society of their favorite concubines, wandering amidst groves and airy gardens, that shed around their soft, intoxicating odors, and lulled the senses to voluptuous repose. Here, too, they loved to indulge in the luxury of their baths, replenished by streams of crystal water which were conducted through subterraneous silver channels into basins of gold. The spacious gardens were stocked with numerous varieties of plants and flowers that grew without effort in this temperate region of the tropics, while parterres of a more extraordinary kind were planted by their side, glowing with the various forms of vegetable life skilfully imitated in gold and silver! Among them the Indian corn, the most beautiful of American grains, is particularly commemorated, and the curious workmanship is noticed with which the golden ear was half disclosed amidst the broad leaves of silver, and the light tassel of the same material that floated gracefully from its top.

-- William H. Prescott, The History of the Conquest of Peru, 1847

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Weaver of Chinchero, Sacred Valley.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 6: Reserva Amazonica - Puerto Maldonado - Cuzco - Sacred Valley (Chinchero)

Breakfast. Riverboat to Puerto Maldonado for the flight to Cuzco, the capital of the ancient Inca Empire, called Tawantinsuyo. The name of Cuzco is a Spanish version of the native word Q'osqo, which means the "Navel of the Universe". Arrival, reception and drive to the Sacred Valley of the Incas. On the way, visit Chinchero, the birthplace of the rainbow, according to Inca legend. The village is on the altiplano, or highlands, above Cuzco and the Sacred Valley, at an elevation of 12,340 feet, and rises against a superb Andean landscape dominated by eternally snow-capped peaks. This late 15th century agricultural center maintains its Inca traditions, one being its composition of "ayllus", or groups of indigenous, related families that work communally in the cultivation of their fields.

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Sunken agricultural terraces of Moray, Sacred Valley.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Traditional weaving is preserved, in part, through the efforts of The Center for Traditional Textiles of Cusco, which has arranged a private demonstration by one of the finest weavers. Another tradition that traces it roots back to the Incas is the barter, or "trueque", market. In Chinchero, people still meet to trade good for goods, just as in ancient times, when money did not exist. The market, noted for its textiles, takes place in the main square, at the foot of an Inca wall. Such traditions are not unique to Chinchero; they still exist throughout the altiplano of Peru. The pueblo exhibits a peculiar Andean-Hispanic architectural style, and paintings by the famous native artist Chiwantito hang in a beautiful colonial church. The canvases are in the Cuzqueña style, dating back to the early Spanish period.

 

 

Machu Picchu Luxury Tours travel Galapagos cruises

Yucay Church, Sacred Valley.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Afterward, visit the impressive archaeological site of Moray. These circular terraces were built by the Incas in natural sinkholes on a limestone plateau overlooking the Sacred Valley and, according to experts, were used to grow crops in different microclimates. Nearby, below the colonial town of Maras, are age-old, terraced salt mines. At a scenic place along the route, we'll set up a table and chairs for a picnic lunch prepared by chef Tatiana Mendoza of Cuzco. If you like, take a three-quarter-hour walk down rural paths to the Urubamba River, where your driver and car will be waiting. Arrival at your hotel, the gracious Rio Sagrado, on the banks of the Urubamba, the Inca's sacred river.

 

 

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Traditional healer's ceremony.
Photo: Kerry Chirinos.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

At a nearby hacienda, an honored shaman will conduct an ancient ceremony still observed by the indigenous people of Peru. To perform this ritual, the shaman, Hubert Lazarte, gathers such traditional items as coca leaves and wine for a simple offering. Each participant selects three coca leaves and chews them while making wishes for health, well-being and luck, then adds the leaves to the tribute, which includes medicinal and aromatic plants. The shaman prays in the Inca language of Quechua, asking Pacha Mama (Mother Earth) and the Apus (mountain spirits) to grant the wishes as he burns the offering on an altar before burying it in the earth. After this memorable experience, you will return to your hotel. For dinner, executive chef Federico Ziegler presents a delicious fusion of Urubamba’s best kept culinary secrets, Peruvian traditional zest and international delicacies. Dinner and overnight in the Orient-Express Rio Sagrado.

 

 

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Ruins of Pisaq surrounding the solar calendar, Sacred Valley.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 7: Sacred Valley (Pisaq - Ollantaytambo)

Breakfast. Drive through along the Urubamba River to the colonial town of Pisaq, where a popular handicraft fair take place under the main square's century-old tree, with wares displayed on vividly patterned and colored textiles. On Sundays, the traditional mass is held in Quechua, the Inca language, at the local church, which is attended by the village leaders from the surrounding communities. They wear their typical costumes and carry their traditional scepter of authority, or vara, that gives origin to their name of Varayoc.

 

 

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Girl of Pisaq adorned in traditional attire and cantuta flowers, Sacred Valley.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

High on a mountain above, tower the imposing remains of an ancient settlement. The Pisaq ruins take up the entire mountain and are made up of different neighborhoods, or squares, the main one being Intihuatana, which is admired for the architectural skill of its constructions. Its central feature is a monumental solar calendar on a promontory from which there are spectacular outlooks. At the same time, the pre-Hispanic cemetery is of great interest, as it is the largest found in this part of the continent, containing thousands of tombs, some of them looted. Pisaq also is famous for the colossal terraces that circle the mountains and the fabulous watchtowers, which were used as observation points as well as for control and military defense.

 

 

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Fortress of Ollantaytambo, Sacred Valley.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

A lunch of nouvelle Andean cuisine by chef Ricardo Behar at 3 Keros. El Huacatay and 3 Keros fight for the title of the best restaurant in the Sacred Valley. The two restaurants greatly elevate the gastronomic offering of the valley.

 

 

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Agricultural terraces, Fortress of Ollantaytambo, Sacred Valley.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Continue to the Ollantaytambo archeological site, a gigantic agricultural, administrative, social, religious and military center in the era of Tawantinsuyo. According to legend, the fortress belonged to a powerful lord, Ollantay, who fell in love with Princess Cusi Coillor, daughter of Inca Pachakuteq. It later served Manco Inca after his defeat by the Spaniards at Saqsaywaman.The architectural style of its streets and squares reflects Inca town planning, with enormous polyhedral stones forming the walls and trapezoidal doorways of temples and palaces set along rectilinear and narrow streets, which have been inhabited continuously since Inca times.

 

 

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Incan town of Ollantaytambo, Sacred Valley.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Above the town, a mountain rises which houses innumerable Inca constructions, such as magnificently-crafted temples and terraces. One striking construction is the partially-destroyed main temple, believed to be the Temple of the Sun, whose carved-stone facade is made up of six perfectly-sculpted, red monoliths. The mountainside on which this enormous fortress is built is strategic: it dominates three valleys that come together at this point. Across one valley, tremendous blocks of stone lie abandoned along the route from the quarry site to Ollantaytambo, their uncompleted journey marking the arrival of the "Conquistadores". Return to your hotel. Dinner and overnight in the Orient-Express Rio Sagrado.

 

 

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Citadel of Machu Picchu.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Arrive like the Inca!

Consider an unforgettable arrival on the Royal Inca Trail

(Trek must be requested in writing at the time of booking your tour.)

Photo album: Marvels of Machu Picchu

 

Day 8: Sacred Valley - Orient-Express Vistadome - Machu Picchu

Breakfast. Early transfer to the station to meet your guide and board the train for a descent into the Urubamba Valley to reach Machu Picchu (Old Peak), the "Lost City of the Incas". The Orient-Express Vistadome's recently renovated carriages have panoramic windows, offering enhanced photographic opportunities. Refreshments will be served. Upon arrival, your guide will accompany you to the Orient-Express Sanctuary Lodge, near the top of Machu Picchu and next to the ruins.

 

 

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Agricultural terraces, Machu Picchu.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

A sumptuous buffet luncheon of regional cuisine by chef Paulino Huaman at the Sanctuary Lodge's Tinkuy Restaurant. On your private tour this afternoon, you will ponder the many theories about this mysterious citadel, including the latest -- that it was Inca Pachacuti's winter palace. The word "ruins" is misleading, as the site is actually in a remarkable state of preservation -- only the wood and palm-frond roofs have decomposed over the centuries. Surprisingly, the Spaniards never discovered the sanctuary, and it remained unknown to the outside world until Hiram Bingham's expedition of 1911. Its discovery captured the world's imagination, and its allure has never diminished.

Walk back to the hotel. From its terrace and nearby lookouts, you will be able to watch the sunset, southern constellations and sunrise over the citadel, from high above the canyon of the Urubamaba River. A gourmet dinner of Peruvian-Mediterranean cuisine by chef Huaman at the Sanctuary Lodge's Tampu Restaurant. Overnight in the Orient-Express Sanctuary Lodge.

 

 

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Trapezoidal windows, Machu Picchu.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

The temples and royal chambers, throughout the Empire, were lined with gold, and, in preparing the stone, they left niches and empty spaces in which to put all sorts of human or animal figures: birds, or wild beasts, such as tigers, bears, lions, wolves, dogs and wildcats, deer, guanacos, vicuñas and even domestic ewes, all of which were made of gold and silver...

Imitation of nature was so consummate that they even reproduced the leaves and little plants that grow on walls; they also scattered here and there, gold or silver lizards, butterflies, mice and snakes, which were so well made and so cunningly placed, that one had the impression of seeing them run about in all directions...

In all the royal mansions there were gardens and orchards given over to the Inca's moments of relaxation. Here were planted the finest trees and the most beautiful flowers and sweet-smelling herbs in the kingdom, while quantities of others were reproduced in gold and silver, at every stage of their growth, from the sprout that hardly shows above the earth, to the full-blown plant, in complete maturity. There were also fields of corn with silver stalks and gold ears, on which the leaves, grains, and even the corn silk were shown.

In addition to all this, there were all kinds of gold and silver animals in these gardens, such as rabbits, mice, lizards, snakes, butterflies, foxes, and wildcats... Then there were birds set in the trees, as though they were about to sing, and others bent over the flowers, breathing in their nectar. There were roe deer and deer, lions and tigers, all the animals in creation, in fact, each placed just where it should be.

-- Garcilaso de la Vega, The Royal Commentaries of the Inca, 1609

 

 

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Machu Picchu, the Lost City of the Incas.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 9: Machu Picchu - Orient-Express Vistadome - Cuzco

Breakfast. Entrance into the ruins. Day of exploration with your guide or on your own. Start by ascending Machu Picchu for sunrise, which due to the high, surrounding mountains does not occur until around 7:00 am. It takes an hour to walk up to Intipunku (Sun Gate), the end of the Inca Trail and the ancient entrance into the sanctuary. Its majestic panorama of the citadel, seen from on high, is the first view the Incas had upon arriving from Cuzco. Other memorable hikes lead to the top of Huayna Picchu (a strenuous, two-hour round-trip), the Temple of the Moon (a moderate, four-hour round-trip), the Inca Drawbridge (an easy, one-hour round-trip) and Machu Picchu's multitude of hidden nooks and crannies.

A lunch by chef Huaman at the Tampu Restaurant. Descend from Machu Picchu at mid-afternoon and walk to the station for the train departure. Evening arrival at the Poroy Station, on the outskirts of Cuzco, reception and transfer to your hotel. A dinner of inspired dishes influenced by French cuisine and created with local produce of the highest quality by executive chef Federico Ziegler at the Restaurante El Tupay. Overnight in the Orient-Express Monasterio.

 

 

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The Stone of Twelve Angles, Cuzco.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

The most renowned of the Peruvian temples,

the pride of the capital, and the wonder of the empire, was at Cuzco,

where, under the munificence of successive sovereigns,

it had become so enriched, that it received the name of Coricancha,

or "the Place of Gold."

-- William H. Prescott, The History of the Conquest of Peru, 1847

 

Day 10: Cuzco (Inca & Colonial Monuments)

Breakfast. Morning walking tour in the imperial city of the Incas to their ancient monuments, including the Stone of Twelve Angles, Huacaypata (Leisure Square -- now called the Plaza de Armas and dominated by the Spanish colonial Cathedral). the fine Inca walls of Inti Q'ijllo, the Ajlla Wasi (the House of the Virgins of the Sun) and Qorikancha (the Temple of the Sun). All of these constructions date from the era of 1440 A.D., when Inca Pachakuteq, desiring a capital befitting his great empire, pulled down the adobe city and rebuilt Cuzco in stone.

The Inca palaces were in the form of "canchas", or enclosures, formed by massive stone walls with living quarters, temples and courtyards within. Throughout Cuzco, you will see the Inca walls, built upon by the Spaniards in colonial style. The Cathedral was built over the Inca Wiracocha's palace. The Palacio Arzobispal, or Archbishop's Palace, was erected in the 16th century in an Arabesque style on the walls of Hatunrumiyoc, the palace of Inca Sinchi Roca, which contains the Stone of Twelve Angles. The Church of Santo Domingo (begun in 1534), was built over Qorikancha, the most important religious structure in the Inca Empire. When the earthquake of 1950 collapsed much of the superimposed colonial architecture, it revealed the ancient Temples of the Sun, the Moon, the Stars, Thunder and Lightning, and the Rainbow.

 

The interior of the temple was the most worthy of admiration. It was literally a mine of gold. On the western wall was emblazoned a representation of the deity, consisting of a human countenance, looking forth from amidst innumerable rays of light, which emanated from it in every direction, in the same manner as the sun is often personified with us. The figure was engraved on a massive plate of gold of enormous dimensions, thickly powdered with emeralds and precious stones. It was so situated in front of the great eastern portal, that the rays of the morning sun fell directly upon it at its rising, lighting up the whole apartment with an effulgence that seemed more than natural, and which was reflected back from the golden ornaments with which the walls and ceiling were everywhere incrusted. Gold, in the figurative language of the people, was "the tears wept by the sun," and every part of the interior of the temple glowed with burnished plates and studs of the precious metal. The cornices, which surrounded the walls of the sanctuary, were of the same costly material; and a broad belt or frieze of gold, let into the stonework, encompassed the whole exterior of the edifice.

Adjoining the principal structure were several chapels of smaller dimensions. One of them was consecrated to the Moon, the deity held next in reverence, as the mother of the Incas. Her effigy was delineated in the same manner as that of the Sun, on a vast plate that nearly covered one side of the apartment. But this plate, as well as all the decorations of the building, was of silver, as suited to the pale, silvery light of the beautiful planet. There were three other chapels, one of which was dedicated to the host of Stars, who formed the bright court of the Sister of the Sun; another was consecrated to his dread ministers of vengeance, the Thunder and the Lightning; and a third, to the Rainbow, whose many-colored arch spanned the walls of the edifice with hues almost as radiant as its own...

All the plate, the ornaments, the utensils of every description, appropriated to the uses of religion, were of gold or silver. Twelve immense vases of the latter metal stood on the floor of the great saloon, filled with grain of the Indian corn; the censers for the perfumes, the ewers which held the water for sacrifice, the pipes which conducted it through subterraneous channels into the buildings, the reservoirs that received it, even the agricultural implements used in the gardens of the temple, were all of the same rich materials. The gardens, like those described, belonging to the royal palaces, sparkled with flowers of gold and silver, and various imitations of the vegetable kingdom. Animals, also, were to be found there --among which the llama, with its golden fleece, was most conspicuous-- executed in the same style, and with a degree of skill, which, in this instance, probably, did not surpass the excellence of the material.

-- William H. Prescott, The History of the Conquest of Peru, 1847

 

 

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Qorikancha, the Temple of the Sun, Cuzco.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

In the time of the Incas, this garden... was entirely made of gold and silver; and there were similar gardens about all the royal mansions. Here could be seen all sorts of plants, flowers, trees, animals, both small and large, wild and tame, tiny, crawling creatures such as snakes, lizards, and snails, as well as butterflies and birds of every size; each one of these marvels being placed at the spot that best suited the nature of what it represented.

There were a tall corn stalk and another stalk from the grain they call quinoa, as well as other vegetables and fruit trees, the fruits of which were all very faithfully reproduced in gold and silver. There were also, in the house of the Sun, as well as in that of the king, piles of wool made of gold and silver, and large statues of men, women, and children made of the same materials, in addition to storerooms and recipients for storing the grain they called pirua, all of which, together, tended to lend greater splendor and majesty to the house of their god the Sun.

All of these valuable works were made by the goldsmiths attached to the Temple, from the tribute of gold and silver that arrived every year from all the provinces of the Empire, and which was so great that the most modest utensils used in the temple, such as pots and pans, or pitchers, were also made of precious metals. For this reason, the temple and its service quarters were called Coricancha, which means the place of gold.

-- Garcilaso de la Vega, The Royal Commentaries of the Inca, 1609

 

 

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San Blas artisans' quarter, Cuzco.
Photo: Walter H. Wust. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

A lunch of traditional Andean cuisine by chef Rodolfo Rolando in the patio of Pacha Papa. Just across the street, visit an artisan's workshop and the Church of San Blas (built in 1562). It houses an imposing pulpit from the late 17th century that, for many, is the finest example of a carved wooden structure in the world. Chiseled from a single cedar trunk, the pulpit features angels, demons, saints, virgins and beasts. A native artist, Juan Thomas Tuirutupa, is believed to have been the sculptor. The main altarpiece is Baroque and exceptionally beautiful.

Afternoon stroll around Cuzco with your guide. Known in Inca times as Huacaypata (Leisure Square), the plaza was surrounded by palaces of finely-sculpted stone. On its southwest side flowed the river Huatanay. On the far bank was the market square of Cusipata (Joy Square), now occupied by the arcade of buildings known as the Portal de Panes. The only remaining portion of that square is the lovely Plaza Regocijo, with its picturesque Queñuales trees. Although the river was later covered over with stone slabs, a division remained: Haucaypata was reserved for the nobles, Cusipata for the commoners. Yet, all could celebrate together in the great square of ancient Cuzco, from which two intersecting roads led out to Tawantinsuyo (the Four Quarters of the Empire).

 

 

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Cathedral and Plaza de Armas, Cuzco.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Facing the Plaza de Armas, you will find notable Spanish religious monuments, such as the Compañia de Jesus (begun in 1576) and the Iglesia y Convento de la Merced (begun in 1536). The convent is famous for its jeweled monstrance, encrusted with diamonds and precious stones, including rubies, topazes and emeralds. A good place to relax and take in the spectacle is the popular Cafe Ayllu, which offers delicious apple pastries and a memorable view. It's just to the left of the Cathedral.Finish at the Convento y Museo de Santa Catalina (begun in 1601) and the Palacio Arzobispal (begun about 1540). Return to your hotel.

This evening, at the Museo de Arte Precolombino, you will see 450 pre-Inca and Inca masterpieces dating from 1250 B.C. to 1532 A.D. Afterward, dinner of nouvelle Andean cuisine by Manuel Cordova at the Map Café, in the museum's courtyard. Overnight in the Orient-Express Monasterio.

 

 

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Fountains of Tipon, the water garden of Inca Wiracocha.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 11: Cuzco (The Collasuyu Road - Awana Kancha - Nearby Inca Monuments)

Breakfast. Morning excursion beyond the ancient fortress that guarded the Valley of Cuzco. Coming back from the colonial village of Andahuaylillas on the Collasuyu Road, follow the route of early travelers from the southern quarter of the empire, which reached beyond Lake Titicaca. Pass through the ancient gate of Rumicolca, gaze at the pre-Inca ruins of Pikillaqta and admire the royal garden of Tipon before your arrival in the Imperial City of the Incas.

In Inca times, the name of Andahuaylillas was Antawaylla (anta = copper and waylla = field). Its lands are fertile; its people quiet and friendly. Andahuaylillas has two attractions -- the Church of San Pedro de Andahuaylillas and the huge main square it faces. The square, considered one of the most beautiful in the region, is surrounded by pisonay and palm trees. The church, built in 1580 and known as the Sistine Chapel of the Americas, features a simple facade in marked contrast to its rich Baroque interior of gilded altars, wall paintings and polychromatic ceilings.

 

 

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Rumicolca, pre-Inca gateway to the Valley of Cuzco.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Departing toward Cuzco, we first encounter Rumicolca, an immense stone fortress at the southeastern entrance to the Valley of Cuzco. It originally served as an entry point into the pre-Inca Huari empire and defended nearby Pikillaqta, their largest city. Centuries later, the Incas fortified and refined the rough construction of the original structure with massive blocks of polished andesite. The fortress became the gateway to their imperial city, guarding the road from Collasuyu, the southern quarter of their "Land of Four Quarters". The southern quarter was the largest, stretching to Lake Titicaca, Bolivia, Chile and Argentina.

 

 

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The pre-Inca and Inca ruins of Pikillaqta.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Pikillaqta, the largest Huari city and the major pre-Inca city in the region, reached its cultural height between 800 AD and 1100 AD, in the period corresponding to the Huari regional confederation. A massive hilltop complex of stone structures overlooking Lake Lucre, its long, straight streets and big, rectangular city blocks full of buildings are surrounded by high, flagstone and mud-mortared walls, which taper as they rise. In some of the rooms, little idols made of turquoise were found and now can be seen in the Museo Inka, of Cuzco. "Pikillaqta" translates as the "City of Fleas". The name comes from the presence of many tiny rooms, only four square meters in area, that seem to be part of a military garrison.

 

 

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Tipon, the water garden of Inca Wiracocha.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel. Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Tipon is exceptional for the harmony achieved in the movement of water through its fine stone structures. This beautiful complex is composed of twelve enormous agriculturual terraces, walls of perfectly polished stone, long stairways, aqueducts (some subterranean) and ornamental waterfalls. According to legend, Tipon was one of the royal gardens ordered by the 8th Inca, Wiracocha. It is believed that the site was earlier the royal farm of his father, the 7th Inca Inca Yawar Huacac, at which time it was dedicated to a religious cult and agricultural experimentation. Return to Cuzco for a lunch of Peruvian cuisine by chef Coque Ossio at Limo.

 

 

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Ritual fountains of Tambomachay, Cuzco.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

This afternoon, see all four species of South American camelid -- the llama, alpaca, vicuña and guanaco -- at Awana Kancha, a living museum of Andean culture. From Awana Kancha, drive to the nearby Inca monuments of Tambomachay, Puka Pukara, Qenqo and Saqsaywaman. Tambomachay is believed to have been dedicated to the worship of water and its aqueducts are fed by springs all year long. The site includes a liturgical fountain and three terraces with structures made from polyhedral blocks of stone, joined without mortar. The setting is bucolic and the spring water is cold, pure and delicious. Drink from the sacred fountain and make your devotions to one of life's essential elements.

Puka Pukara (red fortress) is located at a strategic point along the road to Antisuyo (the jungle quarter of the Inca Empire). It served as a checkpoint and was a military and administrative center. The Inca's retinue received food and lodging here when he stopped at Tambomachay, on his way to the Sacred Valley.

Qenqo is a vast, rocky hilltop carved into staircases, holes and channels, probably built to store the chicha (fermented maize beer) used in Inca rituals. The site features a semi-circular patio studded with several large niches surrounding a stone figure embedded within a chamber, rather like an idol inside its own shrine.

 

 

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Temple and fortress of Saqsaywaman, Cuzco.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

To truly appreciate fortress of Saqsaywaman, one must realize that what may now be seen is only the base of a colossal construction of a series of three successively-higher, defensive structures made from enormous blocks of stone, joined together with great precision.

 

Inside this triple enclosure, three tall towers were erected on a large narrow ground. The largest of them was called Mayac Marca, which means the round tower. It was built over a clear, abundant spring, fed by underground canalizations, concerning which nobody knew from where or how they came... This round tower contained rooms with gold and silver paneled walls, on which animals, birds, and plants figured in relief, as though in a tapestry. It was here that the king lived when he came for a rest in the fortress...

The two other towers, which were round, not square, in shape, were called Paucar Marca and Sacllac Marca, and were used to house soldiers of the garrison, which was composed only of Incas by privilege, ordinary men, even combatants, not being allowed inside this fortress, which was the house of the Sun, both its arsenal and its temple...

An underground network of passages, which was as vast as the towers themselves, connected them with one another. This was composed of a quantity of streets and alleyways which ran in every direction, and so many doors, all of them identical, that the most experienced men dared not venture into this labyrinth without a guide, consisting of a long thread tied to the first door, which unwound as they advanced....

It would have been in the interest of the Spaniards to maintain this fortress, and even to repair it at their own expense, because, quite alone, it gave proof of the grandeur of their victory and would have served as a witness to it for all eternity. And yet, not only did they not keep it up, but they hastened its ruin, demolishing its hewn stones, in order to construct their own Cuzco homes at less cost.

They made their portals and thresholds with the big flat stones that formed the ceilings, and to make their stairways, they did not hesitate to tear down entire walls, provided they were based on a few stones that could be used for steps.

And so, that is how the Spaniards destroyed the Cuzco fortress.

-- Garcilaso de la Vega, The Royal Commentaries of the Inca, 1609

 

 

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Campesina at Saqsaywaman, Cuzco.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Saqsaywaman was considered a fortress by the Spaniards, since it was a place of defense, weapons and war. It was considered the House of the Sun by the Incas because, at the same time, it was a place of worship and sacrifice. Notably, it was the site of the most important ceremony of the empire, Inti Raymi, the Festival of the Sun. Its name means "Satiated Hawk" and it was built in approximately 77 years (1431-1508), during the reign of Inca Yupanqui and Wayna Qhapaj. It began being destroyed from 1537 until 1561, becoming the base for the building of the Spanish Cathedral, churches and homes. "Neither the bridge of Segovia, nor the buildings built by Hercules or the Romans, are so worthy of being admired, as this" says the Spanish chronicler and soldier Pedro Sancho de la Hoz, who saw Inca Cuzco intact, along with Pizarro in 1533. Return to your hotel. This evening, enjoy a dinner of novo-Andino cuisine at Chicha, directed by Peruvian celebrity chef Gastón Acurio. Overnight in the Orient-Express Monasterio.

 

 

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The 1535 La Iglesia de San Francisco, Quito, Ecuador.
Photo: David Bate.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 12: Cuzco - Lima - Quito

Breakfast. Early transfer to the airport for the flight to Lima. Arrival in the five-century-old colonial "City of the Kings" and the capital of Peru. Assistance in making the connection to your flight to Quito. Arrival, reception and escorted transfer to the palatial Casa Gangotena. Dine at Zazu, where chef Alexander Laud creates a fusion of South American and international cuisine. Overnight in the Casa Gangotena.

 

 

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Colonial Quito with El Panecillo in the distance, Ecuador.
Photo: Dan Heller.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Under the diadem of the Incas, Quito assumed a magnificence which it never saw before and has not displayed since. It was the worthy metropolis of a vast empire stretching from the equator to the desert of Atacama, and walled in by the grandest group of mountains in the world. On this lofty site, which amid the Alps would be buried in an avalanche of snow, but within the tropics enjoys an eternal spring, palaces more beautiful than the Alhambra were erected, glittering with the gold and emerald of the Andes. But all this splendor passed away with the sceptre of Atahuallpa...

-- James Orton, Andes and the Amazon, 1870

 

Day 13: Quito

Breakfast. Quito has the best-preserved historic district in South America. It is located on an active volcano, 9,300 feet above sea level in the Andes mountains. The city's origins date back to the first millennium, when the Quitu tribe occupied the area and eventually formed a commercial center. The Quitu were conquered by the Caras tribe, who founded the Kingdom of Quito about 980 AD. In 1462, the Incas conquered that kingdom and created a majestic capital for their northern empire. In 1533, Rumiñahui, an Inca war general, razed the city to prevent the Spaniards from taking it, thereby destroying any traces of the prehispanic metropolis. In 1534, the Spanish conquistadores invaded, and Francisco Pizarro founded San Francisco de Quito. Walking along its cobblestone streets through centuries-old parks and plazas to churches filled with gold, you will imagine you've gone back in time to the astonishing colonial world.

Source: Adapted from www.worldheritagesites.org.

 

 

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La Plaza de la Independencia, Quito, Ecuador.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

This morning, drive to the top of El Panecillo. The significance of this hill dates back to Inca times, when it was known as Shungoloma ("hill of the heart") and used as a place to worship the sun. Its summit overlooks Old Quito and is crowned by a winged statue of the Virgin. Begin your walking tour of the colonial quarter at La Plaza de la Independencia, where the country's history was written. On one side is the Cathedral (1640), considered to be the oldest in South America. Down Calle de las Siete Cruces (Street of the Seven Crosses) is La Compañia de Jesús (1605), one of the great baroque masterpieces of the continent. Also in the baroque style is the oldest of South America's colonial churches, La Iglesia de San Francisco (1535). It was constructed over the Inca Palace of Atahualpa and decorated with images of the sun to lure in the native people. The Moorish style of La Iglesia y Convento de la Merced is most likely explained by artists seeking refuge in South America after the expulson of the Moors from Spain. Started in 1538, the church was rebuilt in 1737. At the City Museum, see what daily life was like in colonial Quito.

 

 

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El Pucará de Rumicucho
Photo: Erythren.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Lunch of Ecuadorian or international cuisine by chef Carlos Alvear at El Crater, inside the Pululahua Volcano. Our afternoon destination is Rumicucho, a late 15th century Inca fortress, observatory and temple of the sun. It was built near the equator, which the Incas called Intiñan (Path of the Sun). Rumicucho was strategically located to allow communication by smoke signals with the ceremonial center of Cochasqui, 9 miles to the east, and with Quito's El Panecillo and the Palace of Atahualpa, 17 miles to the south. Before returning to Quito, go to the equator, where you can stand with one foot in the southern hemisphere and the other in the northern hemisphere. Don't be fooled by the Equatorial Monument, which isn't in the true position.

As an alternative, you may choose an afternoon excursion to the Central Bank Museum.

This afternoon, a lunch of traditional Ecuadorian cuisine by chef Juan José Loaiza at Café Tianguez. To complete your insight into the country's archaeology, history and cultures; investigate Ecuador's ancient past in the pre-Inca, Inca and colonial galleries of the Central Bank Museum. The Incas believed that gold nuggets were the tears of the sun, and one of the galleries, the Golden Court, dazzles the visitor with the gold masks and figurines they fashioned to worship their deity.

 

 

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Traditional horse-drawn carriage, Quito, Ecuador.
Photo: Hotel Plaza Grande.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

This evening, return to El Panecillo for a panorama of the beautifully illuminated colonial quarter. Though not of colonial vintage, the neo-Gothic La Basílica is the place to see bizarre and fascinating gargoyles in the form of giant tortoises, iguanas, anteaters, monkeys, pumas, condors and other Ecuadorian fauna. Admire the night view of the Spanish monuments along Calle de las Siete Cruces, on the way to La Plaza de la Independencia, where you will board a horse-drawn carriage for a romantic ride through the narrow streets of Old Quito. Arrive at Theatrum to savor vanguard Mediterranean cuisine by chef Julio Jose Avendaño Ostolaza. Afterward, return to your hotel. Overnight in the Casa Gangotena.

 

 

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Land iguana and opuntia cacti, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: Ron Dahlquist.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

We seem to be brought somewhat near to that great fact

-- that mystery of mysteries --

the first appearance of new beings on this earth...

 

The natural history of these islands is eminently curious, and well deserves attention. Most of the organic productions are aboriginal creations, found nowhere else; there is even a difference between the inhabitants of the different islands; yet all show a marked relationship with those of America, though separated from that continent by an open space of ocean, between 500 and 600 miles in width. The archipelago is a little world within itself, or rather a satellite attached to America, whence it has derived a few stray colonists, and has received the general character of its indigenous productions. Considering the small size of the islands, we feel the more astonished at the number of their aboriginal beings, and at their confined range. Seeing every height crowned with its crater, and the boundaries of most of the lava-streams still distinct, we are led to believe that within a period geologically recent the unbroken ocean was here spread out. Hence, both in space and time, we seem to be brought somewhat near to that great fact -- that mystery of mysteries -- the first appearance of new beings on this earth.

-- Charles Darwin, Voyage of the Beagle, 1845

 

 

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Male frigate bird displaying, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: Marco Robalino.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

From so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful

have been, and are being evolved...

 

Thus, from the war of nature, from famine and death, the most exalted object which we are capable of conceiving, namely, the production of higher animals, directly follows. There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being evolved.

-- Charles Darwin, On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, 1859

 

 

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Sea turtle, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: Bonnie Pelnar.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Northern & Southern Islands

 

Day 14: Quito - Galapagos Cruise (San Cristóbal Island)

Breakfast. Early morning transfer to the airport for the flight to the Galapapagos Islands. San Cristóbal Island (558 sq. km.) is the fifth largest in the archipelago and the second most populated. The town of Puerto Baquerizo Moreno is the capital of the Galapagos Islands and its oldest settlement. Fauna include giant tortoises and red- blue- and masked- boobies. The native flora include candelabra cactus, palo santo (the "incense tree") and saltbrush.

The Interpretation Center, donated by Spain, focuses on the natural and cultural history of the archipelago, from its volcanic origins to the present. From the Interpretation Center, a short trail leads to Frigate Bird Hill, where both magnificent frigates and great frigates can be seen in the same colony -- ideal for learning to distinguish between the two species. Below, you will see the harbor, where your yacht awaits. Before long, you will be crossing from shore to the Grace, your home for the next week. Your captain and crew will be waiting to welcome you aboard.

We head northeast along the coast of San Cristóbal toward our first landing at Playa Ochoa, a turquoise bay with a white powder beach inhabited by a small colony of sea lions. A tidal lagoon sitting behind the beach is frequented by flamingos, Darwin finches and the endemic San Cristóbal Mockingbird. Playa Ochoa is a great introduction to the islands -- it offers your first opportunity to go snorkeling with sea turtles and the archipelago's playful sea lions. Overnight on the Grace.

 

 

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Red-footed booby, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: David Bate.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 15: Galapagos Cruise (Genovesa Island)

Genovesa Island (14 sq. km.) is one of the smallest in the archipelago but has a big reputation as "the bird island". It is the best place to see a colony of red-footed boobies, the only one of the three species present in the Galapagos that nests in trees rather than on the ground. A natural formation called Prince Philip's Steps is a bird watcher's delight. The trail leads to a plateau inhabited by red-footed boobies, masked boobies and frigate birds.  At the end of this trail are thousands of band-rumped storm petrels at the cliff's edge, where they nest in crevices. Short-eared owls can sometimes be seen here, hunting the storm petrels during daylight hours. Other birds include red-billed tropic birds, Galapagos doves, white-cheeked pintail ducks and many more. Flora includes lava cactus, a yellow-flowered muyuyo forest and palo santo.

 

 

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Baby frigate bird, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: David Bate.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Genovesa is a collapsed volcano and ships sail directly into its large breached caldera to anchor at the foot of the steep crater walls. At Darwin Bay Beach, you will observe sea lions and, if snorkeling, hammerhead sharks below you. The island attracts vast numbers of seabirds that come here to nest and breed: red-footed boobies, great frigate birds, swallow-tailed gulls and storm petrels. A trail leads from the coral beach past tidal lagoons, where lava gulls and yellow-crowned night herons are seen, then along the low shrubs populated by frigates and boobies, and eventually to a cliff edge where seabirds soar. Flora includes croton bush, palo santo and saltbrush. Overnight on the Grace.

 

 

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Swimming Galapagos penguin, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: Bonnie Pelnar.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 16: Galapagos Cruise (Isabela Island & Fernandina Island)

Isabela Island (4,588 sq. km.) is the largest in the archipelago. It is formed by five young, active volcanoes, of which Volcano Wolf is the highest point in the Galapagos (1,707 meters, or 5,599 feet). On a panga ride along the cliffs of Tagus Cove, look for Galapagos penguins and other sea birds

Fernandina Island (642 sq. km.) is the third largest, youngest and westernmost in the archipelago. Many eruptions have been recorded since 1813, making Fernandina the island most likely to become volcanically active, as it did most recently in May of 2005. After a dry landing at Espinoza Point, you will see the largest colony of marine iguanas in the islands, mingling with Sally light-foot crabs. Other fauna include Galapagos penguins, Galapagos hawks and sea lions. There are also nesting sites of flightless cormorants. These birds have adapted to their environment by perfecting their ability to hunt for food in the ocean -- their wings, tails and feet have evolved for swimming. To see these birds is to witness evolution in action. Among the volcanic formations, observers will note "pa-hoe-hoe", other unusual lava formations and recent lava flows. Flora include brachycereus cacti and mangroves, whose beds extend into the sea, indicating a healthy and thriving ecosystem. Overnight on the Grace.

 

 

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Juvenile seal lion, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: David Bate.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 17: Galapagos Cruise (Isabela Island)

On Isabela Island, we'll make a wet landing at Urbina Bay. The bay, at the foot of the Alcedo Volcano, was uplifted from the sea in 1954. Flightless cormorants and pelicans nest along the coast, and sea turtles and manta rays can be seen in the bay. The highlands include large and colorful land iguanas. Other fauna include the largest population of giant tortoises (about 4,000 but difficult to spot), Galapagos hawks, magnificent frigate birds, marine iguanas, hammerhead, white-tipped and Galapagos sharks, eels, groupers and snappers. Continue to Punta Vicente Roca for dinghy sightseeing, snorkeling and scuba diving. Enjoy the high cliffs with tuff-stone, ash and other lava formations; caves; nesting sites for brown noddies and blue-footed boobies; and up-close encounters with sea lions, fur seals and the occasional dolphin. Overnight on the Grace.

 

 

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Galapagos penguin, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: David Bate.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 18: Galapagos Cruise (Bartolome Island & Santiago Island)

Bartolome Island (1.2 sq. km.), small and moonlike, has one of the most famous sights in the archipelago: Pinnacle Rock. After a dry landing, you will see volcanic formations, including lava bombs, spatter and cinder cones. Hike to the summit for an impressive panorama of Sullivan Bay, including the eroded tuff cone of Pinnacle Rock, and the surrounding islands. The exotic flora of red mangroves, tiquilias and cacti all add to the experience. During the ascent, you will see a large colony of marine iguanas and lava lizards. Snorkeling will give you a chance to cool off and see marine fauna, such as Galapagos penguins, nesting sea turtles (January to March) and white-tipped sharks.

 

 

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Goldrimmed surgeonfish, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: Bonnie Pelnar.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Santiago Island (585 sq. km.) is the fourth largest in the archipelago. The eroded shapes on its black lava shoreline form pools that house a variety of wildlife and are wonderful for snorkeling. Wet landing on the dark-sand beach at Puerto Egas. Most of the landscape is tuff-stone layers and lava flows; the surroundings are prime for observing Darwin's finches, Galapagos doves, Galapagos hawks, hunting herons, great blue herons, lava herons, American oyster catchers and yellow-crowned night herons. You will enjoy the sight of marine iguanas grazing upon algae beds at low tide, sharing space with red Sally light-foot crabs. There is a colony of fur seals swimming in deep pools of cool water, called "grottos". This is an excellent place for swimming and snorkeling in search of octopuses, sea horses, starfishes and other sea life caught in the small tidal pools. In the ocean, you can admire moray eels, hammerhead, white-tip and Galapagos sharks, golden and white-spotted eagle rays, jacks, wahoos, tunas, groupers, red-tailed and dog snappers, sea lions, sea turtles (November to May), black and yellow-black Galapagos corals, sea fans and sponges. Overnight on the Grace.

 

 

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Giant tortoise, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: David Bate.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 19: Galapagos Cruise (Santa Cruz Island)

Santa Cruz Island (986 sq. km.) is the second largest in the archipelago and the most populated. Home to the Charles Darwin Research Station, it has many trails, beaches and places for snorkeling. Flora include cacti, saltbrush and mangroves. Fauna include several of the 11 remaining subspecies of giant tortoises, marine iguanas, sharks and various species of waterbirds and landbirds, such as vermillion flycatchers and Darwin's finches. Morning excursion to the Santa Cruz Highlands, where you will observe Los Gemelos, twin volcanic craters, and Cerro Chato. Chances are good for sighting the famous giant tortoises that gave these islands their name. Additionally, you can walk inside the dormant lava tubes.

 

 

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Giant tortoise, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: David Bate.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Afternoon visit to the Charles Darwin Research Station, staffed with international scientists conducting biological research and conservation projects. Here, you can admire giant tortoises, part of the program to breed, rear and reintroduce different subspecies of tortoises back into their natural habitat. Surrounding the station is an impressive giant prickly-pear cactus forest with many land birds. Afterward, some free time to walk around the town of Puerto Ayora. Overnight on the Grace.

 

 

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Sea lions, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: David Bate.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 20: Galapagos Cruise (Española Island)

Española Island (61 sq. km.) is medium in size and the most southerly. More outlying, it has been able to preserve a high portion of its endemic fauna. Aside from the sea lion colonies, this is one of the most important bird-watching sites. It is unique among the islands in having the only colony of waved albatrosses, which is also the world's largest colony. It has a beautiful white beach, the well-known blowhole and one of the most impressive and varied seabird colonies of the Galapagos.

 

 

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Marine iguana and lava lizard, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: Kleintours.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

After a dry landing at Suarez Point, you will learn more about the lava terrain while crossing the inactive lava fields. As soon as you step foot on this island, many species can be spotted close up, such as a large colony of marine iguanas, lava lizards and the colorful Sally light-foot crabs. After a short trek, you will encounter colonies of masked and blue-footed boobies, whose nesting grounds sometimes overlap the trail. You will also find giant frigate birds, red-billed tropic birds and swallow-tailed gulls. After crossing the nesting grounds, you reach the colony of about 15,000 waved albatrosses (April to November). Their mating rituals are a highlight of our visit. Nearing the end of this excursion, you will visit the famous blowhole, where water shoots into the air to almost 23 meters (75 feet).

 

 

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Male yellow warbler, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: David Bate.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Make a wet landing on a white-coral beach on Gardner Bay, amidst a large colony of sea lions. This site has no trails, therefore no hiking, but from this open area you can spot Galapagos hawks, American oyster catchers, Galapagos doves, hood mockingbirds, large cactus ground finches, yellow warblers, lava lizards and marine iguanas. This is a excellent place for swimming and snorkeling -- the best spot is by the rock outcropping that looks like a turtle. Often snorkelers see many of the Galapagos' marine species, such as king angel fish, creole fish, damsel fish, parrot fish, manta rays, white-tipped reef sharks and many more. Overnight on the Grace.

 

 

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Blue-footed boobies, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: David Bate.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 21: Galapagos Cruise (San Cristóbal Island) - Quito

Two hours from San Cristóbal Island is the Sleeping Lion, a magnificent rock that rises 500 feet straight out of the sea. A split in the rock has formed towering walls on either side of a narrow passage through which small vessels can navigate. Continuing to San Cristóbal for a dry landing at Puerto Baquerizo Moreno, we'll have time to walk around town before transferring to the airport for the flight to Quito. Arrival, reception and transfer to your hotel. Dinner at Astrid & Gastón of chef Gastón Acurio. Like the original in Lima, this restaurant incorporates local dishes and ingredients in its sophisticated Criollo cuisine. Overnight in the Casa Gangotena.

Important note: This itinerary is subject to change without notice for various reasons, including but not limited to safety, weather, mechanical breakdown, unforeseen emergencies, and the discretion of the captain, guide, yacht operator and Galapagos National Park.

 

 

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Magnificent frigate bird, Galapagos Islands.
Photo: David Bate.
Machu Picchu Tours & Galapagos Cruises.

 

Day 22: Quito - Home

Breakfast. Early transfer to the airport for your flight home.

 

 

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