I planned to get up as early as possible to catch the first bus to Machu
Picchu. However, this didn’t happen due to laziness. I got up at 6:30 AM
instead of 5:00 AM (my stupid cell phone didn’t work properly and the alarm
clock didn’t go off). After buying me the entrance tickets for the site, we got
some fresh fruit from the market. I also bought some water and crackers last
night. We had a simple breakfast while buying the bus tickets, and then got on
the bus.
Everything seemed so familiar to me, and I know to J it’s just a routine. He
doesn’t remember how many times he has been here. He told me he started off as
a Machu Picchu tour guide working twice a week, then he became a trek
guide, including the Inka trail and alternatives. It’s been five years. I
didn’t bother to do the math.
It was a cloudy day. Many parts were covered with the mysterious cloud in
the morning. As usual, we ascended in the agricultural sector, looked around, and then
descended to the entrance to Wayna Picchu. At the beginning J walked really
fast. He definitely overestimated me. I soon started panting and asked him to
slow down. After all I’m way less fit than he is. Need to be stronger. The
destination was the temple of moon, which I was not able to visit the last
time. Soon after we diverged from the path to Wayna Picchu peak, we got to the
ladder. I was stepping down, and J said something like ‘fortunately you
practiced karate’. Just at that moment, I slipped and hurt my shin a bit. How
fortunately that was. I joked with him that he shall not say any fortunately or
luckily anymore.
It takes about 45 minutes to an hour to get down to the temple of the moon. I
don’t remember how long it took us to get there. All I remember is that it was
very peaceful and quiet. It’s incredible how the Inkas put the rocks there,
especially the pieces in the corner. J and I sat in the niche. He started to
meditate and I watched him. Maybe I should have thought about something useful
too, but I didn’t. Instead I just sat there, watching him and the rocks, with a
blank mind. Sometimes it is nice to not think about anything, and that moment
was like that.
Later we got out of the niches and climbed up a bit to have lunch. Bananas,
mandarins, and crackers. Several couples arrived from the path of Wayna Picchu.
One couple from Argentina asked J whether it’s far to go up (the path that we took
down). J answered mas o menos (more or less). The girls said ’shit, mas o menos
simpre es sí’. I found it amusing. This is how it is like to be in Machu
Picchu. You need to climb up, then down, then up, then down. You can be so
exhausted and yet so impressed by what is around you.
I don’t know how long we sat there and basked in the sun. J told me it’s about
an hour. I followed him after this extended break. It was tiring to climb up,
but I think my body got used to it after a while. Of course we weren’t walking
very fast and that’s the main reason I didn’t feel terribly tired. Three hours
after I got into the Wayna Picchu gate, I came out.
There was one incident that was so amusing that we would never forget. We were
doing our little adventure here and there (trying to avoid the rain at the same
time). We got into a small cave, and J checked the place with his light. I wasn’t
paying attention until he started digging stuff - he found coins in the mud,
some of which were pretty old. ‘We are rich’, he joked. I said that we could
take the coins, someone probably just left them here. J pointed me to some coca
leaves on the ground and said that the coins were offerings. ‘Oh, then we
should put them back’, I said. He threw the coins back. Soon after we found
that there was actually a group of people practicing Andian religion right
beside us. They were meditating while we exclaimed ‘we are rich’. It must be
pretty amusing for them. After they finish meditating, the shaman
asked several people to pass the secret passage, which connects to the small
cave that we were in. We looked at each other and couldn’t help laughing.
I attempted to climb Machu Picchu (the mountain), but gave up halfway after J
told me that it’d take me a hour to get to the peak (it was 3:00 PM already).
On our way back there was a boy trying to get to the peak. He asked us how long
it’d take and I told him an hour. I don’t know if he made it in the end. I hope
so. For me, that’s something for my third time there. I need to leave myself
some excuses to come back (there is no lack of excuses anyway).
We left Machu Picchu at around 5 PM. Dinner was at a small place near the
Plaza. Food was not bad and the price was much cheaper than the gringo places.
Unfortunately I forgot its name. We had a bottle of black beer back at the
hotel. It was my first cusqueña cerveza experience.