Sunday, April 16, 2017

Road Trip 4: Arequipa - Nazca - Lima

Just outside the city, we finally got a good view of the volcanos.

Volcanos around Arequipa

Dessert between Arequipa and the ocean

Two hours later, we were back at the coast and saw the Pacific Ocean. We stopped several times to make blue and sandy pictures and change drivers.

the way to go

Back to the Pacific Ocean

The coast line was uneven, so went inwards drove to a green oasis, headed a bit up, driving down on cliffs and this continued for some hundred kilometers.

Driving along the cliffs ...

... and the oasis valleys
 
At Chanca, we changed again and while Heidi was sleeping I sped north on the Panamericana through the dessert. That afternoon, we made it earlier to our destination then our Google Maps estimate.

Speeding on Panamericana

We booked a Nazca flight for the morning, went for dinner and I did again some laps in the pool.
The next morning, we were at 7 am at the airport to get our flight over the Nazca lines. We boarded an eight-seater Cessna and started. We saw more than 12 Nazca lines among them the monkey, the astronaut, the spider, a colibri and condor. Some were clearly visible while others were hidden well and you needed to look at them from the right angle.

Before take off

Nazca Valley and dessert

The astronaut

The colibri

The condor

Survivors

At 9 am, we had breakfast in the Hotel and afterwards drove back in direction of Lima. We found another mirador and also saw the Lineas de Palpa. They were more figuresque than the Nazca lines.

Lineas de Palpa

We made a shopping stop in Ica and another toilet stop at Boulevard de Carmen. In the afternoon, we reached Roxana’s place in Lima.

In the evening, we met Karina and Freddie for dinner with other alumni. We had a wonderful evening.

Alumni gathering

The next day, Roxana went with us to Mozart for brunch and afterwards to the city center. We saw Easter services at the cathedral and churches. We got a guided tour at San Francisco church and saw the convent and catacombs. 

Cathedral

San Francisco church

In the afternoon, I packed my backpack, carry-on and laptop bag. I said goodbye to Heidi and Roxana, and did the last 25 min drive back to airport alone. I survived the dangerous roundabout again and returned the car without scratch.

Returning the car in one piece

We safely made it 3,000 km around Peru. Most of the roads were in good shape, only the city roads disappointed. Speed limits are 100 km/h on the Panamericana  and major highways, 60 km/h in the city - otherwise follow the signs. Except for the Panamericana, all the highways only have one lane and there are awful lot of trucks.
The indicator is used in different ways:

  • indicate left if there is a car behind you and you want to give them permission to overtake
  • use warning flash lights to signal you wanna stop.
Luckily, none of our itinerary was affected by the March floods. In Peru, there is usually only one way to go and no parallel secondary and tertiary roads. 

It was an amazing experience traveling around in Peru. Just take care of the altitude - it will get to you.


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