Goodbye Peru

Goodbye Peru

I returned to Nazca from Cusco by the same means that I had gone there, bus, and the second trip was no better than the first. I was pleased to see Bridget again and gave her a wash, then took her into town and found a garage that would weld repair her exhaust. That done I was ready to get back on the road towards Ecuador. Driving has become so much less stressful now that Bridget is running properly. I have decided not to visit Lima as I have had enough of major cities for now, particularly Capitals that are not at all representative of the country as a whole. The Pan American highway seems, if anything, to be getting even better. The scenery continues to be interesting although it is changing from the southern half of the country and must be far more fertile as commercial agriculture is very evident here. As I get nearer to Lima the traffic gets worse. Congestion...
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Cusco and Machu Picchu

Cusco and Machu Picchu

It is 13th June 2009 and I am exhausted, partly due to a nightmare of a bus journey and partly to the altitude of the town of Cusco where I have arrived. My decision not to push Bridget through the Nazca to Cusco route has been vindicated. I did catch a bus, actually a very modern ultra smart Marcopolo coach, which took almost nine hours to cover the first 250 miles of the road which we had turned back from. Even with the size, weight and suspension of the bus, I still felt every bump. Knowing the driver was Peruvian and that the drop at the side of the road was often 2,000 feet didn't help either. I am convinced Bridget would not have made it too, and return from, Cusco had we pushed on. It is a great shame because the last 200 miles was generally as good as the Pan American Highway has been and Bridget would have been made so ‘at...
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Chile/Peru Border to Nazca

Chile/Peru Border to Nazca

The run up to the border today was truly breath taking. Much of the time I was driving through flat single coloured desert but from time to time without any warning Bridget would turn a corner around the crest of a mound and there was a valley with drops of between 1500 and 3000 feet. Eventually I realised, the reason that such a huge change could appear without warning is that whilst driving across the desert the landscape appears flat, so that massive valleys are not evident until you are right on the rim. The roads drop right to the bottom of the valley only to climb up the other side. Long stretches of the road has no crash barriers even though the drop is almost vertical. If you lose control of your vehicle, for any reason, there is nothing between you and the long drop. We ran out of petrol today and Bridget’s jerry can came in useful once again. We...
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Santiago to Peru

Santiago to Peru

We left Santiago at around 8:00am and followed the route recommended by the hotel which turned out to be OK but not quite perfect. After a short detour I navigated us in the right direction, more or less! For the first one hundred miles there are hills and mountains in every direction I look. It is really beautiful and just as I am becoming accustomed to it we turn a bend and there ahead of us is the Pacific Ocean. The first thing to strike me about it are the rollers coming into the shore, they are between 15 and 20 feet high although the ocean doesn’t appear to be generally rough. Further on and there are white caps everywhere across the ocean. Off to the east I can see the snow capped mountains of the Andes and to the west the Pacific Ocean. I know from studying the map that they are converging and pushing in on the highway. When they actually...
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