Huaraz, PE

Days 14-21

A few days after Rett’s crash, we needed to move out of Eva/Nancy’s aptly-named “Cozy House” AirBNB, because someone else had the temerity to book it for three nights. To allow for the changeover/cleaning process between when we returned, we booked a week at another AirBNB. It was a a few blocks closer (and more-valuably, down the hill) to the center of town (making grocery trips easier), its shower ran hotter, it had unobstructed views from its 6th-story roof deck, and the off-the-street back bedroom was quieter, but in all other respects it was a downgrade. Especially with the sewer-gas smell coming from the not-entirely-sealed bathroom fixtures. The building had a couple of internal vertical shafts for light entry, and the refrigerator/laundry/utility-sink room in our first-floor unit was at the base of one of these pseudo-outdoor shafts. An 8-foot wall divided it from our neighbor’s unit, but there was no wall/door closing our either of our pseudo-outdoor spaces from our indoor spaces, so we effectively shared the same air space. Luckily they weren’t home too often, or too loud, but they surely heard our TV quite easily! Anyway, just another example of the porous line between indoor/outdoor space here in Huaraz. With less sun-exposure, the unheated unit was also consistently cooler than Eva’s place: 60°F in the morning, rising only to 62°F by afternoon (with our body heat and keeping the door closed, we could keep the bedroom around 64°F).

Our 2nd AirBNB in Huaraz. Our ground-floor unit on the left side had a rare off-street parking spot (which of course we had no use for!)
View from the roof deck of our AirBNB. This sports center across the street had loads of activity (mainly inside the blue-roofed building, with drums, bands, chanting, and singing frequently echoing to the outside).
View of Huaraz and the mountains from the roof deck of our AirBNB.
View of Huaraz and the mountains from the roof deck of our AirBNB.

There was a comfortable couch and a big TV, so that’s where Rett continued to recover from her bike crash, and within a couple days she was up for walks to the grocery store with me, and then even doing walking workouts. One day we returned to the lively Central Market for products that the grocery stores don’t carry, and on the way back got a very good lunch at Trivio Resto Bar near the most touristy area of the city (up by our AirBNBs we haven’t seen a single gringo; they’re more common in the center, but still far from overwhelming).

Rett wrapped up but walking, here in a pretty square that’s much more tourist-focused than our neighborhood.
A random pseudo-parade, where apparently Huaraz families/clubs just sort of hold these gatherings (here a guy is delivering a case of beer to the sashed leaders of the well-dressed group). The hired band was quite good!

Day 22: Laguna 69

Hiking: 8.9 mi / 2640 ft. climbing
Home: Nancy’s AirBNB

Less than two weeks after Rett’s bike crash, she felt ready to reschedule our tour to hike to Laguna 69. It obviously wasn’t going to happen two days after the crash as initially planned, so we’d cancelled our original booking. Nine miles of hiking, with more than 2500 feet of climbing, taking us above 15,000 feet, was a much taller order than our pre-injuries trip to Laguna Paron. So I tried to make Rett really consider if she’d be able to handle it, and she convinced me that she wasn’t just trying to brute-force her way through recovery.

The alarm went off at 3:35am, for a 4:40am pickup (shifted at 10pm the night before from 5am!) That at least meant that we were far more-efficient getting to our destination; not only did we spend much less time picking people up, the near-empty roads meant we got out of Huaraz with zero delay. There were a couple more English-speakers on this trip, and our guide presented some of the information in English, though we would have been ok if it had been 100% Spanish again. All three other English-speakers were solo female travelers, though we only spoke with the Hungarian/UK woman who shared our row on the 20-person van.

Our 7am breakfast stop was freezing cold, and still less food came with our “American Breakfast” than Rett expected, but it got the job done. We got to the trailhead by 8:50am, and were given six hours essentially on our own, but mapped out as 3 hours up, 1 hour at the lake, and 2 hours back.

Twenty minutes before the trailhead, we made a quick photo stop at Lagunas de Llaganuco, a couple of gorgeous turquoise lakes right along the road, which in another country would be worthy of a trip all on their own.

After a quick little downhill to the river, there were toilets, but rather than pay to S/1, I figured we’d be fine using the “Inka baño” (as our guide said) anywhere along the trail. It seemed like most of our group stopped though, so that let us get the jump on everyone, and since our tour seemed to be one of the first to get to the trailhead, it felt like we were on our own for most of this hike, despite it being the most-popular day hike in the Cordillera Blanca.

A flat exposed river in a flat valley belies the non-flatness to come.
Trekking off on our own, easy walking to start.
For at least the first half, there were a lot of cows around, just living up here over 13,000 feet above sea level.
I thought this mountaintop looked like an eagle with furled wings.
1,000 feet of waterfall separates the trail’s initial flat valley from a second, higher flat valley.
This would be a pretty spectacular mountain hike even if there wasn’t a lake at the end.
Switchbacks turn our views in all directions, here looking back toward Huscaran, the tallest mountain in Peru.
Crossing the second flat valley, toward a wall of extreme non-flatness. Tongariro Alpine Crossing in New Zealand is the only mountain hike we could remember with a flat-bottomed bowl like this in the middle.
Our first glimpse of Laguna 69. The color filling the gap seemed impossible.
Yep, that’s a whole lake that blue.
Oh, and guess what, the crazy blue lake is ringed by crazy white mountains.
Again, public displays of religion seem rare in Peru (at least this part; apparently 84% of Peruvians say religion is an important part of their daily lives, and the country partly contributed the new pope), but this cross feels more like it was bolted to the rock just as a cool photo opportunity rather than a strong religious reason.
The bowl in which Laguna 69 sits.
A ton of visitors means a ton of time available to build towers. A couple rocks fell from the top of another one 20 yards away from me when I approached, so I wonder if any more fell over during the 5.6 magnitude Lima-area earthquake last week that we could feel in Huaraz.
Us at Laguna 69, and our first time over 15,000 feet!
The mountains are getting ready to take another bite out of the setting moon.
Blue Laguna 69.
In the lower right corner, a group of other hikers climbed up to a higher vantage point above the lake Seemed like entirely too much work.
The top of Chacraraju, 5000 feet above us (20,039 ft. a.s.l.), looks a bit chillier than the lake. Not that the lake level was exactly warm, especially when the breeze blew (though a couple of guys did take a supposedly-illegal swim).
Earlier I had heard a rockfall across the lake but couldn’t spot it, but on our way out, Rett heard this snow-and-ice “waterfall” let loose, and I was quick enough to catch it before it settled again.

We were proud to make it to the lake in 2h22m, ahead of the “standard” 3-hour pace, and took it as a sign that our fitness at altitude is improving (or at least it hasn’t devolved with our time in recovery). We then left a little “early” for the “standard” 2-hour return, so that we could take it relaxed and stop to enjoy all the views we might have raced through on the way up. And although we did take a few more pauses, it surprisingly took us three minutes longer to go down, so it’s a good thing we left when we did! (our guide always brought up the rear, so as long as we stayed ahead of him we knew we were fine). Near the end, Rett’s corseted ribs did start hurting her a bit, presumably from the bouncing rhythm of a downhill walk, but overall she held up remarkably well.

This place might be nearly as Lord of the Rings-ish as New Zealand. The brown mound in the flat valley could have been a second Edoras.
22,205 ft. worth of mountain standing over Rett’s head. US$3 to rent the trekking poles was definitely worth it.
Rett was ready to declare it the best hike we’ve ever done, I might still rate Tongariro or a few in Glacier National Park higher, but Top 5 seems reasonable. And it’s totally clear why it’s such a popular hike. Of course the absolutely perfect clear weather we lucked into played a huge part.
A couple members of the Fellowship of the Ring heading across the Misty Mountains.
HIking down from Laguna 69.
Another waterfall, just to show that there is far more to the hike than just the jewel at the end.
Huscarán and a cow.
A rare tree makes the scene even more New Zealand-y.
Towering nearly 9,000 feet above us, we finally have a height differential that exceeds the Teton wall, but the Tetons still rise at a faster rate.
Yeah, Laguna 69 hike, you’re a winner.

The return drive took a little over three hours, but at US$11 for the round-trip, it would easily be worth it for the sightseeing even if you never left the van. As we descended the rough switchbacks along the narrow valley’s north wall, we could see the near-vertical cliff looming over us through the sunroof, rivaling Yosemite’s El Capitan as a 3000-ft. vertical rock face. Then descending lower, it remains remarkable to see how much agriculture (again, completely unmechanized) fills these high mountain slopes. I guess US$11 wasn’t enough for them to drop us back near our AirBNB, so we Uber-ed back from the tour office because walking up another 200 feet was more than we needed to do!


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