Jaguar resting in the Manu rainforest

 Manu Expeditions - Adventure tours in Peru

Cock of the Rock

Peruvian Rainforest and Andean Horse Ride Specialists

Cock of the Rock


Visit the Manu Wildlife Center  Bird watching tours in Peru and South America

 

 

 



 The Classic Inca Trail Ride and the Manu Rainforest
 

Involves Horse RidingRainforest Trip

Ride from Country Inn to Country Inn and stay at a Top Class Manu Rainforest Lodge


We own special mountain bred horses descended from noble Spanish Barbs brought from Spain in the 1500s...Crossed with the comfortable but less sure-footed Paso breed our mountain horses give a strong, comfortable ride with greater endurance, stability and reliability needed for steep Inca trails. This trip has two major wildlife attractions in Manu – the Macaw lick and the worlds only know Tapir lick where in the comfort of mattresses and mosquito nets you may watch the largest of all South American Land Mammals visit a mineral lick

No Camping

Exploration of the Sacred Valley of the Incas and Inca trails on Horseback. Machu Picchu and the Manu Rainforest

A comfortable multi-day horseback trip following ancient Inca and colonial pathways through Peru's Sacred Valley of the Incas, including a narrated visit to famous Machu Picchu… We stay each night in a different comfortable Inn or Hotel. Then a visit to some one of the worlds top Amazonian Rainforest. Lodge destinations in one of the World largest protected parks – The Manu Biosphere Reserve.

[ SUITABLE FOR FAMILIES ]

 

Day 1:

This will be a travel day from home and you may arrive on an overnight flight to Lima, especially if traveling from North America, and connect directly to Cusco early the following morning. Arrangements can be made to assist you onto your connecting Cusco flight or we can advise you of the process should you feel uncomfortable in strange airports or arrange overnight in Lima if required at the Ramada airport hotel or other.

 
Day 2:

Rider Alicia and HorseWe will meet your arrival at the Cusco airport. The afternoon is scheduled for a walking introduction to the archaeological and colonial highlights of the old capital of the Inca universe. We’ll also visit the impressive ruins of Sacsayhuaman overlooking Cusco. Our ride leader describes the rituals and ceremonies that would have taken place at the massive walled limestone constructions and sculptured terraces surrounding the immense central plaza. We finish with a summary of the battle here in 1536 which took the life of Juan Pizzaro. We gather for dinner and discussion in the dining room at the centrally located comfortable lodging in Cusco. D.

 
Day 3:

The following morning, we drive a short distance up out of the Cusco basin to meet the waiting horses. Our journey begins in nearby rolling hills, noticeably etched by ancient fields and agricultural terraces. Passing several blue lakes hosting a noisy assortment of Andean shore birds, we arrive at the famous Indian market town of Chinchero at around 12,000 feet in altitude. An early colonial period church and large plaza frame well-made Inca walls that once were part of the Emperor Huayna Capac's Royal Estate. Our plan is to visit here during one of the market days when the plaza is full of tents with Quechua vendors selling every conceivable native handicraft, pottery, weavings, paintings and artifacts. Each day we plan an option for those who prefer just a half day ride in the morning with more time at the site and a ride in the van to the next inn. After a gala lunch in a side park and a discussion of Inca activities here, we journey on through stone walled Inca terraces and other Inca sites before descending several thousand feet down a broad, well-preserved, Inca road into the green Sacred Valley below. Corralling tired ponies with waiting alfalfa and grain at our selected Yucay lodging, we slip into the hotel bar for a warming spirit, then off to a hot bath before meeting again for dinner. We spend the night between 9-10,000 feet for the duration of the trip. (Saddle time 4-6 hours.)

 
Day 4:

Riders above the sacred Valley of the IncasA leisurely breakfast and shots of strong local coffee fuel us for the day's adventure. We start with a walk through the nearby ruins of another bit of tragic Inca history, the Palace of Inca Sayri Tupac. The life of this would be king and his tragic death is reminiscent of a classic Greek tragedy. An interesting story, we save the details for the trail. Cinches pulled up tight, girths to you Brits, Yankee easterners and other flatlanders, we move smartly out at a trot along gentle, level trails through small farms and country villages, and along side the peacefully flowing Urubamba River. Leaving villages behind, we climb steeply up a winding trail leading up onto a high plateau of rolling hills and immense grasslands. A spectacular panorama of the great Ice peaks of the Vilcanota range crowns the near horizon. Sometime around mid-day we arrive at an isolated cathedral seeming lost and forgotten by time and modern civilization. We are pleasantly surprised to discover our support vehicle and crew awaiting us with the table set for lunch. The destination for the afternoon ride is the Salineras. This is a huge area of terraces, which form hundreds of baths all fed by a single saline stream. The salt water is allowed to evaporate leaving the salt to be mined and carried out by burros. The Salineras are worked now much as they were in pre-Hispanic times. For those who prefer, the van will take you to the site for an extended visit before driving you to the inn. Or those in for the full day ride will have the opportunity for some faster riding across the high plateau before descending into the valley of the Salineras on a spectacular trail above the glittering white pools. We ride on into the welcoming courtyard of a very comfortable and friendly old Hacienda Inn. Valet parking with our wranglers seeing to the needs and comfort of our hoofed friends, we amble toward the evening watering hole. (Saddle time 6-7 hours.)

 
Day 5:

Andes RideSaddled up, ponies energized, rearing to go, we ride out in early morning light, horseshoes clattering along the ancient stone paved trail. The powerful equatorial sun reflects brilliantly off of high ancient ice fields. Steadily, we climb up some 3000 plus feet along an old Inca trial to explore the enigmatic Inca ruins of Pumahuanca. Not much is known about this interesting complex of Inca buildings located in a magical setting below immense, 2000 feet high, glacier shaped granite walls. Gary Ziegler and the Andean Research Project conducted a study here in 2007. It is his opinion that it was the residency of a local governor, administering the rich crops and llama herds that the valley once hosted. Like most Inca sites it had multiple uses. It was likely a tambo or way station on the Inca road leading over the high pass beyond. Several of the buildings are storehouses qolcas, others are unusually large residences. Several viewing platforms, usnus and carved replica rocks suggest a ceremonial function as well. We talk about this in detail as our cameras click and flash inside the tall walls. Time permiting, we ride on up the valley to lunch above a spectacular waterfall. Two hours down trail takes us to our night's lodging, A comfortable small Inn with endless hot water showers and happy hour in a pleasant, lushly vegetated garden. (Saddle time 5-6 hours. If you choose not to ride today our bus can drop you at the inn for a leisurely day hanging out or light hiking from the Inn.)

 
Day 6:

Saddled and ready to goFlowing westerly, the Vilcanota, or Urubamba River as it is called here, gently winds through small riverside hamlets, planted fields of corn and forgotten Inca ruins, slowly gaining speed for its insane roaring rush into the deep granite gorge at Machu Picchu. Amidst waving children and curious parents peering from doorways at the unusual site of gleaming horses and gringos, we trot along the old Inca route well away from the modern paved highway that speeds daily bus loads of tee shirt buying tourists to and from Cusco. We could be back in the 16th century. Modern Peru is centuries away. Tying up near an old Inca bridge, we hop a short ride in our support vehicle to visit the major Inca temple/fortress of Ollantaytambo. Probably built by the great Inca ruler, Pachacuti in the 1460s, it was the site of Hernando Pizzaro’s defeat by Manco Inca in 1536. Constructed of finely cut polygonal stones and rhyolite blocks, the fortress and nearby town represent the best of Inca architecture and construction. Large worked blocks, some weighting as much as 100 tons were quarried from a site more than a thousand vertical feet above the valley floor using a technique of pecking with hammer stones, then skidded down and across the Urubamba river several kilometers to the temple site. Inclined ramps were built to raise the blocks several hundred feet up hill to the construction area. We take ample time to examine the complex and ponder its many mysteries. Following a riverside lunch, we mount up again We have two options: We may ride up to the big quarries above the valley for a first hand examination of how and where the blocks were shaped or perhaps we will ride up a side valley to explored the interesting ruins of Pumamarca. (Some may opt to drop out for more time in town or at the lodge..) Late in the afternoon, we arrive at another carefully selected Inn. The food is near gourmet and rooms tastefully furnished in the best of neo-colonial style. Here we sadly say goodbye to our equine companions. We travel on by iron horse the next morning. (Saddle time: 6-7 hours)

 
Day 7:

Our magical journey concludes with the narrow gauge train ride to the New World's most spectacular archaeological monument, Machu Picchu. We breakfast then hop aboard the morning narrow gauge train heading down valley. An interesting hour of click, clack and sway with all of the accompanying sounds and smells of rural Peru takes us to the bustling backpacker town of Aguas Calientes, the portal for Machu Picchu. Soon we are gathered at the gateway to famous "Lost Cities of the Incas"

MACHU PICCHU, one of the most magical and mysterious places on Earth! Situated on the spine of a jungle cloaked granite peak towering some 2,000 ft. above an entrenched meander of the roaring river below, the site is frequently shrouded in misty clouds pierced by the powerful equatorial sun. Constructed from precisely sculptured granite blocks carefully joined with the projecting exposed stone of the surrounding mountain, the site may well be the finest architectural achievement of the new world.

Machu Picchu, otherwise romantically known to the tourist world as "The lost city of the Incas". Our guide concludes the story of the raise and fall of the ancient civilizations of the Andes with the tragic end of the Inca and the enigma that this remarkable site remains. We bus back down to Aguas Calientes.

“In view, down the great canyon of the Urubamba below is the long cloud forested ridge of Llactapata. The steep slope conceals a large complex of Inca ruins rediscovered and investigated by our Inca Research expeditions led by Gary Ziegler and noted British explorer, Hugh Thomson in 2003.”

Boarding the Cusco bound afternoon train, we arrive back in the Capital of the Inca and comfortable rooms at our selected hotel near the central plaza.. B:L:D

 
Day 8:

Manu Macaw LickWe pick you up from your hotel in Cusco and take you to the airport for the early morning light to the Boca Manu Aerodrome. Leaving the plane, we'll head down the Madre de Dios River for two hours to the comfortable lodge facility near the Macaw Clay Lick - Manu Wildlife Center. This strategically located lodge facility is jointly owned and run by Manu Expeditions and a local conservation group and is a base for scientific research in the area and a center for visitors wanting to explore the rainforest. We should arrive in time for lunch and a shower (hot water) and get to meet whichever researchers are onsite. The afternoon is set aside to relax or, if you want, to explore a trail through the untouched forest to a lookout point on a cliff over the river to watch roosting flights of Parrots and Macaws as the sun sets. Manu Wildlife Center has a canopy platform and an observation tower. The canopy platform is accessible via a spiral staircase so everyone can get to enjoy the rainforest canopy. Those who wish can participate in a night walk with your guide in search of nocturnal animals. Night at Manu Wildlife Center. B:L;D

 
Day 9:

Early start to-day for the Macaw Clay Lick. This is truly one of the world’s great wildlife spectacles as hundreds of Parrots and their larger relatives, the Macaws, congregate at this traditional locality to eat the mineral rich clay that is essential to their digestion. We'll use a blind (hide) to get close to the birds. The noise alone is incredible and the sight of these brightly colored birds at the lick is a sight not to be forgotten. As the lick slows down in midmorning we'll head for Cocha Blanco, an old ox-bow lake, in search of a family of Giant Otters that live there, and canoe around the lake on our floating platform looking for other wildlife. After a leisurely lunch at the lodge we'll explore other trails in search of Emperor and Saddleback Tamarins, and we have seen the rare Goeldi's Monkey repeatedly in this area. Night at the Manu Wildlife Center B:L:D

 
Day 10:

JaguarA full day to explore the forest and trails around the lodge. We'll be on the lookout for Monk Saki - an uncommon and rarely seen monkey of the tierra firme forest that is occasionally seen here. We'll explore trails where groups of Manakins, perhaps the most enigmatic of neo-tropical birds, perform their strange mating dances and walk to one of our blinds at a large mammal lick where Guans and forest Parakeets and Parrotlets come for clay. Here too, groups of Black Spider Monkeys visit on occasions for clay to help their digestion. Those who wish will return with the guide to the lodge in the late afternoon however there is an opportunity to stay at the lick after dark to see what nocturnal creatures come to the lick. Tapirs, the largest South American land mammal are frequent visitors with up to 12 animals visiting in one night. We watch them from the comfort of mosquito nets and mattresses from our specially constructed blind. Other nocturnal creatures are always possible. Night at the Manu Wildlife Center. B:L:D

 
Day 11:

After breakfast we head upriver (about 2 hours) to the small airstrip at Boca Manu. Early morning flocks of birds pass over the boat, and we may see a Capybara, the world’s largest rodent. Arriving at the airstrip we board our aircraft for the 40 minute flight over seemingly endless rainforest and then over the Andes, passing glaciers and snow peaks to the ancient Inca capital of Cusco where our staff will be waiting to take you to your hotel. The afternoon is set aside to relax and enjoy the historical city B:

 
Day 12:

Morning to enjoy Cusco and we take you to the airport for flights home. ( we can arrange optional hotel and transfer services in Lima if needed.

 

Suitability:

We raise and train horses at our ranch in the Sacred Valley. These well cared for horses are no-nonsense, experienced, sure-footed, non-gaited mountain trail horses affording a secure, comfortable ride on steep pathways. Although you do not need to be an expert rider, we recommend some previous riding experience or confidence around horses. We give instruction and attention to the less experienced as we travel. Our skilled Quechua speaking wranglers give careful attention to each rider as needed and care for our mounts while we lunch or hike through ruins.

 
 Email us about this trip:   adventure@manuexpeditions.com
 Days in Trip:   12 Days
 Rated Skill Level:   Easy
 Tour Guides:   Edwin Duenas, Pepe Noriega (trek), David Fuerte (rainforest`), Waldo Maldonado (rainforest), Ricardo Sanchez(Rainforest)
 Price:   $4180.00
 Single Supplement:   $542.00

 Availability:

  Please email before purchase to confirm availability.

 Purchase this trip now:

    We accept: Visa Card Master Card Discover Card American Express Card eCheck Card

 Dates 2008:

  April 18-May 3, April 25-May 10 (Experienced Riders), July 25-August 9, September 26-October 11, December 26-January 10

 Dates 2009:

  April 17-May 2, April 24-May 9 (Experienced Riders), July 24-August 8, September 25-October 10, December 25-January 9

 

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