Pisac was lovely. A tiny town of only 2000 souls, the main square was entirely taken up by a col­or­ful market selling everything from jew­elry to back­packs and more. It star­ted to pour so we bought some raingear from the nearby gear shop and I bought an alpaca wool back­pack from a man wear­ing cam­posino tra­di­tional cloth­ing. I ima­gine he or his family wove the bag them­selves. So often when we asked about where an item came from, we were buying it from the person who made it or their sister. 

In the after­noon, as the sun came out, we went to walk up the moun­tain to las ruinas but a man we had bought a wall hanging from asked us where we were going and told us it was too far to walk. He said we needed to get a taxi from near the bridge back through the town, but then a woman from the next stall said, ”Taxi?” and he explained what we wanted and she said her hus­band drove a taxi. They knocked on the door of the house we were in front of, and a guy came out. They asked him about the taxi, he named a price, we bartered down a bit because we only wanted a lift up not there and back and we walked 100 meters to his cab and were on our way.

As we wound our way around about 20 switch­backs we star­ted to under­stand and appre­ci­ate the kind­ness of our stall­holder. The ruins are at around 3200 meters above sea level and we were start­ing in the Sacred Valley, right at the river floor. They are stun­ning feats of archi­tec­ture: ter­ra­cing down the moun­tain­side for agri­cul­ture, enorm­ous stones dragged into pos­i­tion for hous­ing and a temple of the sun, tun­nels in the moun­tain­side. After climb­ing one very steep stair­case and coming over a hill, we encountered an incred­ible astro­nom­ical obser­vat­ory, door­ways care­fully placed at 15 degree angles to with­stand earth­quakes and stones placed with amaz­ing pre­ci­sion.
 
As we were mar­vel­ling at the Incan ingenu­ity, a school­boy came up the hill from Pisac. ”Hola,” he said. ”Hola,” I respon­ded. And still in Span­ish, ”Do you live up here?” ”Yes, but higher.” ”Is it good?” ”Yes.”

He kept going. We soon encountered another. The same con­ver­sa­tion, but then ”How many people live up there?” ”In my vil­lage? 200.” ”And do you walk up this hill every day?” ”Yes, every day I go down and I return.” (This is a 4km walk he’s talk­ing about!) ”Do you like it here?” ”Yes. Don’t you?” ”Yes, but I’m fom Aus­tralia and I live near the sea. This is very high for me.” ”Ah,” he says. ”Do you know much about this place?” ”A little,” I say. ”I know that this is the temple of the sun and I think it was built around the 15th cen­tury.” ”Could be,” he says. ”And I think that build­ing there is older.” ”Yes,” he says. ”I think it’s from around the 12th cen­tury.” ”Could be,” he says. ”Well, have a good day,” I say. ”Ciao’ and he’s off, climb­ing the way we came.

We wend our way down the moun­tain, another hour or so down. The sun sets by the time we get to the bottom and we are happy and tired. This is bliss. We def­in­itely feel like we are on a hon­ey­moon adven­ture now. We have learnt how to say we are new­ly­weds in Span­ish and that this is our ”luna de miel” and we are start­ing to get ”feli­cit­a­tions’ from the locals. A man in tra­di­tional dress at Sac­say­hua­man sold us beads for our hair and wished us many children.

Back in Pisac we want a drink for our tired muscles and I sug­gest we invest­ig­ate Mullu, an altern­at­ive café recom­men­ded by our Lonely Planet bible. It turns out to be awe­some, play­ing chil­lout music and serving the most amaz­ing alpaca ribs in berry and red wine sauce with mash and alpaca ravi­oli with pas­sion­fruit dress­ing for Doug. I had man­dar­ine and lime juice with ginger and honey – mmm!

And then we went back to our gor­geous little hostel and snuggled in for the night, ready to wake early and catch the bus to Ollantaytambo. A won­der­ful, won­der­ful day.