Advice nearly Peru call in?

I'm just wonderin if anyone have been to Peru and if so could you pass me any info/tips as to what to expect. I will be in Peru for just about 2 months



Answers:    Expect to have a really flawless time, as Peru is beautiful and the relations are very friendly. Two months--you're severely lucky.
Some advice:

1. You will probably jump to Cusco and to Machu Picchu. To avoid altitude sickness, DO NOT EAT ANYTHING your first day within Cusco, except perhaps some "caldo" (soup) within the evening. This will be hard to do as Cusco is unbelievably interesting and has lots of apposite restaurants. But you may ruin your trip if you get too sick.

2. Fly whenever possible. The distances are spacious and the travel time is even greater than the distances would indicate, particularly surrounded by the mountains. You can fly to Cusco in an hour, but the bus take around twenty-four hours. And if you are going to Iquitos, you'll have to fly.

3. Prepare for cold weather. The mountains are other cold, and Lima and the coast can be cold and drizzly. So a warm coat, sweater, gloves and hood are all prerequisite.

4. Be very suspicious of "exotic found friends" and NEVER accept anything to put away or drink from people you a moment ago met--criminals put knock-out drops in them. Many tourists enjoy done this and have woken up then relieved of their valuables (or worse).

5. Be sure to check out some of the archaelogical sites other than Machu Picchu and the Nazca Lines. The Inca arrived in arrears on the scene, but there are approximately 5000 years of prehistory. Chan Chan and the "Huacos" fundamental Trujillo, the Lord of Sipan and Sipan itself near Chiclayo are world-class archaeological areas/museums. And here are lots of archaelogical sites around Cusco that you can explore easily by bus.

6. One of the first things to do is to jump to the National Anthropological, Archaelogical and History Museum in Lima (Pueblo Libre) and return with a chronological introduction to the cultures of Peru and the history from the arrival of the Spaniards.

7. Try some ceviche on the coast and some cui and/or anticuchos in the mountains. Seafood is really obedient and inexpensive on the coast. Yum yum!

8. Get cash from ATMs and don't try to exchange money on the street near the money changers. You can get any dollars or soles at most ATMs. Call your bank first to see what web you ATM card is in (usually Cirrus), next use ATMs that display the Cirrus logo. They are generally around the bigger bank in the bigger cities. And cancel quite a bit at a time, as the fees are base on number of withdrawals and not on the amount withdrawn.

9. Deposit any unneeded dosh, along with your passport, plane tix and unneeded credit cards, contained by hotel safe at the desk. Carry a copy of your passport on the street and put a copy contained by each item of your luggage.

10. Make sure you own enough smaller bills and coins for every light of day expenses. Try to change big bills where on earth you can--certainly go contained by the bank whose ATM you used and convert at least one of the one hundred sole transcription the ATM will dispense. Peru is still a poor country where it is normally difficult to get modification for a one hundred sole note. It is enormously frustrating to have traveled for hours to win to some out of the way attraction individual to be refused entry because the ticket department doesn't have cash for a big bill.

11. Be careful next to cabs--use the "official" cabs inside the airport. Agree with the driver surrounded by advance on the fare. The buses and combis are a markedly good process to get around surrounded by the cities but don't try them unless you speak Spanish very economically, as the routes are confusing (at least to this Yanqui).

12. Keep the departure due referred to above in mind. I other reserve the thirty American dollars and keep it within the hotel safe of late so that I know I'll have it if I inevitability it.

Anyway, you will have a great time. !Buen viaje!
First, what you have need of will depend on when you come to Peru and were contained by Peru you are going. Peru is currently in summer, so it is highly hot in the coastal region and it is raining within the mountains. If you come, say surrounded by June, it will be colder in the coast (although a oil lamp jacket should be enough to fend the cold), significantly colder contained by the mountains (heavy jacket recommended) but the rain will enjoy stopped.
Second, what are you interested in?
If it is jungle you want, later you should try Tarapoto in the northenr Amazon, Iquitos (smack within the middle of the Amazon Basin and were the Pacaya Samiria reserve is located), or Madre de Dios (Southern Amazon and be the MANU reserve is located).
If you like ruins and archeology, Cuzco, Machu Picchu and Choquequirao surrounded by the Cuzco area are your point. However, once youre done with that, try the nouns of Lambayeque and the museum of the "Tumbas Reales de Sipan" (Royal tombs of Sipan). If you're already there, try a hurried trip to Kuellap, the fortres of the misterious Chachapoyas (known to the Incas as the "cloud dwellers". When you get near you'll figure out why). You could also try visit the pyramids od Cao, Huaca Rajada, Sol and Luna. Actually, Lambayeque is strewn with hundreds of pyramids from pre-inca times and the oldest remains found contained by america of an ancient society have be found in that nouns.
You'll have to turn through Lima, so try to see Pachacamac ( The temple of the pre-inca oracle. Sort of the American version of the temple of Delphos) and perchance have lunch or dinner al the restaurant "La Huaca" within miraflores (it overlooks an ancient sacred mound and the food is vastly good).
for colonial sites, visit downtown Lima, the palace of goverment, the cathedral, the Osambela house, the Church of San Francisco.
If it is coast you like, try Mancora ans Punta Sal, it is up the north coast, a bit more than a 1,000 kms. north of Lima and it is close adequate to the equator to make it tropical.
If it is partying you resembling, try Larco Mar and al the clubs and watering holes in that nouns.
If you like trekking, try Huaraz. The scenery alone is worth the trip (all the main snowpeaks within Peru are in that area), and a amble around the Yanganuco lake or the trek around the Santa Cruz creek is fantastic.
There is also the Colca canyon contained by Arequipa, home of the condor and the deepest canyon in the world (twice as insightful as the Grand Canyon).
Go to Cajamarca. we love cusco.. treking.. the sacred dale.. ausangate...pisco... amazon.. machu pichhu.. lares
peru is excellent...

check out

http://www.peru-explorer.com/
http://www.cuscoperu.com/
http://www.botterill.com/8.html (my travels)
http://www.botterill.com/7.html (peru earthquake relief we did)
www.sunriseperu.com

its not expensive in attendance and the people are nice and friendly
product sure to get adjectives your travel shots depending on where you are going..
hi, im from Peru, so,, 2 months ?,, after, just to travel and pop in all the citys u can :)..., here some name >: cusco - machupicchu, puno - titicaca lake, arequipa - misti & colca, iquitos, moyobamba, , cajamarca, huaraz, punta sal, mancora , and lima ofcourse :)

check this oficial site: www.peru.com.pe ((english version))

suerte :)
Pick a spot and bound in! I am charitable of fond of Iquitos. Peru is awesome. People are very friendly here.

Cuzco, Lima, etc
Be aware.
I am Peruvian but I grew up in the US, so everytime I go to Peru was beside my parents (so I never paid attention to what they paid).
Last December I go for the first time as an adult to introduce my husband and the trip be fantastic.
However, during out trip we noticed that one type of ATM wasn't accepting our card, surrounded by which case we go to any other one.
When we were departing Lima, at the airport and already at the area back they check your luggage, they told us that there be a 30$ fee/person in command to leave the airport, which by the method, wasn't announced anywhere else and it can only be remunerated in dosh!
We had to gain out of the line and shift back to the duty free nouns were we saw ATMs, what do you know, they be the ATMs that didn't take our card.
Needless to vote, with 30mins vanished to board, we had to entreat people surrounded by line for money.
Next time we step, we're taking extra money to help whoever wasn't lucky adequate to have change in their sack... for karma purposes.

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