Peru Mountain Biking trip!
Bike the back roads to Machu Picchu (and more!)
We'll bike to Machu Picchu, ride myriad tracks around the hills of Cusco, and cycle from Maras to Salineras - two unique and incredible Incan sites. Cycle through the incomparable farmland and river gorges of the Lares Valley, camping overnight along the way at high-altitude, natural thermal hot baths perched over a jagged river gorge! Mix hiking and biking single-track or easy downhill road riding in any combination. Optional rides for confident riders include taking on the Red Bull Mega Avalanche ride.
Whether you’re a seasoned biker or just starting out - if you enjoy riding, this is the trip for you!
Itinerary / Highlights
Day 1. Orientation and acclimatisationWe’ll meet in the hotel lobby at high noon today and head off for a traditional Peruvian lunch at our favourite local restaurant. Lunch is the main meal of the day here in Peru, and Sunday’s is traditionally huge – this is an excellent opportunity to carbo load for the missions ahead! We’ll leave the afternoon flexible so you can get to know Cusco, shop, rest, or wander around.
It’s a good idea to take it easy today and hydrate like crazy as you adjust to the 3,300-metre altitude. If you have the time to arrive a couple of days early, this really helps with acclimatisation. There’s plenty to do in Cusco and we can help make arrangements.
Accommodation: Cusco hotel, Cusco (L,D)
Day 2. Yuncaypata – the fun begins!
Like many Andean cities, Cusco sits in the flat bottom of a steep-sided, horseshoe-shaped valley. The long hill that defines the north side of town is riddled with mountain bike terrain, ranging from easy 4x4 track to gnarly downhill. Easy, fast, public-transport access to this terrain is probably one of the reasons mountain biking has taken off like it has in Cusco. We’ll drive to the top of the hill in our own vehicle, then bike back down any of dozens of tracks that bring us back into the heart of Cusco. We’ll have time for multiple laps if you’re keen.
Accommodation: Cusco hotel, Cusco (B,L,D)
Day 3. Downhill to Pisac
There’s something for everyone today: single track, speedy sealed-road downhill, and shopping!
We’re heading to Pisac, 30km from Cusco and 600 metres lower. To get there, we can ride straight down the highway – a long, looping, and scenic descent that’s a lot of fun for any rider. Or, we can get there by the single track that heads straight down the deep gorge by the highway, before winding and dropping through farmland and villages. We’ll have lunch in a restaurant in Pisac, and show you around this charming, historic Inca/colonial village. Pisac is home to the most famous artesania (handcraft) market in the region, and this is a perfect opportunity to do some souvenir shopping.
In the afternoon, we’ll drive up the other side of the valley to the entrance to the Pisac ruins. From here, enjoy another speedy, sealed-road descent, or walk down through the famous ruined fort that towers over Pisac (entrance not included). Or you can choose to spend this afternoon shopping, wandering around town, or going for a swim in Pisac’s swanky, Olympic-sized swimming pool!
Accommodation: Pisac hotel, Pisac (B,L,D)
Day 4. Ride and camp in the Lares Valley
For two days we’ll cycle through the remote Lares Valley. This is rugged country where subsistence farmers somehow eke out a living, surrounded by bare, precipitous slopes and jagged mountain peaks. This will be two days of riding you’ll never forget. It will be cross-country but mostly downhill - it has to be at this altitude! There's some fairly easy track and plenty of coasting along the road today, through an ever greener and steeper river valley. Tonight's accommodation is an absolute treat - the Lares hot springs, where naturally occurring hot springs have been lovingly terraced and landscaped into a surreal water park perched on the side of a rugged river gorge. Tonight we'll enjoy a well-earned soak in the healing mineral waters as we admire the millions of stars above!
Accommodation: Camping under the stars (B,L,D)
Day 5. Ride the Lares Valley – the bike day of a lifetime
This morning an incredibly scenic drive takes us up to the dizzying Lares pass, and to the top of one of Peru's premier off-road descents. Section follows section of llama track, gravel riverside, and eventually scenic river gorge. We'll end with an array of undulating riverside single track (or take the open, speedy gravel backroad alongside) into the outskirts of Calca, back once more in the sunny Sacred Valley. From here we'll drive back to Cusco for the night.
Accommodation: Cusco hotel, Cusco (B,L,D)
Day 6. Free day
Today is yours to explore Cusco, one of the most fascinating cities in the world. There’s culture aplenty with museums, churches, galleries and more. Or if you’re feeling like a little retail therapy, Cusco offers everything from folksy artesanias of every possible kind, through indigenous markets selling potatoes by the sack and frogs by the bucket, to exquisite handcrafted jewellery and avant-garde fashion. It’s also perfect for just wandering – through ancient, llama-width cobbled alleyways that open up into charming plazas, and there are stunning cityscapes and inviting cafés at every turn. We’re here to help with recommendations, suggestions and directions!
We’ll leave you to sort out your own meals today – if you want a packed lunch, just let us know and we’ll organise it for you.
Accommodation: Cusco hotel, Cusco (B)
Day 7. Maras and Salineras – ride from one incredible Inca site to another
Today’s ride takes us from one Inca site, the mysterious experimental complex of Maras, to another - the spectacular, surreal, Salineras saltpans. Maras consists of three deep, terraced amphitheatres. Controversy rages as to their purpose (the Incas left no written records) but best guess is that it was an agricultural laboratory where they tried out different crops at different altitudes and angles to the sun. Whatever it was, it’s an impressive sight. Salineras is even better – a still-working ancient salt factory that’s as beautiful as it is fascinating, with a patchwork of coloured pools twinkling under the sun. We think it’s one of the most spectacular Incan sites of the whole trip.
In between the two is an easy intermediate level ride (or you can walk it) with all the features you’ll already be coming to take for granted – great range of terrain, consistent downhill, and breathtaking scenery – as we descend, you’re looking straight at the main range of the Andes.
Accommodation: Urubamba hotel, Urubamba (B,L,D)
Day 8. Down into the Amazon basin!
This morning we drive up to Abra Malaga, one of the highest points on the trip at 4,350 metres, and from here descend into the Amazon basin on bikes, losing about 1,300 metres of altitude over up to 71km of road (it’s up to you how much you ride!). The scenery is different from anything we’ve seen before as we descend into the rainforest, and there are lots of photo opportunities along the way as the road snakes down through ever lusher vegetation. There are a few short, optional sections of single track along the way, or you can stick to the road which is sealed for the first 20km and gravel thereafter.
It's not hard to see why this ride is one of Peru's classics, and often favourably compared to Bolivia's infamous ‘Death Road’. It's pure fun - a long, looping descent through some of the most spectacular landscape you'll ever see. By the time we get to Santa Teresa, at 1,900 metres, we’re in high jungle - a whole different world! Tonight we'll camp in a lush rainforest gorge by the side of a rushing river.
Accommodation: Rainforest campground, Santa Teresa (B,L,D)
Day 9. Extreme activity or chillout morning, then train to Machu Picchu
There’s one train per day from Santa Teresa to Machu Picchu, and the timetable changes often, but it should be in the late afternoon, so we generally have most of the day to enjoy the various activities on offer in Santa Teresa.
We highly recommend starting the day with one of our favourite activities in the world - Cola de Mono, a series of six ziplines that’s one of South America’s premier adventure activities.
If people are interested and there’s time before the train. we can also organise a half-day rafting trip today - please let us know at time of booking as we need advance notice to run this very special and quite serious section of river.
The Cocalmayo hot springs are another option and a good opportunity for soaking away any aches and pains while enjoying a beer served to you right in the water!
Later, we’ll take a short train ride to Machu Picchu Pueblo (town), also known as Aguas Calientes, where we’ll have dinner at Indio Feliz – a fancy, French restaurant whose incredibly yummy food is world famous in Peru. Then it’s off for an early night – we’ll be at Machu Picchu in time for sunrise tomorrow!
Accommodation: Aguas Calientes hotel, Machu Picchu Pueblo (B,L,D)
Day 10. Machu Picchu
We’ll set out by 6am to get up the hill before the crowds arrive from Cusco, and spend the day exploring the words-fail-me glory that is Machu Picchu – one of the new Seven Wonders of the World. We’ll have a guided tour plus plenty of time to explore on our own or climb for breathtaking views up one or more stunning nearby peaks: Huayna Picchu, Putucusi or Machu Picchu mountain itself. Later we’ll take the scenic train to Ollantaytambo in time for dinner and a peaceful night's sleep in this charming, largely pedestrian-only village.
Accommodation: Ollantaytambo hotel, Ollantaytambo (B,L,D)
Day 11. Abra Malaga – ride the Red Bull Mega Avalanche course!
Today we head back up Abra Malaga (Malaga Pass), and from here descend a massive 1,500 metres over 20km to Ollantaytambo. You can choose how to do this – either on sealed road or an international downhill racetrack. The road is spectacular in itself, winding down from the glacial heights of the high mountains to the sunny, spring-like Sacred Valley.
For our more advanced riders, today’s single track is probably the most radical we’ll see on this trip. While the road zigzags across the face of the range, the track here drops straight down, and has everything – mud, drops, super fast sections, and stone walls to name just a few features – it’s really exciting stuff. We'll all spend the morning out here, while in the afternoon you're free to pull out a few more descents, or explore Ollantaytambo, perhaps the most perfectly preserved of all Inca towns and a must on any trip to Peru, with atmospheric cobbled alleyways and elaborately carved stone irrigation systems, presided over by a spectacular, llama-shaped ruin.
Accommodation: Ollantaytambo hotel, Ollantaytambo (B,L,D)
Day 12. Bike or hike little-visited archaeological sites
After a scenic morning driving back through the Sacred Valley and over the range towards Cusco, we'll jump out in the hills above Cusco and either hike or bike some lovely farmland and forest single track, to the mysterious yet charming Templo de la Luna (Temple of the Moon) and Cueva de Monos (Cave of Monkeys), before a series of stone staircases brings us out in the heart of cafe-paradise San Blas, just a stone's throw from our hotel!
There's time this afternoon for last minute shopping or sightseeing before our final dinner together.
Accommodation: Cusco hotel, Cusco (B,L,D)
Day 13. Departure day
We’ll collect rental bikes, or help you dismantle your bike to pack up this morning before dropping you off at the airport. See you next time! (B)
Other Details
Accommodation Details
Accommodations on our Peru trips are Katy’s favourite find in each town during Lonely Planet research. The end result is that in Cusco, Aguas Calientes, Lampa, Puno and Ollantaytambo, we stay in comfortable hotels that are quirky and individual.
In Wayllabamba, Raqchi and on Amantani we stay in humble family homes. Conditions are some times quite basic and hygiene may not be what you are used to at home, but any slight discomfort you experience will be well compensated for in this incredible insight into a very different way of life.
Departure Dates, Options & Prices
24 Jun - 6 Jul, 2012
5 Aug - 17 Aug, 2012
12 May - 23 May, 2013
23 Jun - 4 Jul, 2013
4 Aug - 15 Aug, 2013
Private and custom dates and trips upon request. Please note we also operate other trips within the Peru dry season too - so just ask us more info!
