Thursday, January 18, 2007

Sandboarding above the oasis

At the moment I'm staying in the beautiful oasis village of Huacachina, which sits amidst towering sand dunes close to Ica, a major city on Peru's coastline south of Lima. I left Lima on Monday on my way through from Huaraz; meeting a bunch of nice people in my hostel along the way. This is the sort of building that characterizes Miraflores, the more modern part of Lima:

The latest five star hotel to grace the skyline

Huacachina is a popular tourist destination for Peruvians living nearby, but its idyllic loation is attracting more and more foreigners too. I didn't know such beautiful oases existed.

There are two or three oases in this area; this one being the only one with surface water

Lots of locals go swimming in the pool, in which it is reputed a mermaid has her abode.

Quick, point and laugh at the strange man with blond hair!

Yesterday a few of us from my hostel went on an excellent buggy trip into the desert, where we drove at high speed across the extraordinary landscape, and had a go at sandboarding too. All the hotels run these trips at the same time, in the late afternoon. Any earlier than about 4pm, it is too hot to go sandboarding. I tried to walk up a sand dune at about 1pm on the day I arrived, and after about ten metres I was running and squealing like a little girl into the nearest bit of shade, the sun was so hot!

My hair is getting harder to control now.  I'm waiting for the weight of it to pull the annoying curls out!

Rachele (Aussie) and Alex (English) exhibit the kind of grin you get when you first get in to one of these buggies...

...as does Lucas (from Switzerland).  Note the angle of the ground...

...we were going down a hill like this!

Sandboarding turns out to be much harder than snowboarding (or that was our excuse). The sand isn't very responsive and when you land on it, it's a lot harder than powder. But it's still great fun! After a couple of disastrous foot attempts, most of us decided the stomach option was preferable.

Not a bad effort from Alex there

To top it off we had some great sunset views before heading back down to Huacachina

I'm next going to head to Nazca, the location of the famous and enigmatic Nazca Lines. Whether my budget will stretch to a flight over the lines waits to be seen. Either way, I'll probably spend one night in Nazca before getting on the very long bus journey to Cuzco.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Your trip is an educational experience for us, Mike! I've just searched for The Nazca Lines and turned up this from the fount of quite a lot of knowledge, Wikipedia...

"The Nazca Lines are gigantic geoglyphs located in the Nazca Desert, a high arid plateau that stretches 53 miles between the towns of Nazca and Palpa on the Pampas de Jumana in Peru. They were created by the Nazca culture between 200 BCE and 700 CE. There are hundreds of individual figures, ranging in complexity from simple lines to stylized hummingbirds, spiders, monkeys, and lizards. The Nazca lines cannot be recognized as coherent figures except from the air. Since it is presumed the Nazca people could never have seen their work from this vantage point, there has been much speculation on the builders' abilities and motivations."

(But, of course, you know all this already. That's for the rest of us.)

Fantastic! Enjoy :-)

Anonymous said...

ur hair is so long!! u getting ur beautiful golden curls back?? lol. that sandboarding sounds so fun! i wanna try it!! looks like such a nice place to be, loving the oasis too iv neva seen a real one! ul hav to take me there one day cz i reli like the look of it! xxxxxxx

Anonymous said...

reading this in the office isn't the brightest of ideas. i keep combusting with jealosy! good to see you're having such a great time though!