From jungle hiking and sandboarding, to soaring through the skies at head-spinning heights, Peru’s incredible topography invites all manner of adventure. Our tip? Pack for action. Words: James Draven
I live by the coast in the UK, and — along with the absence of falling hazards — there are a number of advantages to the seaside lifestyle. One plus point rarely mentioned, however, is all of that lovely, dense, oxygen-rich air.
Up here, in Peru’s rural Amazonas Region, at 7,500 above sea level, my chest swells, greedily snatching lungfuls of the thin atmosphere. Nevertheless, I’ve never felt so alive. We’re hiking to Gocta Cataracts, overlooking dense cloud forest, along a track that passes agricultural huts. They’re festooned with billowing, varicoloured washing lines and kaleidoscopic plastic jugs that similarly swing on strings, drying out in the morning sun. Smouldering bonfires perfume the air. The scene is so redolent of sacramental smoke and prayer flags that I can’t tell if my heart pounds to race scarce oxygen around my system, or because I’ve fallen in love with the views.
This story is from the Adventure January 2018: Wild ways to see the world edition of National Geographic Traveller (UK).
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This story is from the Adventure January 2018: Wild ways to see the world edition of National Geographic Traveller (UK).
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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