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Hostels Cusco Peru

10 Years of Pirwa

10 Years of Pirwa

A decade ago, Pirwa Hostels was founded with the dream of creating a welcoming haven where travelers could relax and interact, one providing an experience rather than merely a bed and shower. It all began with only Pirwa Colonial Backpackers hostel in Cusco, but despite these modest beginnings, the Pirwa Family has grown incredibly. As we approach our 10 year anniversary this June, we wanted to look back at some of the milestones along the way.

We’ve grown a lot in the last ten years, improving facilities and services based on your feedback along the way. Today, Pirwa Hostels boasts backpackers’ hostels or Bed & Breakfasts throughout Peru and Bolivia: two in Lima, four in Cusco, two in Machu Picchu, and one each in Nazca, Puno, Arequipa, and La Paz. The Pirwa family has also grown into a one-stop shop offering transport and excursions through our own travel agency, Pirwa Travel Service, whose friendly s staff helps travelers with all aspects of their trip.

There’s also been quite a bit of formal recognition over the years, none prouder than when the agency became an officially recognized Inca Trail operator. Other notable events were Pirwa Colonial winning Hostelworld’s #1 Hostel in Peru award in 2009, and Pirwa Machu Picchu B&B winning Hostelbooker’s Cleanest Hostel award in 2011.

It hasn’t been all work, however. Last year was a blast: We added new activities we hadn’t done before, such as free weekly walking tours of Cusco that always ended with free drinks, and the New Years Party at Pirwa Colonial was the biggest we ever had! Currently, we’re happily planning all of the events for our anniversary week this June- details will be forthcoming soon!


So far this year, we renovated several hostels, so that even after all these years and the memories they hold, they feel new again, and more adapted to the needs of our friends and guests from around the world.

Through hard work, trial and error, and lots of listening, Pirwa Hostels’ founders created something different, and you’ll see them at various events still putting their all into making sure that guests enjoy their stay and have an unforgettable. Were it not for the support of our backpacking and traveling friends, we could never have experienced all of these things. So from all of us to all of you, thank you for the memories. The next decade will be even better- we hope that you’ll experience it with us as part of the Pirwa Family!

You’re Invited to Pirwa’s Christmas Eve Dinner in Cusco!

You’re Invited to Pirwa’s Christmas Eve Dinner in Cusco!

You’re Invited to Pirwa’s Christmas Eve Dinner in Cusco!

Cusco is one of Peru’s most popular cities to visit during the holidays, and on midnight on Christmas Eve the city explodes with fireworks and firecrackers. If you’re celebrating on the road and wondering where to lay your backpack, this December 24th at 9pm, Pirwa Colonial will celebrate its traditional Christmas Eve Dinner.

The menu’s been set and sounds delectable- a salad of vegetables and fruits in a Thai sauce, mustard turkey roulades with aguaymanto sauce, dessert tbd, and champagne for toasting. We offer the dinner at cost, a third of the price that the same dinner will be selling elsewhere, so it’s a great alternative to overpriced Christmas menus that the restaurants offer on this day.

No matter which of Pirwa’s Cusco locations you’re staying at, you’re invited to celebrate with us. We’ll be giving out invitations to all of our guests on Dec 23rd and 24th, and we hope to see you there!

 

Join Pirwa’s Weekly Free Walking Tours of Cusco

Join Pirwa’s Weekly Free Walking Tours of Cusco

We’ve been having a lot of fun these last couple of weeks during one of our newer weekly activities- free walking tours of Cusco with our friends and guests at Pirwa Hostels. Announcements go up in the hostels and on our facebook page before each tour, which usually starts at 4pm and finishes around 8pm.

We like to begin with a visit to the vibrant San Pedro Market near Pirwa Colonial Backpackers. It’s always a popular stop with guests to Cusco not just because of its vibrant riot of color and activity but also for the insight it provides into local life. Aside from handicrafts and native Andean grains and produce, there are also products that surprise foreigners, from the live frogs for blending into a fortifying tonic to the bull’s mouths for broths.

From there, we continue on to Plaza San Francisco, where we stop to observe the home where Inca Garcilaso was born, one of Peru’s preeminent schools for boys (and alma mater for many notables including current president Ollanta Humala), a variety of native trees, and the colonial churches.

Just two blocks away, we then arrive to the heart of modern Cusco, the Plaza the Armas, which was once known as Huacaypata, the place of tears, a fitting name for the site where Túpac Amaru II was quartered in the late 1700s after his unsuccessful Inca rebellion against the Spanish. Upon the bases of Inca palaces, the Spanish built arched passageways, churches and mansions. Of these, the most ornate are the 17th century Cathedraland the La Compañía de Jesús Church. The Cathedral took a century to complete, using the sand in the plaza, stones pillaged from Sacsayhuamán Fortress and other Inca sites. Aside from its gold and silver shrines, it also boasts an art collection including a Last Supper complete with Andean guinea pig entrée and the María Angola, the largest bell in South America. The La Compañía Church is believed by many to surpass the grandeur of the Cathedral- for this reason the Vatican tried to halt its construction, but luckily the mandate did not arrive in time.

There are a variety of times during the tour when we find ourselves focusing on the Inca walls of Cusco, searching for the seven snakes of Siete Culebras, admiring the famous 12-angled stone of Hatunrumiyoc, or for the shape of the puma at Inca Roca.

Ascending some narrow and twisting cobblestone street, we’ll make a stop in the small central plaza of the bohemian neighborhood of San Blas, which has been the artistic district of Cusco since Inca times. Here’ll we learn about the well-known artist families, such as the mendivils with their long-necked saints, who have their studios here. The plaza also houses Cusco’s oldest, built upon an Inca shrine consecrated to the god of thunder and lightning. Its simple adobe exterior hides the most ornate pulpit in all of Latin America, carved from a single cedar trunk in the 17th century and with a human skull resting inside it which is rumored to have belonged to the unknown artist.

One of our final stops, and surely one of the most impressive, is Qorikancha, the Incan Temple of the Sun. This was once the most sacred spot in Cusco, dedicated to the supreme Inca deity, Inti, the sun. At the time of the arrival of the Spanish, it was completely covered in gold. Today the gold is long gone, and atop the Inca base you´ll find the colonial Santo Domingo Convent.

We like to end our walking tours with drinks on the house. Sometimes, it’s the sweetened purple corn drink known as chicha morada at Plus Café, our restaurant located inside Pirwa Posada del Corregidor in the Plaza de Armas. Other times, it’s chicha, a fermented corn drink, or frutillada, the same drink with the addition of fruit to make it a little sweeter. It’s a fun way to end the day and to learn a little about local drinks, some of which, like chicha, go all the way back to the Inca.

 

If you’re interested in joining us during one of our trips, just meet us at Pirwa Colonial Backpackers in Plaza San Francisco (two blocks from Cusco’s main square) at the announced time and place. If you’re staying at one of our hostels in Cusco, just sign up with reception and they’ll give you the details. We hope that you’ll join us for a fun few hours exploring the imperial city of the Incas!

Cheerful Pirwa Suecia near the Main Square of Cusco

Cheerful Pirwa Suecia near the Main Square of Cusco

Most travelers stopping by the Imperial City of the Incas like to stay either in the city’s Main Square, the Plaza de Armas, or artsy San Blas. The Main Square epitomizes Cusco’s unique charm by showcasing the mix of Incan and colonial architecture for which the city is known. The hostel we’re highlighting today is Pirwa Suecia B&B, located on Suecia Street, which leads into the Main Square. It places you just a half block, or less than a minute’s walk, from all of the amenities of the city’s center. For the daytime, this means quality restaurants and cafés, ATMs, artisanal goods stores, and museums and cathedrals are at hand, and for the evening, the city’s best bars and dance clubs.

Pirwa Suecia is a bed & breakfast-style hostel with a welcoming atmosphere, bright cheerful colors and murals, traditional architectural touches, and an interior patio ideal for relaxing in between your forays throughout Cusco and the Sacred Valley of the Incas. It in the patio where you’ll find hot water and complementary coca tea set out 24/7 just in case you suffer some altitude-related fatigue or nausea and are interested in trying a local remedy.

Free services that are included with your reservation include a continental breakfast and luggage storage for those of you who are traveling to Machu Picchu and need a place to store your things while you’re in Aguas Calientes. There’s free wi-fi throughout, but if you don’t have a device to take advantage of this there’s also a guest computer for your use, allowing you to share your photos and travel tales with friends and family back home!

Pirwa Suecia B&B is mainly private rooms- married and twin doubles as well as triples, all with private bathrooms. For backpackers on a budget, there are also two three-person shared dormitories, which share a bathroom. Regardless of what type of lodging you choose, you’ll have access to hot showers 24 hours a day and comfy beds.

There’s a convenient travel information counter inside the hostel, manned by the specialists of Pirwa Travel Service, which boasts more than a decade of experience. They are always on hand to give information regarding tourist attractions and travel destinations as well as help arrange transport, entrances, guided visits, and packages for guests.

Want to know more? Check out the Pirwa Suecia B&B page on our website for more info on our hostel, or contact our reservations department at reservaspirwa@gmail.com.

 

 

A Peru for Every Type of Backpacker, pt 2

A Peru for Every Type of Backpacker, pt 2

This is the culmination of our two-part article on the different types of backpackers and what Peru has to offer them. So far, we’ve dealt with the hiking and trekking enthusiasts, the extreme sport junkies, the eco-travelers, and the cultural immersionists. What’s left?…

Time Travelers

From the modern high rises of Miraflores, Lima and the pre-Columbian pyramid shrine in their midst to the traditional villages and towns of the Sacred Valley of the Incas, with vibrantly dressed locals chatting on cellphones and internet cafés housed in adobe structures lining cobblestone streets, Peru is a land of contrasts which in the throes of modernizations still offers up a past rich in mystery and wonder.

  • The world-famous mysterious Nazca Lines and the remarkable thousand year old mummies of Chauchillas
  • Kuelap, a fortress in northern Peru of the Chachapoyas, the most formidable foes of the Inca.
  • The Inca Fortress of Saqsayuhuamán on the outskirts of Cusco and the Lost City of Machu Picchu, the worldwide icon of the Inca Empire
  • the pre-Inca city of Caral north of Lima, the oldest city in the Americas, which as a flourishing urban center as far back as 2600BC

 

Culinary Crusaders

Whether or not you’re a foodie, chances are some fresh ceviche in Lima and roast guinea pig (cuy) in Cusco are on your travel to-do list, the former for the delicate flavors and the latter for the bragging rights. The culinary crusaders among you, hoever, probably have a list that’s more dishes than tourist attractions. What shouldn’t you miss?…

  • Marinated, grilled, and skewered beef hearts (anticuchos) in Ica, proud guardian of Afro-Peruvian cuisine
  • Pollo a la Brasa. Why eat roaster chicken in Peru when you’ve had it before? Because here, it tastes like nowhere else
  • Stir-fried tenderloin and fries known as lomo saltado
  • Seco de Cabrito, or stewed goat in the north
  • In the Andes, Olluquito con Charqui, is a firm potato-like tuber stewed with charqui (dried alpaca)
  • Even if you’re not ready to go as far as some toasted ants, the jungle region has some great dishes to offer, such as Juanes, bundles of chicken and rice cooked in banana leaves, and Inchicapi peanut stew.

Mystic Travelers

A new breed of traveler seeks not only cultural insight but mystical and personal insight as well. The survival of pre-Columbian beliefs in Peru, often in syncretic form, makes Andean or Amazonian Peru an attractive destination for such travelers. What kind of options does Peru offer the mystical backpacker?:

  • Ceremonies at the pre-Columbian sacred sites still believed to contain special energy by New Age practitioners
  • Spiritual cleansings with rubdowns with sacred plants and even with a guinea pig by Andean Curanderos, Healers
  • Hallucinogenic Ayahuasca ceremonies overseen by Amazonian shamans, which are thought to remove the curtain separating the natural and supernatural world, allow one to commune with universal spirits, and to heal problems with one’s own soul and psyche.
  • Very rarely, a traveler gets to visit the town of Queros, which thanks to a willful isolation is considered the town wherein Inca culture has continued unbroken.

Probably your interests fit into more than one category, and the gung-ho backpackers are likely a little bit of each…that just means you’ll have to plan a longer trip! The Pirwa Team includes not only Pirwa Travel Service, which can exist with transport, entrances, and guided excursions, but also Pirwa Hostels, which has 13 different locations throughout Peru and Bolivia. This means that no matter what your interests, and where you end up, you can probably find us nearby!

Stop by the social butterfly Pirwa Colonial Backpackers or the cozy and cheerful Pirwa San Blas Familiar in Cusco, enjoy breakfast on the sunny rooftop terrace at Pirwa Park Hostel Arequipa, or even cross the border and head out on the town with Pirwa La Paz‘s fun-loving team. A a country as varied as Peru, and such diverse groups of backpackers, require a home-grown chain that can offer all that the modern backpacker needs in terms of facilities, budget options, entertainment, and comfort. Check out all of our locations here …see you on the road!