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Parade Inaugurating Puno’s Alasitas Fair

Parade Inaugurating Puno’s Alasitas Fair

The Alasitas Festival in Puno, PeruThis May, more than a thousand eight hundred artisans and vendors will be participating in the Alasitas Fair, an Aymara tradition dedicated to the fulfillment of dreams and practiced in the buying and selling of miniatures. Common items include homes, vehicles, money, construction materials, grocery stores, diplomas and licenses, travel documents and more.

Many of these miniatures are destined to be bestowed on statues of the Aymara deity of abundance and prosperity, Ekkekko (dwarf). These represent the wishes of each person, which they hope the Ekkekko will grant them in the coming year. Once families have received an Ekkekko statue (you’re supposed to receive them, or give them as gifts, but not buy one for yourself), they’re responsible for giving him cigarettes and speaking to him to ensure his good graces. You’ll see Ekkekkos throughout the fair, dressed in traditional ponchos, with characteristically open mouths so that you can offer him pleasing cigarettes, and with open arms that you can fill them with miniature goods. In order to help the items bring you luck, it is customary for vendors to bless your purchase, performing a ritualistic ceremony for you in which he or she blows a charcoal and incense smoke over them, sprays them with alcohol, sprinkles confetti, and them wraps them in long thin ribbons while chanting. 

Diverse Manu Biosphere Reserve in the Peruvian Amazon

Diverse Manu Biosphere Reserve in the Peruvian Amazon

Visiting the Amazon near Puerto Maldonado, PeruPeru’s largest national park shelters the most pristine segments of the Peruvian Amazon and has battled with Bolivia’s Madidi National Park in the last years for the title of the most bio diverse site in the world. It’s estimated that around 12,000 species in the Manu Biosphere Reserve remain to be identified, but more than 20,000 plant species, 1200 butterfly species, and 200 mammal species have been registered- meaning there’s a lot to see and do in this lush area of Peru.

Puno & Lake Titicaca: What to See & When to Visit

Puno & Lake Titicaca: What to See & When to Visit

Exploring the Peruvian side of Lake TiticacaTravelers who enter and exit Peru by land generally do so vía Puno in the Peruvian highlands, at the edge of the Peruvian side of Lake Titicaca. Far from being a mere wayside stop, however, it’s a destination for thousands of travelers. Its greatest attractions are the islands of Lake Titicaca, especially the storied Floating Islands of Uros, man-made reed islands which are home to the Aymara-speaking Uros people, believed to be the oldest living culture of the Americas. Travelers often make it a point to visit one of the the traditional Quechua-speaking islands as well, either Taquile or Amantani, both of which have pre-Incan and Incan temples and terracing. They’re reknowned for  their knitting and textile arts, which they’ve practiced for thousands of years; Taquile’s colorful textiles were even declared “Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity” by UNESCO. 

7 Awesome & Overlooked Wonders of Peru

7 Awesome & Overlooked Wonders of Peru

Backpackers-make-the-majo-001Peru has such an overwhelming wealth of natural, cultural, and historical richness that merely working out your itinerary must-sees can be a challenge. Some, such as the Nazca Lines and Machu Picchu, have become so iconic that they require no mention. Others you may not have heard about yet. In no particular order, this is a list of some of our favorite awesome & overlooked Peruvian wonders:

The Official Program for the 2015 Virgin of Candelaria Festival in Puno, Peru

The Official Program for the 2015 Virgin of Candelaria Festival in Puno, Peru

Virgin_Candelaria_Festival_01One of the most spectacular annual festivals in Peru, and in South America in general, is the Virgin of Candelaria Festival each February in Puno, which honors the city’s patron saint. In a stunning display of faith and devotion, the city embarks on a vibrant display of costume, music, and dance, showing off some of the hundreds of different classified dances which have earned the city a reputation as the Folkloric Capital of Peru. More than 40 thousand dancers, 5 thousand musicians, and an astonishing 25 thousand indirect participants (from embroiderers to artisans specializing in masks, boots, bells and others necessary artisan goods) take part to entertain the more than a hundred thousand visitors that the city receives at this time. Celebrations last for weeks, but here we’ve compiled the details on the main days of the 2015 festival: