| Huayna Picchu with the town of Machu Picchu in the foreground |
Machu Picchu. One of the Seven Wonders of the Tourist World? Or over-hyped?
Soon the terraces came into view.
During high season, a tour of Machu Picchu has to be booked months in advance, High season is the Northern Hemisphere summer, which is also when it is drier in Machu Picchu, Cusco, and the Andean Highlands. The rainy season is the slow season, which is why I was able to book a trip a few weeks ago. One of the people in our group actually booked her trip the night before. That is not happening during high season.
We drew Circuit 1.
By the way, as an aside, any reference to "going high" and taking Circuit 1 is not a reference to the fact that I've had a few cups of the coca tea to deal with the altitude sickness in Cusco. It really does help. And you want to know what coca tea tastes like? Spinach. It tastes just like spinach. Not what I was expecting.
But I'm not. Not only am I away from the cliff's edge, I am holding on to this sign as if gravity itself required me to do so.
By the way, most of the mountains here have "picchu" in the name. Machu Picchu is one, must less photographed moutain. Huayna Picchu, which translates to "young mountain," is another. But the whole place is lousy with picchus.
The Inca capital was Cusco. Machu Picchu does not appear to have been politically important, religiously important, or militarily important. It was at the outer edge, maybe even beyond the outer edge of actual Incan control. And it was built relatively shortly before the arrival of the Spanish. It may not have been even completed. But the lack of political, religious, or military importance is probably why Machu Picchu survived and, eventually, was lost for a few hundred years. It just wasn't a big enough deal for the Spanish to hunt it down.
And the lack of empirical importance is evident from the fact that it was a relatively small town. This was an outpost. It was not a key city in an empire that dominated the western half of the South American continent.
And it has llamas:
Close-up view of llamas:
Would it have been nice to explore the town part of Old Machu Picchu? Yes. But given the limited amount of time you get to see as much as you can by guide -- the alternative being over-tourism that means hardly anyone can enjoy it -- the top-down view did make for great photos.
I present to you for your consideration, Machu Picchu.
I do have a theory about what the true purpose of Machu Picchu was for the Inca leadership. Read no further if you think this might destroy the magic and mystery. But it shouldn't. Machu Picchu is beautiful and extremely preserved because of -- not in spite of -- the fact that it just was not a critical political, religious, or military center. I also don't think it was a season getaway "country club" for the Inca elite, and some historians have surmised.
Given its location just outside the area of Incan control, I think it served as an intelligence gathering post for potential future conquests as all empires live by the inviolable rule of expand or die. Why else built it here? I know that answer is not romantic. There is no aura of mystery to it. And Machu Picchu does not need to mysterious and magical to have a reason to be. Being a well-preserved, well-maintained glimpse into a world from 500+ years ago, isn't that enough?

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