
Travel
Peru for the female traveller
Five fun extras on Alpaca Expeditions’ inaugural women-only trek
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Heart pounding, legs protesting, I lean on my trekking poles and take a few deep breaths, my gaze turned toward the snow-capped peak of Salkantay Mountain in the Peruvian Andes. My mind turns to thoughts of my mum, who passed away suddenly less than two months ago, and how happy she had been that my sister Jo and I were taking this trip together. She would have likely worried (but never said it aloud until we returned to Canada) while also being thrilled for us as we transported her to this enchanted place through sporadic texts and photos. It feels possible in this moment to be both buoyed and deeply sad. “You’ve got this; we’ve got this!” wheezes my co-trekker Bee as she struggles past. And we do.
Peru’s Alpaca Expeditions launched its first women-only tour to Machu Picchu last June. I was lucky to grab a spot on the inaugural run-through of this seven-day trek of a lifetime along the Salkantay Trail to the spell-binding Incan sanctuary in the sky. My mum ingrained in my sister and me the importance of women’s empowerment, and I know she would have loved to hear all about the lives and adventures of this group of 10 determined women — five trekkers and a team of five incredible guides, cooks and porters. I pop a coca candy into my mouth, take another deep breath of thin mountain air and continue ever upwards.
Words cannot do justice to the sheer scale and grandeur of the Peruvian highlands at the heart of the Inca Empire. At its height, from roughly 1438 to 1532 when the Spanish conquistadors arrived, the realm of the Incas stretched more than 4,000 kilometres along the Andes, from modern-day Ecuador south through Bolivia and northern Chile. In my readings ahead of the trip, I kept coming across the term “sacred geography” in descriptions of Machu Picchu and other Inca archeological sites. The idea makes perfect sense when I crawl out of my tent and into this magnificent mountain landscape. The muted light of the dawn slowly kisses one, then the next and the next in a seemingly endless series of emerald peaks; when dusk falls, those same jagged hills fade and disappear as the night skies take over, revealing a million stars and the Milky Way. Little wonder that this fantastical geography was so interwoven with the spiritual beliefs of the Inca, who incorporated their veneration of the natural world into their architecture — designing settlements like Machu Picchu in which the holy and the practical intertwine.
Time and again on this trek, we hike up to excavated archeological sites to marvel at the ruins of temples cleverly laid out to capture the sun’s rays on the winter solstice. Just steps away from these sacred buildings, a waterfall of agricultural terraces speaks to the quotidian. Designed to favour different crops at various altitude — corn and potatoes near the top, fruit trees at lower elevations — the terraces also incorporate sophisticated drainage and clever irrigation systems that funnel rainfall. Everywhere, the architecture is engineered to be both a part of the landscape and able to withstand the earthquakes and temperature swings that were a fact of life in the Incas’ rugged empire. In between settlements, an extensive road network ran north to south — one main thoroughfare along the coast and inland paths that wove through mountain passes, with smaller trails linking communities. Remnants of these roads, including the famous Inca Trail to Machu Picchu, continue to be used to this day.
The Salkantay Trek to Machu Picchu forces us into seven days of intense activity and close quarters. We’re together 24/7, sharing meals and 10-hour hikes, bonding over blisters and broken nails. Our group of five trekkers establishes trust almost immediately, talking for hours that first day and night, sharing who we are and what drew us to Peru. My sister, Jo, is an environmental consultant and an avid hiker, while I’m a magazine editor who loves birdwatching; partners Bee and Connor are high school teachers in Texas with a penchant for fine food and adventure travel; Jennifer, a solo traveller, is a meteorologist and travel journalist. Our ages range across three decades, and yet the friendships are easy, the camaraderie bolstered by long dinners and gruelling climbs whose success depends on each of us cheering one another forward when exhaustion sets in.
On the Alpaca Expeditions side of the equation, our guide, Marcela, is the only member of the all-female crew who speaks English. Quiet with an easy smile, she sits back and allows us to dawdle and bond over meals taken around a communal table, most often under a tent as the wind howls and the doors flap. The atmosphere is intimate and unrushed — tea, tea and more coca tea (coca is thought to help alleviate symptoms of altitude sickness) is poured as the conversation flows and stories are shared. Talk of gear and gradients quickly gives way to how we can recreate these amazing dishes at home. Marcela acts as translator when we coax the busy head cook, Marleni, out of the kitchen to quiz her about herbs and spices, or ask her to share recipes and tips.
Though the language barrier means we trekkers can’t chat at length with the kitchen crew and porters, we learn small details about their lives along the way. Marleni is in her early 30s. A trailblazer in a male-dominated tourism industry, she comes across as serious but has a luminous smile when we compliment her on the meal. She was in charge of selecting and managing Alpaca Expeditions’ first all-women crew and admits that she’s finding it refreshing to forgo the usual machismo present in the kitchen. The work is challenging, she says, but she feels comfortable knowing her team is motivated by the same goal — working hard during the March-through-November tourism season to help support their families. Her crew comprises her younger sister Lorena, who is saving up to attend nursing school, Eulalia, a single mother of four, and Basilia, who has two children at home.
Each day, we trekkers marvel at how quickly Marleni and the porters bound past us on the mountain paths with massive packs on their backs, Lorena laughing as we clumsily attempt to keep up for a few metres before giving up rather than risk a sprained ankle. On the third day, as we cross the trek’s high point — the snow-covered Salkantay Pass at 4,650 metres — the crew even finds time for an impromptu snowball fight before passing us again on the three-hour downhill to the evening’s campground. By the time we arrive, our tents are up, and we have just enough time to set out our mats and sleeping bags before dinner is served.
Over the next few days, there are plenty more ascents and descents, icy winds up high followed by the warmer breezes of the green cloud forest. There are waterfalls and burbling streams, diving hummingbirds and delicately floating butterflies. Switchbacks along parts of the route are just wide enough for one, and we must scramble up the banks to make way for the trains of heavily laden horses also travelling these trails. “Quiet on set!” Jennifer yells at regular intervals. She has been contracted to upload regular weather and geography clips to the Weather Channel and needs us to stop chatting just long enough for her to record each spectacular video.
When we can walk side by side, Marcela answers our questions about the Inca Empire. We are sponges soaking up the history of this epic civilization as we trek through the heart of the Andes. But our guide is also keen to highlight how Peruvians live today. She points out a flourishing passionfruit plantation on one steep mountainside here, an avocado plantation by the side of the road there.
And then there is the coffee. Hectares and hectares of coffee.
On the fifth day, we divert from the main trail to an organic coffee farm belonging to the Choquequirao women’s coffee co-operative. There, we’re greeted warmly by Mery, the entrepreneur running the show and our seed- to-bean-to-cup guide. She throws us some bags, and we get to work harvesting ripe beans.
Mery laughs gently at our unskilled attempts to “help.” Our hands-on tour — which moves on from picking to roasting and grinding — ends with us enjoying the freshest cup of coffee we’ve ever tasted. The tour feels like a truly authentic experience — it’s just a quick dip into coffee culture, but an immediate insight into how hard Mery and her team work. “Quiet on set!” comes the familiar refrain from Jennifer as she leans over a clay pot, giving an exaggerated eyeroll of ecstasy at the aroma of roasting beans as she stirs with one hand and records a quick explainer video on her phone with the other. I picture Weather Channel viewers across the United States racing out to their local coffee shops to demand Peruvian java.
We each buy a few bags of this out-of-this-world-delicious coffee to gift to friends back home. Because the co-operative is small-scale, their coffee is sold to neighbouring villages rather than internationally, so it’s our one chance to score some. Mery promises to send our purchases back to Alpaca Expeditions headquarters in Cusco to be picked up on our return; when you’re hiking eight or more hours a day, you don’t want to be lugging a couple of extra kilos of coffee in your backpack!
Speaking of Peruvian delicacies, I’m embarrassed to admit that until I joined this tour, I had no idea that Peru is internationally renowned for its rich culinary traditions, with foodie visitors from around the globe travelling here specially for cooking classes and to taste for themselves Peruvian dishes that blend Indigenous flavours with Spanish and Asian influences.
As we sit down for an open-air meal a few days into the trek, Marcela informs us that Marleni will be giving our group of food-obsessed hikers a lunchtime cooking class. High fives and cheers ensue as we scramble to clean off the picnic table and call dibs on tasks. Peru’s national dish (and one of the country’s most popular foods) is ceviche. The classic version features raw sea bass marinated with lime juice, onion, salt and hot chilies. But that’s not exactly practical on the road, so Marleni has put together a vegetarian ceviche cooking class. Under her tutelage, each of us takes a role — zesting and juicing limes, chopping garlic, peppers, celery and onions, or peeling mangos. Crunchy Cuzco corn (a giant-kernel version) forms the base of our pop-up ceviche lunch. “I don’t think the kitchen crew will be recruiting you for the team anytime soon,” says Marcela wryly as she surveys my dicing skills.
Marleni’s team has been spoiling us with incredible meals three times a day, working out of tiny makeshift kitchens in tents or at the back of basic huts, so we’re humbled to realize through first-hand experience the level of care that goes into each dish prepared in such cramped conditions.
On the morning of the last trekking day, Marleni bakes us a beautiful cake. After lunch, the four crew members will leave us to head to their hometowns to regroup and get ready for the next tour, while we will move ever closer to our final destination of Machu Picchu. Even after witnessing Marleni’s backcountry kitchen wizardry, we’re not sure how she made a cake from a basic electricity-free shelter on a mountain plateau.
And then, before we set off on that final hike to Aguas Calientes (the closest town to Machu Picchu), we share stories — the cooks and porters speaking about how empowering it is to run the tour and show off their strengths, the travellers speaking about how special it has been to bond with their hosts and fellow hikers.
This all-women trip has been a rare gift at a time when I needed it most — a chance to experience awe and witness the sublime during a time of loss for my sister and me. To be encouraged and lifted by these women during this arduous trek through paradise feels perfect.
On the final day, we are up before dawn to grab the first bus to Machu Picchu, with the goal of being there for that perfect moment when the golden rays of morning sun flood this magical ancient citadel in the sky. Today there is no need for Jennifer to yell “Quiet on set!” For once, our group is silent, taking in the glorious remnants of the royal retreat spread out beneath the towering Huayna Picchu Mountain. I feel grateful to be here with Jo, Marcela, Jennifer, Connor and Bee. Though we may never meet again, we have been privileged to share so many stories and much laughter, bonded over tough climbs and otherworldly views — from strangers to family.
This story is from the May/June 2025 Issue
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