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My Community > Pisac
Pisac
Most people visit Pisac to see the market on Sunday, but there are smaller
markets on both Tuesday and Thursday. However Pisac is a pretty village
and has plenty of small handicraft shops and is worth a visit on any day of the
week. There are local buses departing from Cusco every 15 minutes for the one
hour ride to Pisac village. Local buses cost about US$1 each way. A taxi can be
hired for about US$10 each way. There is no public transport up to the ruins.
You can either hike up, starting from the plaza (allow two hours round trip).
Alternatively you can negotiate with a local taxi driver to take you there
(about 20 minutes following a long winding road) and either return by taxi or
walk down hill to the plaza. (A local taxi costs approximately US$5 each way)
Pisac Ruins
A vital Inca road once snaked its way up the
canyon that enters the Urubamba Valley at Pisac. The citadel, at the entrance to
this gorge, now in ruins, controlled a route which connected the Inca Empire
with Paucartambo, on the border of the eastern jungles. Set high above
a valley floor patchworked by patterned fields and rimmed by vast terracing, the
stonework and panoramas at Pisac's Inca citadel are magnificent. Terraces, water
ducts and steps have been cut out of solid rock, and in the upper sector of the
ruins, the main Sun Temple is equal of anything at Machu Picchu. Above the
temple lie still more ruins, mostly unexcavated, and among the higher crevices
and rocky overhangs several ancient burial sites are hidden
Pisac Village and Market (2,970m)
Modern Pisac is a picturesque Andean Village,
typical except for the huge, spreading pisonary tree that dominates the central
square. The village is best known for its Sunday market, which draws hundreds of
tourists each week. In spite of its popularity the market retains much of its
local charm, at least in the part where villagers from miles around gather to
barter and sell their produce. In the tourist section of the market you can
buy a wide variety of handicrafts - mostly the same things you see in Cusco.
Many of the guide books state that handicrafts are cheaper than Cusco but in
recent years I haven't noticed much difference in price. My advice is if you
like something in Cusco, buy it! And likewise in Pisac. Don't wait around hoping
you'll find it a few dollars cheaper elsewhere. Pisac is a good place to buy the
local ceramics including a huge and varied collection of hand-painted multi-colored
beads. There are smaller markets in Pisac on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
The above information has been used with
permission from Andean Travel Web Guide to Peru © All rights reserved |