Recently my guest Cara Bristol blogged about vacation disasters. In my comment, I mentioned a trip in which my husband and I were almost swept into a raging river by a landslide. Thought I'd share the full story today.
We
went to Peru because, that winter, there was no snow in Austria. That
fact scuttled our original vacation plans for a ski holiday. Hustling
to find an alternative (I'd already secured time off from my job), we
found a relatively cheap package tour to Lima. We'd had positive
experiences traveling with this tour company to Jamaica. They
provided airfare and lodging at a ridiculously low cost, then made
their money on extras. In Jamaica it had been easy to use the hotel
as a base for exploring on our own. We found out a bit late that Peru
was a different sort of place altogether.
It
was the early eighties, and quite frankly, the country was a mess.
Vicious bands of Shining Path guerillas made overland transit
perilous. Strikes and civil unrest occurred on an almost daily basis.
At Lima Airport, we waited three hours for our luggage because the
baggage handlers had stopped work. Rolling electricity outages
afflicted the city of Lima, many regions of which we were advised to
avoid due to the danger of being mugged or worse. Aside from the
amazing gold museum, there wasn't much to see in Peruvian capital. In
any case, we had loftier goals: Cusco and Machu Picchu.
The
only practical way to Cusco was by air, and that turned out to be
almost as expensive as our flight from the U.S. Nevertheless, we
decided to bite the bullet and bought non-refundable round trip
tickets to the old Incan capital nestled in the Andes.
Arriving
in Cusco, we were informed that the narrow gauge railroad to Machu
Picchu had been out of service for three weeks, due to a combination
of rainy season mudslides and another strike. Apparently the strike
had been settled, but it still wasn't clear whether the trains were
running. We were devastated. Cusco was an astonishing place in its
own right, but to come all that way and not get to see the fabled
Incan terraces and the Temple of the Sun...!
Two
days before we were scheduled to return to Lima, our guide told us we
could catch the Machu Picchu train the following morning. We were up
at six AM (a real sacrifice for my husband!) and on the train by
seven. By ten AM we still hadn't left; there were new landslides
blocking the tracks, we learned, that had to be cleared. When the
train finally crawled out of the station, we cheered – but
prematurely, as we were halted by a slide after an hour. Bulldozers
were mustered, mud was cleared, the train proceeded for an hour or
two, before our way was blocked once again.
Normally
the trip from Cusco to the base of Huayna Picchu (only fifty miles!)
takes about four hours. In our case, we didn't arrive until after
four in the afternoon. The heart-stopping bus ride up the steep
mountain flank, along the Hiram Bingham Highway, required another
half hour. And the ruins closed at five thirty.
So
we had less than an hour to explore one of the great wonders of the
world. It was worth the journey, but way too short. Some members of
the tour planned to stay over at the mountain-peak guest house, but
our plane back to Lima left the next morning and we were worried
about losing our money. In addition, my husband was showing signs of
the flu. We climbed back into the bus, trundled down the side of the
cliff and onto the train, and – waited.
The
locomotive finally inched forward, into the inky darkness. We hadn't
eaten. My husband's forehead felt hot enough to fry an egg. Although
we were both exhausted, the hard wooden benches on the train were not
really conducive to sleeping. I remember that trip as a kind of
endless hell – creeping along the tracks that clung to the mountain
side, the rain-swelled Urabamba River audible even though it was
seventy feet below us. We'd stop for obstacles, wait, move, stop...
My husband was hallucinating. I could have believed it was all a
dream myself if I hadn't been so physically uncomfortable.
I
finally must have drifted off into some kind of slumber, when an
awful roar yanked me awake. The train lurched to a stop, throwing us
to the sticky floor. It sounded as a building was collapsing around
us.
The
terrible racket finally stopped. Echoes of the tumult died away.
Along with some of the other passengers, I stepped off the train to
check out the situation.
A
massive wall of steaming mud blocked the tracks, less than ten feet
in front of the locomotive. Trees poked out of the muck at weird
angles. Boulders twice as large as the stones of the Incan temples
lay scattered on the narrow shelf the builders of the railroad had
cut into the mountain side. As I stared in disbelief at the debris, a
few more clods and pebbles clattered down from the heights on the
right. Far below us, at the bottom of the cliff on the left, the
rapids of the Urabamba seethed and boiled.
The
railroad crew hurried us back into the train. I was in shock. If the
slope had given way thirty seconds later, the train would have been
buried. We might well have been swept off the track into the river
coiling below.
My
husband had fallen into an uneasy sleep, moaning and tossing on the
unforgiving seats. As for me, I didn't close my eyes. I heard the
grunt of the earth moving equipment they somehow managed to convey
from further up the route, the shouts of the workmen, the background
mutter of the swollen river. I was awake when the train nudged
forward, rocking on its earth-dented tracks. I kept watch on my
beloved, giving him water, praying his fever would break. I stared
out the open window into the black night, not quite sure we'd really
survived.
I
watched dawn turn the terra-cotta roofs of Cusco from gray to red as
we crawled down, back into the valley. We could have died. With a
smidge less luck, we might have been lost in the Urabamba.
As
the sun rose over the ancient city of the Incas, I found it hard to
believe. I still do. Maybe the old gods were protecting us. Or maybe,
that time at least, we were just lucky.
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