Well cross one thing off the life list. I´ve completed the Machu Picchu trek down the Inca Trail with SAS Travel Peru.
To be precise, here´s a trip iterary for the trek that I did.
Photos and stuff will come later, but first here´s a day by day account for anyone who´s thinking of giving it a go.
If you have any questions about Machu Picchu or SAS, please feel free to make a comment using the links below and i´ll try and answer it for you.
Day 0 - meet at SAS offices in downtown Cusco for a briefing. They go over the route, what to expect, what you need and arrange porters, sleeping bags etc. Also the first chance to meet your guides and your fellow tourist hikers and get acquianted.
Day 1 - Meet up at Cusco at 6am and start a really long drive to the first check point. Most of it down one lane dusty roads where trucks have to back up to let you through! The starting point is called Kilometro 82. Here the porters grab your stuff, you pack up and hit the trail.
The first day is about 14 kilometres of hiking. The first few hours is very tranquil and easy going. Sort of like something out of a kung fu show like Monkey Magic.
You see the river, the train, llamas, alpacas (literally being led by local farmers) mules and donkeys, everything! The second half is a bit more uphill and really starts to get to you. It´s a baptism of fire if you will. Because I was knackered at the end of it!
SAS Travel use a different campsite to other agencies and it´s absolutely breath taking. Believe me the view is totally worth the struggle. If you´re a quick hiker you will get there in time to see the sun set and have a nice hot cup of Milo.
Day 2 - Wake up to that perfect view, knowing it´s a fleeing thing. Because today you´re hiking 16 kilometres (10 miles) - most of it uphill.
The good news is day 2 is the worst of it. And if you can survive that, you can survive anything. By about lunch time, you will hit Dead Woman´s Pass, a pretty steep hike by anyones´standards. It´s pretty steep and chilly up there (the altitude is 4198 metres). So you have to stop and catch your breath. After that, a massive set of down hill steps, which is just unbelievable to see. It´s kind of like a Great Wall of China type deal, undulating everywhere and taking in some great scenery. Also some great Inca sites.
Day 3 - wake up knowing full well that the hardest part of the hike is over and you´re only hiking for half a day! So you wake up late (6.30 am!) and take a comparitively leisurely stroll. One highlight is an absolutely brilliant Inca site with a waterfall behind it you hit at lunch time.
But the real highlight is taking a dip in the freezing cold water fall (while the girls queue for hours for a hot shower) then going to the bar for a well earnt cold beer - the first of the trip. Then kick back and take it all in.
One minor criticism of the trip is that despite the bar and restaurant, this camp site is a bit crap. But it´s the only one where you can stay before hitting Machu Picchu the next day.
Day 4 - Wake up at 4.30 am to be the first in line for Machu Picchu (this part of the trail opens at 5). You start hiking in the dark for about 20-30 mins, before the sun comes up and you realise you´re walking along the edge of a cliff! It´s pretty easy hiking except for about 50 steps which are virtually horizontal. Having survived Dead Woman´s Pass on day 2, this is a mere speed hump!
There´s two Inca sites on the way. One being the sun temple you will see in the 2 odd hours it takes to hike to the Maccu Piccu site. By about 8.30 ish, you´re there!
While it´s a real accomplishment to walk up and see Maccu Piccu before you, it´s a bit of an anti-climax when you start seeing the retirees rock up all clean in their luxury buses all fresh and rosey! But nothing can take the wind out of your sails after that. Then you check in and begin the formal tour of the Machu Picchu ruins.
General feedback on SAS
These guys have great guides and take great pride in their crew and the welfare of their porters (you will have about 2 guides and 20 porters on your trip). Groups are fairly small too. I think there was 18 in our group.
They don´t force you along at any great pace and have plenty of knowledge on all the sites, and yes they speak great English. But most importantly, the food is absolutely awesome! Everyone´s dietary requirements (except obviously religious ones e.g. Kosher, Halaal etc as their ain´t no Rabbi´s or Clerics in Peru!) are catered to no worries at all. Oh yeah and no one goes to sleep hungry!
Also the gear is excellent. They can provide sleeping bags and mats at cost and no one was ever cold or wet! As soon as you arrive at your camp site, tents and common areas are all set up and ready to go. So you don´t have to spend time after a hard day´s hiking putting up a tent.
In short, I can´t recommend them highly enough! Not the cheapest but definitely amongst the best.
General Advice
Don´t bother bringing your own mats and sleeping bag. Because the SAS ones are about $9 USD or something to rent and are awesome. Really thick and comfy.
If like me you´re not a full on hiker, don´t buy a whole bunch of expensive stuff at home. You can either buy it really cheaply in Cusco or even rent it. For example, thermal tights (essential at night) were 30 Soles in Cusco (about $10 AUD) and about $75 for wool ones at home. Same with torches and hiking sticks.
Speaking of hiking sticks, these are an absolute essential, especially for day 2 to save yourself a whole lot of knee pain on the down hill sections. You can buy a walking pole for 10 Soles at the first stop on day one.
Oh and most importantly climatise, climatise, climatise. Give yourself at least 3 days in the high altitude of Cusco before starting the trek, or the altitude will kill you!
Try and get a bit fit before you go too. I did one hour´s personal training a week for 10 weeks and it helped a fair bit.
Above all don´t be scared of it. My partner and I aren´t super fit, and there were plenty of people with no real interest in hiking at all that did it fairly well. It´s hard, but it´s not that hard. What it is though is one of the most rewarding things you can do. And regardless of what tour group you choose, it´s incredibly worth the pain and effort!