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Huayna Picchu — Peru

🚶 Pédestre 8 arrêts Gratuit

🚶8 mapped stops

The vertiginous peak towering over Machu Picchu — a short but intense climb up Inca stone staircases with stomach-dropping exposure and a bird's-eye view of the Lost City. Permit required.

Arrêts de ce circuit (8)

  1. 1
    Huayna Picchu Entry Gate Only 400 permits are issued daily for Huayna Picchu — book months in advance. The climb gains 360 metres in just over a kilometre on Inca-built stone stairs, some carved into near-vertical cliff faces. Not recommended for anyone with vertigo. The entry is timed; arrive early for the best light and smallest crowds. No walking sticks are permitted on the mountain.
  2. 2
    Lower Stone Staircase The climb begins immediately — Inca stone steps ascend through cloud forest. The steps are original 15th-century construction, fitted into the mountainside with the same precision as Machu Picchu itself. Orchids and bromeliads cling to the rocks. The humidity is intense in the forest canopy.
  3. 3
    First Viewpoint The first break in the forest reveals Machu Picchu below — the entire city laid out in its mountain saddle like a scale model. The agricultural terraces, the Temple of the Sun, the Intihuatana stone — all visible from above. This is the view that appears on every postcard, and it is more dramatic in person.
  4. 4
    Cliff Face Traverse The trail crosses a cliff face on narrow stone ledges with a steel cable for handholds. The drop is several hundred metres to the Urubamba River below. The Inca built this path for a reason — Huayna Picchu was a sacred observation point, and the journey to it was meant to inspire reverence and humility.
  5. 5
    Upper Stone Stairway The steepest section — near-vertical stone stairs with the rock face on one side and empty air on the other. The stones are worn smooth by millions of feet over 500 years. Take each step deliberately. The exposure concentrates the mind completely.
  6. 6
    Temple of the Moon Spur A spur trail descends to the Temple of the Moon — a cave with exquisite Inca stonework hidden beneath Huayna Picchu. The temple is less visited than the summit and contains some of the finest masonry at the site. The detour adds an hour but is worth it for the sense of discovery.
  7. 7
    Final Scramble The last section involves crawling through a rock tunnel and emerging onto exposed granite. The summit is close. The air is thin at this altitude — 2,700 metres — and the exertion is real. Catch your breath before the final push.
  8. 8
    Huayna Picchu Summit The summit is a small platform of grass and rock. Machu Picchu lies 360 metres directly below. The Urubamba River curves around the base of both mountains in a tight horseshoe. The Andes stretch to the horizon in every direction — green jungle valleys, cloud-wrapped peaks, and the ancient Inca road network threading through it all. Hiram Bingham saw this view in 1911 and the world changed.

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