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3 Oct 2013
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Biking to Machu Picchu
Hey,
just wanted to share the newest info on the unofficial Peruvian version of the Death Road of La Paz - the road from Cuzco to Santa Maria/Hidroelectrica and eventually, Machu Picchu.
First off, the road from Cuzco to Santa Maria (the closest village to Machu Picchu accesible by bike) is tricky all year round: because of landslides, waterfalls, springs and streams from the snow-capped mountains and good old negligence, sometimes the road is blocked. Because Peru is, well, Peru, the police sometimes don´t bother to stop you and inform you there´s a roadblock or a bit of a road that´s actually been destroyd completely; there have been numerous bikers having to turn around mid - way simply because the police officers told them to go back in the middle of the road instead of the very beginning of it due to mis-communication or simple laziness. So once you reach Ollantaytambo, it´s a good idea to check with the local police and make them tell you whether the road is accessible.
If however you still get stuck, there are quite a few villages that have hostels with garages for bikes (especially Santa Teresa) as well as gas stations or locals selling gas.
And finally, as you get to Hidroelectrica (the hydro-electric plant), that´s where the road ends. Literally. The only way to get to Machu Picchu is either taking the ridiculously expensive train (USD 50 one way for a 15 minute ride), or hiking (around 7km, but the views are totally worth it). As you reach the Hidroelectrica, there is a tourist check-point sort of post. Ask for the security guards; they will happily watch your bike for 15-20 soles (around USD 9) a night while you make your Machu Picchu hike.
The other thing is, most people stay the night in Aguas Calientes, or the Pueblo Machu Picchu. This is however a horrible, overpriced, stifling, tourist-packed sort of place. I highly recommend staying the night at Jardines de Mandor - a lovely quiet hostel on km 114 along the train tracks to Aguas Calientes. It´s cheap, comfy, quiet, has great food, great trekking if you want to stay a bit longer, the manager speaks good English, and is incredibly helpful. It´s only 2 km from the actual Machu Picchu and around 2,3 km from Aguas Calientes (where you will inevitably have to go just to purchase your Machu Picchu tickets).
cheers
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31 Oct 2013
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I recently did this exact trip and no offense but the previous post almost sounds like it was written buy whoever sells the train tickets from Cusco directly and is basically making it sound horrible. To be honest, riding from Alaska to Chile, taking the "back door route" to Machu Pichu was in fact one of our most favorite roads of all. And we did it two up on a KLR. The other couple we were with were on a KTM 990 and a BMW f600. The ride itself was spectacular. There are MANY places to stay along the way that are beautiful little villages along the river and there was gas a plenty. In fact had we known now what we didn't know then we would have stayed a few nights along the river and not so many nights in Cusco deciding wether to take the train or not. The death road was absolutely stunning, granted I can see how it could be dangerous in heavy rains but other than that it was AMAZING. And the drive through all the villages between Cusco and Agua Caliente were stunning themselves. As well as the roads and huge windy beautifully paved mountain passes between them all. There is even a town where if the rain is to bad and you can't ride on where you can jump in the train from there and continue on. But if you can make it ti Aguas Calientes, there you will find one of the most stunning hot springs in the entire South America. We rhode our bikes down into the canyon and put our tents up and stayed for I believe 5 usd if not free. Then there is a hostal where you can park your bikes indoors for again I believe 5-10 usd a day while heading to Machu Pichu. Cheers and have fun...
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22 Sep 2016
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cpaulson
I recently did this exact trip and no offense but the previous post almost sounds like it was written buy whoever sells the train tickets from Cusco directly and is basically making it sound horrible. To be honest, riding from Alaska to Chile, taking the "back door route" to Machu Pichu was in fact one of our most favorite roads of all. And we did it two up on a KLR. The other couple we were with were on a KTM 990 and a BMW f600. The ride itself was spectacular. There are MANY places to stay along the way that are beautiful little villages along the river and there was gas a plenty. In fact had we known now what we didn't know then we would have stayed a few nights along the river and not so many nights in Cusco deciding wether to take the train or not. The death road was absolutely stunning, granted I can see how it could be dangerous in heavy rains but other than that it was AMAZING. And the drive through all the villages between Cusco and Agua Caliente were stunning themselves. As well as the roads and huge windy beautifully paved mountain passes between them all. There is even a town where if the rain is to bad and you can't ride on where you can jump in the train from there and continue on. But if you can make it ti Aguas Calientes, there you will find one of the most stunning hot springs in the entire South America. We rhode our bikes down into the canyon and put our tents up and stayed for I believe 5 usd if not free. Then there is a hostal where you can park your bikes indoors for again I believe 5-10 usd a day while heading to Machu Pichu. Cheers and have fun...
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I fully agree!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Evergreen
...the unofficial Peruvian version of the Death Road of La Paz...
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That sounds rather exaggerated!
We did this road a few years ago. Then it was far from being exceptional bad for Peru and Bolivian roads. Indeed I can´t remember any challenging part. The only issue was snow on the highest pass. Can´t remember the name or the altitude.
The comparison fits, if one means the present conditions of the "Road of death" in Bolivia. Since there´s an paved alternative route for many years now, over which nearly all heavy traffic goes, the old "Road of death" is a walk in the park and maybe one of the safest roads in Bolivia.
As cpaulson said: one of the most senic routes in Peru and a must ride!
Cheers
Panny
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2 Oct 2016
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I agree about the roads being sketchy and dangerous to get to Hyrdroelectrica. The largest problem in my opinion is that once you make it to Hydroelectrica there is no easy to find safe place to park your motorcycle. It is a tiny little town on the side of a mountain with no tourist business's at all. To get to the town, you have to cross a nightmare section of 100m of softball sized rocks.
To do it over again I still would have rode instead of taking the train, but would have found a nearby tourist town to Hydroelectrica and asked a hotel to pay to store my motorcycle and shuttle me to Hydroelectrica.
That would be a way better solution than having to worry about the safety of your motorcycle in Hydroelectrica while you are doing Machu Pichu. Also, if you are traveling with any beginners or women I think parking your bike in Hydroelectrica is one of those things that is likely to start a mutiny situation. lol
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22 May 2017
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gatogato
I agree about the roads being sketchy and dangerous to get to Hyrdroelectrica. The largest problem in my opinion is that once you make it to Hydroelectrica there is no easy to find safe place to park your motorcycle. It is a tiny little town on the side of a mountain with no tourist business's at all. To get to the town, you have to cross a nightmare section of 100m of softball sized rocks.
To do it over again I still would have rode instead of taking the train, but would have found a nearby tourist town to Hydroelectrica and asked a hotel to pay to store my motorcycle and shuttle me to Hydroelectrica.
That would be a way better solution than having to worry about the safety of your motorcycle in Hydroelectrica while you are doing Machu Pichu. Also, if you are traveling with any beginners or women I think parking your bike in Hydroelectrica is one of those things that is likely to start a mutiny situation. lol
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I think you'll find plenty of female riders perfectly capable of riding this or any road a man can. A German lady we met in Patagonia rode the Camion de Laguna (5200m asl) on her own and my wife also rode both the north and south Yungas roads last week - and said the southern road was far more challenging than the so-called Death Road - though both are pretty easy. Assuming women cant do something is a pretty old fashioned view.
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22 May 2017
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Precis
I think you'll find plenty of female riders perfectly capable of riding this or any road a man can. A German lady we met in Patagonia rode the Camion de Laguna (5200m asl) on her own and my wife also rode both the north and south Yungas roads last week - and said the southern road was far more challenging than the so-called Death Road - though both are pretty easy. Assuming women cant do something is a pretty old fashioned view. 
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Thats fine, I'm okay with being old fashioned! 
btw: I think it was pretty obvious from the overall tone of the post that I was not trying to single out women.
I try to be helpful and informative in the posts that I make here. Saying things like: Latin America is no more corrupt then any other place. Or, well 1% of women motorcyclists could ride that does not really add much useful content to these threads in my opinion.
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24 Sep 2017
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Just to add to this, wife and I have just visited MP, riding from Cusco to Santa Maria, then on the dirt to Santa Teresa, 2 up on a fully loaded 2015 GSA...... no issue at all....... my dog could of ridden this road..... if he could ride!! (smart dog  )
We then rode to Hydro at 0430 again no problem at all..... sure its a bit bumpy....we both stand when required..... and sure you need approach each corner as if something is coming the other way but other than that...... no issue.....the base is a solid as a rock...... give it a go...... and if it gets to hard..... turn around and go back
David and Em
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4 Nov 2013
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The Train ride from Hydroelectrica to Aguas Caliente is 50 Soles or about $18 US each way. Not $50!
The train ride is 11 kilometers apparently... I am not sure I didn't measure it... anyway it was easy to walk next to the tracks in 2 hours and quite a lot of people do it.
The last train from Hydroelectrica to Aguas Caliente leaves at 4.30pm.
Aguas Caliente is indeed expensive and full of tourists, which Mirrors the situation for its tourist attraction of Machu Pichu. Tickets were booked out 4 days ahead when I went there, and the online payment system was crap and never worked for me.
There is parking available at Hydroelectrica with some guys that live there. They do this for anyone that needs it - motorbikes, bicycles, 4wds, trucks or whatever you have. I have no affiliation with them but enjoyed their friendly and convenient service. They gave me a flyer they had just made up to let people know where they are
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28 Nov 2013
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Cpaulson,
as for my post, I simply wanted to point out a few things that I think are worth knowing.
I absolutely agree that the road is stunning and the views are amazing, but I´m new to motorcycling and had I known the condition of that road and how mental all the collectivo drivers were out there, I probably would have thought twice before doing it.
Now that I´m more confident after my 11 000+ kms on a bike in South America I´d definitely do it again (actually, probably will once im back from Argentina); all I was saying was that it´s worth taking precautions. Especially checking if there are no roadbloacks, having to turn back when you´re halfway there is no fun at all.
Safe travels
Ellie
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3 Oct 2016
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@gatogato
you can park your bike safe at hydroelectrica.
30m before you register is a bridge to the left. Cross the bridge and after 100m is a parking place. they take care for the bikes for small money.
i read it it this thread already...and i have been there last month
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1 Oct 2014
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Photos and blog of my ride to Machu Picchu in 2013
Here is a link with a few photos and blog of my trip to Machu Picchu.
Travel the Road
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10 May 2015
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I met a french lad in Bolivia who was disgusted with himself that he had got the train because of lack of information on the road to Machu Picchu so I thought i would update this thread.
Biggest change is the bridge just before the Hydro station is currently not passable. There is a box girder bridge in place but no entry and exit ramps just yet. The workers are getting off their busses, crossing a foot bridge and getting into a bus on the far side. This obviously causes difficulty with parking a bike at the hydro or checkpoint.
From Cusco the road via Pisac is very good tarmac in the dry [non porous so very slippy in wet]. If you don't like constant switchbacks i suggest you get the train though.
Santa Maria to Santa Teresa is dirt as previously stated. One deeper unconcreted river crossing [April].
I followed a previous suggestion and stayed in Santa Teresa [Same hostal, straight on when entering town and last on right before dirt. Marked with a H, glass doors to bike parking inside.]
I paid for Minibus to the Hydro for 5 soles with workers.
There is an early train 08.45, I happened to walk into the station as it arrived and thought it was a sign so i took it. Fantastic journey [28USD] Glad I took it though, on the walk down the tracks i met a lot of tired people before they had even got the chance to roam all over Machu Picchu mountain.
Hope this helps someone else!
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11 May 2015
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Can you give me the 411 on visiting MP by motorycle?
I have nver seen motorycle pictures at the MP site so I guess there has never been a way to get to it on two wheels?
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21 May 2015
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Bicycles and motorbikes are prohibited along the rail track. Even if you got past the sign in point at the hydro station there's another checkpoint at the bridge from aguas calientes not to mention the entrance gate at the top of the bus track. Don't see why you would bother to be honest!
The walk along the rail line is a nice one.
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