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Cycling from Santiago de Chuco to Angasmarca

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Cycling from Alaska to Argentina Travelogue - August 2010 Travelogue

 

Leaving Santiago de Chuco

 

Leaving Santiago, it was back on to the unsealed road once more.

Initially, it was in great condition, and what made the early morning even better, was that the road was rolling gently, but in a general downhill manner. Looking over to my right, I could see a town on the other side of a deep valley, and something inside told me that I would be heading for this town. The only problem was, that there was no he suspension bridge - If there had have been, I would have been there within ten minutes. No, instead I cycled downhill on my side of the valley, and when reaching the bottom, crossed a small river, and headed back uphill again.

 

Peru Bridge


That said, Peruvian bridge building in these parts consists of a few logs and layers of rock and dirt. The Incas would have been ashamed !

Two hours later, I was in that town I had spotted, having detoured hugely where the as-the-crow-flies route would have been ten minutes. The towns name was Chachicadan, which has a thermal pool fed from a nearby volcano. I was more interested in a brunch, however, and the caldo with a cup of coffee did nicely.
Leaving Cachicadan, the road turned, and remained, quite terrible, with rocks, boulders, stones, gravel and inches of dust littering the uneven way.

 

 

Angasmarca road


 

Actually this was one of the tamer sections.



I must confess to having a “What the fuck am I doing” moment, but that’s what the I-Not and Rammstein are there for! A two and a half hour uphill cycle along this poor unsealed road eventually brought me to the peak, and below me, I could see a town way down low.

 

Angasmarca, Peru


 

Looking down onto Angasmarca


The descent could have been a fun filled one, had the road not been in shit state, so instead, it turned out to be a ball crushing, arse numbing, headache inducing, hand jarring bumpy downhill section that saw me go not much faster than I had been pedalling uphill. Eventually, I arrived at the town of Angasmarca, whose charm lay in just how dusty the entire place was. There was a cheapy place to stay, so it being 14.00 I called it a day.
I hope to get to the town of Mollepata tomorrow, where I will see if the river road is viable. If it is, it will knock two days off my journey to Huaraz.

Last Updated (Thursday, 12 August 2010 19:17)

 

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Home Cycling from Alaska to Argentina Travelogue August 2010 Travelogue Cycling from Santiago de Chuco to Angasmarca