From Lima we took a 5ish hour (I think? - all the bus journeys have rolled into one already!) bus to an area called Paracas, which is by the sea. Again this was just a 1 night stop before moving on to Nazca via Huacachina the next day. I’ll admit I’m already having a love/hate (mainly hate) relationship with my backpack so staying somewhere for just one night is slight effort. Even more annoying as the laundrette I took my clothes to in Lima has shrunk or dyed a load of my clothes but that’s another moan! Just an excuse to go shopping I guess?!
After yoga we grabbed breakfast before heading out to the National Park. The best time to visit is in the morning before it gets cloudy in the afternoon. Some of the guys got quad bikes and 5 of us girls went in a van with our own driver/photographer! He drove us all around the National Park (which is basically a desert) stopping a various points along the way. My favourite stop, and the most popular being the Red beach.
The next thing we planned was to go wine tasting on the way to Huacachina. We sampled over 10 different spirits and only 1 wine, but still it was a good experience. They love their Pico in Peru, it tastes like Tequila but worse. It’s nice in a cocktail but not straight!
Huacachina is a tiny little town in the middle of the desert and it’s a hot spot for sand boarding and dune buggies. I sadly had to give sand boarding a miss due to my on going back injury, so the group went ahead without me but I still went for a walk up the sand dunes, in my converse!!! Worse decision ever... I could have made a small beach with the amount of sand I poured out of them after! Of course I wasn’t very prepared and everyone else was equipped with their balaclavas and goggles. I also went to the beautiful natural lagoon which is located right in the centre of the Huacachina desert before hoping on the bus to Nazca. The journey took about 2 hours and was probably one of the most scenic drives so far in South America. We continued through the desert then went through some mountains while the sun was setting over the nearby towns.
During the day in Nazca I visited an old abandoned church which isn’t known by tourists so it was pretty amazing to have the whole place to ourselves. I couldn’t even tell you the name of it or where exactly it was. There was no entry fee or souvenir shops, just the Church. We went down into the catacombs as well as onto the not so stable roof!
Nazca is known by most for the ‘Nazca Lines’ rumoured to have been drawn by UFO’s amongst many other theory’s! There are many tour companies which sell flights over the lines to get the best view but as there is hundreds of them you wouldn’t be able to see them all anyway and it’s very pricey. Luckily for the budget travellers there is a tower just of the main highway you can go up and see some of the lines. At the mere cost of 3 sol which is about 70p! I waited in a queue with about 100 other tourists to climb the tower before heading to the desert to watch the sunset. We went for dinner before our next nightbus to Arequipa!


