I am visiting Lake Titicaca next week and will be taking a tour offered by All Ways Travel. I chose them based on the recommendations from my friends who have taken Lake Titicaca tours with them. Lonely planet and other travel guide books also recommended them. Again, I am yet to go there so take my advice with a pinch of salt!
I did a 2 days boat tour with a home stay on Lago Titicaca this February.
Visting and living on the island is probably the best and most rewarding experience if you are visiting Puno and Lake Titicaca.
Very possible. Last year, with a friend, we bussed from La Paz, Bolivia in the early morning to Puno, Peru, on the west side of the lake. By mid afternoon we’d checked into our hostel and booked and were on a trip to the Uro Islands on the lake.
We had a storm on the lake as we were leaving the islands, which added to the dramatic landscape and scenery.
For a description of the tour and my trip, I did a write-up on a blog page.
I should point out that once on the islands, I’ve never felt like I was in such a tourist trap as much as that moment. They’re very cool, and worth seeing, but you really felt like you were (And you literally were!) trapped on an island with pushy sellers.
Besides the trips from Puno the other popular boat ride on Lake Titicaca is to go to Isla Del Sol, an island on the Bolivian side. You can either do a day trip from the Bolivian town of Copacabana close to the Peruvian border, or stay on the island in one of the numerous basic guest houses. You can easily spend a day walking around the island and go swimming. There are some Inca ruins as well but I did not find them very impressive.
Photo credit Peter Hahndorf
The boat ride itself is about an hour from what I remember, and it does help if you have a sunny day when visiting the “Island of the Sun”
We do it from Peru side. You have to go to Puno port and buy one of the excursions they sell that could be just for a lake trip or you can stay one night with a family in Taquile or Amantani islands. That option is very recommendable.
You also have the option to talk with a fisherman and negotiate a better price, but my advice is to buy a tourist excursion, because it’s not expensive and nobody there speaks English so you may end up visiting a beach or going to Bolivia because of a misspelling.
“Can I see anything special?” You will see how these people live every day without electricity and some other comforts of modern life.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
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