Presenter: Parables https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4ia-vrVXl8 Click for audio file

News
Rocks and Flowers
Feb 10 2013
The rocks were cut, polished and placed here centuries ago. The flowers, on the other hand, were fresh, the product of mid-summer rains that water the hillsides each year. Ollantaytambo is a mix of old and new. The main draw is a huge fortress, fashioned by Inca leaders as a defense against invaders and a place for rest and refreshment in the center of what local people call the Sacred Valley. On the other side of the valley, perched against steep hillsides, are seldom-visited colcas (storehouses), where provisions ranging from dried potatoes to leather sandals were stored away as a hedge against drought or disaster. The stone-lined streets and ancient houses have been occupied since the 1400’s, perhaps much longer, making this town one of the oldest continuously-inhabited urban centers in the valley.
Today, Ollantaytambo is a hub of activity — visitors making the trek to famed Machu Picchu board trains here for a two-hour journey down a road-less section of the Urubamba River Valley. Our group spent a night resting at the family-operated Las Portadas Inn. The weather is warmer here than in most of the Andes due to its relatively low elevation (2,800 meters, or about 9,000 feet) and placement in a protected valley. And, despite the thousands of people who pass through here each day to catch the train, the village retains a sort of medieval charm.