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Cusco Travel Guide

Cusco, Peru — Activities

Cusco Culture

The Teatro Municipal (Mesón de la Estrella 149) has a range of dance and music performances as well as plays showing, while the Centro Qosqo de Arte Nativo (Avenida Sol 604) has a nightly dance show.

Mama Amerika at Portal Belén 115 holds salsa classes and then samba lessons for people of all abilities. Several restaurants have evening folklórica music and dance shows, particularly around Plaza Regocijo.

Peliclub, at Tecsecocha 458, is a small independent cinema that shows some classic films. On the same road, at Tecsecocha 2 is Sunset Café, which shows recent releases, as does Film Lounge on the Second Floor of Procuradores 389. A number of the pubs and clubs, including Mama Africa’s, Extreme and Ukuku’s also show films during the afternoon.

Cusco Tours

Tourist agencies are mostly strung along three sides of the Plaza de Armas, or up Procuradores, along Calle Plateros or Calle Saphi. Most can organize walking tours of the city, but you are better off exploring on your own. Simple circuits starting and ending in the Plaza de Armas can be taken in every direction. Most agencies can also arrange half day horse riding or mountain bike tours of the city surrounds too.

At the last count there were over 150 agencies offering trips, treks and tours in Cusco. Listed below are a handful of the most established outfits with the best reputations, choosing some for each price bracket. (Top end) Explorandes (tel: (84) 238 380; website: www.explorandes.com) and Peruvian Andean Treks (tel: (84) 225 701; website: www.andeantreks.com); (mid range) Peru Treks (tel: (84) 805 863; website: www.perutreks.com), SAS (tel: (84) 237 292; website: www.sastravelperu.com) and Q’ente (tel: (84) 238 245; website: www.qente.com); (budget) United Mice (tel: (84) 221 139; website: www.unitedmice.com).

There are a lot of small but interesting sites within walking distance of the Plaza de Armas. The most common day walk is an 8km (5 miles) route from the outlying Inca ruin of Tambo Machay (whose name translates as ‘the Inca’s Baths’), via the hunting lodge of Puca Pucara (‘Red Fort’), the carved limestone monolith of Salapunco and the intricately sculpted sacred site of Qenko to the massive Inca ruin Sacsayhuaman, whose colossal stone zigzag walls stand guard above Cusco. Entry to each of the sites is with the Boleto Turistico.