 We just got a phone call saying that we found out that we are going to Lima, Peru in November 2009. How stinkin' exciting ..... Vincent and I were looking up pictures online and its gorgeous down there. I told him -- if that wont make us lose some weight. :)
We just got a phone call saying that we found out that we are going to Lima, Peru in November 2009. How stinkin' exciting ..... Vincent and I were looking up pictures online and its gorgeous down there. I told him -- if that wont make us lose some weight. :)
So we are going to have to kick our butt into HIGH gear! We have 14 months until then so we best be looking good! :)
I can't wait to go down there --- learn about a new culture, enjoy our trip with some friends and have another experience to write about in our life journal.
Here are some facts about Peru if you dont know about it:
LIMA is a  boisterous, macho city, relaxed and laid-back, yet having an underlying energy,  with money and expensive cars ruling the roost – you can buy anything in  Lima if you have  the cash, particularly in Lima  Centro, the colonial zone of the city. The city’s population has  increased dramatically in the last thirty years, swollen with people arriving  from the high Andes to make camp in the shanty  towns that line the highways. The main plazas, once attractive meeting places,  are now thick with pickpockets, exhaust fumes and, not infrequently, riot  police. The climate in Lima seems  to set the mood: in the height of summer (Dec–March) it buzzes with energy and  excitement, though during the winter months (June–Sept) a low mist descends over  the arid valley in which the city sits, forming a solid grey blanket from the  beaches almost up to Chosica in the foothills of the Andes – a phenomenon  undoubtedly made worse by traffic-related air  pollution. 
Lima is  brimful of culture and heritage, though it’s not obvious at first. On a strictly  guidebook level, there are the museums (the best of which are excellent  and should definitely be visited before setting off for Machu Picchu or any of  Peru’s other great Inca ruins), the Spanish churches in the centre, and some  distinguished mansions in the  wealthy suburbs of Barranco and Miraflores. But in their own way, too, there’s a  powerful atmosphere in the pueblos  jovenes, where Peru’s landless peasants have made  their homes. In addition, Lima’s noisy, fast-moving frenetic craziness is  mellowed by the presence of the sea and beaches. The mix of lifestyles and  peoples is a fascinating world of its own: from the snappy, sassy, cocaine  influenced criolla style – all  big, fast American cars, cruising the broad main streets – to the easy-going,  happy-go-lucky attitude that can seem a godsend when you’re trying to get  through some bureaucratic hassle. And, as anyone who stays here more than a week  or so finds, LimeƱo hospitality and kindness are almost boundless once you’ve  established an initial rapport.
www.peru-travel-adventures.com/lima-peru.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lima  http://www.geographia.com/peru/lima/index.htm
  http://www.geographia.com/peru/lima/usefulfacts.htm
http://www.geographia.com/peru/
Weather when we will be there:  
  Though it does not rain in this  coastal arid region, Lima is plagued by a thick, gray fog called the  garua that hangs constantly over  the city from June through December of the year. This is a shame since without  the ubiquitous fog, the city can have breathtaking views of the ocean. Even more  ironically, right outside the city, the coastal weather is clearer and more  temperate (this explains why the beaches around Lima are very popular among the  locals). 
http://www.peru-pictures.org/peru-pictures-lima-pictures/peru-pictures-lima-pictures.shtml
  http://www.myphotographs.net/peru/peru.html
  http://www.peru-pictures.org/peru-pictures-lima-pictures/peru-pictures-lima-pictures.shtml
Enjoy reading up on Lima, Peru! I will be sharing as we find more about our trip and where we will be staying etc! I can't believe it ---- we are going to PERU!
 
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