Ok, so you are the comfortable type
and rather not trek the strenuous Inca
Trail to Machu Picchu. What's the point in all
that fatigue, anyway, if you can take the train, right?
Well, rail transport to Machu Picchu
is indeed a good alternative for the trekking-adverse:
not better nor worse, just different. Still charming
and attractive, yet much more comfortable.
Train transport to Machu Picchu is
managed by Peru Rail, a company of the Orient Express
group (which also runs the exclusive Monasterio
Hotel in Cusco and Miraflores
Park Plaza hotel in Lima).
The spectacular journey begins at Cusco
with a series of switchbacks, or zig-zags, as they are
know locally, that last for half-hour: the trains ascends
the Picchu mountain, up to the city's highest point
(El Arco or The Arch) and out of Cusco into the village
of Poroy.
The train then descends into the Sacred
Valley and the foothills of the Andes, along the Urubamba
River, passing through a beautiful landscape packed
with typical Andean crops and grasslands, herds of llamas,
and colourful villages.
Rail transportation to Machu Picchu
features two basic route alternatives and three carriage
qualities.
In alternative to the Cusco
departures, you can choose to take the train
at Ollaytantambo or Urubamba, in the heart of the Sacred
Valley of the Incas. Regarding carriage qualities,
You can choose among the plain Backpacker train, the
more upscale VistaDome train, or the luxurious
Hiram Bigham train (which departs from the village
of Poroy, some 20 minutes from Cusco's city centre).