Dave

May 032013
 
hiram bingham resting peru 615nat geo We named the dog Thierry.

Thierry Jamin: 21st Century Bingham, or rotter? ( National Geographic)

In my travels I’ve visited a fair few archaeological sites such as Machu Picchu, Kuelap, Tikal, and various other magnificent ruins of ancient civilisations. I’ve certainly harboured quite a few fantasies of stumbling across a jungle-enshrouded temple myself, fuelled, no doubt, by a healthy enthusiasm for Indiana Jones and lesser imitations. That’s what you get for growing up in the ‘80s. To be fair, I’ve done little about it other than daydream about setting off randomly into northern Peru (where folk in the know reckon there’s actually more than a few undiscovered sites).

That’s why a recent story caught my eye, about a Frenchman currently endeavouring to uncover the tomb of the Inca Pachacutec, which he believes to be located in a relatively recently discovered chamber in Machu Picchu. Thierry Jamin heads up the ‘Instituto Inkari,’ an NGO based in Cusco, whose remit is, ‘scientific research, the protection and the development of archeological sites existing on the Peruvian national territory.’ Having been out in Peru for many years seeking the unlikely ‘Gran Paititi,’ (aka El Dorado), in 2011 a much more tangible prospect emerged, when someone found what appeared to be a previously unnoticed entry way in Peru’s most emblematic site.

With the help of some electromagnetic gear, Thierry and his crew announced they had verified the existence of underground cavities, including a large rectangular room, and some steps, alongside some ‘possible’ archaeological materials / metal. Given that most people have long given up the idea that there’s some great ‘Lost City’ still lurking out there, the idea that we could yet see some kind of “Incan Tutankhamen” scenario admittedly quickens the pulse. While one could argue that Machu Picchu is suitably exciting enough, it is, after all, a century since its discovery, so perhaps it’s about time it coughed up something new?

Incidentally, they actually have unearthed several amazing tombs in Peru in recent years, with significant rulers fully intact with their burial booty – they just didn’t happen to be Incas, who are the ones who sell the tickets.

Back to Thierry. The next step, obviously, was to open up the tomb, hope there were no nasty curses waiting to pop out, and revel in the glory of being a real-life ‘Indy.’ And here’s where it gets even more interesting, as the Peruvian Ministry of Culture turned down his request on a number of occasions in 2012. Things went further south this year, as apparently the French Minister of Foreign Affairs warned the Peruvian ambassador that Jamin is not a proper archaeologist, and had no scientific training. Evidently the message was that letting him run amok in Machu Picchu would be akin to lobbing a border collie into a small room full of glass vases. It subsequently transpired that he received death threats, (perhaps from someone who really cared about the threat to Peru’s patrimony?).

A quick browse on Thierry’s websites and several others has him depicted as anything from a noble man of science and history seeking out exhilarating archaeological secrets, to a lowdown huaquero (tomb robber). So, 21st Century Hiram Bingham, or a serious threat to South America’s most famous historical site? The story, I suspect, has a way to run…

If you’d like to see what all the fuss is about, you can delve into Machu Picchu’s secrets yourself on one of our Peru holidays.

 

 

 

Mar 152013
 
Mujica VW Top 5 frugal world leaders, top 5 frivolous world leaders

Nice wheels Mr President! Jose Mujica in his ‘most valuable possession.’
© www.en.mercopress.com

One thing that struck me when reading about Jorge Bergoglio, aka Pope Francis, is his apparent frugality of lifestyle. This, in turn, led me to wonder which other leaders live modestly, and which lead lives of conspicuous excess. Extensive research has led me to these 10 noble candidates, 5 frugal and 5 frivolous.

Our Frugal Five

5) Pope Francis. The former Cardinal of Buenos Aires lives in a small flat and rides the underground, perhaps even more impressively he supports not Boca Juniors or River Plate, but the rather less glitzy San Lorenzo de Almagro. That’s a bit like finding Madrid’s mayor supports Getafe rather than Atletico / Real Madrid.

4) Joyce Banda. More of a Frugal Frances, Malawi’s president was feted for flogging off her predecessor’s private jet and fleet of luxury cars to maintain a lifestyle somewhat more aligned with conditions in one of Africa’s poorest countries.

 3) Jose Mujica. Back in South America, Uruguay’s president recently made a play for title of the ‘world’s poorest president.’ Donating 90% of his salary to charity, living on a simple farm and driving a beaten up old VW, he is almost the epitome of frugal. However, Uruguay’s not a particularly rich place so his frugality is perhaps less surprising than our number 2…

2) President Ahmadinejad. Evidently one of the world’s more controversial premiers, the Iranian president drives a battered old Peugeot to work and sleeps on the floor. This latter habit apparently put him in an awkward position on a recent state visit to Indonesia, where the poor chap was ensnared in a $3,500 a night hotel suite despite having planned to sleep on the floor of an upstairs room at his local embassy. However, top spot has to go to the man who could buy anything in the world but simply chooses not to…

1) Warren Buffett. The investing legend lives in the Omaha, Nebraska, home he bought for $31,500 more than 50 years ago. Though worth around $53bn, he doesnt have a mobile phone, doesn’t have a computer at his desk (he reads the papers instead), and drives his own Cadillac. He doesn’t own a yacht because, as he puts it, “Most toys are just a pain in the neck.” When he married his second wife, rather than a lavish affair, it was a brief ceremony at his daughter’s house in Omaha. When he bought a corporate jet in 1989 for $6.7m he suffered a fit of guilt and named the aircraft “The Indefensible”. He has begged Washington to increase his taxes but that fits in with his stated aim of giving away 99% of his fortune, most of it going through the Gates Foundation.

Mr Buffet is a worthy frugal chart topper indeed.

Our Frivolous Five

5) Prince Hans-Adam II. The head of tiny Liechtenstein punches well above his weight in the wealth stakes. Poor prince Hans has to juggle a family fortune of $7.5bn with his own personal wealth of another $4bn (he owns LGT Group, a private wealth and asset manager). This all makes Prince Hans one of the richest heads of state in the world and Europe’s most wealthy monarch. Though undoubtedly rich, he’s nowhere near gauche enough to make it to the top of our list.

4) King Mohamed VI. Morocco’s monarch, despite what appear to be laudable efforts to reduce poverty and improve human rights, has quite the lifestyle. The daily operating budget of his palace in Rabat is estimated to be $960,000 although that includes his clothes and the upkeep on the cars, including an Aston Martin or two. He’s got a private jet too. Not a Lear jet or anything like that, no, it’s a Boeing 747-400 which, in commercial configuration, would carry around 600 people. But King Mohamed’s social conscience does mark him down, no such encumbrance for our next frivolous fave…

3) Donald Trump. What he lacks in funds (worth a mere $2.8bn), he makes up for in hair, and modesty: “Those who dislike me don’t know me, and have never met me. My guess is that they dislike me out of jealousy.” Just to show that he’s worth a top 5 place for frivolity, and poor taste, you can enjoy an inside tour of his $100m private jet. Note the charming external livery. However, Trump’s not even taxiing down the runway compared to our next candidate…

2) Vladimir Putin. For a man with a declared income of £75,000 per annum, Putin should, by rights, be closer to frugal than frivolous. However, the annual bill for maintaining his presidential lifestyle is over a billion dollars. The largest of his four yachts alone costs $50m a year to maintain. He has access to over 20 presidential palaces, 9 added under his tenure, just one of which has a staff of 1,000. And why have one aircraft when you can have 58? One of these, his Ilyushin-96, features an $18m cabin fitted out by jewellers, including a $75,000 loo.  Though this report is in Russian, the photos of Putin’s presidential assets speak for themselves.

Yet even dear Vladimir is eclipsed by the man said to have spent more than any other person on the planet…

 1) Prince Jefri Bolkiah. The Sultan of Brunei’s brother, is pretty special in the frivolous stakes, as this Vanity Fair exposé shows. He had a fleet of 2,300 cars, mostly Ferraris and Bentleys. It all helped him blow through $50bn.

It’s the quirkier aspects of his spending which really catch the eye though – $1.5m on a badminton coach? I thought my tennis lessons were expensive. The man spent $1.3m on erotic fountain pens?! $7m on a single rug which is also what he paid Whitney Houston to sing for him. $10m bought him a set of erotic watches. He spent $17m having Michael Jackson perform for his 50th birthday, hosted in a stadium specially built for the event. And his 1,788 room palace is, according to one visitor, “without equal in the world for offensive and ugly display.” A runaway frivolous number 1!

Mar 012013
 
coati1 Food for Thought

Sugar with your cappuccino, sir?

 

As anyone who’s spent time in the Pura office knows, delicious food and drink are never far from our lips, and when we’re not consuming it, we’re often talking about it. Aside from our love of the activities, the people, and the great scenery of Spain and Latin America, we all share a passion (obsession?) with the gastronomy.

This week a number of food-related items caught my eye, mainly centred on Peru (which, of course, has the finest cuisine of any of our destinations). First up was a slightly dry piece on the BBC revealing that research has shown that maize was crucial in the development of Andean society and civilisation from around 5,000 years ago. Think about that next time you’re scoffing that ridiculous size tub of popcorn at your local cinema.

Another one, which perhaps it would be wisest not to think about too closely during consumption, was found in this lovely piece about Peru’s finest coffee. Scroll down to the part about the Uchuñari coffee. I’d heard about this sort of thing going on with civet cats in Indonesia, so I was delighted to hear that Peru is getting in on the act, with some of my favourite animals, ‘tejones’ (aka “coatis”, basically a South American raccoon).

Finally this story, which I must admit raised a chuckle, about copycat restaurants. Now, we’re all very familiar with dodgy-imitation football shirts, and I well remember the pride with which my guide in Beijing showed me his ‘iPhone’ (‘looks like an iPhone, works like an iPhone, is a fake iPhone!!’).

In Peru, whose gastronomy is gaining increasing global recognition, imitating the genuine article has taken on a whole new direction, as a glut of restaurants have opened ripping off the name and design of some of Peru’s flagship eateries. I suppose I shouldn’t really laugh, as the people and places being imitated are doing great things within Peru and elsewhere. Still, you have to admire the originality of the imitators…

If you’d like to check out the flavours of Peru, do take a look at our holiday pages.