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Our 2 Day Story From an Inca Trail near Sucre, Bolivia

Chataquila – Chaunaca – Maragua – Niñu Mayu

This article has a GPS track and our story is available in video.

Day 1: – 20km, 500m D+
Day 2: ~20km, ~600m D+ (if you go towards Potolo – which I would do in case of walking this way again – look up another GPS track or follow the road! My GPS track goes to Niñu Mayu and back to the verge of the crater of Maragua from where we got back to Maragua with a truck)

Bus from Sucre to Chataquila

Hop on a bus from Plazuela San Juanillo in Sucre. They might tell you they are leaving in half an hour, which might turn out to be actually more than an hour waiting to make the bus full.

Before departure all kinds of sellers come and try to treat you mostly with sweets.

Starting point

After a 1,5 hour ride we get to the starting point of the trail. The hike starts with a ~500 meter descent from 3600 meters.

The scenery is amazing towards Chaunaca.

The walk should be easy except, if you haven’t acclimatized enough or the sun is cruel hot.

Don’t expect to find a shadow on your way. Bring lots of water.

After in Chaunaca continue to follow the river from the road to the south.

We’ve refused to go down there for a swim, where the water is deeper, but ever since I regret it.

It was so hot, and the water was so refreshing!

Montañas de Colores

We were lucky finding this shadow, there was nothing similar to this along the way.

Had to stop for 1 hour for the heat to go away.

Our time spent chilling in the shadow was accompanied by great melodic performance.

Crazy geology.

The Bridge

At the bridge you’ll meet an indigenous person who will sell you tickets to cross towards Maragua. It costs around 10 bolivianos per person (~1.5$)

There was a dog here. Don’t worry, usually all dogs we met along the way were nice and polite.

You’ll need to cross this bridge and get to the level of the river first. From there keep this direction, towards where this photo looks (south-west). You should see a nice little waterfall, but even before that, you’ll need to climb up on the right part of the valley. The trail will turn then to the right (north-west).

After crossing this bridge, we’ve lost lots of time figuring out our way to Maragua, because we were following a wrong GPS track from the internet.

The orange line is our track. Ignore the part (red circle) where we are lost from our track, instead continue to the waterfall and then NW

Don’t leave this part out after crossing the bridge.

This is the small waterfall I’ve mentioned before. You’ll need to climb up on the right side of the valley here and then turn NW.

The trail will climb high.

Along the way you’ll find some houses, where you would think nobody lives.

The people in these houses are living completely disconnected from modern society and barely speak Spanish.

This lady lives probably alone here with her dog.

She confirmed that we are on the right way to Maragua.

I would imagine a good chat taking place here between these disconnected humans.

The view from these stone chairs is stunning.

Getting closer to the village we see electricity connected.

It is getting late, the moon showed up above the mountains.

Local family in the sunset.

Getting to the village, we have found no accommodation open, so we were accepted luckily for the night by a local shop owner.

I am trying to make the little girl smile.

She was like a clone of the little girl from the animation Monsters Inc. Very cute.

Our 5 star stay with dinner and breakfast included.

It was a nice morning.

First we’ve climbed to see Garganta del Diablo (40m waterfall) and Mirador Santa Ana (3127m).

While climbing we observe how interesting the geology of the place is and how minimal the village of Maragua is, compared to our expectations from the day before.

We continue now towards Niñu Mayu – the other side of the crater of Maragua – to spot those dinosaur footprints!

I went deep into the valley to Niñu Mayu. I am 0.5km away from the dinosaur footprints and my time is off. I am searching for them with my backpack left on a rock and can’t believe I was so close and did not make it.

The dinosaur footprints aren’t so far from the crater of Maragua, but I couldn’t make it. And it is because I have listened to the shop owner to return from Niñu Mayu, because there is nothing more to be seen if we hike further to Potolo.

It would’ve been a way better idea to go to Potolo on the second day, because there are much more busses leaving to Sucre, and we wouldn’t had to make the way back to Maragua again from Niñu Mayu or the dinosaur footprints.

Plan going from Maragua to Potolo by touching the dinosaur footprints!

Our time limit was set by the truck which was waiting for on the top of the verge of the crater leaving at 12:30pm, and the next limit was set by the bus which was planned to leave from Maragua to Sucre from 1:30pm.

Later it turned out that the bus is the same truck we hopped on at 12:30pm.

The experience was unique and beautiful.

Waiting for the “bus” from which we just got off earlier in the village about 300m away. We have returned to the shop, from where it should leave at 1:30pm.

On the picture from right to left: René, his mother, his daughter (Monsters Inc. star), another woman from the village.

The “bus” to Sucre

We continued our way back to Sucre with this truck. It took about 4 hours, collecting everybody from the village and their grains and other products they were bringing to the city.

To get a feeling of how this whole trip worked out I recommend you watch the video, which has Hungarian narration, but it is subtitled in English, so turn on captions and make sure you watch it on YouTube directly that allows the captions feature.

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