Tuesday, October 11, 2011
The road to Q'ero
check it out!! we are working hard to raise the money to bring this to the world.
xxx
Labels:
andes,
cuzco.machu piccu,
jorge luis delgado,
lake titicaca,
peru
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Road to Q'ero : a journey home!
we are thick in the middle of the editing process and are beginning to reach out for support.. we would be thrilled if you would felt you could help us bring this project home! a percentage of the proceeds from the film are going straight back to the Q'eros !
check out the link below!
check out the link below!
Labels:
andes,
beth dunnington.,
ivapeelephoto.com,
jack is cooking,
jack peele,
jorge luis delgado,
julie junz,
machu pichu,
peru,
picaflor productions,
q'ero
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Journey to Q'ueros
There are a few places left on earth it seems that are truly original. Where no cars, or machines, or electricity, or gasoline have ever been. Where the language of the people is shaped by the land and sounds like the whisper of the wind or the gurgle of a brook over stones. Where there is little shouting, when a whistle will do.
Q’ueros, high in the Andes mountains in Peru is this place. After a day of riding on dusty buses and minivans from Cusco and then two days of walking/riding horses over two 17,000 feet, perilous, mountain passes you arrive in a place where the water still runs so clear and clean you can drink from the streams, the silence is profound and the sun falls down in clear cascades of light.
You sit in a valley as the sun is setting. Off in the distance two children are herding the llamas back to their corral. There is no sound. No sound at all. You are cocooned in a silence so still it seems this must be where possibility begins.One of the children begins to sing and dance alone on the hillside with her llamas. The Q'ueros song. And in one clear stroke of feeling you absolutely understand in your very cells that we are The Children of the Sun. That it isn’t just a story, a myth, that there is an Inner sun within us, an Outer sun that we see in the sky, and The Sun behind the Sun, the Creator of it all, but that this is fact. And that we always have been the Children of the Sun. Some of us have just forgotten. We have forgotten the song. But In Q’ueros you remember.
iva
photos copyright ivapeelephoto.
iva
photos copyright ivapeelephoto.
Labels:
andes,
children of the sun,
cusco,
incas,
ivapeelephoto.com,
peru
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Picaflor's UNCONVENTIONAL guide to Cuzco and beyond
Food
After eating potatoes and quinoa for weeks, chifa (peruvian chinese restaurants) are a nice break...delicious and cheap! There are plenty all around the city, we recommend going to the ones that are full of people.
There are lots of cute little cafes, like cafe Meli Melo which have the best hot chocolate ever. add your own sugar and don't forget to try the empanadas and pastries.
Dont be afraid to roam the local markets. They have everything you need for the best prices. Get your shoe fixed for 1 sol and buy a kilo of coca. Check out San Pedro Market, the largest covered market in the city and full of great deals.
For the tourist restaurants, Jack's and Two Nations Cafe have our best ratings.
Shopping
The supermarkets have interesting products you may not find at home, such as Cats Claw tea, maca and quinoa pop.
At the end of gringo alley, on calle Tecsecocha, there is a little hippie store with cool clothes, a movie chillout area and a charming vendor who will give you a free didgeridoo vibration massage.
Also on gringo alley you can also find all sorts of trekking goods for your hike up into the mountain. Dont worry about buying everything before hand, since you can rest almost anything including clothing.
The pharmacies are a great source of lots of meds you need a prescription for in the USA. You can buy antibiotics in case you get a bout of upset stomach, although it is better to call the doctor in severe cases (the tourist doctors are excellent, we know from first hand experience). The naturalistas or herbolistas are a great source of alternative medicines.
If you are tired of vendors hustling you on the street, there is a wonderful fair trade shop on calle Tullumayo, for all your souvenirs.
ETC.
If your stay is long enough, you can rent a cell phone at the airport upon your arrival. Quite convienent when you need an emergency taxi.
The tourist buses which go long distances like Cuzco-Puno are worth your buck. For $12, you have more legroom than in the airplane, a luxury for the 6 hour ride.
Forget about expensive hotel laundry. Any store will wash your items by weight for a fraction of the price and all in the same day.
Beware of the random holes on the sidewalks, you can seriously injure yourself!
Most of all, enjoy the people, small balconies and dont be afraid to explore little alleyways. Cuzco is a city of surprises :)
After eating potatoes and quinoa for weeks, chifa (peruvian chinese restaurants) are a nice break...delicious and cheap! There are plenty all around the city, we recommend going to the ones that are full of people.
There are lots of cute little cafes, like cafe Meli Melo which have the best hot chocolate ever. add your own sugar and don't forget to try the empanadas and pastries.
Dont be afraid to roam the local markets. They have everything you need for the best prices. Get your shoe fixed for 1 sol and buy a kilo of coca. Check out San Pedro Market, the largest covered market in the city and full of great deals.
For the tourist restaurants, Jack's and Two Nations Cafe have our best ratings.
Shopping
The supermarkets have interesting products you may not find at home, such as Cats Claw tea, maca and quinoa pop.
At the end of gringo alley, on calle Tecsecocha, there is a little hippie store with cool clothes, a movie chillout area and a charming vendor who will give you a free didgeridoo vibration massage.
Also on gringo alley you can also find all sorts of trekking goods for your hike up into the mountain. Dont worry about buying everything before hand, since you can rest almost anything including clothing.
The pharmacies are a great source of lots of meds you need a prescription for in the USA. You can buy antibiotics in case you get a bout of upset stomach, although it is better to call the doctor in severe cases (the tourist doctors are excellent, we know from first hand experience). The naturalistas or herbolistas are a great source of alternative medicines.
If you are tired of vendors hustling you on the street, there is a wonderful fair trade shop on calle Tullumayo, for all your souvenirs.
ETC.
If your stay is long enough, you can rent a cell phone at the airport upon your arrival. Quite convienent when you need an emergency taxi.
The tourist buses which go long distances like Cuzco-Puno are worth your buck. For $12, you have more legroom than in the airplane, a luxury for the 6 hour ride.
Forget about expensive hotel laundry. Any store will wash your items by weight for a fraction of the price and all in the same day.
Beware of the random holes on the sidewalks, you can seriously injure yourself!
Most of all, enjoy the people, small balconies and dont be afraid to explore little alleyways. Cuzco is a city of surprises :)
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
taking flight
It is hard to describe the feeling of the mystical city of Machu Picchu. It is like coming home; you can dream on the rocks at the quarry, give an offering to Pachamama, replenish yourself at the place where the sun rays are tied to the earth, have a chat with your neighbors, talk to the surrounding mountains and drift along the winding river.
Most of all, Machu Picchu is a place of flight, the place of the condor.
There is a flying rock that you can sit on and fly off right into Potokusi, the mountain of joy. You must let go of all fear and let yourself be carried away by the wind, waira.
It is this fear of the unknown that stops us from fully experiencing life.
So far some of us have had to overcome a fear of heights, others the need to escape when something becomes overwhelming and others have even had to overcome physical illness.
We encounter these obstacles as opportunities to release a part of us that is holding us back, a fear or pain that is within and we drag along, heavily. In order to really be present we must be aware and release those heavy energies and fears.
We all have wings to fly, we have just forgotten how to use them.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
slowing down
Yesterday we arrived in Cusco where we met our amigo Lorenzo, who is a Q'ero elder and is our host in peru for this journey and our film. We also met a new friend, Carrie, at a local ex pat cafe called jack's. We were all hungry and tired after our over night flight and when our food arrived without stopping or thinking we dove into the food like a pack of animals and began to devour it. Lorenzo and Carrie's food arrived a minute later and i looked up from my feeding trough and in unison and in the same focused energy they held their hands over their food and muttered a small blessing of thanks before they began to eat. the contrast in energy and behavior was remarkable.
Later that evening we told lorenzo what we noticed about our selves. he smiled and said, so from now on , you will slow down and pay attention ...
Today the six of us in our little crew climbed aboard a local bus and road out of cusco to a sacred apus called waina picol. (waina means the feminine apus) and there he performed a ceremony called a despacho, an offering to pacha mama, to introduce us to the apus and to ask for protection and blessings on our journey and with our project. as our despacho was burning an eagle soared overhead. It was a sign of great luck, according to Lorenzo.
I think that we all felt more present, more focused. and when we returned to cusco later that day and sat in a tiny little restaurant for lunch, we all without hesitation held our hands over our food in acknowledgement of pacha mama, of our being human and the great gift that is and that we are here and the earth is always here for us. gratitude... overwhelming awe and gratitude. and we are doing it. we somehow are here, in peru, the guests of the q'uero and being given tremendous support by Jorge Luis Delgado, and we are making a movie that we hope will bring everyone who sees it across the hummingbird bridge with us.
Later that evening we told lorenzo what we noticed about our selves. he smiled and said, so from now on , you will slow down and pay attention ...
I think that we all felt more present, more focused. and when we returned to cusco later that day and sat in a tiny little restaurant for lunch, we all without hesitation held our hands over our food in acknowledgement of pacha mama, of our being human and the great gift that is and that we are here and the earth is always here for us. gratitude... overwhelming awe and gratitude. and we are doing it. we somehow are here, in peru, the guests of the q'uero and being given tremendous support by Jorge Luis Delgado, and we are making a movie that we hope will bring everyone who sees it across the hummingbird bridge with us.
Saturday, August 28, 2010
The mystery of the solar disc
The mystery of the Solar Disc
Belief in prophecy, myth and legend may strike little significance within western society today; yet in antiquity these ‘mysteries’ formed the history and identity of great civilisations. Though weaker in modern strength of belief, it remains that these mysterious ‘truths’ still exist in some cultures, accessible to us through our acceptance of a way of life similar to that of our ancient past. There is a chance to reconnect with our own roots of civilisation, through an experience of life within these places; particularly we can look to the Inca people of Peru. Integral to Peru’s culture and identity, prophecy has remained an influential force over the Inca way of life; and according to Inca legend, a new era has begun.
The Incas measure time by thousand year cycles, or Inti, each divided into halves. Each five hundred year ‘half’ is referred to as a Pachakuti. Just as the Ying and the Yang are connected through ‘opposites’, so do the Inca people perceive these halves; light opposes dark, just as there could be no day without night. Thus this opposing, yet complementary, duality prophesises a time of great change; the eighth Pachakuti saw a five hundred year time period of great prosperity, as the Inca people thrived and flourished, followed by the second half of the ‘cycle’, where the Inca people were prosecuted, and conquered, by the Spanish.
Today, the Incas acknowledge that a new Inti has begun. In our western understanding of time, many may overlook this prophesised transitional time of change. However, to the Incas, this Pachakuti is believed to bring with it peace, harmony and an overwhelming sense of ‘light’. It is during this time that we are able to reactivate the Solar Disc. According to Inca legend, the Solar Disc was a means of accessing a higher power, a cosmic wisdom that remains sacred to Incan culture. This is not only significant to the Incas, but to our planet as a whole. Interestingly, in 1987 indigenous leaders of the world recognised a cosmic shift of energy, from the masculine energies of Tibet to the feminine energies of Peru. Particularly, Lake Titicaca, Machu Picchu and the Sacred Valley of the Incas have been identified as the focus for this remarkable change. Soon, our planet may experience a cosmic change; a shift from dark to light, a renewal of prosperity and love. Though centred in Peru, this is a change for the planet.
We set off to document this ‘transformation’, record and experience the return of light, prosperity as well as acknowledge this return of peace amongst the Inca people. More than this, we aim to experience a reconnection with a past way of life and belief, where prophecy and legend hold sway over life, and significantly, the future of our planet.
Belief in prophecy, myth and legend may strike little significance within western society today; yet in antiquity these ‘mysteries’ formed the history and identity of great civilisations. Though weaker in modern strength of belief, it remains that these mysterious ‘truths’ still exist in some cultures, accessible to us through our acceptance of a way of life similar to that of our ancient past. There is a chance to reconnect with our own roots of civilisation, through an experience of life within these places; particularly we can look to the Inca people of Peru. Integral to Peru’s culture and identity, prophecy has remained an influential force over the Inca way of life; and according to Inca legend, a new era has begun.
The Incas measure time by thousand year cycles, or Inti, each divided into halves. Each five hundred year ‘half’ is referred to as a Pachakuti. Just as the Ying and the Yang are connected through ‘opposites’, so do the Inca people perceive these halves; light opposes dark, just as there could be no day without night. Thus this opposing, yet complementary, duality prophesises a time of great change; the eighth Pachakuti saw a five hundred year time period of great prosperity, as the Inca people thrived and flourished, followed by the second half of the ‘cycle’, where the Inca people were prosecuted, and conquered, by the Spanish.
Today, the Incas acknowledge that a new Inti has begun. In our western understanding of time, many may overlook this prophesised transitional time of change. However, to the Incas, this Pachakuti is believed to bring with it peace, harmony and an overwhelming sense of ‘light’. It is during this time that we are able to reactivate the Solar Disc. According to Inca legend, the Solar Disc was a means of accessing a higher power, a cosmic wisdom that remains sacred to Incan culture. This is not only significant to the Incas, but to our planet as a whole. Interestingly, in 1987 indigenous leaders of the world recognised a cosmic shift of energy, from the masculine energies of Tibet to the feminine energies of Peru. Particularly, Lake Titicaca, Machu Picchu and the Sacred Valley of the Incas have been identified as the focus for this remarkable change. Soon, our planet may experience a cosmic change; a shift from dark to light, a renewal of prosperity and love. Though centred in Peru, this is a change for the planet.
We set off to document this ‘transformation’, record and experience the return of light, prosperity as well as acknowledge this return of peace amongst the Inca people. More than this, we aim to experience a reconnection with a past way of life and belief, where prophecy and legend hold sway over life, and significantly, the future of our planet.
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