Sacred. Shifting. Older than time, and still evolving. Peru doesn’t whisper — it remembers. It remembers empires that rose from stone, rivers that carved myth into mountains, and skies that once mapped entire cosmologies. Here, the land doesn’t just look powerful — it is. This is not just Machu Picchu. Not just alpacas and quinoa bowls. This is a land of portals. Of cloud forest ruins, highland altars, jungle ceremonies, and desert geoglyphs still speaking to the stars.
At Rich Hippy Travel, we don’t just visit Peru — we enter it with humility. You’ll hike ancient Inca trails with Quechua guides whose ancestors built them. Sip coca tea in a high-altitude adobe village where the wind still knows your name. Listen to the jungle breathe in the Amazon, guided by shamans who heal with plants older than Western medicine. And stand still in the Sacred Valley — not for the view, but for the vibration. We partner with elders, curanderos, farmers, weavers, and cultural guardians — not tourist operators repackaging sacred knowledge. Your presence supports indigenous-run lodges, land conservation, and the living lineage of Andean cosmology. This is not spectacle. This is reciprocity — with the land, the culture, and yourself.
Peru doesn’t offer escape. It offers remembering. It doesn’t entertain. It initiates. This is travel that sheds the surface. That asks you to slow down, go inward, and open up to mystery. Peru, by Rich Hippy Travel. Meet yourself at altitude.
The ideal time to visit Peru is during the dry season from May to September, particularly if you plan to hike to Machu Picchu, explore the Sacred Valley, or journey into the Andes. During these months, you can enjoy clear skies and cooler nights, perfect for trekking and highland travel. The Amazon is also drier and more accessible during this period. Meanwhile, the coastal region, including Lima, experiences its warmest temperatures between December and April. The wet season, from October to April, transforms the highlands into lush green landscapes but also brings more rain and limited trail access.