Lake Titicaca. Sacred Waters
of the Inca Empire.
Lake
Titicaca, at 12,530 feet, is the highest navigable lake and the
center of a region where thousands of subsistence farmers make
a living fishing in its icy waters, growing potatoes in the rocky
land at is edge or herding llama and alpaca at altitudes that
leave travelers gasping for air. It is also where traces of the
Spanish conquistadors' aggressive campaign to erase Inca and Pre-Inca
cultures and, in recent times, the lure of modernization. The
deep blue Lake Titicaca is so large that it has waves. This, the
most sacred body of water in the Inca Empire and now the natural
separation between Peru and Bolivia, has a surface area exceeding
3,100 square miles, not counting its more than 30 islands.
The best-known of the islands dotting Titicaca's
surface are the Uros, floating islands of reed named after the
Indians who inhabited them. The Uros' poverty has prompted more
and more of them to move to Puno. That same poverty has caused
those who remain to take a hard-sell approach to tourists and,
besides pressing visitors to buy their handicrafts, they frequently
demand "tips" for having their photographs taken.
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