Not much to say about this trip, it wasn't very adventurous but still enjoyable

.
I spend 1 month on the coast surfing good waves in cold water (16°C) which is hard for me because, home, water is between 24 and 30°C all year long. Advice for surf amateur going to Perù : it's easy to find board to rent but not so easy to find wetsuit
at the right size with no holes so take your own in your luggage.
Jamie : i only surfed 3 different spots but peruvian coast is loaded with high quality waves (most of them are left). I surfed the longest wave (chicama 4km !) in the world... but Poséidon wasn't with me and i didn't have the right swell. And indeed, it was difficult for me to leave the coast, i had to kick my ass to move to the montains to see somethng else from Perù.
I went to Huancabamba (brought back a SP pup from over there) which is a famous place for "brujos" using San Pedro and sometime aya but i didn't partake in a ceremony but i saw them at "la laguna negra" a very sacred lake at ~3500m (altitude).
What else, some nice ruins (Kuélap, Chan Chan), mummies in cliff and the traditionnal sight like caves and waterfalls near Chachapoyas.
I didn't take San Pedro over there cause i didn't met the right people (i'm not good at connect with people

) but i could test coca leaves (really efficient to climb and to surf too

). I've also took some cocaine, usualy i don't do coke but i was with a peruvian politician and he told me "this is the best coke you can find in Perù" so i tried it and you know what ? Cocaine is cocaine, even the best one.
The 2 cutting i brought back, i found them in the
hudge market in Piura and it was a challenge to find them in this crowd with my bad spanish

.
About San Pedro : i saw them everywhere, in gardens or in pots close to the door of houses because it's the guardian but i didn't see them in the wild (from 0 to 3500m altitude), each time i saw a columnar it wasn't a Trichocereus. If someone could chime in to tell where are they growing in the wild, i'll be thankfull
« I love the smell of boiling MHRB in the morning »