After a not very pleasant overnight bus ride - they were the best tickets we could get - we were picked up at 6AM by a neighbour of the owner of the AirBNB rental we had found and whisked to another world. We went straight from our house to the hot baths
Baths are individual and you control the heat. They are emptied and washed down after each usage.
When we came back breakfast was ready.
The garden was full of beautiful birds
and flowers
Garden in Don Simom's Farm, Cajamarca
with mountains in the distance
The home is owned by Ileana Dufresne; the widowed mother of a young child - Alphonso.
Alphonsito
Olga and I traveled with Clara Bravo, our friend from Trujillo (see my Trujillo post).
The patio of the house is typical of older country homes
The nice touches are that almost everything is hand made by the owners. These stairs for example. They are home made, the bracket holding them is home made and they come from the first cut of a tree trunk so only have one flat side.
The sinks in ech of the rooms are what are sold as feeders for pigs. They are re-used old truck tires and cost about $1.50. They look quite nice
All of the wood is the first cut when you are milling a tree (I don't know its name in English) so it only has one flat side. The table the sink sits in is made entirely of this wood - very cheap.
Later in the day we were served tea - English style
The picture contains Ileana's mother (Sophie) visiting from Yucatan, Olga, Clara and Ileana.
Our first night I made pizza on the stove top. It turned out ok but I don't have any pictures. The second night we made Indian food and ate as a "family". The kitchen had a wood-fired stove. Each room has a stove (but without the oven) and all the stoves are used to heat water.
The picture is of Ileana and her father, Eduardo.
Ileana also raises cuy (guinea pigs). She charges about $6.00 for one but cooks two every Thursday and sells a meal consisting of 1/4 of a cuy, ric, veggies and salad for about $3.50.
Her hen house is pure African
But what really impressed us was our rooms. They couldn't have been better.
Olga looks like a real campesina in a 3/4 ton pickup.
Baths are individual and you control the heat. They are emptied and washed down after each usage.
When we came back breakfast was ready.
The garden was full of beautiful birds
and flowers
Garden in Don Simom's Farm, Cajamarca
with mountains in the distance
The home is owned by Ileana Dufresne; the widowed mother of a young child - Alphonso.
Alphonsito
Olga and I traveled with Clara Bravo, our friend from Trujillo (see my Trujillo post).
The patio of the house is typical of older country homes
The nice touches are that almost everything is hand made by the owners. These stairs for example. They are home made, the bracket holding them is home made and they come from the first cut of a tree trunk so only have one flat side.
The sinks in ech of the rooms are what are sold as feeders for pigs. They are re-used old truck tires and cost about $1.50. They look quite nice
All of the wood is the first cut when you are milling a tree (I don't know its name in English) so it only has one flat side. The table the sink sits in is made entirely of this wood - very cheap.
Later in the day we were served tea - English style
The picture contains Ileana's mother (Sophie) visiting from Yucatan, Olga, Clara and Ileana.
Our first night I made pizza on the stove top. It turned out ok but I don't have any pictures. The second night we made Indian food and ate as a "family". The kitchen had a wood-fired stove. Each room has a stove (but without the oven) and all the stoves are used to heat water.
The picture is of Ileana and her father, Eduardo.
Ileana also raises cuy (guinea pigs). She charges about $6.00 for one but cooks two every Thursday and sells a meal consisting of 1/4 of a cuy, ric, veggies and salad for about $3.50.
Her hen house is pure African
But what really impressed us was our rooms. They couldn't have been better.
Olga looks like a real campesina in a 3/4 ton pickup.