TRANSPORT IN PERU
PART (1) - BUSES
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shop Last updated 28 September 2011
It was election time in Peru
in early 2011, and this open-top Mirabus
Hyundai 56-seater (No.1, VG-2086) took
a break from tourist duties in Lima to promote candidates El
Escudero and Castaneda (mayor of Lima) from the Congress party. They didn't win.
These pages review some of the transport items of interest
that caught my eye during a fascinating trip to Argentina and Peru in February
and March of 2011. The various parts of this story are; 1. Argentina; Buses in Buenos
Aires 4. Peru;
Buses (this page) Peru is a vast country with a wide spectrum of transport
interest. I have tried to capture a varied selection of items that we passed on
our travels. This page looks at the buses, and we start in Lima,
the capital city and major port on the Pacific Ocean coast.
Double deckers are not common in Peru, but here's another one. This is a sightseeing bus belonging to Turibus, based in
Miraflores which was the coastal area of Lima in which we stayed. I think
the licence plate is A4N-773. Does anyone know what it is? Far more typical of
the buses around Lima is this ETUSA Daewoo (No.63, A6T-737), starting to plummet
down the hill from upper Miraflores to the coast below the cliffs on route
EO35. ETUSA (Empresa de Transportes Unidos Sociedad Anonima) has been
trading since 1935 and currently has a fleet of over 150 buses.
Here is another ETUSA bus on route EO35 again, in upper Miraflores, Lima.
This one (make unidentified) has licence plate A6A-710.
Equally colourful is this ETUPSA
73 Mercedes (No.76, UJ.9762) on route NO 07 in Miraflores again. ETUPSA 73 is variously known locally as "The
73", "The Green Bus", or "The Crusher" during the rush hour! Downtown in Lima a lot of traffic is picked up by what I
would call 'minibuses', and here are two examples waiting at the lights. On the
left is unidentified UG-9581, and I hope the driver will put down his newspaper
when the lights change. On the right is A6A-711, built by Asia Motors of South
Korea. The company is now defunct, having been
merged into Kia in 1999. I think it's an Asia Combi. But what interested me most in Lima were these wonderful
normal-control buses that thurdered ponderously around the city, packed like
sardine tins with passengers. Makes included International, GMC and Ford, and it's quite hard to tell their age. This
might be a second-hand US school bus, for all I know!
Here's another one - this one's an International (UO-5383). And here's another. What a glorious beast. I'd be delighted if someone could tell me more about there wonderful
buses. If you know about these, please give me a call. Now we have a complete change. This is Aguas Calientes, at
the northern end of the railway line to Machu Picchu. It's a helluva line that
runs for miles down a narrow gorge beside a raging river (there is no road), and
you can see more
details on my Andean railways page
. Apart from hiking (which takes several days) Machu
Picchu can only be reached by catching the train to Aguas Calientes, and then
taking a bus up the 1200 foot climb on a single-track road of endless hairpin
bends. This picture shows the confluence of the railway, a waterway running into the river Urubamba,
and the buses waiting to take tourists up to the top. Here is the road. Way down on the left is the end of the
railway, with a train waiting to return up the line, and the Urubamba river,
which looks quite benign from this distance, but is very much a monster.
Switching back and forth across the rest of picture is the road from Aguas
Calientes climbing up to Machu Picchu. It doesn't go anywhere else,
or connect to any other road. There's nowhere else to go. If you're lucky, the road will be wide enough to pass
something at the point where you meet a vehicle coming the other way. If not, a
lot of reversing is involved. In fact the only vehicles you are likely to meet
are another tourist bus (we reckoned there were around 25 of them, all virtually
identical) and the occasional service lorry for the hotel and the national park
at the top. Since the buses tend to take a run at the hill, and keep the power
on as they take the hairpins, meeting something head-on can be quite sudden and
a bit alarming! The higher you get, the more alarming it is,
because the drop over the side becomes more and more dramatic. And here is a typical bus - a Mercedes-Benz
LO915 Senior (bodywork by Marcopolo), with a picture of Machu Picchu on the rear. I
mentioned that there was no road from the rest of Peru to Aguas Calientes, so
you will deduce correctly that all the buses arrived here on the narrow-gauge railway, along with
every other single darned thing, however big or small it is. Here's another one (No.11), loading passengers at
the top for the wild ride back down the hill. There is very little space at the
top for turning round and parking, and the drivers have developed
a disciplined procedure so they don't get in each others' way, and a strict order of succession is maintained. A radio message is
sent to the bottom of the hill as each bus leaves. Machu Picchu was built by the Incas, and their capital city was Cuzco, also
our base for exploring that part of the world. It's a beautiful place, 10,000 feet
up in the Andes mountains, and has much to explore - once you get used
to the thin air - and this is one way to do it. This thing is not a bus, I
agree, but it's not a tram either - it's a 'tranvia', which is (apparently) a conventional
vehicle made to look like a tram. This
imitation 1910 steetcar operates cheap tours around the city. A far more common form of transport in Cuzco is the
minibus. Narrow streets and some challenging roads prevent bigger buses
from getting established, so the minibus is definitely the weapon of choice.
This example from the fleet of Correcaminos (which means something like
"Roadrunners") is a Mitsubishi Fuso Rosa. Actually this is a classic - the first
Rosa rolled out of the factory in 1960, and they are still making them now! Not many
(any?) buses can claim 50 years of continuous production. Shane Conway tells me that this is a Toyota Hiace.
The fleet of Zorro buses was large and varied. And
here's another Hiace, this time working for La Florida. 'Batman' was probably the most common operator in Cuzco. This bus
is No.38, definitely a Toyota Hiace, and probably dating from around 1988. Is that
hand emerging from the top of the side door hanging on
for dear life, or just holding the door on? 'Batman' operates newer buses too. Here is yet
another - but much more recent - Toyota Hiace. Finally we ascended even further to 13,000 feet, as our trip
ended a long way south of Cuzco in the region of Lake Titicaca, the highest
navigable lake in the world. This picture was taken on our way into Juliaca, and
shows another Mitsubishi Fuso, this time an early Rosa Deluxe. I'm not sure
what the company name "20 de Mayo" signifies. A quick Google search to see if
it's a special date in Peru records that a fleet of UFOs was seen over
Marcahuasi on 20 May 2007. I doubt that this is the explanation, although I have
to say that the Lake Titicaca area is one of the
strangest places I've ever visited, so you never know....
The various other parts of
this story are; 1. Argentina; Buses in Buenos Aires 4. Peru;
Buses (this page)
SOME QUICK LINKS WITHIN THIS WEBSITE;
Home
Email me
Events Diary
THE CLASSIC BUSES WEBSITE SHOP
Halfcab survivors list
Links
Classic Irish Buses
OR CLICK HERE FOR THE
COMPLETE WEBSITE MENU
for bus books, models, videos &
DVDs.
2.
Argentina; "The search for Di Tella".
Classic British saloon cars made under licence in Argentina
3. Argentina;
Air
transport
5. Peru; Train travel in the high
Andes
6. Peru;
Air
transport
7. Peru; Assorted transport
















2. Argentina; "The search for Di Tella". Classic
British saloon cars made under licence in Argentina
3. Argentina; Air transport
5. Peru; Train travel in the high
Andes
6. Peru;
Air
transport
7. Peru; Assorted transport