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VIRTUAL TOUR 360° |
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Isla Suasi Travel Guide
Traveling to other destinations
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Puno (122 km / 77 miles)
Visitors can return to Puno by lancha (motorboat) across the lake or by car.
Car:
Isla Suasi is just 1 km from Cambria – town on the lake bank. Guests will take a 15-minute boat from Suasi to Cambria and then take a taxi (or private transportation) to Juliaca for 2 hours and 15 minutes along a spectacularly scenic paved road that hugs the banks of Lake Titicaca. If you would rather go until Puno, it will take 1 hour more. The boat will be available when you want to leave the island.
Boat:
Return by boat can be arranged. On the way back, it takes only 2 hours and 30 minutes, since you don’t stop at Uros Floating Islands or Taquile Island. The lancha leaves at 13.00 and arrives at the private pier of Casa Andina Private Collection - Puno at 15.20 aprox.
For more information you can write us to travel@casa-andina.com
Cusco (388 km / 241 miles) & Lima (1,495 km / 935 miles)
Travelers can fly to these and other Peruvian cities from Juliaca (45 minutes by road from Puno). To Cusco, travelers can take the very scenic 10-hour train (3 days per week/4 in high season) that departs from the station in Puno.
La Paz, Bolivia (419 km /670 miles)
The most common and scenic route is from Puno to La Paz via Yunguyo and Copacabana. Travelers are dropped off at the border and picked up by a colectivo or taxi shuttle to go through Customs and passport control. The trip to La Paz takes 7 or 8 hours by bus.
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| QUICK LINKS |
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| Casa Andina Hotels in Isla Suasi |
| Casa Andina Activities in Isla Suasi |
| Puno Travel Guide |
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More than 15 years of publications, including 220 books and guides about Peru and its environment. |
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More than 15 years of publications, including 220 books and guides about Peru and its environment, five encyclopedias and more than 1,000 articles in magazines in Peru and abroad. He is considered the most prolific publisher on ecological topics in the country in the last decade. Forest engineer, journalist, publisher, professional photographer and analyst of environmental topics, Wust is the only Peruvian to publish five articles in National Geographic magazine. Currently he is the director of Wust Ediciones. |
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Ten years crisscrossing Peru, producing 240 TV programs on diverse topics. |
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Ten years crisscrossing Peru, producing 240 TV programs on diverse topics. A journalist and writer, for nearly a decade he has directed and hosted the TV program Tiempo de Viaje, in which he travels throughout Peru (and occasionally other countries), documenting natural, historical and human scenes infrequently visited by conventional tourism. His perspective is not that of a tourist, but of a traveler, who immerses himself in what he finds and shies away from nothing in his reporting. He is also the author and/or publisher of an extensive series of books about Peruvian culture. |
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The author of 15 travel guides to cities and countries around the world, including 4 editions of Frommer’s Peru. |
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The author of 15 travel guides to cities and countries around the world, including 4 editions of Frommer’s Peru, and articles on subjects ranging from the travel industry to food and wine. A travel writer, journalist and photographer, Schlecht first traveled to Peru and trekked to Machu Picchu as a student in 1983, and he has returned repeatedly to Peru over the last two decades. He has also been a consultant on international development projects for the European Union and USAID, as well as a correspondent for a Spanish art magazine. |
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With nearly 15 years of travel experience, and having lived in different places in Peru. |
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With nearly 15 years of travel experience, and having lived in different places in Peru. Agronomist, theologist, and holding an M.A in Amazonian anthropology. He’s lived 7 years with the Aguarunan people of Alto Marañon; also in Huanchaco (Trujillo), Urubamba (Cusco), and Madre de Dios. Consultant in tourism, collaborator for several media resources and professor of Sustainable Tourism Diploma at Ruiz de Montoya University. |
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