San Francisco Chronicle

Tourists are flocking to ‘Rainbow Mountain’

- By Franklin Briceno Franklin Briceno are Associated Press writers.

PITUMARCA, Peru — Tourists gasp for breath as they climb for two hours to a peak in the Peruvian Andes that stands 16,404 feet above sea level. They’re dead tired, but stunned by the magical beauty unfurled before them.

Stripes of turquoise, lavender and gold blanket what has become known as “Rainbow Mountain,” a ridge of multicolor­ed sediments laid down millions of years ago and pushed up as tectonic plates clashed. It’s only within the past five years that the natural wonder has been discovered by the outside world, earning it must-see status on Peru’s burgeoning backpacker tourist circuit.

“You see it in the pictures and you think it’s Photoshopp­ed — but it’s real,” said Lukas Lynen, an 18-year-old tourist from Mexico.

The popularity of Rainbow Mountain, which attracts up to 1,000 tourists each day, has provided a much-needed economic jolt to this remote region populated by struggling alpaca herders. Environmen­talists, however, fear the tourists could destroy the treasured landscape, which is already coveted by internatio­nal mining companies.

“From the ecological point of view they are killing the goose that lays the golden eggs,” said Dina Farfan, a Peruvian biologist who has studied threatened wildlife in the area just a few hours from the Incan ruins of Machu Picchu.

As proof, he points to a 2.5-mile dirt trail climbed by tourists to reach Rainbow Mountain that has been badly eroded in the past 18 months, scarring the otherwise pristine landscape.

A wetland once popular with migrating ducks has also been turned into a parking lot the size of five soccer fields that fills each morning with vans of mostly European and American visitors.

There are more serious threats, too.

Camino Minerals Corp., a Canadian-based mining company, has applied for mining rights in the mineral-rich area that includes the mountain. The company did not respond to a request for comment on its plans.

Yet the flood of tourists has meant jobs and hard cash for the local Pampachiri indigenous community, which has struggled with high rates of alcoholism, malnutriti­on and falling prices of wool for their prized alpaca. Many have abandoned nomadic life for dangerous gold mining jobs in the Amazon.

Now, they charge tourists $3 each to enter their ancestral land, netting the community roughly $400,000 a year — a small fortune that has triggered a tax battle with an impoverish­ed, nearby municipali­ty, which has seen no part of the windfall.

The surge in tourists also comes with a responsibi­lity to be good stewards of the environmen­t and their new guests, and Pampachiri community leader Gabino Huaman admits he is not sure they are ready to fully handle it.

“We don’t know one word in English,” he said. “Or first aid.”

Despite the challenges, roughly 500 villagers have returned in the past couple of years to take up their ancestral trade of transporti­ng goods across the Andes. The difference is that now they are hauling tourists on horseback.

 ?? Barcroft Media via Getty Images ?? A tourist takes in the mountain’s natural wonder at 16,404 feet above sea level in Pitumarca, Peru.
Barcroft Media via Getty Images A tourist takes in the mountain’s natural wonder at 16,404 feet above sea level in Pitumarca, Peru.

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