This is one of the great Andean routes — a single day that takes you from Arequipa through one of the deepest canyons on Earth and delivers you to the shores of Lake Titicaca in Puno. It's a long day by design, and worth every hour.
Hotel pickup in city centre Arequipa begins at 2:30 AM. The bus heads northeast on the Yura road, skirting the base of Chachani volcano and climbing through the Aguada Blanca and Salinas National Reserve — a protected highland plateau where vicuñas roam freely across the ichu grasslands in the early morning dark. As dawn breaks over the altiplano, the Tocra wetlands come into view, home to flamingos and a variety of migratory birds that use these highland marshes as seasonal habitat. A stop at the Mirador de los Volcanes — the route's highest point at 4,910 metres — offers a sweeping panorama of the Cordillera Occidental, including the silhouette of an extinct volcano visible from the roadside.
The bus arrives in Chivay around 7:00–7:30 AM, the main town of the Colca Valley, before continuing along the canyon's north rim towards Cruz del Cóndor — the premier viewpoint for watching Andean condors ride the morning thermals. With a wingspan reaching three metres, these birds soar effortlessly above canyon walls that drop over 1,200 metres to the river below. Best sightings are typically between 8:00 and 10:00 AM. On the return, the route passes through the colonial villages of Pinchollo, Maca, and Yanque — each anchored by its own whitewashed church — with stops at the Antahuilque and Choquetico viewpoints, where pre-Inca terraces cascade down the valley walls and stone tombs carved into the rock mark ancient burial sites.
Back in Chivay by 12:20 PM, a included lunch is served before the bus departs at 1:00 PM towards Puno. The return crosses back over the high altiplano with scenic stops along the way, as the canyon landscape gradually opens into the broad plateau surrounding Lake Titicaca.
Arrival at the designated meeting point in Puno around 7:30 PM.