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Shanelle injured her knee towards the end of the 12.5 miles we covered on day 1. That night, we saw a huge hairy tarantula about 50 feet from where we had put our sleeping bags on the ground to sleep. We saw another travelogue from people who did this trek that had a picture of a tarantula, but I doubted we would see one. We also saw dozens of these, which if you ask me were kind of creepy.
Day 3 of the trek : Katie and I scurried down the mountain. Jeremy and Shanelle were still there, and a guy with three mules came to bring Shanelle out . Fortunately, all of our packs went on the mules so Me, Katie, & Jeremy got to hike the last 12.5 miles (which was all uphill) with no weight on our backs. I thought the first two days were hard, but they were nothing compared to this one. Aside from doing 6 Km first thing in the morning, we were hiking from 1 PM to a few hours after sunset. I was so fatigued that I was puking most of the night. The tarp wasn't set up right, either, and Jeremy and I got soaking wet by 10 PM. Thankfully, Katie let me share her Thermarest, and I think Shanelle kept Jeremy's spirits up, too.
Day 4 of the trek : I thought the first two days were hard, but after puking all night and hiking however long we did I thought I was going to die. Shanelle, the guide, and the mules made it back long before me, Jeremy, and Katie, and the guy was nice enough to unpack the mules and backtrack to fetch us. He brought back two mules, so the two of us that were in the worst shape got to ride the donkeys the last 1/4 of a kilometer. Needless to say, it was me and Jeremy. I don't know why Jeremy was so fatigued, but he wasn't doing so hot either.
40 miles and around 5 vertical miles were covered by me and Katie. All in all, it was well worth it, and much harder than the Inca Trail. Much harder but there was a genuine sense of accomplishment because it was so remote, and comparatively untraveled.