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A solo traveler vanished in Peru 5 months ago. Her family won't quit searching for her Their daughter vanished abroad. Months later, they don't know if she's dead or alive - CNN
She does. Her father seems to be a native Spanish speaker, from the videos I've seen.Does anybody know if Carla speaks Spanish?
That definetly increases the probability of speaking Spanish and also increases the number of locals she would have been able to interact with in depth which in turn, increases the number of potential criminals that would have a common ground in approaching her.She does. Her father seems to be a native Spanish speaker, from the videos I've seen.
I know. I've read many times that she speaks Spanish, and besides that many, many people in Cusco speak English. They have a tourism based economy.That definetly increases the probability of speaking Spanish and also increases the number of locals she would have been able to interact with in depth which in turn, increases the number of potential criminals that would have a common ground in approaching her.
Then again, English was not my mother's native language, yet I grew up only speaking English. Likewise, with Spanish, I have known several Hispanic children/ young adults from homes where one or both parents are native Spanish speakers, yet the younger generation only speaks English. It just depends on what language is used around the house and how strongly the surrounding area encourages retaining Spanish.
She seems to have vanished in thin air. The river being so close to Pisac is something that has always concerned me.
I believe you're talking about ayahuasca. It's a brew that's prepared by local shamans and used in "traditional" religious ceremonies, and makes people hallucinate and... you know, get in touch with their inner something. I know people who have used it, and it's not frowned upon. However, it has to be prepared by someone with experience, and since its effect lasts many hours those ceremonies usually take place at night.
Ayahuasca dealers don't exist, afaik. Marijuana and cocaine are cheap and quite easy to purchase, especially in Cusco (the city itself, not the village where Carla went missing).
I hope that was a little helpful![]()
SBMThe articles that I have read about it seem to imply that its origins are with the indigenous groups in the Peruvian Amazon. I wonder if its use is really traditional with highland groups? My guess is that creative highland locals might be offering "traditional ceremonies"- yeah, right to tourists centered on a drug that is not, well traditional to their area.
That possible irony aside, how much of a drug scene is there involving foreigners in the Cusco area? Are there a noticeable number of foreign resident "drugees" loitering in the area and perhaps in the smaller villages along the historic trails? If so, I imagine some are broke and desperate or perhaps are more hardened "bad news" types.
The infamous Charles Sobhraj led an expatriate robbery/ murder gang in India during the 1970s that targeted foreign tourists or wandering travelers. Though a potential assailant would statistically be local, I still wonder if these smaller villages have foreign residents known to approach tourists and befriend them.
SBM
There are some foreigners that stay to open some kind of business, mostly restaurants. Some others stay for a couple months, work giving English classes at informal language institutes, and then move to another city where they do the same. And then there are the ones you're talking about. They sell hand made jewelry, weed pipes, friendship bracelets, etc. on the streets. They stay in the city for a couple weeks, maybe a little longer. But the number is not what I'd call noticeable... maybe 20 tops?
Me too, the description of her father looking and looking is heart breaking. Equally sad is that Carla was so, well, normal outside of her disability.I still think about Carla. I’m blind, and it freaks me out that someone could take advantage of that.
Me too, the description of her father looking and looking is heart breaking. Equally sad is that Carla was so, well, normal outside of her disability.
The route she was taking is common with tourists. Locals are accustomed to tourists and there is no communal hostility to them. The towns are viewed as over all safe. No endemic gangs.
Though a handful of locals, as in any area, sell drugs to tourists, or peddle admission to "ceremonies" involving an ohh so organic (well, at least purportedly so) hallucenagenic drug, the towns are not viewed as the epicenter of a volatile drug scene.
Carla was doing the standard tourist activity of hiking to accessible ruins and shopping at tourist markets. In short, an ordinary woman following her dreams to see certain sites- no risky behavior and no high risk side activities.
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