View allAll Photos Tagged Peruvian,
Mercado de PISAC - Perú
No deje de verlo - A must see spot
www.portalmachupicchu.com/es/que-hacer/mercados/mercado-d...
Peruvian Hairless dog at Temple of the Sun and Moon, Trujillo
See my favorite Peru photos
See my book "Faces of Celebration" at Blurb.com
Iglesia de los Jesuitas de Cuzco - Perú
es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iglesia_de_la_Compa%C3%B1%C3%ADa_(Cusco)
Lobitos-talara-peru 25/06/2011
andres monteverde (Chochi)
Ricardo martinez (Riky martin)
Jose fernando pareja (Boliqueso)
Viaje al norte peruano km 1147 de la panamericana.
This image was taken during my Palm Beach Photographic Centre's Peru workshop and was captured with a modified D200 using the enhanced color filter conversion.
Post processing was done in CaptureNX The conversion was done by lifepixel. The conversion was done by lifepixel. Their URL is www.lifepixel.com/affiliate/idevaffiliate.php?id=158
© Vincent Versace 2008
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This neoclassical adobe building was officially opened on 1 October 1922.
About the park:
The Municipal Park in Barranco was offically opened on 13 February 1898.
About Barranco:
Barranco is one of 43 districts in Lima, Peru. Its current mayor is Jessica Vargas and its postal code is 04.
The district is considered to be the city's most romantic and bohemian, being the home and working place of many of Peru's leading artists, musicians, designers and photographers. In the 19th-century, it was a very fashionable beach resort for the Limeño aristocracy, and many people used to spend the summer here and in neighboring Chorrillos.
Today, Barranco's beaches are among the most popular within the worldwide surfing community, and a marina completed in 2008 provides state-of-the-art services for its yacht club.
The name Barranco (Spanish for ravine) is descriptive of its topography, featuring homes and restaurants in and around a ravine near a cliff overlooking a sand strip which runs from the Miraflores District to Chorrillos (now flanked by a highway, Costa Verde Ave.).
Mother, daughter and cria, Cusco, Peru
A baby llama, alpaca, vicuña, or guanaco is called a cria (from Spanish for "baby").