Traverse one of the world's most dramatic coastal deserts by private 4×4 — red-sand dunes plunging into turquoise Pacific coves, fossil-studded cliffs, and panoramic viewpoints inside Peru's only marine national reserve. Raw, cinematic, and almost entirely crowd-free.
What to expect
Your driver-guide collects you at the port and enters the reserve through the official checkpoint. The route winds past the ancient Candelabro viewpoint, along the windswept coast to the geological marvel of La Catedral (before its 2007 collapse, now dramatically reduced — still stunning), and to Lagunillas Cove, where sea lions haul out on the rocks below. The guide explains the reserve's extraordinary geology — a desert shaped by the cold Humboldt Current — and its importance as a UNESCO World Heritage site buffer zone. The palette of terracotta, white salt flats, and cobalt ocean is unlike anywhere else on earth.
Good to know
The reserve entrance fee (approx. PEN 11 / USD 3) is paid on entry — bring small local currency or USD cash. The half-day itinerary (4–5 hours) is comfortable for most port schedules. Dust can be significant — a light scarf is useful. Roads inside are gravel and 4×4 is genuine.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Pisco (Puerto San Martin) — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.