

The story of Inka's
Empire Tours

156 Fifth Avenue (left
of center) and the Empire State Building.
Moises Loayza led many a trek on the
Inca Trail before arriving on Manhattan's Fifth Avenue to guide
his company's tour operations. More than a decade of "trail-blazing"
in Peru and other South American countries gave him insight into
places and experiences that aren't in any guidebook. That lets
him personalize his tours to accentuate a client's particular
passion -- trekking, biking, rafting or horseback for one, the
entire day at Lima's Gold Museum for another. He also got to
know the locals and works directly with the best.

Moises Loayza, tour
director.
The Manhattan location is no accident.
In 1990, entrepreneur Martin Haggland of that metropolis, now
Inka's promotion director, arrived in Peru with no travel plans
and nary a hotel reservation. Luckily, he soon met up with Moises,
who arranged his tour of the country. So impressed was Martin
that he agreed to set up a tour office in Cuzco and have the
talented, young Peruvian run it -- in 1991, Inka's was born.
After successfully operating in the Inca capital for seven years,
Moises arrived in New York, in 1997, to open the company's headquarters
and create a tour "boutique" that offers an array of
archaeological and ecological tours of the Inca Empire.

Martin Haggland, promotion
director.
Added to this mix is tour consultant
Lola Salas, who has a long history of promoting Peru and its
culture, both as a consultant to the U.N. and as director of
the tourist desk at the Consulate General of Peru in New York.
An expert on Peruvian folk art and textiles, her agenda is to
enrich Inka's tours with the living heritage of thousands of
years of Andean culture. This includes everything from enjoying
folkloric music and dance to visiting colorful native markets;
from witnessing a traditional healer's ceremony to savoring typical
cuisine; from viewing ancient ceramics, gold and textiles to
just relaxing in Inca hot springs or in the garden of a Spanish
colonial hacienda.

Lola Salas, tour consultant.
Airline ticketing director Renato Prada
began his administrative career with the Peruvian government's
Banco Internacional del Peru, in Lima, where he spent 16 years
in successively more responsible positions, including manager
of the loan division. After the bank was privatized in 1998,
Renato served as financial manager for Langrow, a language institute
for executives. In 2000, he came to New York, where he is combining
his management skills with a life-long interest in the travel
industry.

Renato Prada, airline
ticketing director.
Since the above was written, Inka's
Empire Tours was merged into Inka's Empire Corporation, Moises
Loayza has become a consultant to the company, Martin Haggland
was named president, Lola Salas was named tour director and Renato
Prada was named vice president. After September 11th, Inka's
refunded all payments without penalty to clients who decided
not to travel, whether covered by travel insurance or not. To
maintain its debt-free, financial strength, the company moved
out of its Fifth Avenue office and, currently, its staff works
via Internet from their residences.

Portico of 156 Fifth
Avenue.

Inka's
Empire Tours...
Impeccable!
© 2013 Inka's Empire Corporation, Machu Picchu Luxury Tours. All rights reserved.
