corner
 
ACAP
 
ACAP
 
HP
Membership
Register
 
March 2007
corner
 
ACAP
 

Shangri-la in the Andes

By Ron Cole

Does an isolated life-style in the Andes Mountains lead to a longer life? Is “modern” life a negative factor in the calculation?

Scientists, journalists and health enthusiasts have been coming to Vilcabamba, Ecuador, for half a century in search of clues to what makes this out-of-the-way town so conducive to long life.

A scientific study decades ago found that nearly 15 percent of the residents lived past 60, compared with 4.5 percent in the rest of the country. Clean air, a mild climate, mineral-rich water, low-calorie diets and active work and sex lives are the factors most often cited.

But are fewer Vilcabambans reaching the magic 100 number these days?

That's the fear in this town of 4,500 that has built a reputation and a thriving health-based tourist trade on its residents' longevity.

The number of people 100 or older has dropped to five from 10 to 12 in 2000, town official Victor Carpio said. The town has lost four centenarians this year.

Wilson Pilco, a doctor who has seen patients at the town's health clinic for 25 years, said he had no doubt that the longevos, as the long-lived ones are called, were declining in numbers. The healthy conditions that once existed have been diminished by the encroachments and stress of modern life, he said.

"When I first came, people lived an extremely quiet, conservative way of life. They went to bed early and ate only what they produced, all natural with no pesticides or fertilizers.

"Now those habits and tranquillity have changed," Pilco said. "Now, junk food has replaced the grains and the discotecas the tranquillity."

Vilcabamba, which had four or five cars 15 years ago, now has dozens, said Richard Fontes, a Brazilian native who owns a health food store just off the central plaza.

And land speculation driven by the arrival of wealthy foreigners and the construction of 16 inns and health spas since 1990 has created Type A personalities in Vilcabamba.

"Everyone has taken on the foreign mind-set: land speculation, taxis and Coca-Cola," Fontes said. "People are being ground up in the grinding machine, like hamburger."

Rumors that mining projects might be in the works are also causing a buzz among townspeople.

Crews have test drilled for gold and other natural resources in the mountains surrounding the Vilcabamba valley.

Some drilling has been in the shadow of the valley's best-known landmark, a peak called Mandango, where legend has it that Incas hid huge quantities of gold from the Spanish conquistadors.

But officials at the Ministry of Mining and Energy in Quito, the Ecuadoran capital, insist that though half a dozen mining concessions have been granted in the area, there is little chance of large-scale production.

"There may be some exploring going on, but there are no indications of any productive deposits of gold," Carlos Muiragui, the vice minister of mining and energy, said. "We're going to take care of Vilcabamba. The old ones are not going to die because of mining."

Although busier than before, Vilcabamba is still laid back, the climate mild, the air clean and redolent of tropical fragrances. The sweet smell is said to come from a tree called the huilco that produces copious quantities of oxygen.

The town has become a destination for people with heart conditions looking for rejuvenation, said health spa owner Zoila Aguirre, 74, who moved here 15 years ago to improve her health. "I couldn't walk a block without losing my breath before and now take long walks every day," she said.

Centenarians might not be out in abundance, but the number of spry, good-humored elderly people walking the streets in and around Vilcabamba seems high, though they stand out because many of the town's young people have left for bigger cities.

So the jury is still out on Vilcabamba. The implications of life-style on life span raise many difficult questions about our modern times.

(From a report in Transitions)

 

<< Back

 
corner
 
corner
 
 

Av. Angamos Oeste 1155 Miraflores, Lima 18. Tel 222-6359 • Fax 441-4545. Email office@acap-peru.org

Office Hours: Monday - Friday: From 8:30 AM to 5:00 PM

cornerleft   cornerright