Casa Kallpa is a remembering. A vision, an intention, and a mission in the jungle that raised her.
Casa Kallpa exists to be a bridge between modern life and ancient remembering, between body and breath, between the seeker and the medicine that has always been inside them.
Born out of ceremony, Casa Kallpa was first a vision, then an intention, and finally a mission.
Leshka first received the vision for this space during an Ayahuasca ceremony, a moment that would forever alter the course of her life. From then on, her path led her into deep healing and devoted study of the sacred medicines of the Amazon Rainforest. Through the relationship she cultivated with the jungle and its wisdom, the land revealed itself to her in 2021, and exactly seven years after that first vision, she opened the doors of Casa Kallpa, manifesting into reality what had first been shown to her in ceremony.
We do not sell transformation. We open a door, prepare the room, light the fire, and trust the jungle to do what only the jungle can do.
Every ceremony is held by someone in direct lineage with the medicine they carry. No costumes. No shortcuts.
Twelve guests per cohort, always. The medicine cannot be rushed and the jungle cannot be franchised.
Yoga, breath, somatic practice, and silence are practiced to regulate the nervous system, and reconnect with ourselves.
We tend to the land, plant more than we take, and help keep the biodiversity of the land alive.
Born in the Peruvian Amazon, Leshka's life has always been rooted in a deep connection to the land, spirit, and the unseen intelligence of nature. She grew up having a deep respect and reverence for the natural world around her.
For the past ten years she has worked closely with plant medicine, learning directly from the jungle and from ancestral lineages that carry this wisdom forward. She is also a 500-hour RYT, sound healer, and breathwork facilitator.
Her work is devoted to being a bridge between worlds, between modern life and ancient remembering, between seekers and the intelligence of the Amazon.
Through Casa Kallpa, she shares the magic of the jungle, a place she was fortunate to be born into, guiding others back to themselves through direct relationship with the land and the medicine. There is something profoundly transformative about meeting the medicine in its natural home where the jungle is not just a backdrop, but a living teacher.
The jungle doesn't teach you anything new.
It just helps you remember what you already knew
before the world made you forget.
If something in you slowed down while reading this — that is the answer.