Posts Tagged bolivia tour

Land of the Brave

On a journey of extremes – South America’s richest rewards are in its poorest country.

The cliff-hanging cycle tour down Bolivia’s Death Road is punctuated by rest stops at breathtaking precipices, where guides inform riders about the tragedy of others who have attempted the route before them: the bus that plunged from this ledge, killing 100; the four rusty crosses here that mark a car’s final, fatal turn; the backpacker on a mountain bike, just like ours, who took that hairpin bend way too fast and sailed into the abyss.

My wife and I are not so young and we are not especially seeking a near-death experience when we tackle the 64-kilometre Death Road, an hour out of Bolivia’s political capital, La Paz. It is our last full day on our Bolivian highlights tour, at the end of a three-month, whirlwind tour of South America, which has been action-packed enough for middle-aged risk-takers. We’ve swum with crocodiles and piranhas on our Pantanal tour wetlands of Brazil, strolled blithely into guerilla and landmine territory in Colombia and trekked to the continent’s fabled lost cities.

So we take this ride with the safest outfit money can buy, undeterred by its name, Downhill Madness. We start at 4700 metres above sea level and descend 3600 metres in a few hours, not so much for the adrenalin but because, after only two weeks in this much-ignored country, we do not want to miss a final glimpse of its boundless, heart-stopping beauty. Beneath our pedals, clouds drift through valleys. Don’t look down! Look up and a glacier steals the limelight.

Bolivia was our afterthought. It was not even on the itinerary when we left home. We squeezed it in only after the constant urging of travellers we had met on the road. They said the Salar de Uyuni tour, the salt plains that cover the biggest flat surface on the planet, must not be missed.

We entered Bolivia on a road rimming Lake Titicaca, the high-altitude lake shared with Peru. The postcard does not change at the checkpoint. The indigenous peasant farmers still herd llamas and alpacas; pre-Columbian ruins still speckle the countryside; the locals still speak Quechua or Aymara; the women wear the same bowler hats and smile with the same flash of gold-filled teeth; and, offshore, small boats made of reeds still carry fishing families to artificial islands, also made of reeds, a lifestyle that has persevered on both sides of the border for hundreds of years.

Our first stop, much like the advancing Spanish conquistadors in the 1530s, is Copacabana, 90 minutes over the border. There is little risk of mistaking this modest lakeside town for Rio de Janeiro’s Copacabana. And yet that brazen child in Rio was named after this holy place. Pretty but shambolic, Bolivia’s Copacabana, one of the nation’s big tourist attractions, has no auto-teller machines foreigners can use. We discover it will be two days before the bank opens. Nearly cashless, we book in to the only hotel we can find that takes credit cards, Hostal La Cupula. It is a little above our usual standard so we’re relieved the next day to find $80 covers the huge double room with ensuite, three-course dinner with wine and breakfast.

Catholicism and Inca legend are fused in the town’s Basilica de la Virgen de Candelaria. It contains a wooden statue of a dark-skinned Virgin Mary, dating to 1583, to which miracles are attributed to this day. The grandson of the Inca ruler Manco Kapac is said to have carved the statue after the virgin appeared to him in a dream.

The next day we are three hours to the east in La Paz and witness again the melding of belief systems. At the 16th-century San Francisco Cathedral, an indigenous woman goes to the marble font of holy water at the entrance. Discreetly, she dips a plastic bag into the font, looks about, blesses herself, then leaves the church with her loot, perhaps a remedy for a sickly child or a dying mother or a failing crop.

La Paz perches improbably on steep Andes valley walls and sprawls through mountains that howl with the echoes of its vanquished wilderness. The view from slum alleys can be priceless, though the 18,000-year-old Chacaltaya Glacier overlooking the city has all but vanished, spoiling more than a postcard. It has been a vital source of water for La Paz.

The city buzzes – it is wild but with manners, in the way of a place civilised by indigenous and Spanish customs. A tough suburb in the heights rollicks to a brass band on the night we arrive, Aymara men and women dressed to the nines and dancing in the streets, unhindered by the piles of litter at their shuffling feet.

La Paz in Bolivia

La Paz in Bolivia

Our La Paz stopover tour deserves more than the few days we afford it, so we wear out our shoes on the cobbled streets of the Witches’ Market, knowing we’ll never again buy good leather boots so cheaply and never again find so many alpaca jumpers, scarves and blankets sold in so many shades of bargain.

But we have come with a grand plan. We will bus it three hours to Oruro, from where we will take a first-class, overnight train to Tupiza, in the far south of the country, from where we will ride horses into the canyons and sunsets that possessed Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid until their apparent deaths in an ambush.

Sometimes the best plan is to have no plan. Ours is ambushed by a train strike.

Instead, we take an overnight bus further east, on one of Bolivia’s few sealed roads, to Sucre, the judicial capital. It is a historic, charming, manicured, middle-class university town with cheery boozing establishments and comfort food for Western palates. Otherwise, it is an inoffensive stop on the way to the far more interesting Potosi, the world’s highest city at 4090 metres above sea level.

Now UNESCO-protected, Potosi was built around the biggest silver mine on the planet. A scar of barren mountain, Cerro Rico, towers over the town. Founded in 1545, the mine bankrolled the Spanish empire and Potosi, current population 2700, grew to 150,000 by the year 1600. The mine was, and remains, a disgrace. More than 8 million miners have died over its life and many continue to die each year, either crushed by rockfalls in its shafts or, more commonly, of silicosis pneumonia or from the poisonous effects of carbon monoxide, arsenic gas, asbestos and acetylene vapours.

Every day, tourists enter the mine, which yields less silver today, more zinc and lead. It is not recommended for the asthmatic or claustrophobic. I am both. But I cannot resist this opportunity to witness men at work in conditions that have changed little since the Spanish drove indigenous and African slaves to their deaths.

Next on the journey is Uyuni which is not a destination but a launching pad to the world’s biggest and highest salt flats. Here on our Salt flats tour we discover infinity. All perspective is lost out here, where the earth is white, blindingly white. Risen from a lake – and before that an ancient sea – the baked salt earth covers 10,500 square kilometres of Bolivia, 3650 metres above sea level. It is one colossal mirror for the sun.

From kilometres away, the labourers are visible; six or seven salt miners. They are clothed from head to toe but not all can afford sunglasses. They shovel half a tonne a day per worker, for less than $20. For a little more than half that you can buy 50 kilos of their table salt. The supply seems inexhaustible and yet Bolivia still imports the stuff.

Convoys of tourists in four-wheel-drives crawl over the salt-encrusted lake, as if daring to be swallowed. We get out to take trick photographs. There is no foreground nor background in the infinite white, so we become tiny people inside a giant’s shoe, we recline in a potato chip and we poke from wine bottles as if we’re the corks.

We stop at a craggy island rising from the flats that is populated by giant cacti and walk among these eerie triffids. They have grown at one centimetre a year and many are 10 metres tall, so they are 1000 years old. We find the tallest cactus: more than 12 metres. From here we take in the flats. Everything that isn’t salt seems so tiny – the trucks, the tourists frolicking on the flats, all human history before and since the conquest.

Red Lagoon in Salt Flats

Red Lagoon in Salt Flats

That night we sleep in a hotel made of salt bricks and eat at its table made of salt, before another two days of wonders: pink flamingos swarming on lagoons coloured fluorescent green and red, the world’s highest desert, remote geysers spewing steam enough to power cities and thermal springs to soothe a traveller’s aching bones.

Back in Uyuni, there is a steady procession to Minuteman Pizza, the perfect comfort food for cold and weary travellers. We swear, like many others, that it is the best pizza on the planet. Maybe it’s just the altitude. Maybe it’s the fact they take donations for the salt miners to buy them sunglasses. Or maybe it’s all the amazing photos that travellers have left on the walls.

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Heading to the Salt Flats

Chimu Adventures travelers – Ben and Josie Benoit – embark on a fantastic journey around South America and the world. Below is a continuation of their adventures in the salt flats down to Chile:

On arrival, we breakfasted at a little hotel and freshened up before our salt flats tour set off at 10.30am. We were greeted by our guide (Jaime), our driver (Alberto) and our cook (Lydia) and set off in our Toyota Land Cruiser (Bolivian people nickname them donkeys). Our first stop on day 1 is the train cemetery, 3km out of Uyuni. It is a collection of abandoned steam trains, mostly British, and quite a sight in the middle of the desert. From the train cemetery, we drove for another 25km to a town on the edge of the salt flats called Colchani, one of few towns around the salt flat with permission to mine and trade salt on the open market. Mining has to be conducted manually using axes and spades and we saw first-hand how the salt is then dried, grinded and bagged. The factory we visited (by factory = two small rooms!) produces 1000kgs per day for 1 Boliviana per kg (~20p). We carted one bag around with us as far as the Chilean border but then abandoned it over worries of mistaken white powder.

From Colchani we started our tour of the salt flats. It is huge (80km sq.), it sparkles against the light blue sky and looks truly amazing. En route across the plains we visit a salt museum and wind up at ‘Fish Island’, a huge, cactus-strewn rock (made from coral), which affords spectacular views across the plains. We munch up our first meal

Salt Flats in Bolivia

Salt Flats in Bolivia

from Lydia, scale the island and take a 2km trot across the plains. Further across the plains by car, Jaime and Alberto pick an ideal spot to take the requisite comedy pictures that we’d decided to avoid (since everybody else has posted millions on facebook). We settled on 3 or 4, taken with the gang – see below. That evening, we bed down in a really humble village called San Juan, eat some more fabulous home-cooked food from Lydia and reflect on one of the best days of our trip so far.

We’re expecting days 2 and 3 to be a bit of an anticlimax – after all, we’ve seen the salt plains now – but we were wrong. First, we head to an ancient cemetery containing human remains from pre-Inca times, buried in rocks – slightly spooky, but fairly fascinating. From San Juan we drive across some testing terrain up into the volcanic mountains of southern Bolivia. Our route is via a number of lagoons that house thousands of pink flamingos and the backdrop to more breathtaking scenery. The first lagoon we come across has a sulphur stench powerful enough to put you off your lunch but Lydia serves up some great “albondigas” (meatballs) and “Keeynwa” (quinoa) and we tuck in by the lagoon side. Our little group is bonding well at this point and we challenge the boys to a game of cards later that evening.

The last stop of the day is at a red lagoon close to the Chilean border. The Bolivian authorities attempted to have the body of water recognised as a “modern wonder of the world” but lost out to the Iguazu waterfalls. Nevertheless, it’s pretty spectacular and definetly should have its place in a highlights of South America tour. Jaime and Alberto teach us a gin-rummie-esque card game that evening, which ends up as a Bolivia vs. Inglaterra match. They are incredible cheats but we win 4-3. We also spend time talking to Jaime about Bolivia and its struggles to recognise 37 different languages, manage regionalised phone networks and gas / electricity distribution (no national grid!) and the various points of view on the first indigenous president and his quest to nationalise resources. We bed down early (8pm), knowing that this is going to be a very cold night ahead, at 4,200 m.a.s.l. Josie buried herself in super warm sleeping bag and several blankets and subsequently work up at 2am absolutely boiling…

Day 3 of our tour is another great experience. We start the morning with live volcanic geysers, squirting grey froth into the cold air. Next, we visit a lagoon lower down the valley, where we swam in hot springs. We finish the tour at a beautiful green lake and huge volcano (5,900 m.a.s.l), which also provides the back drop to our destination in San Pedro De Atacama. We just have enough time over lunch for the Bolivian boys to even up our ongoing card game and we bid them farewell at the border.

thermal lake Bolivia

thermal lake Bolivia

So our final thoughts on Bolivia are definitely tempered by the great people we met in the salt plains and the fantastic things we’ve seen in the south. Its landscape is hugely contrasting and beautiful.

And on to Chile…
We’re picked up at the border by a Chilean surf dude driving a modern Mercedes people carrier and the relief when we see a tarmac road is palpable – the modern world for the first time in 4 weeks. Our first full day (the next day) includes a hike up to the local pre-Inca mirador ruins in blistering heat, followed by an afternoon of cooling off and an early evening of sand boarding. After several hours of trampling up steep sandy dunes, candle-waxing our sub-standard boards and wobbling down the bank to the inevitable sand-in-mouth wipe-out, we admit defeat. It was a fun experience but we won’t be swapping snow and skis for sand and boards anytime soon.

From the relatively conservative confines of our hostel we move on to the wonderful Awasi hotel at 9am on the Sunday morning. We have packed in a 4-expedition 2-day Atacama desert tour we are really keen to get going. The Awasi (which means ‘welcome to my home’ in native language) is a truly wonderful place, relaxing and beautiful with great food (3-course meals), wine and service.

On day 1, we opted for some energetic biking in the valley of death – an opportunity to retrace our sand-boarding route and take some pictures of the incredible dunes. Our guide turned out to be a semi-professional rider and left us for dust (literally), but did stop at one point to produce some first-class fruit skewer refreshments. After a champagne lunch and snooze by the pool, we set off on a canyon hike, amongst rugged mountains clad with cacti. That evening, we settled down to another superb, first class meal of scallop and salmon ceviche and rack of lamb. We’d signed up for pm star gazing, which departed at 11pm, and with visions of an hour’s snuggling in luxurious camping materials followed by mulled wine and quick departure, we set off eagerly. It was not to be. We arrive at a telescope-littered mansion belonging to the most self-indulgent French man and his long-suffering wife. After an hour playing with the telescopes (quite good fun, see some interesting things), we stand for 2 HOURS under the stars (no comfortable blankets) to listen to his drivel. We glean about 5 interesting facts but most of his waffle is dedicated to obvious statements (the earth is round), how you navigate Google to find a map of the stars and how you should woo someone whilst star gazing. What a waste of time. We return at 2am, tired and cold.

The next day we’re invigorated by a lovely breakfast and then meet our new guide for the day, who takes us on a 40K round-trip bike ride to a salt lake where we float for 30 minutes before receiving seriously royal treatment on our exit – robes, hosing down, drinks, fresh fruit, chairs and foot rests. In the afternoon we chill out and catch up on sleep before our sunset hike across the Valley de la Luna (Moon valley). This is truly spectacular – crater-like terrain surrounded by sweeping dunes. Our guide and driver leave us to enjoy a romantic sunset alone before whisking us back to the hotel, where they’ve set up a private dinner in the tented area by the pool.

Overall it was a great tour and we loved our time on our Atacama desert tour. Next is on to Argentina!

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Buenos Aires to Cusco

Buenos Aires to Cusco is perhaps one of the best known routes through the very heart of South America. It is commonly known as the “Gringo trail” and over the past 30 years as backpackers have discovered South America it has become more and more popular. Chimu Adventures offers a fantastic 21 day tour along this route which can be customised to suit you! Check out Buenos Aires to Cusco tours here for details!.

The route starts in Buenos Aires and winds its way up to Iguacu falls. One of the worlds largest waterfalls. In fact it is not one waterfall, but hundreds. A spectacular site in a fantastic setting Iguacu falls is one of the “must sees” in South America.

From Iguacu we travel to Salta, in the Northwestern frontier of Argentina. Salta is a legendary city to travelers. With its colonial heritage buildings in the middle of the wild desert hills it is reminicent of a wild west movie set. The imposing cactus  trees and red canyons and sands add to the appeal of this Argentinean frontier town. The San Antonio de los Cobres and the Salinas Grandes salt flats are other highlights of this region.

From Salta we move accross the Bolivian border at Villazon and into Bolivia. Bolivia is blessed with some of the most amazing scenery in South America. Much of the country is above 4000m above sea level, and to the east of the Andes lies the Bolivian Amazon. It is a land of contrasts, Bolivia is also South America’s poorest country with no access to the sea. From Villazon we travel to the incredible Salar de Uyuni – The legendary Salt plains with coloured lagoons, vast salt deserts and an amazing array of wildlife including the pink flamingo. On our “Gringo trail” tour we spend a few days here and then move onto La Paz, at 4200m above sea level it is bound to take your breath away!

Lake Titicaca is the next destination. the mysterious lake is the world’s highest navigable lake and nco3800m above sea level. The first Inca, Manco is said to have arisen from the lake and from this miraculous birth went on to unite the ancient peoples of South America into the Inca empire, with its capital in the next destination, Cusco.

Cusco has long been a centre for travelers. The heart of the Inca empire, all Inca roads lead to Cusco and via these paths or Inca trails the Inca transported food, people, their armies and messages. It was an incredible feat of infrastructure and evidence of this can still be seen today. Cusco is home to many original Inca ruins, as well as magnificient Spanish colonial mansions. Museums and markets abound and there is something to entice every traveler. From Cusco we visit the Sacred Valley of the Incas, including Pisac and Ollayantambo amongst other sites.

Whilst the tour ends in Cusco, it is also possible to extend the tour to the magnificent Inca trail, and Chimu Adventures can help with your Inca trail bookings and reservations. There is a permit system in place by the Peruvian authorities, and booking well in advance for the Inca trail is best advised. If not up to the Inca trail, we have a host of other tours that may appeal, visit Chimu Adventures for more details. This tour can also be done from Cusco to Buenos Aires, depending on your itinerary we can change this for you.

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