Thursday, March 29, 2007

Into Bolivia and the Salar de Uyuni

Another planet

The Salar de Uyuni is certainly one of the most incredible places, if not the most incredible place, I have been to on my trip... I completed my trip around Cafayate, seeing some Inca ruins at Quilmes, taking in more stunning landscapes and a few vineyard visits before getting back to Salta. From there I made a quick stop in Purmamarca, where I had the tastiest llama steak ever, before crossing into Bolivia. This whole area has some really incredible scenery, with multicolored mountains from the various types of minerals in the rocks, deserts with Daliesque rock formations, and then these salt flats, the remains of dried up lakes.

The tour I took headed out from Tupiza, 2 hours inside the Bolivian border for 4 days of bumping around in a jeep, getting around the various, lagunas, volcanos, flamingo colonies, geysers, and eventually the salar. It was painful at times, not least because of all the dust you breathe in as you shake about on the dirt tracks, but I definitely felt like I was seeing some of the most dramatic landscapes on the planet. I was doing the tour with a french girl, a german guy and a norwegian couple which worked out well. The Norwegians come from the most northern town on the planet where its dark for 3 months of the year, so it was interesting to hear about that.

The Salar de Uyuni really feels like you are on another planet. There is just white salt around you for as far as you can see, and the horizon is blurred in places where the salt flats are covered with water and the sky and the salt flats melt into one. Here and there you have an island covered in cactuses, one of the ones we saw is suppost to be 1200 years old. It is entirely surreal.

From Uyuni, I have made it up to Potosi, famous for the one of the biggest silver mines in the world, a huge source of wealth for the Spanish. The town was once bigger than London or Paris as people flocked form all over the world to get rich, and you can visit the mines. I did and they are horrendous, there is absolutely no concept of safety, and when I was inside I really felt like it was a silly thing to do, to take the risk of being inside, although admitedly it is extremely interesting to see what sort of conditions the people work in there. The dust inside make breathing extremely difficult, gas from dynamite explosions burn your throat, and you're always wondering if the thing is going to cave in. When I saw the light at the end of the tunnel as we made our way out, it really made my day. I'll put some pics of the mines up soon...


The Inca ruins at Quilmes

Looking across at the ruins

Choclo

Selling arts and crafts in the desert!

Los Tres Cruces

La Garganta del Diablo with its pink stone

Ecofriendly lawn mower!

Residential area in Salta...

Our guide Armando!

Sunset in Salta

Music in Purmamarca

Valle de los Siete Colores, Purmamarca


Colourful shopfront!

Wall painting in Humahuaca

Derelict rail line

Bus turned BBQ

Scary croc in Villazon!

End of the line


Parade in Tupiza

More parading in Tupiza to commemorate the loss of the sea access to Chile

An interesting little member in our horse riding group!

CaƱon del Inca


Kids in Tupiza


Tupiza town square

Rescuing a truck!


Landscape near Tupiza

Power in the altiplano

Tiny village

Kids next to mud house...

Close up!

Barren

Looming storm


Flock of llamas


Hot spring



Laguna Verde


Sol de Manana Geysers

Laguna Colorado

More Laguna Colorado

National park keeper and his pet beguna!


El Arbol de Piedra


Flamingos

More flamingos...

Pit stop

Tornado across a salar

Military camp

Salt hotel

Tough navigating across the salar

Soaking upo the view with some emergency sunglasses!

Where's the horizon?

Just whiteness...

Isla del Pescado

1200 year old cactus

Only the Israelies would put a flag on their jeep...

You don't often get to stand on salt

Or in the clouds...

Only the top of 10m depth of salt...

Salt extraction...

Our excellent Tupiza Tour guides...

What 3$ gets you in Uyuni...

Dinner

People aren't very happy with Evo...

Road from Uyuni to Potosi...

The bus breaks down

Getting on the local bus

Casa de la Moneda in Potosi

To the previous post:

Stormy Paraguay



2 comments:

Unknown said...

Wow, ce sont de tres belles photos!
Au moins tu as l'air d'avoir du beau temps... pas comme en NZ.
Maryvonne et Paryvonne n'arretent pas de parler de ton Blog, un vrai succes!
Bon, tu m'envoies un petit email?

Anonymous said...

Great pictures and it almost makes me feel bad that as Bolivian that I am I don't know any of the places that you took pictures of. I would love to experience what you did, how did you get/set up the tour? email me with any info that you may have PLEASE since I will be on my way to Bolivia on September. My email is laricura2001@hotmail.com....Gracias!