Tuesday 22 May 2007

BOLIVIA February 2007



We crossed into Bolivia and were immediately excited with the complete contrast to anywhere else we had been.

Bolivia takes time to get use to and the border town, Quiero probably wasn´t the easiest place to start out. Quiero consisted of 2 dirt roads and copious amounts of chicken feet soup. We were stuck there for a couple of days waiting for a train to Santa Cruz that never arrived (You get use to the punctuality of their transport).
So we settled for our first Bolivian bus experience, 25 hours, 3 drivers/fully qualified mechanics who continuously chewed coco leaves and only dirt roads ahead of us.The air conditioning was in the form of open/broken windows and we arrived in Santa Cruz looking like we had travelled through the Sahara, carrying 30 extra people and their chickens.

After Santa Cruz we headed off for our volunteering stint. We bought our bus ticket to Villa Tunari and were assured that we would arrive at 6am, so you can imagine our delight when the bus driver wakes us at 2am and dumps us on a dark highway. The upside was that we were at the right place, the downside was that no one woke up until 7am and we had to fend off the mozzies and kamikaze dragonflies until then.
The next two weeks were awesome living with the monkeys and we made some good friends, there was also some half decent people there too.
After leaving the jungle it was off to the clouds as we made our way to Salar de Uyuni -the Salt Flats.We did a great 3 day tour down to the Chilean/Argentine border and back to see amazing scenery (at times it seemed like we were on a different planet); mountains; lots of Alpaca´s; hot springs and the salt flats themselves. On the third day we drove up to 5000m so La Paz at 4100M was going to be no problem.

La Paz is an amazing city surrounded by snow covered peaks. Part of the beauty is that you can forget you are in a capital city. One Saturday morning we woke to find a massive food market outside our hotel that stretched as far as we could see, we laughed how only yesterday this area was bustling with cars and buses.

All in all Bolivia was the business, we absolutely loved every minute of it.

1 comment:

MuppetMaker said...

Sounds like you two are having a blast! Brad and I are ever so slightly green with envy (no, we haven't eaten too much lettuce!). It's good to know we can keep track of your adventures - keep up the good work and keep having fun -
Siobhan and Brad xx