|
Salar De Uyuni |
So... I have
really got behind on my blog. I’ve been
pretty busy since the last one. So here
is a quick recap of my past adventures.
The first weekend of May, I took a trip to Uyuni to tour the Salt flats
and the surrounding landscape of southern Bolivia. It would turn out to be one of the rarest and
most beautiful landscapes I had ever seen in my life. But first I had to make it there which was a bit
questionable at first. At first my bus
was delayed over an hour leaving the terminal of La Paz. Once we left the terminal we began settling
in for the long 14 hour journey to Uyuni.
Our bus was making its way through the rush hour traffic of El Alto when
the unthinkable happened. Would you
believe that are bus shut off in the middle of an intersection as we were
turning onto another street. It caused a
huge traffic jam of honking minibuses.
The police who were in the intersection began yelling at the driver of
our bus. The driver tried and tried to
get the bus started to no avail. The
driver then came up and asked us if we could help push the bus out of the
intersection. I was thinking, “Push this
huge thing? He must be crazy!” Well I
shucked off my sleeping bag and began putting my shoes on to give it a go. All of a sudden, as soon as I got my shoes
on, the bus cranked up and began to work.
The driver threw it in gear and pulled out of the center of the
intersection leaving all the angry police and minibus drivers behind. Soon after, I laid back in my seat and dozed
off to sleep.
|
Looking for the Roadrunner and Coyote |
I woke up the next morning as the sun was
rising over the rocky mountain formations sticking up out of a sandy desert
wasteland. I kept staring out the window
thinking that I was going to see the coyote chasing the roadrunner through the desert. There was nothing to see except for random
llamas, cactus, and shrub bushes scattered around everywhere. After a few more hours of riding through the
desert, the bus was finally pulling into the city of Uyuni. I had about an hour to find the tour office
and breakfast before it was time to head out to the Salar (Salt Flats) on the
tour. The weather was pretty chilly but
not unbearable. As in every city in
Bolivia, finding a house or building with only an address is not that
easy. Eventually, after some searching,
I had found the hostel/tour agency where my jeep was supposed to pick me
up. I put my bag in the office and went
and sat down in the cafeteria to order some breakfast. As always I met a few random people from
different parts of the world and we talked about our adventures.
Finally, the
jeep arrived and I loaded my bag on top then hopped in where I met the people
with whom I would be spending the next three days. There was an older guy from Germany, a guy
from Holland whose girlfriend was from Spain and 2 girls from Sucre here in
Bolivia. We made our greetings as our
driver “Teo” took us towards our first stop on the tour. We made our first stop at the Train Graveyard
just outside of the city. It was pretty
interesting to see so many steam engines and carts leftover from the silver
mining days of the past. We explored the
old engines climbing in, around, and over them.
We snapped some photos and talked a bit getting to know each other a
little more. Next we loaded back into
the jeep and went off into the Salar.
Teo was flying through the salt flats heading deeper and deeper into the
white desert of salt. After we had made
it a way into the flats and saw the pyramids of salt, we made a stop to take
some interesting photos where you can manipulate the size of things in the salt
flats. Teo told us that the salt flats
were actually floating on a body of water.
My mind was blown! How was that possible? He then showed us holes in the salt flats
that were full of water that had no end.
The guy from Holland stepped on a weak spot of the salt and went up to
his knee into the salty brine underneath.
Teo then showed us how to retrieve large salt crystals from underneath
the surface by sticking your arm down into the water and breaking off the
crystals from the underside. The water
was frigid but I managed to retrieve a few crystals.
|
Me in the Train Graveyard |
|
Dakar Statue on the Salar |
|
Me holding my friends from Sucre |
After another
hour of riding deeper into the Salar, we ended up at the first and only hotel
ever built on the Salar. The hotel was
built out of bricks of salt that were quarried from the Salar. While Teo was preparing lunch, we went around
taking some more interesting photos and exploring the white wasteland. Eventually, Teo was done preparing lunch and
we sat down behind the jeep and had baked chicken, rice, and sautéed
vegetables. It was a bit cold but very
scrumptious. After lunching and snapping
some more photos, we jumped in the jeep and started the long ride to Isla de la
pescado. It is an island in the middle
of the Salar. The island is covered with
huge cacti. I have never seen anything
like it in my life. On the island, you
make your way through the cacti forest and up to the top of the island where
there is an amazing view of the Salar on all sides. The island once served as a refuge for Incans
as they made their way across the Salar in search of unconquered lands. In the middle of the island is a cave that
the Incans may have benefited from for shelter.
During the rainy season, travel to the island is almost impossible
because the Salar becomes covered with a thin sheet of water that can become
dangerous. So we spent a while on the
island exploring and searching for the best photos possible. Getting drained from all the walking and
climbing as well as the scorching sun, we made our way back to the jeep. Next we began to make our way out of the salt
flats towards the small town where we would be staying the night.
|
Recieving presents from a giant snowman |
|
Cacti on the Island of the fish |
|
Another Cactus |
|
Starring off into the distance |
Before the sun
set we made it to our hostel. It was
pretty amazing because EVERYTHING was made from salt. The tables and even the seats were stacks of
nicely carved salt bricks. Believe or
not, but the floor was even covered with a thick layer of ground salt. We got
our rooms and began preparing for the night as a lady began preparing
dinner. I was in the room with the German
of course so it made me feel more at home which was good. After getting my sleeping bag and what not
unpacked, I went outside to see the sunset.
All I can say is WOW. The sunsets
over the deserts and Salar are amazing and full of color. After the sun had set, we went back into the
hostel because it was extremely cold outside.
I sat at the table with the people from my group and we sat around
talking about all kinds of things while we waited for our dinner to be
prepared. It seems like I always eat a
lot better when I am on a trip. When the
food finally arrived we were starving.
We had a nice and hot vegetable soup followed by chicken and french
fries. After dinner we sat around
drinking tea and chatting until we decided it was time for bed. Man was it cold!! I jumped into my sleeping bag and waited for
it to get warm before I finally drifted off to sleep.
|
Dinner Table of Salt. Notice the salty floor |
|
Sunset from the Hostel |
The
next morning, I woke up in time to see the sun rising. It was about 15⁰ Fahrenheit that morning and
the slight breeze didn’t aid in keeping warm.
After packing our bags, we sat back around the table to drink coffee and
eat some bread with butter and jelly for breakfast. We then loaded up the jeep and began to make
our way towards the Chilean border.
Thank goodness our jeep had heat.
It was so nice and cozy that I began to doze a bit along the way. After an hour or two, we neared a volcano
that is half ways in Bolivia and half ways in Chile. From there we continued south hugging the
border on the way to our next stop. We
took a break at some ancient lava flows to explore and take some photos. It is always very interesting to see how all
the lava makes very interesting formations as it hardens and then dirt around
it erodes away. We got back in the jeep
and continued south. Another couple of
hours and we arrived in the lake district of southern Bolivia. As we neared the lake we could see that there
were wild flamingos scattered here and there.
I had never seen a flamingo close up before and only in the Zoo. We jumped out of the jeep and made our way to
the water’s edge to take some photos.
After the rainy season passes the lakes begin to get lower and as it
gets colder, they begin to freeze over.
So after the rain stops it is kind of the off season to see the lakes
and the colors. When the lakes freeze
over it is a little more difficult to notice the colors of the water.
|
Volcano on the Border of Chile and Bolivia |
|
Lava Flows |
|
My first Wild Flamingos |
|
I like this picture |
Once
we left the first lake we made our way to the second lake of the tour. Like the first lake it was frozen over with
scattered flamingos here and there.
There was a heavy smell of sulfur in the air from the sulfur mines and
the sulfur in the lake. You could
slightly see the greenish color of the lake but it was nothing like the color
in the rainy season. We then made our
way to the third lake where we would eat lunch.
Walking around the lake I honestly felt like we had landed on another
planet. It looked as if we were on
Mars. As we were venturing around I
believe I found evidence of the Mars rover and also believe I saw the same
scenery as one of the pictures from NASA’s website. We sat around a roughly built table of
fragmented stones and had our cold lunch that consisted of chicken, noodles,
and cooked vegetables. We ate our fill
and then continued south on our journey.
Along the way, the scenery changed into an orangey sandy desert with
sand dunes. It kept blowing my mind at
how the landscape continued to change dramatically as we continued on our
trip. We stopped in the middle of the
desert to take photos of the seven colored mountain on the border of
Chile. The wind was so strong and
frigid. We quickly made our way back
into the jeep to get warm again. About
another hour of riding we arrived at a place where many large rocks were
jutting up out of the desert. It is the
home of the Árbol de Piedra
(Rock Tree). It is a very famous rock
that has the appearance of a tree. We
took some photos of it and then meandered around the other rocks taking photos. I really enjoyed exploring and climbing up
onto the large rocks.
|
Mars Landscape |
|
Lunch by the lake |
|
In the desert |
|
Arbol de Piedra |
|
Chilling up on a rock |
Our
final stop for the day was in a small town on the edge of Laguna Colorada
(Colored Lake). The lake has a reddish
tint to it form the sulfur that is in the lake and the organisms that feed on
it. Again we explored around the lake
and took some photos of flamingos as we waited for dinner to be prepared. Our hostel had a bit of age on it but was
sufficient. We also had a very small
stove for heat but it really didn’t put off much heat. We ate dinner and then made plans for the
following day. We decided that in order
to make it to the southern tip of Bolivia to see the Laguna Verde (Green Lake)
that we had to wake up at 4:30 in the morning.
So we got ready for bed and turned in for a freezing cold night.
|
Laguna Colorada |
|
Sunset |
The
following morning we woke up, ate breakfast, and packed our bags so we could
leave. After thawing out the jeep we
loaded our things and continued our way south following the border. It was 9 or 10 degrees Fahrenheit that
morning but the stars were so clear. We
rode for 2 hours down one of the bumpiest roads I have ever been on in my
life. It was like riding on a jackhammer
for 2 hours. But finally, as the sun was
trying to rise and warm everything up, we arrived at our first destination. We were at the geothermal steam vents heated
by the nearby volcanoes. They may have
put off some heat but it wasn’t enough to thaw out my hands. We didn’t stay long because it was so cold
that we were in a rush to get back into the jeep. We then continued to Laguna Verde which is
nestled in the very southern corner of Bolivia.
The lake is shadowed by a volcano that sits part in Bolivia and the
other part in Chile. Off in the distance
you could also see the mountains from Argentina. I sat there starring at Chile and Argentina,
pondering about my trip that I will have in a month and a half from now. Well again it was extremely cold so we
scurried back into the jeep and made our way back north to our final stop of
the morning which would be my favorite stop.
Once there, we changed into our bathing suits and took a dip in the
thermal hot springs. Oh the waters were
so nice, especially since the weather above was so cold. I was in heaven! I did not want to leave the waters. But after 30 minutes of soaking we had to get
out and continue on our return trip to Uyuni because we had a lot of ground to
cover and there are no paved roads.
|
Me trying to warm up by a Thermal Steam Vent |
|
Laguna Verde and Volcano in the most southern part of Bolivia |
Finally after a
long draining drive and only one stop at another rock formation, we arrived in
Uyuni. Exhausted and hungry, we said our
goodbyes to each other. Since me and the
two girls had to wait for our buses, we went and walked around the city a bit. We finally found a good place to eat. It was a great way to end our amazing trip. After our dinner we said farewell and I
jumped on my bus and settled in for a long ride home. I was hoping to get a good night’s sleep but
it wasn’t easy. The whole night the
driver was playing some interesting music and had the heater on full blast. Everyone on the bus was so miserable from the
heat. I was extremely happy to finally
arrive at the bus terminal and get off the bus, and to also know that I was
back home. I love to travel and see new
things but it is always a great feeling to be home...
|
Me holding up a boulder while someone finds me a stick to prop it up..... |
No comments:
Post a Comment