A Travellerspoint blog

Dec 2006

Arequipa, Perú, Day 2

Well well well

sunny

I have to get into this writing every day thing again... When I`ve done tons of wonderful things and don`t write about it immediately, I just put it off more and more. I promise to catch up soon.

For now I am in Arequipa. I arrived last night and will leave tomorrow night on a bus for Ica. It`s a nice city, but most of the wild fun things you can do take 3 days or something like that so I don`t have time to do much.

Today I visited the Santa Catalina monastery, this massive building famous for it`s architecture and history in general. It was very beautiful and worth the 2 hours it took to walk through it all.

And tonight I went go-karting!! It was so much fun! Of course because it`s South America none of us wore helmets; they even let one guy with a cast on his leg have a go. We had 5 turns each so we were able to get a good fix racing and skidding around the corners, trying to overtake the guy ahead. Yay for actually doing the things I usually just do in video games!

Catch ya on the flip side.

Posted by The Cat 7:42 PM Comments (1)

Copacabana, Day 1 - my last day in beautiful Bolivia

Man oh man...

sunny

I was in La Paz for 3 nights but had such a wild time I haven`t anywhere near the internet for more than 10 minutes.

I`ve come to the realization today, a strong, desperate realization, that I don`t want to leave Bolivia. I have a bus ticket for Arequipa, Perú, tomorrow, and it`s going to rip my heart out when I go. I`m in love with Bolivia, it`s people, and La Paz especially. The practical side of me is going to make me move on, knowing I have to catch a plane 3 countries north of here in 3 months, but I want to stay. I wish I could figure out a way to work and make enough that I could live AND pay back my student loans. Anyway, I will go back one day, I have to.

As for the past few days, I will write about them another time, probably when I`m in Arequipa. I plan to travel through Perú in no more than a week and be in Ecuador at least a few days before Christmas.

For now though I`m going to go enjoy my last night in Bolivia. A couple friends from La Paz happen to be here now, too, so I`m going to try and find them. Adios!

P.S. Today is my 3 month mark!

Posted by The Cat 4:38 PM Comments (4)

La Paz, Day 1

Too much to catch up on...

sunny 10 °C

I have way too much to catch up on so this entry will be a condensed quick version of everthing I`ve done the past couple weeks.

The mine tour in Potosí was really interesting. ´Fun´ is the wrong word cuz you go down into the mines and see these men, some boys as young as 12, working 12-hour days with no food in contaminated air. It was intersting though, and as usual I had conflicting thoughts about whether I was doing any good as a tourist or not. It was a bit scary at times, actually. We were all dressed up in our protective clothing, hard hats, rubber boots, head lamps. At some points along the tunnels are tracks for the miners to pull/push trolleys of minerals in and out, we had to dodge them suddenly when we heard they were coming. There was never much room obviously so sometimes we had to run down the track a bit to get to a wider space. Sometimes we were crawling the shafts were so narrow. We had a dynamite demonstration as well - one of the miners was getting ready to blow a bigger hole in his section so we scooted to a safer place and listened as the muffled boom boom went off. I could feel the energy wave through the rocks. There is so much to say but to describe it all would take pages.

I went to Tupiza with Andy and Tamsin and we stayed in the same hostel. The first afternoon we just arranged everything we were going to do. The next day we went horseriding which was fantastic. Unlike the smaller weaker Bolivian horses I rode when in Samaipata, these horses were from Argentina: big and strong and very very well bred and well looked after. The canyons we saw were spectacular - it really was like being in the American Wild West and the galloping was scary but great fun. I`ve never gone so fast on a horse before! The second time we tried it my horse tripped though and almost fell over so he gave up after that.

The day after we started our 4 day jeep tour. Aside from copying down my rather extensive journal entries regarding this trip, I don`t know how I can describe it. I think it`s the best thing I`ve done so far, and I doubt I`ll ever see such amazing landscape ever again. Bolivia is so full of hidden and unexplored treasures! What I paid for the trip was well out of my usual budget, but it was worth every penny. Bolivia`s southwest and leading up to the salf flats is virtually impossible to navigate without an experienced driver and a 4x4 vehicle. The roads are rough and sometimes barely visible, they fork out all over the place, and there is only the occasional very small village. With a good topographic map and a compass and a lot of patience it might be possible to do this on one`s own, but I don`t think many people would attempt it.

The landscape changed so much in our 4 days that just reaching the top of a hill was exciting cuz we never knew what to expect on the other side. We went from tundra-like land to the roughest rockiest terrain, to rich coloured lagoons with flamingoes straight out of a fairy tale to the vastest yellow deserts where nothing can possibly grow. The salt flat, the biggest in the world, was incredible too. It`s like walking on hard crunchy snow, but it so so flat and stretching out for ever, sometimes to the horizon. The last morning we got up early to watch the sunset in the middle of it, and driving across the flat flat white land was surreal and magical and I`m never going to see anything like it again.

After exploring the salt flats we made a final stop in Uyuni, a town not far from the edge. I hung out with some other people who`d just finished the trip as well for a few hours, and took a night bus to La Paz, where I am right now. I dropped my bag off at a hostel, but I have to wait a couple hours before others check out before I can have a bed for myself and catch up on some much needed sleep.

As much as I love La Paz, it`s very different being here after 4 days in a completely different world with no people but those in the other jeeps. Time to change gears once again.

Posted by The Cat 5:03 AM Comments (5)

Uyuni, Day 1 and only

I´ve never been on a slower connection in my life!

sunny

Man what a fan-freakin-tastic trip! I saw deserts! and red mountains! and purplegreenblueyelloworangered lagunas! and flamingoes! volcanoes! geysers! the biggest salt flat in the world! a coral island covered with cacti at 5000m above sea level!

And I´ll write all about it when I get to La Paz. I got back from the jeep tour this afternoon and now I´m just waiting for a direct bus to La Paz. I´ll be there for a few days (1) to ride a bike down the world´s most dangerous road and (2) to buy new glasses because I sat on mine yesterday and snapped them in half. What luck! But from what I´ve heard it´ll only cost me about $40 to replace them.

Yesterday I rode through a desert at top speed in a 4x4 Land Cruiser so I´m not too worried about the glasses.

Posted by The Cat 12:35 PM Comments (0)

Tupiza, Day 2

I`m getting bad at this...

semi-overcast 21 °C

Hey lovely people, I know I have a lot to catch up on, but for now all I really have time for is to say that tomorrow I`m going on a 4 day Jeep tour so I probably won`t be on the internet until Wednesday or so.

Just so I don`t forget, this is what I have to fill in still:

- cooperative mine tour in Potosí
- travelling to Tupiza
- horseriding (and actual galloping!) in Tupiza

All is well and good. I`m still travelling with the British couple and we`ll part ways in Uyuni where the tour ends. Until then amigos!

Posted by The Cat 3:27 PM Comments (0)

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