February 8, 2006


Our car is getting dirty!!! Love it!

Ah theres the name of the park!

Ran into Dave, Dom and Thomas, who also rented a car and drove the route. Run and smile!

Loads of cactus along the way.

Looking on to the park.

Bags of onions along the way!

View of the valley.

On our way to a national park.

Group shot.

Strike a pose Tracy!

Here I am again!

Over the hill and more gorgeous sights.

What to say, its great!

Mucho vineyards all around Cafayate.

More cool rocky mountains

Day 2!

In the morning, up early for breakfast before we hit the road again.

A few more beer, and good dinner out with wine. Also saw some folk music at the hostel. Great night in Cafayate.

Drinkin Salta beer!

Last landscape shot of the day!

In Cafayate and enjoying a beer after our long day of driving and photo taking.

Nice.

Donkeys! Hello! They came right up to the car window. Hilarious!

And it just keeps getting better.

Our road trip crew!

Trace and me.

Lovin it!

The sun is shinin!

Gorgeous.

The Ampitheater....there was a little boy and his mom singing in there, sounded fantastic!

Could not stop taking photos along the drive...we stopped almost every km!

Another cool tree.

Me, Trace and Markus

Me and Tracer.

Looking out from inside.

Tracer

Beautiful rocks along the way.

The Devils Throat.

Cactus

Cool tree and house.

The chocolate river.

Your basic fence.

Another bridge.

A tree....duh.

An old bridge.

February 7, 2006


On a river bed. Love the self timer!

Gorgeous sights along the way...and this is only the beginning!

Look a fly!!! This is so fun!

Look at all the ants!

Markus and Tracer taking pictures of bugs!

February 5, 2006

Hi Ho Hi Ho, Its off to Work We Go!!!!

Wow! I have had an amazing experience! Where to begin.......

So, we took the bus from Uyuni to Potusi. In the guide book it said it took 5-7 hours to get there. Of course this is never right, and it took us 8 hours to get to Potusi! During the trip, at one point we had to get out so the bus could get over a particularly muddy section and then get back on the bus. Another time we had to get out of the bus because a huge fuel tanker had gone partly off the road and was blocking our way! Thankfully they had another bus waiting on the other side and we were quickly on our way again(unlike some others who had to wait till they moved it and their journey was 16 hours!!!). Crazy Bolivian roads! Only 4% of the roads here are paved and I haven`t seen one yet!

So once in Potusi we get a hostel, have dinner and early to bed. It was a long day. Potusi has about 110,000 people and it is the highest city in the world at 4000meters above sea level. Breathing is a little hard here, but only when you exert yourself. Otherwise its ok. Was nice to run into a couple London boys who were in the other jeep of our Salar tour that night. Small world.

The next day we moved hostels. The one we were at had no heating and the showers sucked, so moved to our second choice(and where Dom and Dave were staying) where they have wicked beds, heating, good breaky, good common area, and fantastic showers! Love it. That afternoon we booked ourselves in for a tour of the mines. This is where it gets interesting!

So in Potusi there is a mountain that loomes over the city called Cerro Rico, where they have been mining for over 400 years and it is still in operation with over 12,000 miners. Its a huge mountain and has 17 levels. We got picked up at about 1pm, met the rest of the group (2 Chileans, 2 Argentines, 3 English, 2 Swiss, and 1 Welsh), and went to get suited up. They gave us jackets, pants, boots, helmet and a head lamp. We looked fabulous. Then to the market where the miners go to buy their supplies in the morning. A little info on what they need and we get to buy them some gifts to give out along the way on our tour. I bough dynamite and 96% proof alcohol! They actually drink this! Crazy. Some others got them pop and coco leaves, which is about all they have while they work their 12 hour days. The miners don`t work for someone, but independantly, and sometimes in groups(1-50 people). They work for themselves so make their own hours. No work=no money.

So after shopping we drive up to the mountain and the guides give us a demonstration of the dynamite going off. We actually got to pose with a stick of dynamite, while it was lit!! I declined, but Tracy happily took advantage of the photo op. Crazy girl. It was so loud when it went off! Talk about safety hazzard. Can´t believe they can actually do this here! Crazy gringos for wanting to see this I guess. So after the dynamite, we have the customary shot of booze before we head into the mines. That day it was the anniversary of the mine we were going into, so a bunch of the miners that were there(finished work!!) were having themselves a party. They were sooooo wasted. It was crazy. Inside the mine it got hot very quickly and it was hard to breath. Very dusty, and we are over 4000 meters above sea level. Unbelievable that they work in this. Our guide actually worked in the mine from the age of 10-15. And we met one guy there that was only 14. It was quite an experience. We had to crawl on our hands and knees through narrow openings, and down very unsturdy ladders. We went down to the 5th level. At one point we got to see some miners setting explosives and then had to scramble up the ladder and down the tunnel to a safe distance, and got to hear the dynamite go off! I must admit I was pretty nervous, and it was very hard to breath. Scary. And I paid to do this!!! I we weren´t even working, just moving through the mines! This has got to be one of the hardest jobs. And our guides father is still working in the mines at the age of 68! Unbelievable.

After being in the mines for a couple hours, we finally make it back to the surface. I have never been so happy to see daylight in my life. It was a very emotional experience. One I´m not likely to repeat. Thank you!

So after the mines we got to see the processing plant, and then made arrangements to meet with the guide and the others on the tour for drinks that night. Unfortunatly, our English friend Dave has spent the day drinking with some miners and was on deaths door. We spent part of the night taking care of him(his friend had to catch the bus to La Paz), and nursing him back to health. We (Trace, Dave, me, and George, who was on the tour with Dave earlier that day) all went to get some food, and Dave went home to sleep after dinner. On our way home we ran into a guy that was on our tour with us and told us that they were at a miners party with the guide. So we followed suite, and found ourselves at a private party. There were shots going around every few minutes, and a band with trumpets and drums. We spent the rest of the night doing shot after shot and dancing with old miners!! It was fantastic. Good video footage!

Today we are chillin, and tomorrow we go to Sucre. Sounds like a great city, and will spend my birthday there. Only 3 more days of being 28!!!!! Yikes. Should be a good one. And a couple of people we have met along the way will be there too. So looks like we will make a party.

Anyways, will try to get some pics up there. No cd rom in this city either. Have loads of fantastic pics. Until then!!

Ciao ciao.

February 2, 2006

PS...

Just wanted to add another way to check out photos from my trip so far.....

Check out Aggies photo page...

http://thelongwayhome.blogphotography.com

Cheers!

Serious Adventure Tour!

Wow! What an amazing four days! We have arrived safe and sound to Uyuni, after spending four days in a jeep with six other people. Yaaa! My ass is sore! Glad to be here and the journey was fantastic. Let me break it down for you....

So after spending a lovely day by the pool in Tapiza, we joined up with 10 other people for our tour. This included the 4 Americans in our jeep, and in the other jeep...3 South Africans, 2 Londoners, and 1 Italian....and a partrige in a pear tree!!! There was also 1 driver and 1 cook for each jeep. We left bright and early on Sunday morning(which was actually our latest start...9am...for the next 3 days). The jeeps were fairly old, 3 in the back, 3 in the middle and the driver and cook up front, but we had enough room to be fairly comfortable. Four days was just the right amount of time. The first day was quite adventurous. For most of the day(and the rest of the trip actually) we followed a dirt track, not a road, over mountains, through valleys, and over rivers. It is the rainy season here now, so sometimes it was a little dodgy, and we passed a few vehicles along the way that were stuck in the mud. One had to build a bridge over the ditch with dirt and branches so the trucks could cross. Luckly we had a fantastic driver with loads of experience and we had no trouble at all. The view was amazing and the landscape was constantly changing(pics to come...no cd rom in this entire town!). Our first night was spent at 4200 meters! The highest I have ever slept for sure! You can sure feel the atitude at this height and breathing was a little hard. But I felt great up to this point.

The next day(starting at 5:45am) we continued our journey and got to see the ruins of a small city in the mountains. I think (as the driver spoke only spanish) that people lived there until about 200 years ago, mining siver from the surrounding mountains. That day we reached a height of about 4900 meters. At this point I got a headache and didn´t feel so hot. But it didn´t take me long to get over it, and by lunch I was back to normal. We got to see Laguna Verde, a very cool green laguna, and take a dip in some thermal hot springs. Very good to soak in after being in the jeep for 2 days. After the springs we drove higher into the mountains and all of a sudden we were in the middle of a snow fall! So crazy. We got to the gysers and got to see it amidst a layer of snow. This quicky led to snowball fights, Tracy making snowangels and me making snowmen. Very fun. We all felt like little kids again. As quickly as the snow came, as we drove, it was gone again, and we reached our 2nd nights stop. We stayed near the Laguna Colorada, at a height of 4300 meters.

In the morning(wake up call around 6am) we visited the Laguna which was a cool rose colour and had tons of pink flamingos in it. The views were stunning. A rose coloured lake, surrounded by mountains, with pink flamingos and llamas! What a beautiful sight. Next we drove on and the landscape changed to huge open areas of sand and funky rock formations. We got to climb all over them and take tons of photos. Continuing on our drive we saw something called the Sun Dog. I have never seen anything like this. It was like the northern lights, but in the day! It was so beautiful. With the endless sands, blue skies, white fluffy clouds, and gorgeous colours of red, yellow, green and blue in the sky. Absolutely amazing. A couple more lagunas, a hail storm, another area of funky rocks and lots of photo ops finished off the day. Because of all the rain, we had to have a change of plans and tour around the salt flats to a place called San Cristobal, where we spent the night. Because it was our last night on the tour, we had a little wine and even made an apperance at the local bar(made out of a huge old steel drum).

Our last day we got to sleep in a little, getting up around 7am! We left San Cristobal and drove to Uyuni and on to the salt flats. Because of all the rain, the entire salt flats(around 12,000 sq kms) was covered in about a foot of water. We drove right out onto the flats to a hotel that is made all of salt. Tons of photo ops here. With less water it creates a wicked mirror effect with the sky and clouds, but there had been lots of rain, so it didn`t quite have the same effect. But it was still amazing and me and Trace had fun taking photos. After lunch we headed back to Uyuni to end our tour. It was a fantastic trip and worth every penny. Imagine 4 days, 3 nights, accomodation, all meals, water and transport for only $105 US. Fantastic.

So tomorrow we head to our next destination, a city called Potusi, where they still mine in horrendous conditions. We can actually take a tour of the mines. Should be very facinating. Will also try to get some pics up. I have hundreds! No cd roms here. I have so many amazing photos. I don´t know how I will choose which to put up!

Take care all. Ciao ciao.