We are writing this from the roof
top of our hotel in La Paz, so I guess at about 3,700m, the sun is shining and
I can see the sprawl of the city and a massive snow- capped mountain called
Illamani in the distance, which stands at 6402m
So, we arrived in Santiago de
Chile at 11.30am on Tuesday having left New Zealand at 2.30pm the same day, if
you have ever travelled across the date line you will know it is a weird
experience having to experience the same day twice ... also very tiring.
Santiago is a very modern, clean
and friendly city and very much like any large European city. We spent 4 days
here just pottering around and catching up on e-mails and blogs and sampling
some local Chilean dishes. The only touristy thing was a wonderful day spent
horse riding in the foothills of the Andes just outside Santiago.
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| Sarah and Bobby at the start of our horse ride with Rose |
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| On the trail |
Rose Deakin, the grandmother of
one of Amber’s old school mates, Stanley, lives just outside Santiago in the Cajon Del
Maipo and coordinates horse rides using the local horsemen. So we headed out to
the outskirts of Santiago on the Metro and were picked up and taken up into the
Andes about 45 minutes drive. After a coffee and a chat with Rose we were
saddled up and off we went up in to the mountains with our two local guides. The path was pretty treacherous but of course the horses had done this many
time before so we felt safe. We stopped for lunch by a stream and pool, did
some fishing and Amber caught the only two fish. The scenery was spectacular
although there was no snow on the mountains and was very dry as they had had
hardly any rain for 6 months (it’s all in the UK so we hear).
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| Bobby is shown how to gut a small fish |
After 4 days in Santiago we
headed north, making our way over a few days to San Pedro de Attacama stopping en route at
La Serena, Caldera, Bahia Ingles and Antofagasta. Bahia Ingles was a deserted
beach resort which might have been nice in the summer but had nothing to offer
us this time of year. All these places were interesting to see but that’s about
it.
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| Alpacas in the park at La Serena |
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| We didn't make it to Easter Island but this is an original Moai in the museum at La Serena |
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| We all got a look at some planets and a close up of the moon at the observatory at Vicuna |
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| Picture of the moon through the telescope |
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| This clock was given to the city of Antofagasta by Great Britain |
So after 4 day travelling we
arrived in San Pedro. A good place to begin our acclimatisation to altitude
being at 2500m. Although its main raison d’etre now is mainly for tourists travelling to
the nearby desert and salt plains, it
still retained great character with
traditional buildings and dusty streets of a desert town.
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| The biggest supermarket in San Pedro |
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| Volcan Lincancabur overlooking San Pedro |
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| Our hostel in San Pedro and yes Amber is doing her homework |
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| The main street in San Pedro |
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| 17th century Iglesia San Pedro |
There are many tours to do from
here but we decided to stick to one that didn’t involve getting up at 4 am plus
Steve took a mountain bike for a day to explore the surrounding desert. The
scenery here is spectacular with volcanoes dotting the landscape and huge ranges
of unusual rocks rising from the salt
plains.
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| Unusual rock formations in the Valley de Luna on the edge of the Salar de Attacama |
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| The road into San Pedro |
After a very relaxing 4 days in
San Pedro we decided to take the well worn tour to Uyuni in Bolivia, which
crosses the Andes at just under 5000m and into the Salar de Uyuni - the largest
and highest salt plain in the world. Apart from a little dizziness and the
occasional head ache we survived the altitude and amazingly the kids were both
fine. What a fantastic tour, the first day we stopped at multi-coloured lakes,
volcanoes, thermal springs , geysers and flamingos and we slept in a 6 bed dorm
at 3600m by the side of the Laguna Colorada where the water was bright red and
full of feeding flamingos (the red colour is algae that the flamingos love to
eat). The night time temperature here was -10 and there was no heating, we had
5 blankets, slept in all our clothes and hats, and were still cold!
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| An old wreck of a bus at the Chile/Bolivian border, now a toilet! |
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| Just before setting off into Bolivia with our 4x4 and driver Alberto |
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| Amber posing at the border post at 4000m |
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| The Laguna Verde, green due to large amounts of Arsenic! |
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| A welcome hot bath at 4000m, the water was about 35 degrees outside was zero |
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| More thermal activity at the highest point of our tour at 5000m |
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| Our lodgings for the night, very basic and no heating |
The second day was equally as spectacular and we
stayed at an ‘Hotel’ made entirely of salt on the edge of the Salar de Uyuni. A
little warmer this time but up at 6 to see the sunrise over the salt plain,
then on to Uyuni itself for a few hours
before catching the night bus to La Paz.
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| Flamingoes on Laguna Honda |
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They call this the forest of Rocks
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This one does look like a tree
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| The Salar de Uyuni stretches far in the distance |
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| Yes it is salt as Amber taste checks |
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| Kids snuggle up in their salt room |
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| Giant cactus seem to be the only thing that grows here |
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| Bob has grown a lot |
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| Breakfast on the Salar de Uyuni |
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| More fun with camera tricks |
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| The tour group, 4 Brits (us), 3 Germans, 2 French, 2 Brazilian and 1 American |
Hey, such a good report about your time! :-) I like your style oft writing and the pictures are great. We hope we meet you again somewhere :-)
ReplyDeleteJan and Sabrina