Travel Blogs by Travellerspoint

Jun 07

Death Road and Amazon Photos

as above!

18 °C

Try these 2 links for more photos.

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=10551&l=4142b&id=741335836

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=10548&l=d8324&id=741335836

xo

Posted by bec3688 15.06.2007 19:40 Archived in Bolivia Comments (0)

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Finally mas fotos!

Facebook it up!

17 °C

I've given up using the travellerspoint photo gallery as its too much hard work. So you all have to join facebook to see my photos i think.

Its easy and free and just do it cause the photos are good. Please. That includes computer illiterate friends as well.

Try these links and you may be able to see the photos without signing up -

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=10525&l=c79ef&id=741335836
and

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=10531&l=06959&id=741335836

www.facebook.com

By the way, I'm in Puno, Peru and have come from Copacabana, Bolivia yesterday. Went to the Isla de Sol (see photos) and did a really hard walk. Would be nice if not at altitude but it just makes any physical movement difficult.

From Puno we plan to go to the floating islands then to Araquiepa and then on to Cusco for Machu Pichu. More soon.

Ta!!

Mmmwah!

P.S. Meat Challenge, Alpaca last night, tender but a little tasteless.
Also the add to my diseases and Bolivian hurdles - Stolen hiking shoes and phone, mild dog bite, severe drink spiking, bee sting and sunburn.

Posted by bec3688 14.06.2007 12:04 Archived in Peru Comments (0)

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The Amazon (okay, just the basin)

A holiday in the holiday...

26 °C

From last I wrote I've experienced probably one of the best and most realxing highlights of my trip. The Pampas tour to the Amazon basin. Heres the itinerary:
Short (but loud and dodgy Bolivian military) flight to Rurrenbaque, straight away at ease when we breathed in the tropical warm air...bring it on after cold and bustling La Paz. After being issued with our regulation old mans work shirt to protect from mozzies, we were on a 4 hour Jeep trip, dusty as all hell to the river and Frank (a name given only because the man nevetr spok a word to us). After an hour and half boat (driven by our new best friend- Ronaldo) along the river at sunset to our home for the few days we were there, mozzie nets and right on the water.

That night after eating excessively, we went Alligator hunting, next day more eating followed by a cruise down the river and Anaconda hunting. Was crazy and Ronaldo got bitten but trapsing though the mangrovey sluge may have been easier with boots that sealed. All sorts or crazy things live around there.

After more food and a long siesta in the hammocks we went Pirhana fishing (caught the first one, of course!) Nah, we got 10 decent sized ones all together and ate them for tea, not he tastiest or meatiest things Ive seen but those teeth really are like in the cartoons! That night after again, more food (God Bless Rosa the cook!) it was beers and whisky with Ronaldo on the guitar.

The next morning we went out on the river again and saw some more pink river dolphins, went for a swim with them (and evidently pirhanas and alligators...), its a spin out to see dolphins in a river, they were pretty amazing.

A lazy trip back to the jeep after lunch and we were in Rurrenbaque again, tiny town, unorganised airport and hitch hicking played a part in our depature. It was a perfect break but were back to La Paz now.

Posted by bec3688 14.06.2007 09:58 Archived in Bolivia Comments (0)

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La Paz - The Death Road

4200m and she´s on a bike again!

sunny 22 °C

La Paz so far

I´m being booted off the computer but here whats coming:

Yesterday I rode a push bike down the most dangerous road in the world, scary, more so with my uncoradinated riding style.

Today a Dr. visited my bedside, put an injection in my bum cheek and told me I have Selmonella and Ameabic Dysentary. More antibiotics and another depleted diet.

Next week, to the amazon, pink river dolphins, snakes, pirhanas...

The Meat Challenge - Update
Unfortunately Prue didn´t make it down the mines but at the market Dani and I ate...ANACONDA. Its upped the challenge a bit!

Adios.

Posted by bec3688 02.06.2007 11:51 Archived in Bolivia Comments (0)

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Why?

The silver mines of Potosi (Bolivia)

6 °C

Post Salt Flat Traumas
There is so much to include but my health is at an all time low (read on to the end for more details) so no promises on quality.
Left Uyni (possibly the coldest place on earth) quicker than we even thought possible. The one saving grace of that place was "Minute Man" a pizza joint run by a true blue American, good service, awesome Sangria and great food (massive pizzas omlette breakfasts etc), sufficed after the lack on food and showers of the salt flats.

Uyuni to Potosi
A ´chicken bus´, complete with non-opening windows and crowded isles took us the supposed 6hrs that inevitably became 8. It was so cold outside I had thermals on and Goddamn was that a bad move (also, no toilet, oh, one stop, pissing behind things is an art you know. One must master this before entering Bolivia).

Then to Potosi, cute little town with heaps of bizzare costume shops and masses of cakes "Feliz Dia Mama", it was mothers day.
We spent a night in a ´pub', wandered the markets and street parades, saw some sights and then....Cerro Rico (rich hill).

The most horrific experience I've ever had. I´m sure others deal with it differently but the Silver Mines of Potosi are not a place I ever want to see again. Awesome day and glad i did it but never again. First we got into huge outfits to keep out dust, complete with gumboots, hard hat, head torch (with huge battery pack strapped to our backs) and bandanas to keep dust from our mouths which was suffocating enough. They took us to the Miners Market where I purchased dynamite (fun!) and drank a 96% alcohol (keeps the miners going apparently) also bought cocoa leaves, softdrink and cigarettes all for the miners.

So there goes my career as a miner
From there we drove up the massive mountain that towers over Potosi, it has up to (if you want more info, google it, really interesting history). Then into the mines we go. Someone told me there was about 5 meters where you have to crawl, they lied. It was dusty and dark and at times I was squeezing my body through the tightest little burrows inside this enormous mountain. The men working there have a very short life expectancy and after seeing them in action its obvious why. Two words: HARD LABOR. They work up to 12 hours a day 6 days a week, hardly see sunlight and many believe it is their purpose. As their fathers have done, as will they. Our guide worked in the mines from age 10 to 15 and luckily someone plucked him out to run tours.

Anyway, there were 3 levels in the mine we were in, by the end of level 2 I was crying uncontrolably and found it hard to keep my shit together. Friends with me were great and the guide made jokes to help pull me together (to no avail). Five words: GET ME THE HELL OUT OF HERE. Chewing cocoa leaves and now with unfamiliar company, speaking minimal English, I made the accent back to daylight and air (anyone who knows me well knows my issues when theres a lack of fresh air, well, demonstrated again!).
Its an odd feeling I can´t quite name, it didn't feel like claustraphobia, I wasn't particularly panicking, but I just couldn´t control my tears and continually thought, "WHY would anyone come down this mine of their own free will??" I didn´t enjoy it at all but am glad to have seen what some people have to do for a living. Rory's little OHS brain nearly exploded so he had to turn it off. Oh, and finally we blew up our dynamite, we made them up and I was actually holding one when the guide lit the fuse, mmmmmmm, safe. The conditions are below poor and way below illegal. These men are now paid quite a bit by Bolivian standards, but its not a trade off I´d like to make.

Potosi to Sucre
I forgot to mention, we´re still with the Aussie girls and have now made our group 6, Amy from Wales and Andy from England. So together, all shaken to our cores and exhausted we got on a bus to Sucre. It said 3 hours but allowed 8. Miraculously, it took only 3 hours!! Sucre is the Colonial capital of Bolivia so has some pretty amazing buildings. However, all the hostels were booked out and wandering the streets of Sucre at 10pm, homeless isn´t much fun. One thing I will say is that there was an eery likening to the hotel in ´The Shiníng´ and even the guy who owned the first one we saw was creepy. We didn´t stay there as to avoid waking up minus organs or being the subjects of backyard medical experiments (not an exaggeration!)

Ended up in the best room in town, the 6 or us in the HI hostel (besides the fact they took my phone from the room-dodgy circumstances) and the massive hangover obtained from the Joyride Bar, Sucre was kind to us. Rory and Dani went Paragliding and had a ball, we drank the best fresh squeezed OJ form the little man on the street. Had the best chocolate I´ve found in South America and spent a lazy homeless and hungover day waiting for the bus to La Paz.

Posted by bec3688 02.06.2007 10:54 Archived in Bolivia Comments (0)

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