Happy new year all! Hard to
believe we’ve been in La Paz just over three months already. Considering we’ll only be in Bolivia two
years, over 1/8 of our time here is already behind us. Time to start getting out and checking some
things off the Bolivia bucket list!
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| Ready, set, go! |
We started off slow with some short ventures out of La Paz. The highest golf course in the world is a 15
minute drive from our house – and it’s beautiful. Getting out to the course has become a
regular diversion. In just a few
minutes, you feel like you’re out of the city and on a lovely stroll through
the canyons and woods. Quite literally,
since my balls end up in the canyons and woods regularly.
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| It is a really stunning course. |
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| I don't know who looked at this crazy, canyon-y topography and thought, yeah, we can put a golf course there... but I'm glad they did. |
We’ve also found some amazing hiking areas – also within a 20 minute
drive from our house. The canyons around
La Paz are really stunning – think Bryce Canyon. Even in La Paz, on my daily commute to work
on the gondola each day, I am dazzled by the views. It’s a stunning city.
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| Hike #1 though a river canyon about 20 minutes out of La Paz. |
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| We went on a dry day, but now that the rainy season has started, this canyon probably gets pretty wet carrying all the runoff from these steep canyon walls. |
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| A view from our lunch spot. This isn't a national park or anything, folks. Just a rural area outside La Paz. There are views like this EVERYWHERE here. |
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| Mt. Illimani peaking out from the clouds towards the end of our hike. |
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| Riding back to La Paz at the end of the hike. If you drove straight there, it would take 20 minutes. It took us about an hour on this "trufi" - vans that run a set route around the city and suburbs (and pick up anyone that flags them down along the way) for about 30 cents a ride. |
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| Hike #2 - Muella del diablo (Devil's tooth). A cool rock formation you can see from pretty much anywhere in La Paz. We drove up and then hiked down (downhill is key at this altitude) to a little, rustic ecolodge where we had dinner and spent the night. |
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| The intrepid migrants on the trail. |
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That rabbit-meets-squirrel looking thing is a viscacha - super cute rodents that like the dry, craggy canyons around La Paz.
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| Sunset at the Colibri ecolodge. It took us most of the day to hike there. It took about 20 minutes to drive back to La Paz the next day. |
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| A stop at a local ceramist's studio on the way back to La Paz the next day. |
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| And lunch at Flor de Leche - a fabulous local cheese producer. |
La Paz also loves a good holiday – especially Halloween, it seems. When we heard they were shutting down traffic
on Halloween evening in an area called San Miguel – a 15-minute walk from our
house – we headed up to check it out. San
Miguel was long ago a horse race track – a very high-altitude and slightly
uphill oval. It has now been paved and
converted into a commercial area with lots of restaurants and coffee
shops. We like to head up on weekends to
stroll around and grab a coffee. On
Halloween, EVERYONE came out – in full costumes. Businesses handed out hard candies to the
kids. We enjoyed a $2 glass of wine at a
sidewalk café and watched the procession.
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| Even the embassy got into the spirit, turning into a haunted house for local and U.S. families working here. |
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| Our household shipment - and most of my clothes - hadn't arrived yet, so I fashioned Ruth Bader Ginsberg out of a black suit and some coffee filters. |
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| Halloween evening in San Miguel. They closed the streets and it became a huge party. Also featured in this photo - an example of the omnipresent 1970s Volkswagen Beetles that are everywhere here. |
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| A flash mob did the Thriller dance. I'm not usually much of a Halloween person - but La Paz made this such a fun night for all ages. |
We also arrived about a month before Bolivia elected its first
pro-U.S., pro-private market government in 20 years. After two decades of socialism, the new
president is promising lots of reforms to try to boost Bolivia’s economy. We’re waiting to see how it all shakes out,
but in the meantime, U.S. officials are falling over themselves to come here to
meet with the new administration. It has
definitely been a much, much busier job than what I was anticipating – the
previous government hated the U.S. and wanted nothing to do with us. But it has been exciting to be here during a
pretty monumental moment in Bolivia’s history.
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| Lots of pomp and circumstance on inauguration day. |
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| Bolivia's newly inaugurated president (Rodrigo Paz) at the Government Palace. |
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| I was part of our team that was staffing our U.S. delegation that came for the inauguration, so the day was a bit of a blur. But it was pretty cool to be "in the room where it happened." |
The busy work schedule is part of the reason most of our sight-seeing
so far has been contained to the immediate La Paz area. But we were able to celebrate a long
Thanksgiving weekend at the Uyuni salt flat in southwest Bolivia. It is the world’s largest salt flat –
basically a huge salt desert with small “islands” in its interior and a volcano
on the perimeter. It’s Bolivia’s biggest
tourist attraction – though Bolivia still hasn’t quite figured out how to do
tourism, so it’s a challenge to get to and navigate. But we figured it out and spent two days
driving across the salt flat, hiking one of its islands and the volcano, getting
up at 3am to see the stars from the salt flat, and then watching the sun set
later that day. It is a pretty magical
place.
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| On the Uyuni salt flat. |
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| Various tour operators offer day trips to the salt flat from the neighboring town of Uyuni. All of them take small groups of tourists out in 4x4 Land Cruisers. |
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| The cars more or less follow well-worn tracks through the salt flat to various destinations - islands, hot springs, volcanoes, etc. |
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| It looks like snow, but the salt is hard as heck. There are salt mines scattered around that cut huge blocks to use as building material for lots of the buildings in the area. |
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| Our lunch spot during our tour. The walls were made of salt blocks. Even our hotel was constructed of salt blocks. |
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| A hike on Cactus Island (aptly named) offered stunning views across the salt desert. |
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| A tourist trap, er, destination on the salt flat featured huge sculptures made of, you guessed it, salt. |
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| Wet season was just starting during our visit, so parts of the salt flat were covered with shallow standing water that reflected the sky and made for very cool views. |
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| We donned wellies for a stroll - and photos - in the standing water. |
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| The reflections at sunset were particularly striking. |
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| Day 2- a hike up the dormant Tunupa Volcano on the north edge of the salt flat. It was about 1,000 foot gain - but Uyuni is even higher than La Paz, so there was a lot of huffing and puffing to get to this vantage point. This photo was taken at about 14,500'. |
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| We came upon this mama and newborn llama when we got off the volcano. |
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| Our tour guide had us posing for all sorts of photos. |
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| These are just a couple of the photos he took. There are dozens more like this. |
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| Another sunset showing just how vast this salt desert is. |
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| We were up at 3am to get to the salt flat and look at the stars before sunrise. It was COLD out there... |
We’ve continued to get out of La Paz since Thanksgiving, spending the
week before Christmas in Bolivia’s colonial capital Sucre and its wine region
Tarija. More on that trip in a future
post since this one is already running long. (If you've read this far, thanks for sticking around!) We also received our household shipment
(i.e., all our stuff that follows us around the world) two days before
Christmas, so we spent the holiday unpacking and starting to make our temporary
house feel like home. So at the three
month mark, we find ourselves settling in… and ready to venture out.