Sunday, April 25, 2010
34 - Uyuni
All right blog readers... things are about to get good, so brace yourselves. I arrived in Uyuni on April 21 after a very long 7 hour bus ride on a road so bumpy it was an effort just to stay in my seat.
Uyuni was a small town with not much to do but watch the little old people wander the streets. Which is what I did...
Here´s a photo of a Michael Jackson commemoration in the middle of Uyuni´s main plaza. Good to see that some cities have their priorities straight. Boston has Paul Revere. Uyuni has Michael Jackson. They win.
Uyuni doesn´t really have much to do except for go from tourism agency to agency deciding which to use for a tour of the nearby salt flats and lagoons.
I signed up for a three day, two night tour that would take me down through the salt flats and lagoons and end by dropping me off at the Chilean border.
Our first stop on the tour was a train graveyard with lots of old rusting trains. Pretty cool, but the fun part was climbing on top of the trains. It´s always fun to play on giant rusty objects.
Our next stop was the Salar de Uyuni, the world's largest salt flat (4,086 sq mi).
Here are some interesting Wikipedia facts about the Salar:
- The Salar was formed as a result of transformations between several prehistoric lakes.
- It is covered by a few meters of salt crust, which has an extraordinary flatness with the average altitude variations within one meter over the entire area of the Salar.
- The crust serves as a source of salt and covers a pool of brine, which is exceptionally rich in lithium. It contains 50 to 70% of the world's lithium reserves, which has yet to be extracted.
- The large area, clear skies and exceptional surface flatness make the Salar an ideal object for calibrating NASA´s Earth observation satellite and for taking amazing, incredible, supercool creative photographs (wikipedia´s words exactly)
The walls in all the tourism agencies in Uyuni were filled with photos like the following.
SOOOOOO fun taking these.....
A little break-dancing
Elephant attack
Big foot
Queen of the card house
Queen of the salt mound
Token jumping picture
Oh look.... a hotel made of salt. And a table made of salt. And a chair.
¨This chair is too salty,¨ said Goldilocks.
After taking lots of fun pictures we drove in our jeep for another couple hours through the seemingly endless white salt flat when all of a sudden ahead of us was a big mound like an island popping out of the ocean. The ¨island¨ was actually the top of a volcano. Back when the salt flat was a lake the volcano was underwater, so now it´s covered in coral-like structures and fossils. It was also covered in hundreds of cacti.
Lost my body for a bit... I found it a couple hours later though, so no biggy.
After the Salar we continued driving until we got to a tiny town in the middle of desert nowhere, which was where we stayed the night. About a fifteen minute walk out of town was a sort of museum with ¨mummies¨. They were actually just creepy human skulls and bones hidden in these rock formations. This picture sort of romanticizes the whole experience because of the pretty sunset background, but seeing the skeletons was just disturbing.
Yet another incredible South American sunset.
The next morning we were back in the jeep for more exploration. This, as you can see, is a train going by.
Our second day of the tour was a flamingo filled lagoon day. We stopped at three different lagoons to look at the flamingos. Yay nature!
Yowza that´s a good picture I took. Wanna know a secret? We weren´t very close to the flamingos, and I don´t have much zoom on my camera, so I just stuck my camera lens into my binoculars and took this shot. Pretty good, eh?
Fox in the desert.
Arbol de Piedra - translation: Tree Rock
I took a walk, and look what I found. A herd of vicuñas of course (related to llamas and alpacas).
Another beautiful lagoon.
On our third and final day of our tour we woke at 4:30 AM, so we could get out and watch the sun rise over the geysers. So we´re driving along through the sandy desert when all of a sudden we stop. Why? Cause we´re stuck in the sand. Our driver drove forward and reverse and forward again, and all it did was sink us deeper. So we all piled out in to the absolutely freezing night (we were around 5,000m at this point) while our driver worked to get us unstuck. After about 20 minutes of waiting outside and freezing our bums off we finally got unstuck and continued on our way.
Good thing we finally got unstuck ´cause those geysers were cool... and they were nice to warm my hands in.
Oooooohhh.... ahhhhhhh....
Pretty sunrise!
And that was the end of the Salar de Uyuni tour. What an amazing tour with some of the most beautiful sights I have ever seen. By the way none of the photos were photoshopped or anything. That´s just pure natural beauty. Yay nature!
Okay, it´s late and time for me to get going. Hope everyone is doing well.
Love to all,
Amanda
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ReplyDeleteHi Amanda, Sorry about not posting sooner, but we've still been following your great South American Adventure with great awe. These photos are amazing! Better than National Geographic. That elephant shot must have been really dangerous-you look like Alexander the Great. And I never realized you had such big feet... Must be from all the hiking. That mound of salt you're on in the Salar de Uyuni is on top of the largest Lithium deposit in the world... watch out, electric cars are coming and that area may never be the same. We miss you and look forward to seeing you. This blog is great, it really gives us a glimpse into your travels and the amazing experiences you're having. Regards to mom when you see her. All our love, Don, Ann & David
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