Sunday, February 24, 2008

BIG BANGS, ILLEGAL TOUR GUIDES, RECKLESS CABBIES

Hello once more from La Paz, the world´s highest capital...like you care!

It´s been suggested by some that my blogs have been in the glass-half-empty category of writing. So with that in mind I will try to make my inane ramblings a little more positive. So here goes...

Half our group on our tour of Bolivia had diarrhoea, a few had to travel back to La Paz early to see an emergency doctor. The tour leader was about as useful as a chocolate tea pot and some of the places we stayed didn´t have running water. I could write an entire piece just on the quality of the toilets... I won´t though, you would think I was making it up.

So let´s start where I left off before. Travelling from beautiful Copacabana to La Paz (not quite so beautiful but interesting in its own way). We arrive at the hotel, very nice 3 star job, meet our two other companions an English girl called Charlotte who knows my dad and has met him, weird! And a Swiss girl who liked to order cheese cake at every given opportunity called Barbara.

So we take a flight the next day to Bolivia´s second city Sucre. Spanish colonial stuff etc. Met our hotpant-stringy-vest-wearing tour guide who is also called Barbara. Right away we´re thinking she´s not really putting out that air of ´´this girl knows what she´s doing´´ and she didn´t disappoint. We found out that she wasn´t technically able to work as a tour gude legally in Bolvia, nice one boys! I won´t bore you with how much this ´tour´cost but we debated over whether we really needed a tour here or not. As it turns out we didn´t. We spent 3 days in Sucre, our only source of information was the Lonely Planet. Did some horse riding to a nice waterfall where we all put ourselves in mortal danger by jumping off the top of it in to a slightly muddied pool. Our Spanish-speaking horse riding leader merely watched from the sides, chewing coca leaves, occasionally spitting them on to his horse.

So then we meet the rest of ´the group´all of whom are in the middle of a 45 day trip around South America. Mixed up of English, Danish, Australian and Northern Irish. All very nice but then our fuckwit of a tour leader gets involved and things rapidly descend in to...well fuckwitness.

We discover she has a penchant for going to the Spa, not telling anyone what the plan for the day is, whether the towns and citys we stay in are safe and a general feeling of ´fuck you guys it´s my holiday too.´ I had to pinch myself every so often and remind myself that she was not a petulant twelve year old, she was in fact our tour leader.

So we travel to Potasi (the worlds highest city) via these taxis. It takes 3 hours and here´s where I need to tell

THE STORY OF JUAN
Juan grew up in a small Bolivian village just on the outskirts of Sucre. He had strict parents who used to beat him with long sticks made of Llama dung. Juan harboured an ambition, he wanted more than anything to be a racing car driver. Everytime his head hit the pillow (also made of Llama dung) he dreamt of winning the Bolivian Grand Prix (well first he dreamt there was a Bolivian Grand Prix then he dreamt of winning it).
Juan tried as a kid to make it, borrowing his fathers donkey cart and attempting to do doughnuts in the back yard. But as Juan grew up he realised his dream could not come true. He spent years feeling down, his life meant nothing. Then one day as he was taking the donkey for spins when he saw a Toyota dealership. His mind raced, maybe just maybe he could do something about his dream. He bought himself a 90´s white Toyota Corolla. A thing of beauty, now he could finally realise his dream. With no qualifications or testing he immediately became a taxi driver ferrying unsuspecting tourists from Sucre to Potasi. Oh boy he loved seeing the incomprehensible terror on his passengers faces. That delicate smell that would emanate from the back seats as he overtook the fourteen wheeler on a blind corner with a thousand foot drop and no crash barriers.
Juan just loved the challenge of Bolivian roads. Everytime he set off he would say a little prayer thanking his God that the Bolivian government hadn´t discovered the heretical English words ´road resurfacing.´ He loved to chew coca leaves, spitting them out his window utterly unaware they would fly in to the face of the person sitting in the left back seat.
And his love, more than anything, was to get to Potasi before his other Taxi driver comrades. It was competitive and they made it difficult for him but Juan lwas a born risk-taker. He simply had to cross that finish line first, it didn´t matter how many Llama or Alpacas he would instantly turn in to dog food. Nor would he consider minor adjustments to his beloved vehicle like seat belts or workable brake pads. If God wanted him dead, he would have crashed already surely.
He could see the tourists sitting behind him trying to work out the Spanish for ´Slow the fuck down´ but he knew that even if they found the words in their Latin American Spanish Phrasebook the sheer terror would be too much for them to utter the words. Only mumbles and high pitched whimpers would be the only sound that would emanate from their stupid white mouths.
And so ends the Story of Juan. We must assume that he still drives with the same disregard for others and we salute his God for having the power to keep him alive in the face of such reckless abandon. Chao Juan!


So we arrive in Potasi looking for a toilet and a new bum. The Spanish discovered silver in Potasi and decided it would a spiffing idea to send hundreds of thousands of African slaves and local Bolivians down in to the mines to go get it for them. 8 million people died in these mines under some of the most atrocious conditions imaginable. So now they send tourists down there, each happy because they are allowed to buy a stick of, wait for it...DYNAMITE with them. Yes dynamite is a readily available commodity in Potasi. You can walk in to a store, buy a couple of sticks under the guise of ´I´m taking it to the miners as a present.´ HA, they are so gullible. So the tour leader (not Barbara, this one is competent) asks if we want to set a stick off (I remind you we are still talking about DYNAMITE...whilst down in the mine! I mean...do Llama attempt to kill themselves when they cross roads...fuck yeah! So we go in to the mines all singing ´´Hi Ho´´ our dynamite and matches at the ready and basically we are happy campers. See attached video for what actually happened when it when bang!

Once we´re finished blowing up parts of Potasi we get a bus to the worlds largest salt flat and the small town of Uyani which looks like some old fool was walking through the desert and thought ´´No water, utterly exposed to the elements, temperatures reaching -20. You know what, this is the perfect place for a town.´´

So we jump in some slightly dubious 4x4´s and drive up to the 12,000 square kilometer salt flat which is simply one of the most breathtaking sights I have ever seen. And because it was flooded, this being the rainy season, the blue sky was perfectly reflected in the water making you feel like you were on some other planet, strange.

Then we spend the next few days driving around the superlative-exhausting Reserva Nacional de Fauna Andina Eduardo Avaroa with some of the most stunning landscapes I´ve ever had the pleasure of seeing. Truly it was like a safari for landscapes, with every turn of a corner we´d see a new canyon or snow-capped mountain. Bear in mind we are over 4000m above sea level at all times. Deserts, laguna, flamingos more Llamas. Lovely. There was a particularly stunning volcano and turquoise lake called Laguna Verde which I couldn´t help myself I had to take some video of, have a look.

What wasn´t lovely however was the places we were staying in. The bed on the first night was like being strapped to a silver birch tree trunk, the toilet smelled of...words can´t even describe what it smelled of. There were flies, dogs and babies crying in no particular order. The food was simple but as we found out later totally unfit for human consumption. We´ve used up most of our emergency supply of Imodium. On the plus side though I think I´m losing weight.

Second place we stayed in was worse than the first, don´t get me wrong I´m all for character building exercises but really, do I have to pee next to a pile of rotting rubbish which should have been the shower. Seriously guys...come on now, maybe start with the mantra ´let´s not make the tourists (our biggest source of income) sick to the point of emergency evacuation. I tell you, that night was like an orchestra of flatulence. I understood why they had no smoking signs all over the place. And to top it all off no running water, good effort chaps.

So with everyone feeling tickety boo and some of our gang speeding back to La Paz with critical stomach issues we hop in to the landcruiser and see some more rock formations. Then head back to Uyani and a night train. I won´t bore you with all the things that went wrong after that suffice to say it ended with one of our group in tears because our fuckwit tour leader was nasty to her. We had to all sit down and have it out with her. It was like Tour Group Therapy.

So we catch the night train back which was actually pretty decent and now we´re back in La Paz awaiting a flight to Buenos Aires which we should catch tomorrow. So Bolivia has been eventful and beautiful and stomach challenging. I sure won´t forget her in a hurry.

I just read this back, is it me or do these things get longer and longer. Must try the ancient art of subbing down my ramblings to something easy to read, with grammar people can actually decipher. Oh well, there´s always next time.

Chao!

Dan

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