Array
Checking out the whole system. For some object the sound is off a few seconds. The HD version is also handy. For those that have wondered, the ...
Checking out the whole system. For some object the sound is off a few seconds. The HD version is also handy. For those that have wondered, the ...
As Jessica likes to say, “sit down for a nightcap, people” – this is going to be a protracted blog update. We are currently in La Paz, Bolivia and have had noticeably an interesting week getting here.
Part 1: What You Eat in San Pedro doesn´t Mizen-stay in San Pedro.
We last left you in Valparaíso. From there, we went to Santiago (see Jess´ station about our futbol game experiences) and flew to Calama, Chile, in the halfway point of the desert. The runway was a dirt walkway etched into the earth, and the airport was a squat edifice with one way in and out, and no separation between arriving and departing passengers. From there we took a minibus to San Pedro de Atacama, at an altitude of 2,400m (that´s 7,900 feet for you non-metric people), smack in the centre of the Atacama desert and dubbed the most arid seat on earth. San Pedro de Atacama (hereinafter “San Pedro”) hadn´t seen trickle for 52 years until January 2008, when it rained for an astounding 20 minutes. As you can see by my pictures, the village does, in fact, look very very dry, with squat garbage buildings and dusty roads – very Tatooine, as Jess would say. Dusty enough that, upon our traveller in La Paz, the hotel took one look at our muck covered bags, bodies and faces and asked where in the empty we came from. Being as high as it was, we were all quite winded and silly until we adjusted a bit to the altitude.
San Pedro de Atacama:
We consumed two days San Pedro, one of which included a expert bus trip out to the Valle de la Muerte (expiration valley) and Valle de la Luna (Valley of the Moon), where we got to on one's guard for the sun sink down into the desert and carpet the wild dunes in blues, pinks and reds. I jumped on a last notes trip out into the desert after sundown (and by last split second I mean...
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