Thursday, December 20, 2012

Petra Day 1, Jordan

We were down for breakfast at 7am to get an early start with Petra.  We bought a 3-day pass for 60 JD. I thought we'd be Petra'd-out after two days, but we weren't sure if my ankle would need a break.  The 2-day pass was 55 JD so the extra day was just a 5 JD insurance.

We took our time going down the Siq. Because we'd already seen the Treasury last night I wasn't in a big rush     

There weren't too many other tourists. The situation in Syria has caused a huge decline in tourism here, even though its a different country. I used to think traveling in shoulder season was the best way to travel; now it seems to be going to a country adjacent to a troubled country.

All the shadows of rock formations we had seen on the night trek were now in full life. It's so surreal it almost looks fake, like a Disney impression of Petra. Except it's real.

We spent a few minutes at the Treasury. There were more workers than tourists at the site. The whole of Petra is kept impeccably clean.

We have been pleasantly surprised at the lack of aggressive sales pitches from guides. Just saying No Thanks once is enough, and they wish you on your way. Much different than any other country I've been too!

We followed the suggested walking tour in the Lonely Planet. After the Treasury is the Street of Façades, where the Nabateans cut 20m high façades into the rock around 2000 years ago. Petra has survived earthquakes because it's not built, but carved out of solid rock. Everything is one piece.

We had the street to ourselves - there were no other tourists in sight.

Next on the LP walk was a climb up to the High Place of Sacrifice. I thought it would just be a short climb, but it actually goes all the way to the top of the 200m rock formations. There were amazing views of the surroundings.

By the time we descended, it was close to noon, and the tour bus tourists had arrived. We waited for tourist free pics of the 8,500 seat Theatre. We had to keep remembering that everything was carved, and not built.

We walked up to the Royal Tombs across from the Theatre. By this time we were getting hungry and tired. Had a box lunch from a restaurant facing the Royal Tombs, which was pretty good (pita bread, cheese, tomato, cucumber, orange and cookies) for 6JD. There are also excellent toilets inside Petra -- much better than we had expected.

Rejuvenated, we headed back to the Royal Tombs along a path we had observed from our lunch seats. It ran above and behind the ground level row of tombs. We had this to ourselves - it's hidden from a casual view (especially if you're checking out the Theatre). It was amazing, with great views looking down on the Street of Façades.

We debated doing some more sightseeing but it had been a long day and we didn't want to push my ankle. So we headed back to the Treasury, took some more pics, and then walked back through the Siq to our hotel. 

We showered and headed out for dinner.  It was a choice between identical mediocre restaurants and we didn't choose well. Went to the Mövenpick for a celebratory beer. 

Monday, December 17, 2012

Petra Night, Jordan

We went on the Petra by Night tour tonight. It was amazing! The 1.2km Siq (the canyon that is the entrance to Petra) is lined with candles. There's enough light to see the canyon walls (200m high) all the way to the top, where the sky is lit by thousands of stars. The walk down the Siq is almost as impressive as seeing the Treasury. The Treasury is lit by hundreds of candles. There's a musical performance (flute, and some stringed instrument). The 150 or so tourists are seated in the floorspace. The acoustics are pretty good. I'm sure it's a much different experience from the day (we'll find out tomorrow!)

I managed to get a decent pic even with the low light (see the Photo Album link under Jordan in the right sidebar). The performer asked every to take a pic at the same time. I took a long exposure pic, and all the flashes that went off lit up my pic :)

We have an early start tomorrow to catch the early sun, so we're off to bed.

Wadi Musa, Jordan

This trip we've taken our iPad along. One benefit is the ability to download pics from my camera, edit them and then upload to Picasa. So I can create our vacation album on the go! I'm using Photogene to edit the pics and Web Albums to manage uploading. I'm quite happy with both apps.

I also finally made the header pic random, using a php script running on AWS. If you refresh the page you should see a new pic.

Wadi Musa, Jordan

We took a private car to Karak, about 90 minutes south from Amman. As with almost all private cars we've taken on trips, it was an older Mercedes, but still in great shape.

Our driver explained the road we were taking was historically the route to Mecca for Muslims from the region and Eastern Europe. (In fact the road goes all the way to Sanaa, Yemen, which is on our list of places to see).

We stopped at a touristy roadside place for lunch (the "Petra Tourist Restaurant"), and arrived at Karak around 2pm. We looked at a couple hotels, and settled on the Karak Guest House, right beside the entrance to the castle.

Karak Castle is the main attraction in Karak, a sprawling castle in varying states of disrepair. After paying the JD1 entrance fee, and politely declining a couple guides, we spent the next three hours exploring the linked tunnels and vaulted rooms, some buried deep into the hillside. It was pretty cool. It wasn't as well preserved as castle in Tomar, but still fun to explore.

After we wandered down the main street, and saw lots of trades at work in their shops: someone working a loom (a loomer?), butchers, someone working with animal pelts (a pelter?). I bought a scarf cause it's getting cold at night (3C).

Had dinner at Kir Heres restaurant, which was really good. I really liked the fried haloomi.

We were back at the hotel by 7:30pm. I was exhausted, apparently not over jet lag, and was asleep by 8:30pm. Unfortunately I was also up at 2am and couldn't fall back asleep.

Heather was also up pretty early. The mattresses weren't the most comfortable, and it was really cold in the room, so we decided to get up and were ready to look for breakfast by 7am.

We found a local eatery and sat down for an excellent Jordanian breakfast of hummus, omelette, salad and deep fried eggplant and falafel, with a mint tea to drink. It only cost 6JD ($8 CAD) too!

We had originally scheduled a driver for 11am, but since we were up so early changed it to 9:30am. First was a stop at Shobak, another Crusader castle ruin. It's in more of a ruined state than Karak - the attraction of Shobak is its location perched on the top of a steep hill.

Next we were on to Wadi Musa to see Petra! It was less than an hour drive from Shobak.

We checked into the Petra Moon Hotel. It was one of the few places we had reserved ahead, because we weren't sure how busy Petra would be at this time if year.

There's a night walk to Petra along the Siq (that's the crescent moon in Raiders of the Lost Ark) three nights a week, fortunately tonight's one of them. So we'll be seeing Petra (or at least the Treasury) in a few hours!

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Amman, Jordan

This was the most rushed we've been to leave on a trip.  Heather had an appointment at 10am with her back specialist to see if she could get clearance to dive.  Heather has a couple partially ruptured disks in her back and the water pressure from diving can be very dangerous to ruptured disks. Unfortunately the advice was that the risk is too great, so diving is off the list. That took a couple hours out of the morning, which left us rushed to leave.  Poor Craig, who drove us to the airport, had to wait 40 minutes for us while we finished packing.

The Air France flight was full to Paris. The line up to check in had a lot of people but it moved fairly quickly, it only took us about 20 minutes to get through to the gate.

I had made sandwiches for dinner, which we ate before boarding. That was a mistake because Air France had pretty decent food, and lots of it.

There was also too much on-board entertainment -- it almost seemed like the seven hour flight wouldn't be enough time to read our books, watch movies, listen to new CDs and read the in-flight magazine. I watched The Bourne Legacy (pretty good) and Prometheus (not so good).

We arrived at 7am in Paris. The wine and cognac with dinner had left me a little worse for the wear. As we deplaned, I heard someone call my name, which I ignored because I wasn't expecting anyone to know me in Charles de Gaulle. But it turned out my cousin Tyron had been on the same flight, he on his way to Mumbai!  We chatted for a bit. His connecting flight left shortly so we parted after getting through security.

Heather and I had six hours to wait. After freshening up (a bit more planning required post 911 to take airplane sized toothpaste, mouthwash and contact solution), we found some really comfortable lounge seats at the very ends of the terminal. They're hidden from view until you're right up on them, so most passengers weren't aware they were there. We napped for a bit.

The flight to Amman was on a smaller A320 and the seats were more squished. We slept on-and-off on the 4.5 hour flight, in between eating another good meal from Air France. There was a bit of turbulence, but nothing too bad.

On arrival in Amman, we easily withdrew Jordanian Dinars (JD) from an ATM, paid our 20JD fee for the visa, and got our passports stamped. The immigration officials were very friendly, only asking which hotel we were staying at in Jordan (and also where I was from originally, out of curiosity).

Next was picking up our  luggage which was already off the conveyor so Heather didn't have time to get worried (she has a long history of lost luggage). I had arranged with the hotel for a pickup from the airport, but we didn't see anyone with our names so we took a taxi from outside the terminal. Heather and I are now 0-4 for airport pickups on our last four trips.

We reached the hotel around 9pm, about 20 hours door-to-door from home. We're staying at the Hishamm hotel, a self-described "boutique style" hotel. As a boutique hotel, it has the requisite popular bar and restaurant on the ground floor. We cleaned up and went downstairs for dinner. The food was yummy (although the Arabic food was listed on the back pages, behind the western food). We also had a local draft beer, which at 7JD was the same price as the main.   Smoking is allowed in bars and restaurants, to which we'll need to adjust. It's hard to believe it wasn't that long ago that that was the norm in Toronto.

We crashed pretty quickly after dinner in a very comfortable king sized bed.

This morning I was up at 5am, which isn't too bad for jet lag. The room is pretty quiet so I could just barely hear the call to prayers. Heather noticed a sticker on the ceiling which we couldn't figure out until Heather noticed it pointed the direction to Mecca.

Today we're headed south to see a couple ruins along the way to Petra.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Toronto, Canada

We arrived back in Toronto earlier this week.  All our souvenirs made it back too.  I thought winter would be over by the time we got back, but oh well.  We were very lucky with the weather over the six weeks, it didn't rain at all (drizzled a couple days, but not enough to get wet).

Here's our favourite pics:
2011 South America - favourites

Also here's my attempt at being artistic:
2011 South America - artistic

Monday, April 11, 2011

Santiago, Chile

We're at the airport in Santiago waiting to fly home after six weeks in Chile, Argentina and Bolivia.

We spent the last few days of our trip in Santiago.  We flew through here twice on the trip, spending a night each time.  I've also flown out of Santiago on previous trips, but never really spent much time seeing the city.  This was finally our chance to see Santiago.

We flew to Santiago from La Paz on April 7th.  The flight stopped down at Arica and Antofagasta.  In Arica we had to deplane, claim our baggage and clear Chilean customs, then reboard the flight.  The customs people asked us to open up the extra souvenir bag, which messed up my careful packing job.  Fortunately everything made it to Santiago.  The stopover in Antofagasta was supposed to be 35 minutes; but then the Chilean air force had some planes take off, which shut down airspace to commercial flights.  This delayed our new flight crew coming in, and so we ended up spending three hours in the airport in Antofagasta.

We arrived in La Paz around 7pm.  Heather's backpack was the first to arrive on the conveyor belt, before she had time to even think about worrying about it.  Our other two bags arrived within the first five as well -- we were loaded up on the cart and out the airport in about two minutes after getting to the conveyor belt.  The restaurants in our area of Santiago close around 11pm, so we were cutting it close to get to the hotel, clean up and get to a restaurant.  We ended up at Ostras Squella, a seafood restaurant we ate at the 2nd time through Santiago.

The next morning we talked with Dennis, owner of Casa Bonita (our hotel) for sugggestions about what to do with our time in Santiago.  We arranged for a wine tour for the day of our flight home, as the flight was at night and it left us the full day in Santiago.

Friday we spent walking around the highlights of downtown Santiago.  Santiago is a city of neighbourhoods, each with its own character.  We stopped in at the market for lunch, I was expecting a low-key place with mom-and-pop places serving fresh seafood.  Instead it was a  very popular place for tourists and business folks to have long lunches with wine and dessert.  We tried the king crab, one of the specialties at Donde Agusto.  It was amazing.  It came out freshly steamed to our table.  Our waiter then expertly cut and served us the crab, so we didn't get messy trying to eat it.  It came with a heated olive oil and garlic dipping sauce.  There were also some other sides (fries and a mixed salad if I recall) that we didn't eat, because we were so focused on the yummy crab.  Mmm good.

After lunch we wandered through Barrio Bellavista, an artsy area with a lot of university students, mostly drinking cheap draft beer on patio bars.  Bought ice cream at Emporio La Rosa, and ate it while strolling through Parque Forestal.  Took a trip up the funicular to the top of Cerro San Cristobal for very smoggy views of Santiago.

We walked home down Av O'Higgins, the main street of Santiago, and were amazed at the number of pedestrians.  The other visits through Santiago had been on Sundays, and it's much busier on weekdays (as you'd likely expect).

Later that evening, we had dinner at Las Vacas Gordas.  We had lunch there our first day on the trip, which was amazing.  I had been thinking about eating here again the whole trip.  We arrived at 8:30pm, thinking we would be early and beat the crowds.  However it was already packed, and we added our names to the waiting list.  About 30 minutes later we were seated, which gave us enough time to try to remember the cut of wagyu we had the first time.  We both ordered the same meal (one of the few times we've done so), and then feasted on way too much perfectly grilled meat.  It was one of the best eating days ever.

Saturday we saw a couple art galleries.  Had lunch at Opera Cafe, which shares the kitchen with the acclaimed restaurant of the same name.  We had the chef's choice for sandwich, smoked salmon, arugula, avocado and some other toppings on a long thin baguette -- it was really good.  We had planned to have dinner at Tales, but it was closed because of work on the water main in the area.  So instead we took a taxi to Barrio Lastarria and ate at Patagonia Restaurant.  Both our dishes were excellent, which was four straight amazing lunches and dinners over the last couple days.  The wineries are also running a promotion at this time of year at many of the restaurants in Santiago.  If you order one of the promoted wines, you get a 2nd bottle for free to take home.

Santiago mostly shuts down on Sundays, so we had planned our day around the few places open on Sundays.  We stopped in at Museo de la Solidaridad Salvador Allende, which was one of the best contemporary art museums we saw on this trip.  Next was Palacio Cousino, unfortunately it was closed for renovations. We spent the afternoon browsing through Pueblito Los Dominicos, a small village of craft shops, with really good quality (and somewhat higher prices than La Paz).  It reminded me of the Distillery in Toronto, where there's a concentration of higher-end arts and crafts stores, and little bakeries and coffee shops.  We bought a few more souvenirs, then headed back to the hotel to pack up.  We went back to Barrio Lastarria for dinner, hoping to find other restaurants open, but only Patagonia appealed to us so we ate there again.  Unfortunately our streak of amazing meals ended, we shared the cheese and deli platter for two, which sounded good on the menu, but was very disappointing.

Our last day we spent on an organized tour of a couple wineries, Vina Cousino Macul, and Vina Aquitania.  Vina Cousino Macul is one of the oldest and larger wineries.  The tour of the winery was more museum-like, as a lot of the wine-making equipment was no longer in use, replaced by automation and high-tech containers.  It was still cool to see though.  They also had a cellar with bottles dating back to the 1930's -- again, just for display as the corks weren't designed to last that long, so all the wine would have soured.

Vina Aquitania is a smaller boutique winery, just inside Santiago city limits.  It was surrounded by subdivisions -- I guess Santiago is no different from any other city, growing out.  The view were nice, though, with the city core in the smoggy distance on one side, and the mountainside on the other.  They also had the better ambience for wine-tasting at the end of the tour -- outside, under a walnut tree, with an oak barrel as a table and right beside the vineyards.

We arrived back at the hotel around 3pm, cleaned up and then went to Tales for a late afternoon meal.  The setting was great -- overlooking Calle Concha y Toro, a beautiful little cobblestoned street with art deco and beaux arts mansions.  The food was also great, a nice way to end the trip.  The Lonely Planet says one of the best ways to experience Santiago is through the food and drink, and we gave it our best shot.

We took a taxi for the four blocks from our hotel to the airport bus stop, with the extra bags for souvenirs we were less mobile.  We had 10kg more weight in baggage than the start of our trip, according to the airport scales, but still under our limit.  After checking in we settled into the wait for our flight, and getting home!

Wednesday, April 06, 2011

La Paz, Bolivia

We've spent three days in La Paz, with the main goal of souvenir shopping.  (La Paz is the best city in South America for souvenirs). We just bought a large sports bag in the Mercado Negro to pack them up for out flights.  Right now we're sitting in the 3rd floor lounge at our hotel (Hotel Rosario), with a great view of the city and Mt Illimani (6402m).

La Paz is one of the more amazing cities to see.  It sits in a crevice in the Altiplano, a city of a million people up and down all around.  In the middle, where we are now, all you can see are buildings climbing up the sides at extreme angles near the top, almost like you're in the middle of a sphere with the city wrapped completely around you.

Unfortunately we didn't get a view of La Paz on our flight from Sucre.  We could see the road winding through the mountains, and were glad we took a 45 minute flight rather than a 12 hour bus ride.

I had arranged for the hotel to send someone to pick us up at the airport, but there was no one there, so after waiting for 30 minutes we took a taxi.  (There was another couple at the airport in the same position, different hotel).

We're staying at Hotel Rosario, close to the main tourist shopping areas.  The hotel room is good, the service is amazing.  The front desk staff have been great at recommending restaurants, making reservations, etc.  When we get taxis, they flag them down and then record the taxi driver's name and taxi number to prevent any problems.

We spent our first two days shopping along Calle Linares and Sagárnaga.  Most of the stores sold the same clothing, jewelry and stone carvings. But every here and there was a store with cool stuff, antiques such as walking sticks, wooden stirrups, weights; or unique jewelry; or traditional masks. We bought quite a bit (thus the need for the extra bag to get them home).

There weren't many artists' stalls.  We stopped in at the three we saw.  We particularly liked one painter, Gustavo Apazo, from whom we bought a oil-on-canvas.  Today we visited the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo, which has an exhibit on the top floor with local artists' works for sale, and saw some of Gustavo Apazo's paintings!  We actually recognized his style, and then saw his signature.  The prices in the gallery were much higher than what we paid at his workshop, so we were glad we stumbled across his stall.

We've been having the set menus for lunch, which have been okay. Breakfasts have been great at the hotel -- tasty fresh fruit, amazing bread, eggs to order.  For dinner, we've been trying out the fancier restaurants, a taxi ride across town to Sopocachi (a much hipper area than where we're staying).  Eating at the best restaurants in La Paz, including a bottle of wine, and tip, comes to about $40 - $60, so we figured why not.

We ate our our hotel the first night, we had just arrived and hadn't yet got a feel for the city.  Plus our hotel restaurant is listed as one of the top in La Paz.  We weren't too impressed -- Heather's trout (from nearby Lake Titicaca) was overdone and dry; my lasagna was okay.

The second night we ate at El Arriero, an Argentinian steak house, which was excellent.  Both our steaks came medium rare as requested (tres-cuatros in spanish), the wine was great, and the service was good.  It was one of our favourite meals in Bolivia.

Last night we tried out a french restaurant, La Comédie.  Our taxi driver couldn't find the place, I had to show him the LP map on my iPhone (we downloaded the La Paz chapter).  The atmosphere was great, but the food was not that good.  My lamb shank was so dry I had trouble cutting a bite, and Heather's duck was competing with my lamb for toughness, and salty.  They appeared to substitute quantity for quality -- I had three (!) lamb shanks on my plate, Heather had two (!) duck breasts. Maybe we ordered the wrong stuff, but both were listed as chef specialities.

Tonight we're trying out Pronto Dalicatessen, rated #1 in La Paz by tripadvisor (although not so much a foodie site as chowhound).

Today we did some touristing, haivng been shopped-out over the past two days.  First went to the Contemporary Art Gallery, as mentioned above. It's in a gorgeous old house on El Prado (the main street that runs down the middle of La Paz). It reminded us of the occasional grand old house on Jarvis or Sherbourne.

Next we walked up to Plaza Murillo, which is surrounded by the main government buildings and the cathedral. We saw the sights just in time before being booted out by the police, who were closing down the plaza in advance of a demonstration (which are almost a daily occurrence here -- this is the 2nd we've seen). Later as we ate lunch, we saw the demonstration by miners carried live on the local TV station. It was odd to hear the bangs of dynamite (we thought it was firecrackers) on tv, then the echo in real life.  There was no danger, as we were away from the action.

Yesterday in the market, I almost got peed on by a little boy. We were walking along in the busy street, I was taking in the scene, when Heather blurted at me to look out.  The little boy was peeing in the street, I had just enough reaction time to step over and not get hit. The local lady behind us couldn't stop laughing. A couple people behind us who didn't notice walked right through. Too bad for them.

Well we're off to get ready for dinner. Tomorrow we fly to Santiago, our last stop on our little trip.

Sunday, April 03, 2011

Sucre, Bolivia

We fly to La Paz this afternoon, so we´re just waiting at our hotel in Sucre (Su Merced) with a couple hours to laze about.

We spent almost three full days in Sucre.  We saw most of the highlights, including all the major museums, art galleries and churches.  The centre is littered with museums and galleries, half of them not listed in the guide books, of which we stopped into a few.  One of the more interesting non-listed museums was the militiary museum.  It had lots of antique large cannons and guns, which neither of us had seen in real life before.

The weather in Sucre was very comfortable.  theweathernetwork.com had us thinking it was going to rain the whole time, but so far so good and no rain.  The temperature has been around 18C with cloudy periods.  At night it gets a bit chilly but we just needed our jackets.

Yesterday afternoon we were done with touristing and shopping, and so had a beer at the Plaza Restaurant, on the 2nd floor overlooking Plaza 25 de Mayo, and caught up on our reading.  It was a very relaxing place to spend an afternoon.

We found an excellent restaurant for dinner the first night, Tentanciones.  They had homemade tagliatelle with mushrooms, one of the best pasta dishes we´ve had.  We followed that with a cheese and meat platter.  The cheeses all came from Bolivia, I didn´t know they produced such a variety of cheeses.  The tagliatelle was so good we returned for lunch a couple days later and I ordered it again.

Aside from the lunch at Tentanciones, for lunches we´ve started having the ´menu´, which is a set menu of soup, main and dessert, usually under $5.  The soups are generally excellent, and it´s a good amount of food (nutritious too).  The set lunch at La Casona was only 25 Bs, about $3.50 (Heather had the set lunch -- I had a meat craving and so had the asado, which was pretty good for outside of Argentina).  We had it with a glass of house red (about $1).

The 2nd night we ate at La Taverne, a french restaurant inside Alliance Francais. The atmosphere was great, but we were disappointed with the food which was a bit bland. 

Last night we had dinner at El Huerto, a little out of the centro, so we took a taxi (10 Bs).  We were the only ones there at 8pm, and only one other couple showed up at 9pm.  We weren´t sure if this was normal, or maybe they were busy at other times of the day of week.  They were a tapas restaurant (which took us a bit of asking to figure out).  The kitchen was excellent, we particularly enjoyed the chicken brochettes and the panko shrimps.

Our hotel in La Paz offered airport pick-up for about the same price as a taxi, so we´ll have someone greeting us when we arrive after our 45 minute flight.  Whenever I´ve done this in the past my name has always been messed up so it will be interesting to see how they spell D´Souza.  Hopefully the driver will stop at the top of the altiplano before we descend into La Paz, so that I can take a picture.

Sucre, Bolivia

Some more pics.  The last trip I had my SD card corrupted when I connected it to a computer, so the only pics I´m uploading are ones taken from the iPhone, cause I can upload those over wifi.  I haven´t figured out a way to link to picasa when posting to my blog from the iPhone, so I only post pictures when I have access to a computer.


Laguna Verde with Volcan Licancabur, from the Uyuni tour


Inside Cristal Semana (a salt hotel) near Salar de Uyuni


Cathedral in Salta

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Sucre, Bolivia

We took a shared taxi from Potosí to Sucre.  It costs 200 Bs for the whole taxi (about $30 for the 2.5 hour ride). There was another guy in the hotel who was going to the airport in Sucre so just the three of us split it (normally there's four to a shared taxi).  The shared taxi was much more convenient (door-to-door in both cities), more comfortable and faster.

We arrived in Sucre around noon.  I had been checking the forecast on theweathernetwork.com and it had showed rain every day for the past month.  However it was a nice sunny day, 20C, when we arrived.

We checked into Hostal de Su Merced, which Heather had found rated #1 for Potosí on tripadvisor.  Just in case we hadn't seen it there, the hotel had a plaque in the lobby announcing their tripadvisor rating.

It was still relatively early in the day, we didn't lose a day to travel.

Sucre is a very affluent city (also the political capital of Bolivia).  The centro is almost completely restored, one of the nicest colonial cities I've seen.  Every building is white with terra-cotta roof tiles.

Lunch was great, we had the set menu at La Posada, soup, chicken with a mustard sauce, and ice cream for dessert, for 35 Bs ($5) each.

We visited Templo Nuestra Señora de la Merced, a church just across the street from our hotel.  The outside is plain, but inside almost everything is gold-plated.  The church was in disrepair but still looked amazing. We climbed to the roof for great views of the city.  It wasn't as tiring as climbing in Potosí, now that we're only at 2750m.

Forgot to mention, we got our running shoes cleaned in Potosí. There's shoe shine people all about (as in most places in the world). Most of them also clean your shoes if they're not polish-able.  So now we're walking around with our shoes looking like a million bucks.

Heather and I are just relaxing on the rooftop terrace at the hotel, waiting for the sun to set.  Then we're off for dinner.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Potosí, Bolivia

Potosí is a nice little city with a buzz to it, we liked it so spent an extra day here.  At 4060m it's also one of the highest cities in the world.

The bus ride from Uyuni to Potosí took about six hours. The road is mostly paved, which made for a pretty smooth ride. It was also scenic, although having just finished the Uyuni tour, we were a bit blasé about it.

We stayed at Hotel Cima Argentum, a little out of the centre, but one of the nicest places we've stayed at this trip. We had reserved a double, but they were full so bumped us up to a suite for no extra charge.  

The staff were very helpful and friendly.  They took in our laundry even though we were a little over the deadline, no problems.  (it was pretty cheap too, less than $1 for jeans, and about 50¢ for tshirts)

We relaxed and cleaned up (very nice shower, good pressure and lots of hot water).  We decided to walk into the centro, about a 15 minute walk.  The streets were crowded with people and cars and minibuses. A little hectic but nice buzz.

We ate at El Mesón, I had trout and Heather had llama skewers with pineapple and rice, both were excellent.

The next morning we were up early because we wanted to catch the 9am tour at Casa Nacional de Moneda (National Mint).  Breakfast at the hotel was great (including freshly squeezed juice, eggs and great bread -- Bolivia has really good bakeries).

The National Mint tour was pretty extensive. They had mule-driven wooden cogs that were used to flatten silver ingots, old coins dating back to the 1700s, minting equipment through the centuries.  It was cool.

We toured the Cathedral, in which we climbed the bell tower for great views of the city and of Cerro Rico, the "rich hill" full of silver.  In the 1500s, Potosí was one of the wealthiest cities in the world because of the silver mined from Cerro Rico.

We tried unsuccessfully to find silver and tin souvenirs, but apparently they sell them in La Paz.  

We weren't up for anything big for dinner, so went to 4060 for pizza and beers.  (It took me a while to figure out that the name of the bar was its height above sea level). The bar was packed, we were lucky to get a table.  The pizza was actually quite good. The beer, Potosina, was okay.

The next day we continued our hunt or souvenirs, and did find a couple places selling antique stuff. We bought a silver-plated walking stick, and a nested weighting set (I think made from copper). We bargained down to about 75% of the original asking prices, I don't think they overquote too much here.

An oddity of Potosí is the number of dogs running around the street in nice sweaters.  Some of them don't even look like they have owners, but they do have nice threads.

We didn't visit the mines, a common tourist activity.  I had seen them the last time I was here, and they're quite dangerous. 

The last night in Potosí we ate at El Fogón, one of the few misses for food on our trip. At least the wine (Campos de Solana malbec from Tarija) was good, i was surprised that we were able to finish the bottle at this altitude. 

Monday, March 28, 2011

Salar de Uyuni tour Day 4, Bolivia

The salt hotel was pretty comfortable to stay in.  There were only two other groups of people, a couple from Buenos Aires, and a family of five, so the hotel was creepily empty at times. 

Almost everything that could be made from blocks, was made of salt.  The bed platform, side tables, non-load-bearing walls, floor, all from salt.  We were warm at night so I guess salt blocks also have good insulating properties. 

Our driver picked us up at 9am, and we were off for the final day of the tour.

Rainy season is in Jan-Feb, and so at this time of year, the salar is covered with water, around 10cm depth when we visited.  We drove out slowly, for about 30 minutes at 5 km/h (to minimize salt water splashing under the vehicle).  We drove past workers collecting the salt.  Some were making conical piles about 1m high, which allowed the salt to dry out.  Others were shoveling the dried-out salt into trucks, which is then taken to refineries.  

The salar reminded us of lakes after winter, when the surface is melting but there's still ice underneath. However there was no worries about falling through -- under the water is 1.5m of solid salt, 12,106 sq km big.

A lot of other tourists walked through the salt water in their bare feet, but we didn't feel the need.

After lunch, we drove to the Train Cemetery just outside Uyuni.  There's dozens of rusting old steam locomotives and other train cars, just sitting in the middle of sand.  It's a b/w photography dreamscape.  I took a whole bunch of pictures, in the hope that a couple may actually look good.  I don't have a good eye yet for b/w pictures.

Our driver dropped us off at our hotel in Uyuni, Los Girasoles Hotel. The 4-day tour seemed much longer than the 5-day W trek, maybe because the scenery changed so quickly.

We walked around town, with not much to do except find a place for dinner. All the tourist places have the same menu of pizza, llama burgers and pasta.  We had resigned ourselves to attempting pizza again, until we walked by a restaurant with rotisserie chicken (the range was outside on th sidewalk).  It was pretty good, served with decent enough fries.  

After we went to a bar and celebrated with a Potosina, a local beer.  We haven't had any alcohol since we've been in Bolivia, to help adjust to the altitude.  At 3669m, Uyuni is lower than the 4200m+ of the tour.  Our remaining cities in Bolivia are Potosí (4070m), Sucre (2750m) and La Paz (3660m), before we return to closer to sea level in Santiago. 

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Salar de Uyuni tour Day 3, Bolivia

We had pancakes for breakfast, with dulce de leche (a cross between condensed milk and caramel), and were on the road by 7:30am.

The first stop was Árbol de Piedra, a tree-shaped stone in Desierto Sioli.  It's a mandatory photo stop, which most people post to Flickr.

Because it's near the end of rainy season, the normal route wasn't accessible.  We drove by a couple amazing lagunas instead. 

The first was Laguna Cañapa.  The surface was completely still, and formed a perfect reflection of the surrounding snow-capped mountains.

Next was Laguna Hedionda, which had a couple thousand flamingoes, which didn't run / fly away at the first sight of humans.  It was signposted as to how close you were allowed, which is maybe why.  We sat and took dozens of pictures of flamingoes with the Andes in the background.

The rest of the day was driving to Uyuni.  We stopped at a few towns:  Alota, a farming community surrounded by colourful fields of quinoa; Culpina K, a mining town with a plaza filled with iron works; and San Cristobal with a beautiful 350-year old church.

We also saw active Volcán Ollagüe, and drove through a giant area filled with rock formations as far as we could see.  In another area, we drove through a sandy desert at 4500m.  It's an odd sight to see snow-capped tips of 5000m mountains just peeking above the horizon. The whole day was filled with surreal images.

Tonight we are staying at Hotel Cristal Semaña, built almost entirely from salt, just off Salar de Uyuni.  We just watched the sunset over the Salar from the 2nd floor dining area.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Salar de Uyuni tour Day 1-2, Bolivia

We started the tour (also called the Southwest Circuit) in Tupiza, doing it the reverse of most tours (which start in Uyuni).  We arrived from Argentina and are headed north, so it made more sense logistically, but also gets us to the sites at different times from the bulk of tours.

We met our driver and cook, and headed out in our Toyota Land Cruiser.  The first day was a lot of driving, with the main attractions the following days.

The scenery was amazing, with lava formations, eroded sand cliffs, abandoned Spanish villages, quinoa fields, llamas, sheep and donkeys.  We reached a maximum altitude of 4855m.  I got a bit sick, but I think more from heat stroke, as I was sitting on the sunny side most of the afternoon.

The driver and cook were great at paying attention to our health, and were very concerned that I might have altitude sickness. 

We stayed the night at Quetena Chico (4200m), in a very basic hospedaje.  We were the only tourists (tours that start in Tupiza do more of the southwest), so raided the extra beds in our dorm room for blankets.

We were in bed by 9pm, and slept all the way through till 6:30am.  The altitude was exhausting!

Day 2 started with us in much better health (and so spirits).  It was a short (90 minute) drive to Termas de Polques, hot springs (30C) that now have basic facilities.  When I was here 10 years ago, there was just water coming out of the ground.  Now they have built a small pool that captures the water, about a foot deep.  We took off our shoes and socks, rolled up our pants and relaxed on the ledge for a while.  The water was very soft.

Next we drove through a valley that looks like a replica of a Dali painting.  It's a big stretch of sloped sand, dotted with house-sized boulders.  It's deceptively large.  We parked near one boulder, and thought to walk to another to take a picture.  After five minutes and not getting closer, we thought better.

Next was Laguna Verde, one of the highlights of the tour.  It's mint green lake, (from high concentrations of lead, sulfur, arsenic and calcium carbonates), at 4400m, with Volcán Licancabur (5960m) rising in the background.  

We had lunch at 4400m, within view of Laguna Blanca.

En route to the next stop, we drove past the hot springs again, which now looked like Daytona Beach at spring break.  We were glad we visited earlier in the day.

We drove through a pass at 5000m, the highest altitude of the tour, without any altitude problems.  Just over the pass is Sol de Mañana, filled with geyser basins and bubbling fumaroles (and sulfur fumes).  Not that impressive as other sites we saw earlier, but still interesting.

The last stop of the day was Laguna Colorado, a fiery red lake with hundreds of pink flamingos feeding.  The red comes from the algae and plankton in the water that the flamingos feed on. I got some good pictures, but a big zoom lens would be better.  The flamingos move away from humans and vehicles.

It was a shorter day, we were in a hospedaje by 3:30pm, with a view of Laguna Colorado.

There were other groups also in the hospedaje, about 30 tourists in total.  At least we had our dorm room to ourselves. Electricity was from a generator and was on from 7-9pm, so it wasn't a good place to recharge camera batteries.

We had dinner at sundown, and were in bed by 8:30pm.  There was no light switch so I had to unscrew the lightbulb in the room to go to bed.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Tupiza, Bolivia

Our bus arrived at La Quiaca, the Argentinian side of the border, at 6:30pm.  We decided to stay the night in Argentina rather than attempting the border crossing with night approaching.

La Quiaca is at 3442m and we could feel the effects of the altitude.  We had no endurance at all.  We took a slow walk a few blocks to Hotel de Turismo, and checked in.  

The Lonely Planet only has one page and no map for the town, so we went to the very friendly tourist information.  Our hotel was within a block of the church and museum, so we stopped into both on the way back.

The next morning we had breakfast then walked to the border.  Leaving Argentina was very easy;  entering Bolivia was pretty straightforward as well.  

Villazón, on the Bolivian side, is a small bustling border town.  We found our way to the bus station, and bought tickets for the next bus to Tupiza.  

We had about an hour to wait, so dropped our bags at the guardaropa and walked around.  Had some really good empanadas from a street stall (3 Bs, about 40¢).

It was fun crossing the border, because we had to figure it out as we went.  Travelling has become a bit of paint-by-numbers over the years :)

In Tupiza we checked into Hotel Mitru. We were lucky to get the last double, there are more tourists here than in Argentina, although the demographic is more 20-something backpackers.

Our errands for the afternoon were to book the Uyuni tour, get money from the bank, and have lunch. 

We booked a four-day tour for just the two of us, with driver and cook, meals and accommodation, for 4800 Bs.  On the 3rd night we're staying in a salt hotel (this is extra), and then we'll finish in Uyuni.  

I have been wrong about this before, but I don't think we'll have Internet access until we get to Uyuni.

Tupiza, Bolivia

I guessed wrong about not having wifi access for our last couple stops.  Even the hotel at the little border town of La Quiaca in Argentina had wifi (and a non-guessable password -- most hotels have just used the name of the hotel).

We spent three nights in Salta.  It was a nice town for Heather to recover from her cold.  Between the two of us, we were sick for almost our entire time in Argentina :) 

The first night we ate at the hotel restaurant, and were pleasantly surprised that the food was great. The next day we went to a couple museums (not a lot was open on Sundays). 

The highlight was Museo Histórico del Norte.  In 1999 three tombs were discovered at the peak of Llullalliaco (6739m).  Because of the altitude and cold, the tombs and bodies were perfectly preserved.  The museum gives a history of why they were there, and has almost everything on display, including the preserved bodies.

We went to a couple of the artesenal markets but they didn't have anything that appealed to us.

The 2nd night we ate dinner at Viejo Jack's, a parrilla (grillhouse) a little out of the centre.  They serve huge amounts of meat at very low prices.  We had the parrillada for two (a grill filled with various meats, brought sizzling to the table).  We originally ordered the 'Parrilla Jack', but the waiter said we just needed the 1/2 Jack.  Which was a good thing, as we didn't even finish that between the two of us.

The last night in Salta we ate at José Balcarce, a trendy restaurant with exposed brick walls and the like. The food was great (I had a llama steak, which was very tender).  

Also in Salta we went up the teleferico which has great views, as I suppose they all do.

From Salta we took a bus to the border town of La Quiaca. 

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

La Quiaca, Argentina

A couple pics.  The first is of Perito Moreno Glacier; the second is Isla Magdalena in the Strait of Magellan.  


Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Salta, Argentina

We're off to the border town of La Quiaca this morning, and then into Bolivia. We may go straight on the four day Uyuni tour. Not sure when we'll have Internet access again; it may be after the tour.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Salta, Argentina

We split up the 9+ hour bus ride from La Rioja to Salta, stopping in Tucumán for a night.  There's no real tourist attractions in Tucumán, and we didn't see any other tourists.

I was at the tail end of my cold, and Heather was just getting into hers, so we didn't do much sightseeing. We did have dinner at a nice little mom-and-pop place, with excellent empanadas.

Walking about Tucumán at night at this time of year is a bit nerve-wracking, there are a million cicadas flying about.  I didn't like it one little bit; the locals seemed unperturbed. 

Took the bus today to Salta.  We've actually been watching (and enjoying!) some of the movies shown on the bus rides, including to my surprise Norbit (the Eddie Murphy movie).

Because Argentina wasn't part of our original plans, we didn't bring a guide book for Argentina.  However thanks to the Internet and iPhones, I bought a digital copy of the Argentina Lonely Planet (they sell them as PDFs, which I've saved to Stanza), which we've been using for the last week or so.  It took a couple days to adjust, and I now find it far more convenient. Lots of locals use smart phones, so if we're looking at a map on the iPhone we don't stand out as tourists.  Plus it's no additional weight.

So far the only downside is that there was one page that was corrupted (or at least won't open on the iPhone). It is the map of Salta.  So we arrived today without a map.  We wanted a hotel near the main plaza, so took a taxi to the main square, and then looked at hotels.  We decided on Hotel Salta, on a corner of Plaza 9 de Julio, splurging an extra $10 per night to get a huge terrace balcony. We asked and received a significant discount for staying three nights and paying cash.

Salta's a beautiful colonial town with a few pedestrian-only streets around the centro.  We walked around a bit this afternoon, to stretch our legs after two days of bus rides.  We're here for a couple days, with plenty of churches, museums and artesanal markets to visit.