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Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon

a travel blog by The Happy Couple


Michael's view on the trip. This blog is really mostly for me, so that I'll have a clearer memory of the trip when it's done, like a journal, so please forgive me my obsessions like sampling and photographing all the local food and the booze. It's just my thing!

Also please forgive all typos, spelling mistakes and grammar mistakes. I'm usually doing this in a rush, and most of the time it's on such a slow PC that it would take even longer to check for mistakes and correct them.

The blog is usually 2 to 3 weeks behind, but I try to keep next few locations on the map up-to-date. You can see the schedule dates associated with the map if you go to http://blogabond.com/TripView.aspx?TripID=4517 and click "Show Newest First" or, if the maps are causing problems try http://blogabond.com/TripView.aspx?tripID=4517&slow=1
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Salar de Uyuni Trip: Day 4

Uyuni, Bolivia


The previous two mornings had required us to get up at about 5am, but David wanted us up even earlier to make sure we got onto the Salar for sunrise. We were all at the car, ready for leaving at 5am, but this time David and/or Bernadine had slept in, and they were rushing around trying to get stuff done. Abi was already seated in the car and a suspicious smell of bacon was wafting out of their quarters. Our breakfast had been stale bread and dolce de leche every morning.

We did get to David's preferred stopping place for dawn, but his preferred stopping place was disappointingly ugly as there were rows of salt bricks hacked out of the flats and piled up near where we had stopped. The dawn was a bit of a non-event anyway, as there was a lot of cloud. Oh well, time to get down to David's proscribed repertoire of photos locos.

When we got out of the car, Joanne noticed that her trousers were wet and after a bit of investigation it seemed that it had been a mistake for them to put Abi in the back of the car so long before they were ready: she had wet the seat, where Joanne had then been sitting. After a bit of photo taking, we were off again towards an island in the middle of the Salar. These salt flats are huge; I think they are the biggest in the world. Apparently they were formed through the evaporation of a large inland sea, which occupied the whole of the Bolivian Alto Plano at the end of the last ice age. So the island in the middle, Isla del Pescado would have been a real island in the middle of an extremely saline lake at some point, and it still really gives the impression of being a real island, except that it is surrounded by salt rather than water.

At the island, Bernadine prepared another pitiful lunch for us, while David stood around chatting to other guides, who were all chewing coca leaves.

Then it was off again for more photos locos and also to dig around through the salt layer to look for crystals. The salt layer was surprisingly thin and it was quite easy to make holes with our shoes. The car didn't seem to be in any danger of falling through though.

Apparently when it's the rainy season you need to wear wellies because the water just lies on top of the salt layer, and this is when the Salar looks its most impressive, apparently, with the reflections in the water. Joanne wanted me to do a star jump (or "jumping jack") to get her own photo of me doing silly things, but disaster struck: a large hold in my new trousers ripped open at the crotch, rendering them totally unwearable. Luckily I had shorts to change into. It was a bit cold, but it would have to do. I knew I should have paid over the odds for trousers that didn't quite fit correctly! A quick action photo sequence of the whole process of my trousers ripping and me realising exist on Joanne's camera. Unfortunately she hasn't been uploading many photos so nobody will ever see it....

Eventually we set off again, to stop at the salt hotel. It turns out that this is the illegal one, so it's now been turned into a museum. We originally had thought that the illegality might come from some desire to preserve the salt flats, but it fact they are quite happily mining it all over the place: for building bricks and also for food. In fact the original salt hotel is the only one on the Salar itself; the rest are near, and the problem was that it had no proper sewage facilities, located as it was in the middle of nowhere on the salt flats. Oddly, you can't go into the shop and museum until you agree to buy something, but you have to do this before you've seen what's on offer, so we refused. Business sense seems to be seriously lacking at time in South America! We just took photos from the outside.

At last the tour was over and we hung around a small market where they are trying to flog all manner of tourist tat, which we also declined to buy, reasoning that on the salt flats is probably the most expensive place to buy any of it.

Then it was on to Uyuni, where I had to pay for the trip. They had a cash machine, I had been told. However, what they didn't tell me was that the maximum withdrawal is only half what I owed for the trip. Luckily I had a credit card I could use for a cash advance, but it could easily have been an awkward situation.

We said goodbye to everyone and gave David a tip from us all, though he had been acting very strangely since leaving the salt flats: he had become very sullen; maybe he was sad that we were going, or maybe he had run out of coca leaves. I'm sure his mood had been rising and falling depending on how large the bunch of leaves in his mouth. Poor Victoria was taking the option to return with them to Tupiza; maybe the problem was that David was in a huff because she was depriving him of family time. She was planning going to the office to complain and refuse to pay any more than what she owed minus all the money she had spent on water during the trip.

We booked cheapish bus tickets and sat around at a bar, drinking and chatting to some other travellers, before getting on the bus out of there. Uyuni is a rather ugly and pointless place, so we were delighted to leave. Not so delighted when we discovered how cramped the bus was: it was the least leg room we had seen since Nepal. I was getting leg cramps from the lack of space, but thankfully the person in front did not recline their seat. Whew! Another overnight bus, this time to Sucre.

We had been promised toilet stops as the toilet on the bus was locked, but the first stop was at 2am, seven hours after the bus had set off. This was also the food stop, so we bought some cheese and bread. Oddly the cheese was being sold for 5Bs for three cheeses, which was far more than we needed, but it was so little money it hardly mattered and we bought all three.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on October 22, 2009 from Uyuni, Bolivia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Sucre, Bolivia




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on October 23, 2009 from Sucre, Bolivia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Sleeping in Sucre

Sucre, Bolivia


We were absolutely shattered when we arrived in Sucre. Three days in a row of getting up at or before 5am really takes its toll, especially when immediately followed by a night bus designed for garden gnomes. Sucre is supposed to be a nice colonial place, which is why we were there. It was Joanne's idea; I had seen enough South American colonial towns, but people did rate it highly. We really weren't up to sight-seeing when we arrived, so we just spent time online, drank, and then went to bed about 7pm. The hostel we were staying in, La Dolce Vita, was a bit pricier than we were expecting for Bolivia, but it was supposed to be a good one. Despite that, they did not let guests use their wireless internet connection. There is no excuse for not having internet access, especially in a more expensive place!

We had read that Bolivia is famous for its fruits and we hadn't yet a a chance to sample them, since we had only been on the tour and in a very dry part of the country before that. So we went to the nearby market to buy some fruit and also buy some of Bolivia's famous fruit juices. The juices were a real disappointment: the guidebook raves about them, but they are not a patch on the juices and fruit shakes you can get all over Asia. You can't usually even just get fruit juice: you have to choose between con agua and con leche. Funnily enough, one tastes like watered down fruit juice and the other tastes like a milk shake. What a let-down!

One highlight of Sucre we had been told about is Cafe Mirador, in a nice part of town, with amazing views over the city. So we went there. It rained, but we bumped into Ricarda, the German girl we met in Salta, then again briefly in Tilcara. Cafe Mirador was OK. I suppose it would have been better in the sun. At least the beer in Bolivia is quite good. We agreed to meet up with Ricarda later, where we were planning to meet some other people from our hostel later. We drank too much. We drank two towers of beer. It was messy.




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on October 25, 2009 from Sucre, Bolivia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Tourists Trapped in Tarabuco

Tarabuco, Bolivia


Next morning we were booked to go on a tour to Tarabuco, which is meant to be a lovely little town with a Sunday market, mostly of traditional textiles from different nearby villages. The market was traditionally held for locals, but it was now chiefly a tourist event, we understood. Unfortunately I was too hung over to shop. It's not easy for me at the best of times, but virtually impossible with a hangover. When we got off the bus, we headed straight for a cafe for some coffee. The first place we stopped had such bad coffee that we poured it away before heading to another place.

The next place we found was actually quite nice and we ordered a “traditional breakfast” without really knowing what to expect. It was described as being Api con buñelos but I had no idea what either were. Api, it turns out, is a hot and spicy fruit drink; very nice and thick. Buñelos are little biscuits, for dunking into the api I supposed.

The stuff on sale at the market was quite nice, but the town was a tourist trap and people constantly hassled us; something that hadn't really happened since Asia, and something my hangover did not equip me for. I just wanted to leave but we couldn't because we had taken the tour bus instead of getting the local bus: we had to stay until our bus was leaving. In the end we did buy a couple of things are probably got quite good prices for them, but I found it so irritating being hassled constantly for the whole day, I wouldn't recommend the place. Yet, when the boot is on the other foot it's a different matter: I asked an old man if I could please take his photo, and he just looked annoyed, as if he was sick of all this hassle, and said no. Horrible place! Maybe he's not involved in the market and it is all annoying for him too.

Back in Sucre we went out to Locot's Mexican Restaurant, which the guidebook recommended, saying it had wifi. We got the worst service so far on the trip, which is saying something, and the wifi wasn't even working. I was really becoming sick of Bolivia. Lucy and Zdenek arrived later in the day and were also staying at La Dolce Vita, but he was really ill and not up to socialising at all. He also believes he has a really strong stomach (unlike Lucy), but the food in Bolivia had struck him down.

The following day we managed to find an open tailor and get my poor broken trousers repaired, along with various other items of clothing, mostly shirts, which had ripped to a greater or lesser degree. The repair was cheap and quick, so I had trousers again! Just in time for another overnight bus. This time to La Paz. We had to check our bags in like a plane and mine weighed only 25kg, so I was at least losing some weight from my bag. It was another horrible bus journey: the speaker above our heads rattled loudly, the toilet stop was far too late again, but at least I finished my Che Guevara biography. It was heavy going but really good. And how appropriate, I thought to finish it in the country where they did him in. And what a cheek, I thought, for all the tourist places to be selling goods with him image on them, when the people of Bolivia constantly reported his presence to the military and their betrayal led directly to his death. Still, I suppose nations can change. And he was a bit stupid launching a guerilla campaign in Bolivia in the first place, not helped by the Stalinists in the country deceiving him, causing him to make serious tactical errors.

permalink written by  The Happy Couple on October 26, 2009 from Tarabuco, Bolivia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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La Paz, Bolivia




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on October 27, 2009 from La Paz, Bolivia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Dried llama fœtus

La Paz, Bolivia


We had agreed that by the time we got to La Paz we would have recovered from our party excesses nearly two months previously in Chile. After the towers of beer in Sucre we weren't so sure, but we had already booked ourselves several nights in what we had heard is one of the most extreme party hostels in South America: The Wild Rover. Yes I know it sounds Irish rather than Bolivian, and that's because, well it is an entire hostel in the style of an Irish bar. I know, it's awful, but these are the sacrifices you have to make if you want to have a good time.

Unlike most hostels, they didn't provide any directions on the website, just an address and how much you should expect to pay the taxi driver. Obviously people who go to party hostels have lots of money. We checked in an headed out again, wary that we should try to get as much done as possible before we found ourselves with crippling hangovers.

La Paz is quite high up, so we were a bit worried about altitude sickness, but hoped that our previous high altitude experience was recent enough to protect us. The city reminded me slightly of a very Shimla: blocky houses on steep slopes, though La Paz was missing that everything-on-stilts, Dr Seus element to the architecture that makes Shimla so strange-looking. At one end the streets at one end of town there is a huge mountain. Once in the center, zebras were driecting the traffic. Yes, zebras.

There was quite a nice church, though undergoing renovation, in one of the main plazas, and Joanne was keen to visit the witches market, which she thought looked good in the guide book. They did have some interesting, even nice, things, but they also had some rather gruesome objects for sale, most notably the dried llama fœtus, which is apparently a standard house-warming present for good luck. Good yuck, more like!

After perusing the fœtuses for a while we booked a cycle trip down the Road of Death for the following morning, then we found a Cuban bar and stepped inside to see what was on offer. Mojitos and a Cohiba: that'll do nicely! Heading back towards the hostel we popped found an Indian restaurant, run by an English guy, so we thought we'd try it for lunch, after all it couldn't be worse than the usual standard of food in Bolivia. In fact the food was excellent. I opted for the vindaloo, which is so hot they give you a t-shirt to finish a full portion, however I was only having a lunch portion; I saw it as a test run for the real thing. It was exceptionally hot, by far the hottest food either of us had eaten on the trip, but I reckoned I'd be able to earn that t-shirt.


Back at the hostel we unpacked and I discovered that my dry bag, containing my thermals, was missing. Someone must have stolen it during the night, from the where our bags were stored on the bus from Sucre. And soon we would probably be needing them again, since we were planning to go trekking in Peru. Thieving scum!! I was really going off Bolivia: first food-poisoning and now theft. Nobody warned us about this, everyone had said Bolivia was the best place in South America and everyone we had spoken to before getting there had loved it. Now that we were there, everyone we spoke to had been robbed and had food-poisoning. A strange difference.

That evening, the bar was very loud and lively, and we had a few drinks and chatted to some people. Most of the people staying there were younger than us and a large percentage were Irish. One Irish guy said that he had recently got his vindaloo t-shirt even though he hates curry, which made me more determined than ever to get one of my own. He had made himself sick after finishing the bowl and thought it was very brave of me to have even a lunch portion the day before our death road cycle. You don't want that in you he advised, helpfully. Later, Ricarda appeared and also seemed keen to go for the vindaloo t-shirt. We all agreed that we would do it on Friday when Lucy and Zdenek arrived in La Paz; I was sure he would want to have a go at it too.

permalink written by  The Happy Couple on October 27, 2009 from La Paz, Bolivia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Road of Death

La Paz, Bolivia


The Road of Death cycle route starts at an altitude of 4650 metres and then it's almost continuously downhill to 1200 metres. The road was declared the world's most dangerous road in 1995, with around 300 people being killed each year on it. It's much safer now that a new road has been opened, which means that there is almost no traffic on the Death Road now apart from mountain bikes and their support vehicles.

We were picked up early at our hostel and driven to the starting point of the route. It was nice and sunny, but still very cold at that altitude. We had heard some dodgy tales of unscrupulous operators using badly maintained bikes and minimal protection. We had been recommended Vertigo by someone who had used them and they were offering a low season discount so it cost only Bs400, more than Bs200 less than the most famous company, Gravity, who the Wild Rover Hostel would have been happy to sign us up with.

There's not too much more to say about the day, but I have lots of photos as the fee includes a CD of photos and a t-shirt saying that you survived the Road of Death. Most of the photos were taken on the day, but they also included some standard ones, including lots of photos of shrines and a couple of jokey ones. I was surprised they are still so flippant about it, after our guide Chello told us that there was a fatal accident with their company not that long ago. There are still occasional fatal accidents, but nowhere near the levels they were at before the new road opened.

The route starts off on tarmac but at the point the new road splits off it turns into a crumbly gravel road. The mountain biking wasn't as tough as anything I've done in Scotland, though the chances of dying if you do have an accident are certainly much higher: those drops are long. The bikes were good, it was probably the best mountain bike I've ever been on, but they didn't seem to be geared very high, which meant I couldn't go as fast as I would have liked. Maybe this is deliberate to reduce the chances of people taking corners too fast, or perhaps it's just that I'm used to road bikes, which are usually much faster. Nonetheless it was a lot of fun and the views were great.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on October 28, 2009 from La Paz, Bolivia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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More Bolivian Misery

La Paz, Bolivia


When we got back to the hostel after surviving the Road of Death, we thought we should get into the party spirit of the hostel and had a few drinks. One thing this party hostel does which actually makes it much easier to sleep than most party hostels, is it organises taxis to whisk people away to different clubs every night, by about midnight. So we decided to go to that night's club when the taxis turned up. The club was completely empty until we arrived there. It was awful, so we just accepted our free drinks and then headed out to look for somewhere more interesting. We did find a more interesting club, which meant that we only left it when it was light, a situation we took advantage of by picking up our Death Road t-shirts and CDs. There were traffic zebras everywhere.

Predictably, we spent most of that day sleeping and feeling terrible. Eventually we got up for food and I had a burger in the bar. That was that day.

The next day was Friday and Lucy and Zdenek were arriving. They had decided to give our hostel a miss and instead book into the Adventure Brew Hostel which has its own microbrewery. We went looking for them, hopefully to join them for a beer, but they weren't answering text messages when we arrived there and I was starting to feel really ill again; I could barely drink the beer from the microbrewery. By the time we gave up waiting for them and left, I was convinced that I had food poisoning again. I suspected the burger. This partly ruined our plans for the night because I was too ill to eat anything, let alone the hottest vindaloo in South America (maybe the world) and when they woke up again we discovered that Zdenek hates curry anyway, so he wasn't interested. Oh well, at least I had my Death Road t-shirt.

That night we went out again, this time with Lucy, Zdenek, and Ricarda, but even on Friday night we struggled to find lively places and spent a fortune going from place to place in taxis. Eventually someone told us about an after-hours club so we took a taxi to there. I was in the front seat and everyone else got out so it fell to me to pay the driver, however I had nothing smaller than a Bs100 note which people are always sticky about changing. Before I handed to him I asked him if he had change and he said yes. Then he took a pile of small coins out and said no and could I ask my friends, so I turned to ask the others and Ricarda handed me a Bs20. When the taxi driver handed me back my Bs100 note something almost registered, but didn't quite make it though the drunken fog. It was only after I got out that I realised the note he handed me back felt completely different from the one I had handed him. I looked down and it was pretty sure it was an obvious fake. The bastard had realised I was drunk enough (only just actually) and switched it on me after directing my attention away from him.

Robbed again! Why did nobody warn us about Bolivia? At the door I tried to use the Bs100 note but my suspicions were confirmed that it was an obvious fake, but the people on the door were nice enough to apologise for the taxi driver when I cursed him. It actually seemed like a really good place, but it was packed with nowhere to sit and we were all a bit tired by that point. And I was completely fed up, as well as still feeling ill. At that point I was completely sick of Bolivia. Poisoned twice and robbed twice. What a place. Just before we left, I spotted Chello, our guide from the Road of Death, wearing his “I survived the Road of Death” t-shirt. He came over and hugged as both before heading on towards the bar. I think it was a proper cool underground club we had stumbled on; if only we had found it before so many of the other rubbish places that we'd nearly had enough. I didn't care: I just wanted to go to bed and dream of murdering taxi drivers, who seem to be almost consistently the most evil people in any country. OK, you do get nice ones, but most taxi drivers seem evil in every country.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on October 30, 2009 from La Paz, Bolivia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Copacabana, Bolivia




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on October 31, 2009 from Copacabana, Bolivia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Good Food in Bolivia!

Copacabana, Bolivia


I just wanted to leave Bolivia, but Joanne had been reading the guide book and Copacabana was going to be nice, apparently. At least is was at the border with Peru. Bolivia had been one of the countries we were most looking forward to, but I was feeling very negative about it now. Looking back at it, the Salar de Uyuni trip was amazing: the landscapes we went through there was fantastic, but it cost a lot of money; in fact, taken together with the Death Road cycle, they alone used up what I had estimated our entire budget for Bolivia would be. South American “cheap” is not like Asian cheap.

Anyway, one thing we were looking forward to in Copacabana was, because it's on Lake Titicaca, fish in Bolivia would finally be safe to eat, and trout is abundant apparently. Of course, we were looking forward to the ceviche in Peru even more, but a Peruvian guy staying at the Wild Rover had told us that we have to wait for the coast for the ceviche to be safe in Peru; apparently the fish from Titicaca isn't right for ceviche. However I was still really ill and wouldn't be eating anything; I just wanted to get to the hostel and get to sleep. The hostel was apparently very disorganised and had no idea that we had booked with them, so they did not subtract our ten percent booking fee from the bill, although I think what they charged us was less than the online price anyway.

I just went to bed, leaving Joanne to fend for herself for the first time in ages. I slept all the way to morning, but when I got up and used the shower I was not impressed: there was no hot water, which wouldn't have been a problem if it was warm, but we were at about 3900 metres above sea level, so it was cold. To make matters worse, this cold water was streaming through bare wires hanging down from the shower head, where they were presumably supposed to do something about heating the water, but were just scaring me instead. Online we had booked for two nights, but decided to take advantage of their ignorance by moving hostel to a much nicer place.

I wasn't much impressed by Copacabana itself, but perhaps the main reason for going there is to take a trip to the nearby islands, so we made enquiries at a couple of travel agents. The woman at the desk of one reasonably-priced place told us that the trip leaves early for the Isla del Sol, visiting the South end of the island, before stopping off for an hour or so at Isla de la Luna and returning about 6pm. We bought tickets for this half-day ticket, but when we returned to get on the boat, the captain said that we were going to the Isla del Sol then returning at 4pm. I was still annoyed with Bolivia, so I got very angry and demanded our money back. He sent us back to the office and we did get a refund. The woman at the desk denied that she had told us that the trip went to Isla de la Luna. What a liar!

I was still feeling quite unwell anyway, so I returned to bed and sent Joanne out to get me medicine, book a full day trip the next day, and book the bus to Peru. For the first time, I gave her the dictionary and an extra phrase book; she was going to have to speak Spanish! She had started quite well, making a reasonable effort in Chile, but has quickly become lazy as my Spanish got a bit better. Now she was in at the deep end. A bit later she came back with everything, having apparently found it all easy enough. There were no trips to Isla de la Luna, even though every travel agent had a sign outside saying “trips to Isla de la Luna”. Everyone had told her that you can only do it with a private boat, which they don't offer. We theorised that because high season was now finished, they were no longer doing there.

I was feeling lots better, so we headed out to find some trout. We found quite a nice place at the water front and I ordered a trout. For reasons I cannot understand, Joanne ordered lasagne; here we are at a lake full of fish, which we had been looking forward to for weeks and she orders lasagne. The trout was very nice, though a bit on the small side. Apparently Joanne's lasagne was OK. Definitely feeling much better after dinner, I finally got around to smoking the Cohiba I had bought in the Cuban bar in La Paz.




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on November 1, 2009 from Copacabana, Bolivia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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