Saturday 7 July 2007 Tomorrow is a landmark as its 6 months since I left London. On Thursday night I left
Cusco in Peru by bus to La
Paz, the capital of Bolivia. The
journey was
a lot better than I feared.
Because of the protests of the previous weeks the bus was taking a round about route avoiding
Juliaca to
Puno, the first stop on the journey. Although it was a fine looking double
decker luxury coach the route taken included a lot of unmade sandy roads which made me nervous because of the increased risk of a skid. In fact there was only one
hairy moment I
noticed when the bus seemed to slip sideways for a second and, I think, clipped a sand bank. The driver stopped and got out to check for damage but
was soon on the way again. I slept reasonably well although I was a bit cold and this company didn't hand out blankets. Daylight broke about 5.30 am and before long we arrived in a cold
Puno bus terminal. I then had to wait an hour for the next bus to
Copacbana, in Bolivia. After a dreary breakfast I got on the on the bus and was sat
next to young Korean guy. We had a long conversation which took most of the 2-3 hour journey to the Peru /Bolivian border to Copacabana.

Copacabana is a small resort town on the edge of Lake Titicaca which gives access to the Bolivian islands. I had lunch at an outdoor restaurant and took the final bus to La
Paz, which included an interesting ferry crossing a
narrow point over the Lake. The passengers take a small boat and the bus goes the half mile crossing on a barge driven by one outboard motor.

On the other side we passed some wide barren valley
with snow capped mountain peaks off in the distance. Eventually we
entered what I took to be the outskirts of La
Paz. This
consists mainly of very unattractive red brick buildings, many apparently unfinished and without any aesthetic or or architectural merit. On a slight incline of the plain I could see these stretched on for miles. I was beginning to wonder what La
Paz would be really like when we entered onto a motorway and soon were looking down onto an a huge valley lined right up the mountain edges

these
unprepossessing building. Except now in the bottom of the valley one could see the high rise office blocks and
apartments which is the the city centre.
Once we arrived in the city centre I walked the few hundred metres from the bus company office to my hotel. After a welcome shave and shower I made my way to the next tour company to make my plans for the coming week. After the business was done I walked round the

city centre which was really bustling, to get more money from the bank and then for a dinner. After quite along walk around the centre I found
a nice bar/ restaurant near my hotel

where, over dinner I met a Frenchman who could speak English and enjoyed a good conversation about our respective travels, the problems of
capitalism and the benefits of Coca.
Today I took a bus tour to some more ancient ruins,
Tiwinaku, "Bolivia's most significant
archaeological site" 72
kms west of La
Paz. Today was cloudy and there was a cold wind so it was
necessary to keep wrapped up. I'm afraid after
Machu Picchu the site was not very inspiring but the museum attached and the Llama steak lunch made it worthwhile.

Tomorrow night I take another bus south to
Uyuni, from where I plan to take a tour of the highly proclaimed salt plains and other
landscapes of South West Bolivia

3 comments:
Noting your comments on being cold, can I refer you to what the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy has to say on towels, the first of which is to wrap it around you for warmth.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A984657
love
matt + clare
Paul
Come home soon, all this reading is tiring me out, particularly as it sounds like a 6 month holiday... which is grossly unfair on the rest of us
Yours in work
Dennis
Paul,
We're still going strong reading the blogs,will we need to book a weeks holiday to come around and see all the slides when you get back?!!
Keep it going, enjoy the thin air!
Best wishes
Jessica and Dave
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