And then there was two……Kate and I are writing this after saying a sad goodbye to Soph, Shane and Anna. We have had such an incredible journey together over the past two and a half months and we´ll miss them heaps and heaps.
We´ve had some amazing experiences in the last few weeks - some of the best and worst days of our trip. We have learned that Bolivia has some of the best mountain biking in the world, La Paz has amazing shopping and fruit juice and never to let Bolivian shop owners see how much money we have!
Following our jeep trip across the salt plains we took a bus from Uyuni to La Paz. It was a bit of a shock for all of us arriving in third world Boliva. Although rich in natural resources Bolivia has been constantly exploited over the years with an unstable political history. These things combined make it one of the poorest countries in South America. The poverty is clearly evident on the streets. After almost having our teeth shaken out on the bumpy bus trip to La Paz we made our way through the chaotic streets to the Adventure Brew Hostel.
We´ve had some amazing experiences in the last few weeks - some of the best and worst days of our trip. We have learned that Bolivia has some of the best mountain biking in the world, La Paz has amazing shopping and fruit juice and never to let Bolivian shop owners see how much money we have!
Following our jeep trip across the salt plains we took a bus from Uyuni to La Paz. It was a bit of a shock for all of us arriving in third world Boliva. Although rich in natural resources Bolivia has been constantly exploited over the years with an unstable political history. These things combined make it one of the poorest countries in South America. The poverty is clearly evident on the streets. After almost having our teeth shaken out on the bumpy bus trip to La Paz we made our way through the chaotic streets to the Adventure Brew Hostel.
Exhausted from our long ride we chilled out in La Paz buying presents for our families and planning the next leg of our journey. Planning touring routes in Bolivia is a little more challenging than down south. Getting our hands on descent maps was tricky in itself….then knowing how much to believe is another story. After gathering as much information as possible we set off out of La Paz hoping to do a three or four day loop. Getting out of La Paz was a mission in itself….the crowded streets, erratic drivers and packed markets made pushing, let alone riding our bikes hard work. For the first time on the trip I had absolutely no energy in my legs and Sophie and Shane were cracking up when they watched Anna, Kate and I cruise by on a bus on the climb out of the city to La Cumbre! At la Cumbre we had our first views of the famed `World`s Most Dangerous Road`.
As we dropped in altitude the air became warm and sticky with the vegetation becoming more and more jungle-like, with mango trees and brightly coloured butterflies everywhere. The most challenging part of our ride was crossing a large active land-slide with rocks and rubble tumbling down. In the hot jungle air we climbed a steep 7km to the town of Coroico.
The following day will not be remembered as our favourite…..but at least we could all laugh about by the end of the trip! We rode in the humid tropical air toward the town of Coripata. Soph arrived first and headed into a shop to buy us some lunch supplies. The shop-owner assured her he had change for her 100 boliviani note then preceeded to deny she ever handed it to him (blatantly stealing it!). By the time I arrived they were in a heated discussion in broken Spanish. Unfortunately the locals had seen how much money we had and decided to completely rip us off. We all attempted to get our point across, but to no avail. Angry and frustrated, one of the group (I`m sure many of you can guess who!) decided to take the law into her own hands by throwing a big bag of oats over the shop floor and owner. What eventuated was a near street brawl with buckets of water being thrown, broomsticks flying around, us being man-handled, Sophie´s pannier being taken and eventually the police arriving on the scene. Having attracted the attention of half the town we eventually escaped from the horrible scene with all our gear, no lunch and 125 bolivianis less. After finally finding the road out of town Sophie calmed herself with a beer on the bike while I vented my anger at a certain oat-throwing person! After a subdued lunch we all had a good chat/debrief…and as I said we can laugh about it now! This is definitely not the norm for Bolivian behaviour, but there are pockets of animosity toward `gringos`, and we have been a lot more wary following this incident. That afternoon we rode into a valley that joined back up with the dangerous road. Once again it was not easy finding somewhere to camp with the road cut into the steep slope.
Following our ride into rural Bolivia we took a more touristy trip to Lake Titicaca and Isla del Sol (Island of the Sun). The trip involved lots of shopping, eating and a terrifying/hilarious trip in a bus on a precarious wooden barge across the lake. Shane and Soph were smart enough and fast enough to hop of the bus and take the safer ferry, while the rest of us were still gathering our gear our bus was moving and swaying across the water! We stayed in the lakeside town of Copacabana where Anna went nuts buying alpaca products- her favourite and a definite must for all adventure racing world champions- alpaca leg-warmers!
The last few days have been a bit dampened by Kate´s worsening tummy troubles. She has been sick on and off for a couple of weeks but things have deteriorated in the last few days (power-chucking in the streets of La Paz!!) We have started antibiotics and hope things settle soon. We´re planning a chilled out couple of days in Sorata to recuperate.
To our beavers…..thank you for such an awesome trip. It has been such an amazing experience journeying through South America with you all. Thank you Shane for all the fix-it jobs and putting up with us four chicas. Thanks Soph for towing us in the headwinds and always being so super organised. And Pari….well thanks for being you- you´re special alright! We´ll miss you all so much….it has truly been the trip of a life-time!! Ciao perros!!!
1 comment:
so ggod to read and know you are OK. really think Miss Kate that it is time you stopped throwing oats! I have heard of 'throwing a tantrum' and 'sewing your oats' but that is ridiculous.Anyway I am relieved to hear fronm you- it had been getting a bit of a strech. Take care- Love you both.
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