Breathing Easy Again

We head to Santa Cruz, Bolivia’s largest city, dropping down from the 4,000m plus altiplano to the Eastern reaches of their Amazon plain. Santa Cruz is a large working city. Pleasant enough, with aLeggi altro
We head to Santa Cruz, Bolivia’s largest city, dropping down from the 4,000m plus altiplano to the Eastern reaches of their Amazon plain. Santa Cruz is a large working city. Pleasant enough, with aLeggi altro
Picking up on a theme from our time in Paraguay and Northern Argentina last year, we head further East to follow the Missionaries Route. These are a collection of small towns - San Jose, San Miguel,Leggi altro
The plan was clear - headed back West and up the Andes to the regional city of Cochabamba. We got half way to the farming town of San Julian and got trapped by a farmer’s protest (they blocked allLeggi altro
The road from Trinidad to La Paz is a classic drive that takes a few days. Starting at a few hundred metres above sea level we move from Amazon jungle, over a number of increasingly high passes, withLeggi altro
Bolivia’s (other) capital, La Paz, runs at a frantic pace. A confusing mixture of old and new, it is crammed into a high valley (at just under 4,000m) that challenges daily commuting. Wealth andLeggi altro
We escape La Paz, manage to find some diesel (not easy in Bolivia), and head to the Southern shores of Lake Titicaca. Of course the trip requires another dodgy ferry ride, but we arrive safely at ourLeggi altro
Before we headed north to Peru, we decided to get a quick reprieve from the altitude and headed for the coast and a final couple of days in (very northern) Chile. The route was south-west from LakeLeggi altro
An uneventful (how we like them) border crossing, and we enter Peru, and a new flag is on the troopy.
After a few days on the coast, we head back inland and into the Andes. Not too high to start with, about 2,500m, when we visit Peru’s second largest city, Arequipa. Surrounded by snow-cappedLeggi altro
Just a “short” drive over another 5,000m pass and we set up camp at Colca Canyon. Only discovered a couple of decades ago (if you don’t count the indigenous farmers who have been there forLeggi altro