Sunday Times

RISE UP & FALL FOR BOLIVIA Day 1

Chris Moss proposes a 10-day journey that takes in the country’s incredible landscapes and noble cultures — all as you climb gradually from 400m to more than 4,000m above the sea

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Even attempting to describe Bolivia produces a kind of breathless­ness. The landlocked nation bordered by Peru (in colonial times they constitute­d a single viceroyalt­y) and four other South American countries is beguilingl­y beautiful, dizzyingly extreme, economical­ly poor, biodiversi­ty mega-rich — and is the undisputed heartland of indigenous cultures. Bolivia has two Andean mountain ranges, an immense altiplano or high plateau and a pocket of the Amazon basin, as well as the world’s highest capital city, highest navigable lake and largest salt flat. It has coca, coffee, llamas, alpacas, jaguars, anacondas, condors and macaws. Its people speak Aymara and Quechua before they speak Spanish, and are as likely to revere Pachamama, an Inca fertility goddess, as the Virgin Mary.

A 10-day trip can’t possibly take all this in. But my own introducti­on to the country, 25 years ago, was not much longer and held enough wonder to make me realise I was visiting a very special land — I remember waking dreams from cold buses, as I peered out on a landscape that evoked Tibet, or Mars, or Salvador Dalí — and would need to return, time and again.

In recent years, Bolivia’s capital, La Paz, has been making news thanks to its playful Andean cuisine, designer hotels, a fabulous cable-car transit system and the sociocultu­ral “revolution” wrought by Evo Morales’ Left-leaning government.

But tone down the hype, and you’ll find Bolivia’s real attraction­s are deeper, more idiosyncra­tic, and less time-sensitive.

This itinerary aims to provide a showcase of talismanic locations as well as a primer in the cultural highs of a nation that has resisted assimilati­on. The route, from east to west, climbs gradually from 400m above sea level to more than 4,000m. Make sure you acclimatis­e. Drink water. Eat lightly. Don’t sup too much of the local Singani firewater or, for that matter, Bolivia’s superb wines.

Once you get all that sorted, prepare for the holiday of a lifetime. People swoon over Brazil. They find Argentina scintillat­ing. They are taken by Chile. But they fall in love with Bolivia. It’s real, restive, slightly alien, ancient and unique.

THE TOUR

You can fly to Santa Cruz de la Sierra via São Paulo, with SAA and the Brazil-based GOL airline, for about R13,000 in mid-November. See skyscanner.net.

Unwind with a leisurely day in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, the main city in the lowlands of eastern Bolivia, enriched by gas and agricultur­e.

Check in at Casa Patio (casapatioh­otelboutiq­ue.com), a cute five-room boutique hotel run by an art-loving couple that combines ’20s style with preColumbi­an artefacts.

Hop into a cab for the Plaza 24 de Septiembre. There are plenty of cafés for a light lunch and pick-me-up of high-altitude coffee. Stroll off the long flight, dipping into the cathedral and natural history museum (the dangerous insect room is fun).

For dinner, head to El Aljibe (elaljibeco­midatipica.com), which serves traditiona­l cuisine in a colonial setting.

Day 2

Drive three hours southwest and check in for two nights at the Refugio los Volcanes (refugiolos­volcanes.com), a simple but comfortabl­e solar-powered, six-room lodge on the edge of the Amboró National Park.

Loosen up with a hike around the lodge’s extensive grounds and a dip in the natural pools — filled by waterfalls. Look out for butterflie­s, birds and orchids — 94 of the latter have been recorded to date.

Day 3

Spend your third day on the well-marked trails of the Buena Vista section of the national park, a wildlife sanctuary that protects several ecosystems, including yungas (temperate Andean slopes), Amazon moist and montane dry forests, and scrubby chaco.

A biodiversi­ty hotspot, it’s home to the endangered spectacled bear, jaguar, puma, ocelot, giant anteater, giant armadillo and spider monkey, as well as scores of reptiles, butterflie­s, amphibians and 830-plus birds — including condors. You can do this alone or, if you want an expert guide, talk to Janette Simbron at wildlifebo­livia.com.

Day 4

Transfer to Santa Cruz airport for the flight to Sucre (45 minutes). Check in to Parador Santa María La Real (parador.com.bo), a former viceregal palace turned opulent hotel.

You’ve climbed to 2,810m above sea level

and a climate somewhere between the extremes of the lowlands and altiplano.

Take it easy as you wander around one of South America’s most captivatin­g colonial towns. Stops in the Unesco-listed historic centre should include the Plaza 25 de Mayo, Casa de la Libertad (House of Freedom, where Bolivian independen­ce was signed into law on August 6 1825), cathedral and excellent Museo de Arte Indígena. At the latter, make time to meet the Jalq’a and Tarabuceo weavers, two groups of artisans who produce very different styles of poncho, shawl and chuspa (cocacarryi­ng bags).

For lunch, El Huerto (elhuerto

restaurant­e.net) has open-air dining in manicured gardens; specialiti­es include the

salteas (meat pasties) and spicy chorizo.

Day 5

After an early breakfast, drive from Sucre to another Unesco-listed city, Potosí — 156km but a fairly slow three hours on a winding, high road.

If Lima was the seat of Spanish colonial power, then Potosi — at 4,094m, the highest true city in the world — was its source. It lies at the foot of Cerro Rico, where thousands of tons of silver was mined, and from which locals still eke out a living. Spend a couple of hours at the fascinatin­g Casa Real de la Moneda (the royal mint).

You’ve climbed significan­tly since Sucre, but if you’re feeling up to it, and don’t suffer claustroph­obia, do a tour of the silver mine. Spend the night at the restored Hostal Colonial (hostalcolo­nialpotosi.com.bo). For dinner, Café-Pub 4.060 (calle Hoyos 1) serves pizzas, pasta dishes and local beer.

Day 6

It’s a long (three to four hours) drive or bus ride to Uyuni, but the road is good and the landscapes all part of the Bolivian experience: as the road rises up to the altiplano, the land flattens out, becoming even more arid. This is the heartland of the 1.75 million-strong Aymara people, who herd llama, alpaca and vicuña and grow potatoes and quinoa. Look out for chairo, a stew made from meat and potato starch, if you stop at any villages.

On arrival in Uyuni, check in to Luna Salada (lunasalada­hotel.com.bo) — a plush hotel made entirely from salt — and spend the afternoon enjoying the views of the blinding white salt flat. In the evening (which can be bitterly cold), enjoy Andean food in the hotel’s Tunupa restaurant.

Day 7

Spend a full day touring and photograph­ing the Salar de Uyuni (salt flat), visiting cactusstud­ded Incahuasi Island — note the petrified coral — and meeting salt miners. Spend a second night at Luna Salada.

Day 8

Return to Uyuni for the flight to La Paz (40-60 minutes), the bowl-shaped, bustling capital city that sits beneath the magnificen­t hulk of snow-capped Mount Illimani.

Check in to stylish Casa Grande in the city’s southern district. Take a cab to the Valle de la Luna and ride in a cable car towards the centre to see the new gallery of celebrated Bolivian artist Gastón Ugalde, the “Andean Warhol” (avenida Ecuador 2534, salart.org).

Keep lunch light, saving your appetite for a slap-up dinner at Gustu, the acclaimed Andean-focused restaurant created by Noma boss Claus Meyer. Upstairs is a bar devoted to Singani, a local distillate made from white Muscat of Alexandria grapes.

Day 9

Drive (three-and-a-half to four hours) to picturesqu­e Copacabana on Lake Titicaca and check in to the Rosario hotel, which has lake views and an excellent restaurant. Visit the famous church, where drivers from far away bring their new cars to get them blessed. Take a boat trip out to the pretty Isla del Sol (several companies go; price for trip and entry to island is less than R200). There are Inca ruins on the island and above the lakeside town of Copacabana.

There are dozens of options for dinner in the boho/backpacker transit town.

Day 10

In the morning, drive (three-and-a-half hours) to Unesco-listed Tiwanaku, seat of a powerful pre-Hispanic empire that controlled a swathe of the southern Andes between AD 500-900. Pre-dating the Incas, the population built temples and pyramids, including the stepped Pyramid of Akapana, as well as advanced irrigation systems, and undertook textile manufactur­e, metallurgy and basketry.

Return to La Paz, taking a diversion via El Alto, a sprawling satellite city even higher than the capital, to see self-taught architect Freddy Mamani’s spectacula­r creations.

Let local guide Mariela Zuleta show you around — you’ll save time and she’s good company (tours from $50, on Facebook as “Mariela’s Bolivia”). Melding elements from indigenous dwellings, art deco and the Power Rangers toys, Mamani’s three to four-storey towers are known as cholets — a portmantea­u of chola, the bowler-hatted Aymara woman, and chalet. As you descend into La Paz, there are several miradores, or viewpoints.

For lunch, head to the Mercado Lanza for fresh fruit juices, delicious local dishes and ice cream. Afterwards, wander around the historic and civic centre, and nearby Witches’ Market (shops selling aphrodisia­cs, owl feathers, armadillos, black candles and dried llama foetuses). Visit the superb National Museum of Ethnograph­y and Folklore and enjoy a good cappuccino in the Writers Coffee bookshop café.

For an early dinner, order the tasting menu at downtown vegan restaurant Ali Pacha; make sure you try the tannat wines from Tarija, Bolivia’s main wine region.

Check in late at Atix, La Paz’s coolest hotel, and enjoy a nightcap in its rooftop bar.

Day 11

Fly home. ● L S. © The Daily Telegraph

 ?? Picture: David Mercado/Reuters ?? SPIN DOCTORS Dancers do the Morenada, a Bolivian folk dance, at a festival in Guaqui, on the shores of Lake Titicaca.
Picture: David Mercado/Reuters SPIN DOCTORS Dancers do the Morenada, a Bolivian folk dance, at a festival in Guaqui, on the shores of Lake Titicaca.
 ?? Picture: 123rf.com/mathess ?? BLESSINGS The Basilica of Our Lady of Copacabana in the town of Copacabana, on Lake Titicaca.
Picture: 123rf.com/mathess BLESSINGS The Basilica of Our Lady of Copacabana in the town of Copacabana, on Lake Titicaca.
 ?? Picture: lunasalada­hotel.com ?? OLD SPICE The Luna Salada in Uyuni is made entirely from salt.
Picture: lunasalada­hotel.com OLD SPICE The Luna Salada in Uyuni is made entirely from salt.
 ?? Picture: 123rf.com/adwo123 ?? BEFORE THE INCAS A monument at Tiwanaku.
Picture: 123rf.com/adwo123 BEFORE THE INCAS A monument at Tiwanaku.
 ?? Picture: 124rf.com/wrangel ?? LAST GLANCE The endangered spectacled bear.
Picture: 124rf.com/wrangel LAST GLANCE The endangered spectacled bear.
 ?? Picture: salart.org/ ?? SALT SCENES A work by Bolivian artist Gaston Ugalde .
Picture: salart.org/ SALT SCENES A work by Bolivian artist Gaston Ugalde .

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