Our second day on the road had finished with a visit to the Cementerio de Trenes just outside Uyuni. As the regular route via the salt flats was flooded, our three-day trip to Uyuni had become a two-day trip with a one-day excursion tagged onto the end. Day three started with yet another early wake-up call and departure at 5am to see the sun rise over the Salar (the salt flats). In fact we weren’t dealt such a bad hand. No sooner had we stepped outside our front door, than we were blasted with some soft-rock in Spanish by way of a fuzzy PA system on the local church. It turns out they do this every morning in Uyuni. A call to greet the day as it were.
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We're two happy-go-lucky travellers (well, one super-efficient organiser and one procrastinating neurotic risk-taker) on an adventure together spanning 7 months and most of the mainland countries in the Americas. Follow us from January until August 2012 for tips on marital bliss (peace? cessation of hostilities, perhaps?) and how a vegetarian tea-totaller and an inebriated carnivore find suitable places to dine ... together.
Wednesday, 4 April 2012
Northern deserts, part 3: Uyuni
Our second day on the road had finished with a visit to the Cementerio de Trenes just outside Uyuni. As the regular route via the salt flats was flooded, our three-day trip to Uyuni had become a two-day trip with a one-day excursion tagged onto the end. Day three started with yet another early wake-up call and departure at 5am to see the sun rise over the Salar (the salt flats). In fact we weren’t dealt such a bad hand. No sooner had we stepped outside our front door, than we were blasted with some soft-rock in Spanish by way of a fuzzy PA system on the local church. It turns out they do this every morning in Uyuni. A call to greet the day as it were.
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