La Paz and Copacabana

Based on what I’d heard I wasn’t expecting much at all from La Paz. People had told me, or I had read, that it’s dangerous, dirty, and generally just not that great. I was pleasantly surprised, then, to find a city surrounded by mountains, with cheap fresh fruit in the street, beautiful old buildings, cute narrow roads, and a generally safe and bustling atmosphere, at least as far as I could tell. Jess, Maria, Anatole and I got in early in the morning and went straight to bed. Around noon we headed out to stroll around and see what we could find. We stumbled onto a market of sorts which was really just a bunch of people set up in the street, without stands or anything, selling all manner of fruits and vegetables. One advantage of traveling with a group is that it’s easier to buy food and cook it yourself, and we ended up buying eggs, cheese, beets, potatoes, carrots, avocado, oranges, papaya, chirimoya, and at least a couple of other things I can’t remember. After wandering around a bit more we headed back to the hostel and made lunch, which slowly turned into dinner as we realized there was only a single burner and it was going to take a while to cook the giant pot of potatoes and beets that we had. It was delicious though and I very contentedly stuffed myself with beets.

The next day we wandered again, finding a set of food stands where the locals got lunch. I got myself a plate of kidneys for about a dollar, and a lunch menu with soup and a main dish was about $1.25. Crazy. We then strolled over to the big park in the middle of town and worked our way up to a high lookout point, where you got a great view of La Paz wedged into the valley. On the walk back it started pouring right as we got to the plaza with all the impressive government buildings, so we took shelter for a while and then hopped in one of the many colorful buses back to the hostel, where we whiled away the afternoon. Right as we were getting back to the hostel we ran into Eugene, whom I had met way back in El Chalten, Argentina. We stayed in touch and had planned to meet up in La Paz but I wasn’t expecting to actually just run into him in the street outside of our hostel (not so strange – I told him where we were staying…). That night Eugene, Anatole, and I wanted to check out El Alto, which is the larger, poorer part of La Paz (or actually might be its own city bordering La Paz) that stretches out on the plateau above. We walked over to the shiny new cable car station and paid our 50 cents for the ride up. We started chatting with two young women in our car and they ended up showing us around El Alto, helping us wind through the streets filled with hawkers and taking us to an arcade, where we played air hockey for a while. El Alto is reputed to be even more dangerous than La Paz so I was a bit on edge, especially when Eugene and I agreed that a guy in the arcade had been watching our group a bit too intently for a while. We told the girls we wanted to go and the walk out was a bit tense but we didn’t see our admirer anymore and later decided he was probably drunk and just looking at either the girls, the gringos, or both. After a dinner of fried chicken, spaghetti, rice, and fries (seriously – that’s a standard dinner) we said our goodbyes and headed back down to La Paz. In our earlier conversations Eugene had told me about the Death Road, which used to be a functional road but which is now used almost exclusively for tourists on mountain bikes to drop 3,000 vertical meters down a gravel road in a matter of a couple of hours. It sounded pretty fun to me so we did it the next day, and sure enough, it was. With a bit of caution it really isn’t very dangerous but you can certainly get going pretty fast and it was a hell of a good time.

Eugene had also told me about Huayna Potosi, a snowcapped mountain just outside of La Paz that you can climb in 2 or 3 days. He wanted to do it and, after some waffling, I decided to join him, so we set out the day after the death road. We did the 2 day climb, which is actually more of a 24 hour excursion. We left La Paz in the early afternoon and drove right up to the base camp in a beat up old station wagon. From there we walked over to a nearby glacier and did some basic practice with crampons and ice axe, and then hiked about 2-3 hours up to high camp, at an elevation of 5,200 meters. We got there around 6, had dinner, and then went straight to bed. After an hour or two of sleep and several more of just lying there we got the wakeup call around midnight. The climb is done at night because the sun is very strong and starts loosening up the snow as soon as it comes out, increasing the risk of avalanche as the day goes on. So we set off at 1am to get to the top around 7am, walking a short section of rock before getting to the snow and pausing to put on crampons, get out ice axes, and put on harnesses to tie ourselves to our guides. After that it was just up, up, and up, mostly shuffling in a zig zag up the slope, with one particularly hard exception being the ice chute type thing we had to actually climb up. I had never tried to exercise at altitude like this before so I didn’t necessarily have any concrete expectations but I can safely say it was harder than I thought. At the section just before the summit, which was very steep and all loose snow where you would step up and slide halfway back down, I could hardly take more than 5 steps in a row before I was completely winded, needing to stop and suck in huge breaths. So that was an interesting experience. I had a couple of moments where I thought I should just turn around, but luckily when I finally asked Mario, my guide, how much farther we had to go, he pointed to the top of the section we were climbing and said that was the summit. And man, what a feeling it was to get to the top. The sun had just risen and across the other side of the mountain was a huge flat expanse, with a giant lake that Mario told me was Lake Titicaca. Looking back towards where we had come from showed an awe-inspiring landscape of mountains all around. I felt a hell of a sense of achievement as well. As soon as Eugene told me about it I got excited about my first experience above 20,000ft – cruelly, I later found out that the top is at 6,088m, which is, I kid you not, 19,973.75ft. I didn’t even have to look that up again when I wrote this post, the number is fixed in my brain. But really, I kid (not about the elevation, that’s true) – the sense of achievement is real, and the climb was amazing. I’ll come back another time for 20,000ft.

After coming down from the mountain all I wanted was a quiet room to shower and sleep, which is exactly what I found. The next morning I slept in and packed, Eugene and I grabbed lunch, and then we caught the cable car over to the cemetery, where we admired the memorials for a while and then I hopped on a bus to Copacabana. This turns out to be the original Copacabana, rather than the famous beach in Rio, and it sits on the edge of Lake Titicaca on the Bolivian side. It’s a cute, small, touristy town, where the main attraction is cruising around Lake Titicaca, specifically to the Isla del Sol, or Island of the Sun, The Incas apparently believed this was the birthplace of the Sun, one of their most important gods. It’s a big island out in the middle of the lake with some truly beautiful beaches, ruins, and a nice 3 hour walk from the north end to the south end, which is what I did. I met Quinnen, a woman from Boston who’s working as a tour guide for an American company currently giving luxury tours to Machu Picchu, in Copacabana, and we walked around the Isla del Sol together for a while before splitting up because I had to run to catch my boat back and she was staying for a couple of days at an idyllic, secluded beach on the island. Rough life… That night I got on a bus and headed out for the 11 hour ride to Cusco.

Bolivia was great. I didn’t get to see nearly as much of the country as I would have liked but I sure enjoyed what I did see. The south, with its volcanoes, sweeping desert, and of course the salt flat, is truly striking and unique. La Paz is a bustling city between beautiful snowcapped mountains, and Lake Titicaca is a huge, tranquil resting spot. I’m not sure when but I will definitely be back to check out the jungle and other parts of the country. Now it’s on to Peru, which is going to be the last country I visit before heading back to the good old US of A. I bought a ticket from Lima to New York leaving June 7th, so after my week in Cusco I’ve got 4 weeks volunteering in Huancayo, then about 8-9 days to see… something, and then that’s all folks!

3 thoughts on “La Paz and Copacabana

  1. Amazing adventure. Besides loving to hear about your marvelous trip, I ambeyond thrilled that you are safe and well!! Lots of hugs,
    Grandma

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  2. You seem to have covered everything in this latest blog! Reads like a Bond movie – was waiting for you to ski down the mountain! Don’t know anything about elevations but it seemed scary to me. And the guide? Glassy eyed? Who was leading who? And so early in the morning? Like your grandma- am glad you are safe! Liked the photos – especially birds eye city view, rocks, and you in diva coat! 🙂
    Anne

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  3. Heh Mr. Bond – what’s with the broken spike? Yikes!! You’re living dangerously!!! But it must have been thrilling to Reach the top ( just to turn around and go back down!)

    Absolutely nothing here by comparison! The candy is gone. Not getting Any more . Glenn still trying to heal his foot, Lily her leg, and Mimi rolling From room to room. Liv and you have the adventures! She text today and said she Was finished ! And now you start again ( if even for a month). Can’t wait to hear what The kids are like, classrooms, etc. Will you teach them English? Or any subject they Need?

    On NPR today they had a report on some woman who was captured by the rebels, Tried to escape three times, finally rescued by the Bolivian government, which she later Sued! Quite an uproar. Nothing like feeding the hand that . . . Anyway, she is back in Bolivia To help with peace talks between the gov. And the rebels.

    School ends for me June 10. Very early this year. Take care – enjoy your last month . Anne Sent from my iPad

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