Friday, May 21, 2010

Sucre!!

Finally! An update of Sucre!!!!

Most these pictures are really bad... a lot seem like they are overexposed or something. Oh well.

This is where I am living for the time being.





Time is going by really fast and I only have 2 weeks left! Honestly I don't feel like I have learned that much Spanish but I have a feeling I have learned more than I think I have. I can understand a lot when people are speaking slow to me but can barely understand anything when they are talking regular speed. It definitely takes time to develop an ear for a new language...

Anyways, this is the host family I am living with. They are soooo nice and a lot of fun to hang out with. The daughter is obsessed with Michael Jackson and she even did a dance that was perfectly choreographed to one of his songs. The grandmother's name is Martha, the mother is Shirley, and the daughter is Maria... they are all so nice!!





This is my school... i can't remember the name for these types of places but the middle of the school is open to the outside and then all the classes are around the middle "plaza" type area.





Sucre doesn't look like most Bolivian cities... it has a much more European look to it with a lot of colonial type buildings.





There are also a lot of amazing parks all over the place.







We go and play "Wally" at least once a week. It is like volleyball but you can use the walls. In fact, we are going to play again tonight!!



Here is the main market... they sell all kinds of amazing fruits and vegetables as well as meats, cheese, and anything else you can think of.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Salar de Uyuni, Potosi, y Sucre!

A lot has happened since I last posted. There hasn't been many wifi spots since I have been in Bolivia but now that I am in Sucre I should be able to post a little more often. I am staying in Sucre Bolivia studying Spanish right now so I probably won't post too often because I won't have many new pictures.

I am staying with a Bolivian family... the Grandmother's name is Martha, the Mother is Shirley, and there is a daughter named Maria. They are all incredibly nice and feed me really good food (and too much of it).

After La Paz I took a night bus for 11 hours or so to Uyuni and booked a tour with some random guy on the street for a tour of Salar de Uyuni (the biggest Salt Flat in the world).

Besides the really awful food, the freezing cold hostel with no insulation and no heat, waking up at 5am, inhaling dust for 10 hours because the cars vents were broken, and listening to the guide laugh at his own stupid jokes... AVI Tours was really awesome!!! Seriously though, the sights that I saw were unforgettable and it was all totally worth it.



There was a guy in our group that did freestyle walking (Parque?) that made for some really cool pictures:



We also tried to mess with perspective a bit but kinda failed. This is me standing on Dave's hand:



We walked around on Isla del Pescado which had some really cool rock formations and cacti that were over 1,000 years old.



We stayed in a hostel that was made completely of salt the first day. Pretty cool I thought.



We also got to hang out at a thermal pool on the second day. I lost my swimsuit and my towel sometime in La Paz or Cuzco so I didn't swim (it was soooo cold out) but I soaked my feet for awhile which felt awesome. All the water around this pool was almost completely frozen.



After Uyuni we took another night bus to Potosi and didn't get in until about 2:30am. We booked a tour of the Potosi mines the next morning. I am a little claustrophobic so I was a bit worried about it but it turned out to be really cool. We even set off dynamite inside the mine (even though we could barely hear it because we were so far away). We also set dynamite off outside which was a lot cooler because we got to see the explosion! :)

We went to the mines on a Saturday so there weren't hardly any miners... I don't know how this guy fit through some of the tunnels in the mine because I thought they were pretty tight and this guy is huge. He has been working in the mine since he was 10 years old (for 30 years). I found it interesting they smoke cigarettes in the mine because it is healthier to breath in the smoke than the toxins that are in the air (and obviously this guy is super healthy, no?).



Hard to get many pictures on the inside of the mine obviously...



Me being a tourist and pretending to mine...



After the mines we took a bus to Sucre and I have been here since. Sucre is a really cool city with a lot of colonial buildings... they call it "Ciudad Blanca" because pretty much all the buildings are... you guessed it! White!!

I haven't loaded the pics of Sucre onto my computer yet (and to be honest haven't taken many yet) but I will do that next time.

Thanks for commenting on my blog... I never know if people are reading/viewing or not (maybe there is somewhere that says the # of views??). I always like to know that I am not just wasting my time posting on this blog.

I have been really busy with school, activities after school (learned a little salsa last night... woot!), and hanging out with the host family and students from the school so I don't have much time to come online. Hopefully I can make a post about Sucre in a week or so.

Hope everyone is doing good! Keep in touch!

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

LiL Catch up

This is the first time since I have been in Bolivia that the wifi connection has worked so I was able to upload a bunch more pics...

After Cusco we went to Puno but decided to skip the floating islands. We just didn't really like Puno much and heard that the floating islands were nothing special. We just stayed there for the night and then took a bus to Copacabana to see Lake Titicaca from the Bolivian side.



After taking a bus to Isla del Sol we walked around for only a little while. We thought that the boat ride to island was only going to be about a half hour so we booked a hostel in Copacabana rather than staying on the island. The boat ride ended up to be about an hour and half so it only gave us about an hour to see the island. I don't think we really missed too much though.



When we were leaving the island we ran into something (a rock or part of the dock or something...). Dave was sitting on a bench right over where the boat hit. Was pretty funny actually.



The solution to the problem was simple. Everyone move to the back of the boat. lol.

After Lake Titicaca we took a bus to La Paz. The bus ride on the way there was pretty crazy. When we got right outside La Paz for some reason the highway was completely covered in rocks/boulders (for miles) and there were tons of people on it. I don't know if it was a protest or what but it caused us to have to drive around really rough side streets for what seemed like hours before we could get into La Paz.



This kid seems pretty happy about the situation:



And just a lady taking her pig for a walk on one of the side streets we were driving on.



After we got to La Paz we found a company to take us rock climbing. We could have just went on our own but we didn't have all the stuff we needed. I didn't have anything because this was my first time climbing. It was fun but it seems like a sport that gets more and more fun the more you do it. When you first start you get tired and sore really fast... I hope I can start climbing more because I could see how it could be quite fun and addicting.





Yesterday we rode bikes down the "Death Road" or "World's Most Dangerous Road"...



There was some really amazing scenery and although I thought it was going to be a lot more scary to ride down it was still a lot of fun to ride really fast on the dirt roads. There were some really sketchy turns and I came close to falling a few times but never came very close to falling off the edge.





I am the 4th from the left... it was hard to tell who was who with all the gear on...



Felt like Evil Knievel or something with all the gear on (and no i'm not winking at the camera, the sun was in my eyes)...



Oh yeah, and the ride home was really long but the mountains looked absolutely amazing.



Next stop is Salar de Uyuni to see the worlds largest salt flats. After that we are headed to Sucre, Bolivia where I am planning on staying for awhile and studying spanish.