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- Chile also announces the opening of its borders!October 13, 2021
- Explora opens new lodge in El Chaltén, PatagoniaSeptember 8, 2021
- Chile also announces the opening of its borders!
From Atacama to La Paz Highlights: Santiago, Atacama and Siloli Deserts, Uyuni Salt Flats You’ll roam around Santiago and explore the city’s museums, parks and splendid restaurants, stargaze in the astonishing Atacama Desert, and visit its lunar …
Stretching from the majestic icebound peaks and bleak high-altitude deserts of the Andes to the exuberant rainforests and vast savannahs of the Amazon basin, Bolivia embraces an astonishing range of landscapes and climates.
Stretching from the majestic icebound peaks and bleak high-altitude deserts of the Andes to the lush rainforests and vast savannahs of the Amazon basin, Bolivia offers an astonishing variety of landscapes and climates.
This mystical terrain boasts scores of breathtaking attractions, including stark otherworldly salt pans, ancient Inca trails, and towering volcanic peaks. Landlocked on the heart of South America, Bolivia rewards adventurous travellers and encompasses everything that outsiders find most exotic and mysterious about the continent.
Most visitors spend a few days in the fascinating city of La Paz, Bolivia’s de facto capital (Sucre is its official capital), which combines a dramatic high-altitude setting with a compelling blend of traditional indigenous culture and modern urban life. La Paz is also close to the magical Lago Titicaca, the massive azure lake that straddles the Peruvian border, making it an excellent base for trekking, climbing, or mountain biking in the magnificent Cordillera Real.
Just north of La Paz, the Andes plunge precipitously into the Amazon basin through the deep, lush valleys of the Yungas. The towns of Coroico and Chulumani are perfect places to relax, while Coroico is a good place to break the overland journey from La Paz to the Bolivian Amazon. The best base for visiting the Amazon is the town of Rurrenabaque, close to the near-pristine rainforests of Parque Nacional Madidi and the wildlife-rich Río Yacuma. More adventurous travellers can head east across the wild savannahs of the Llanos de Moxos via the Reserva de La Bíosfera del Beni to the regional capital Trinidad, the starting point of exciting trips north along the Río Mamoré towards Brazil or south towards Cochabamba.
South of La Paz, the bleak southern Altiplano, stretching between the eastern and western chains of the Andes, is home to some of Bolivia’s foremost attractions. The dour mining city of Oruro springs to life during Carnaval, one of South America’s most vibrant fiestas, and the legendary silver mining city of Potosí offers a treasure-trove of colonial architecture and the opportunity to visit the Cerro Rico mines.
Further south, Uyuni is the jumping-off point for expeditions into the astonishing landscapes of the Salar de Uyuni and the Reserva de Fauna Andina Eduardo Avaroa, a remote region of high-altitude deserts and half-frozen, mineral-stained lakes, and home to flamingos. Beyond this lies the cactus-strewn badlands and canyons around Tupiza, and the isolated yet welcoming city of Tarija.
To the north of Potosí, Bolivia’s official capital, Sucre, boasts fine colonial architecture, but has a more charming and refined character. It is set in a warm Andean Valley in the midst of a region noted for its textiles.
Further north, the city of Cochabamba has less obvious appeal, but offers a spring-like climate and a warm welcome. Not far from here you can find the rainforests and coca fields of the Chapare region, though for most travellers, Cochabamba is mainly a stop to break-up the journey between La Paz and Santa Cruz, the country’s eastern capital. Completely different in character from the highland cities, Santa Cruz is a brash, modern, and lively tropical metropolis. Though the city itself has few attractions, the city is a good base for exploring the Eastern Lowlands, including the rainforests of Parque Nacional Amboró, and the idyllic town of Samaipata. Scattered across the lowlands east of Santa Cruz, are the immaculately restored Jesuit missions of Chiquitos, one of Bolivia’s most unusual attractions. From here, a train line heads east to the Brazilian border and the wildlife-rich wetlands of the Pantanal. Santa Cruz also serves as the starting point for trips to the remote and spectacular Parque Nacional Noel Kempff Mercado.
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