La Paz on Tour

BOLIVIA

Taking Off On Tour

By LYNDI

Friday, September 17, 2010

Let’s play the adjective game. I’ll say La Paz and fill it in with the first adjectives that come to mind: Big. Crowded. Frigid. Traffic. Poverty. Thieves. Drugs. Corruption. Cheap. Rainy.

There. Makes you want to give it a miss, doesn’t it? Despite my really fun game above, missing out on La Paz would be a huge mistake. Because despite all of the adjectives above which all aptly describe Bolivia’s legislative capital and the chaos that surrounds it – the cheerful and friendly Bolivians more than make up for it.

Tiahuanaco ruins

It’s true, in La Paz you watch your back. But when 80% of the population lives beneath the poverty line, you can’t really blame them. And the worst you’ll find is theft. You leave your purse on the back of the chair at a restaurant, it won’t stay there long. You leave your iPod on your bed when you run out of your room for a few minutes, it will disappear (as Aaron learned the hard way…). But at the same time, if you walk around with your backpack unzipped, a kind Bolivian will quickly tell you to zip it up. Or if you’re waiting in line to exchange money on the street, someone else will tell you where to find a legitimate and reliable place to exchange money instead of getting fake notes where you are. They look out for each other and they’ll look out for you too.

And there’s actually a lot to see in La Paz. Both Aaron and I have been to the vast city on many occasions – me to lead tours and Aaron on border runs to extend his Peruvian visa. I’ve had the opportunity to go to the pre-Incan ruins of Tiahuanaco about 30 minutes north of the city (Topas Tours has great guides), do the Deathroad Bike Tour where still today tourists drive off the cliff faces on their bikes (Gravity Tours have the best bikes and safety record), visit the infamous San Pedro prison where the prison is run by the prisoners, or just shop in the cheap stalls of Sagarnaga Street or eat like a king for under $10.

San Pedro prison

But this was to be our last time in La Paz. I was starting my last tour through to Rio and Aaron was joining me as a passenger along with Luke, Keryn, Kim and Stef (small group this time) who will all play major roles in the next few blogs. We celebrated our last night in La Paz at a small chicken and chips shop around the corner from our hotel and a few drinks at Oliver’s Travels before calling it a night in the world’s highest capital city.