November 7, 2008

On the Road, through the Desert.

Well, it is official, we are now backpacking through South America. But first, let´s backtrack a bit and tell you a little about our Pastor seminar that we did on our last day in Paraguay. We woke up early in the morning feeling underprepared and wondering if the dark, dreary clouds were going to turn to rain. Well, long story short, the rain came and poured. We adapted though, and kept pushing through the theoretical stuff in hope that it would stop raining and then we could do the practical drills if it stopped. Well, our speaking went well and people were really responsive but the rain wouldn´t stop. At one point, we made a joke to the people that the rain wouldn´t stop us in Canada from playing soccer. Well, I don´t know if that is what spurred them on, but either way, they felt the material was valuable enough to do the drills even in the rain. Funny enough, the rain was worse than we had ever seen as it was probably a sort of tropical downpour and Bryan and I were both wearing white T-shirts. Bad News. Oh well, overall a great success and we were stoked to be finished. Oh ya, we also have some hilarious pics that we hope to post one day of that youth group game where you put the lifesaver on a toothpick that sits in your mouth. Then, you have to pass it off to the next person´s toothpick without dropping it. If that is confusing, we basically watched these people ¨almost kiss.¨ Very amusing.

Now let´s bring you up to speed with what we have done so far. Our first 50 hours or so included about 35 hours of busing with a little bit of waiting in bus stations. We bused through Northern Argentina, into Southern Bolivia to our first major stop in Uyuni. The bus ride from the border of Bolivia to Uyuni was only about 270 km but it took us over 10 hours which included: cliff hanging bus rides, amazing scenery, driving through shallow rivers and creeks, randomly have to change buses in a city for some reason, and getting stuck in the desert sand for about 30 min where we got out and pushed. I am proud to say that 4 out of the 10 people pushing were us Canadians...proving that Adam has large biceps.

Anyways, Uyuni is a town of about 14000, and basically built strickly for tourism to the largest sand flats in the world. Here we went on a 2 day tour where we stayed next to a volcano that had about 10 families living in the town. There is so much we could say about this but basically, we were 3800m about sea level and then climbed a bunch of the volcano to about 4500m (that is about just under 15000 feet). It erupted 20 000 or 30 000 years ago whiping out the people. We also went to this cave where there were 5 mummies (a family) that was killed by the ash) but somehow their bones are still existant. Kinda hard to believe and the tour was in Spanish but we understood this more or less.

Anyways, last night we took an overnight bus to La Paz and we will be here the weekend. Hope to get pics up later and hope things are good back home...

PS. Too lazy to proofread, hope that this makes sense.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Looking forward to the pictures, especially the ones of Adam's large biceps :) Cliff-hanging bus rides ... just what a mom wants to hear!

~~Adam's mom

Trev said...

Those buses sound neat.