We are leaving the Explora in San Pedro de Atacama this morning – far
too early. Three nights is not enough –
we could have done with one more. At
breakfast we say goodbye again to new found friends – some flying today at
various times and some staying for an extra night. Christian from Guest Relations has arranged a
lunch box for us, as we are taking the bus from the San Pedro de Atacama Bus
Station to Salta. We have a transfer at 9.00am for the five
minute journey to the bus station!
Overkill. The bus station is so called
because it is where buses call in and collect passengers – the similarity there
ends. There is a board with a whole list
of departures for the day in chalk – a small room with chairs and a little shop
where you can buy drinks and snacks. The
transfer drops us off, and we are in loads of time for the departure. Buses come and go, but none so far to Salta. 9.30am comes and goes – apart from no-one
speaking English – and we haven’t a clue what is going on. There are a lot of back packers here, so I am
sure they are waiting for the same bus as us!
A couple more come in – none with Salta
on the front, and none saying Pullman
which is the company we have booked with.
The bus station is right next to a football pitch with a small seating
area. Completely in sand, with no
markings. If you can play on this, grass
must be a doddle!
At 10.00am a Pullman bus pulls in with Salta on the front. Yippee!
At least we aren’t stranded.
Everyone in the bus station gets up – it must be a full bus. Paul was not keen on this option to start
with, and I can tell by his face he isn’t impressed so far! Out luggage is loaded, and it seems we have
paid for first class – what else? I am
glad to see the odd child that was getting on was not in our section. Eventually everyone is loaded, and we set off
– an hour late. Manyana! We get a few yards down the road and
stop. For about fifteen minutes. No idea why, and as no-one speaks English no
chance of finding out. The bus started
its journey in Calama about an hour earlier, so must have been held up there
before even getting to us. Doesn’t seem
as if they are keen to make up for lost time!
We start off again, and a chap comes out with a couple of packets of
biscuits. Then he comes round with a
Fanta. I didn’t think we got anything on
the bus – perhaps this is the first class treatment! We leave San Pedro de Atacama the opposite
way to which we came in. The volcanoes
and rolling mountains are on our left, and we continue on this road until we
come to some more salt flats and lagoons on both sides of the road. The border to Bolivia is only five kilometres
away at one point, so we must be skirting that.
It is about two and a bit hours before we get to the border with Argentina.
This seems, as first glance, to be a much more efficient border control
that the one we came from Argentina
to Chile
when we left El Calafate to get to Torres del Paine. It seems there is only one office, which both
countries share. We all get off the bus,
and get in the queue to leave Chile. Once we have had our documents stamped, and I
got a wink from the official (or he has a tick) we then have to get in the next
queue to get in to Argentina. This happens to be the man sitting next to
the one that just checked us out of Chile. Once we have then been checked into Argentina, we
have to go back outside where all of our luggage has been taken out of the bus,
and pull it into the same office and put it through a x-ray machine. Then we have to drag it back out and load it
back on the bus. We left our lunch box
on the bus, and wondered if it would have been confiscated by the time we got
back on! The luggage now has to be
segregated, as there are two stops.
Jujoy and Salta. Salta
goes on first, because that is the last stop.
Once all the luggage as been reloaded, we had to hang around as one lady
had an Australian passport and they seemed to want some visa money from
her. Her husband then seemed to lose her
completely, so we had half an hour or so extra for this. Not sure if it got sorted out or we left them
behind!
We then started to make our way through the mountains. I could not believe how the scenery changed
from one minute to the next. The
mountains were sand, then they were black volcanic rock, then they were covered
in the yellow grass clumps, then they were copper red, then they were sand
coloured again. At points, they were
like sand dunes, then they were gravel, then they were hard rock. Amazing.
I took pictures all along as Paul had gone to sleep – at least he can
see the replay! The snow capped tips of
some of the mountains were always in the distance. There were dust storms over the ground near
to the further mountains, that was pushing the dust up into twisters.
We then started the hard climb up through Andes. The roads twisted and turned, and the scenery
just got more and more amazing. There
were birds flying along the side of the bus, and llamas and donkeys on the
sides of the mountains. Then came the
cacti. I have never seen anything like
it! There were a few to start with, and
I had to look twice. They were growing
on the sides of the mountains, and were about ten feet high. Some higher than that. A few to start with, and then the mountains
were covered with them. Some must have
been higher than twenty feet. Paul even
stayed awake at this point. We then went
past more salt flats. These were
completely different to the ones we had walked in between. It looked as if the
ground was completely covered with snow – really thick. There were a couple of diggers scooping it up
into huge piles – will have to look on the packet where my salt comes from next
time I buy some!
Once we had gone through this region we started on the downward
slope. We passed a sign saying that we
were at 4170 metres – not sure if that was the highest point or not. Not long after this, going down the other
side of the mountains, we could see the cloud below us. What a weird sight. It was like cotton wool stuffed between the
rocks. Not as nice when we actually
drove into it though. It was like going
through thick fog – and with the roads very narrow and several hairpins in a
row I was glad I was not driving.
We got our of the bottom of the clouds, and the mountains had changed
completely again. They were now covered
with green vegetation, and there were trees appearing. Don’t seem to have seen any trees for
weeks! There were waterfalls coming down
the mountains, and it all seemed to be a different land. Once we had travelled about two thirds of the
way down, we stopped at a village called Jujoy, which is meant to be one of the
prettiest villages in the Andes. It certainly seems that way, although we are
still covered in cloud. I think the
mountains must stop the clouds moving from this way, and maybe always have a
cloud covering.
Once we had got to the bottom of the mountain range, and six o’clock was
on its way we thought we were nearly there.
6.00pm was the scheduled arrival time at Salta, although we had had several
delays. 6 o’clock came and went, as did
7 o’clock. Paul predicted 7.30pm – one
hour late and half an hour extra at the border.
7.30pm came and went as did 8.00pm.
It was now pitch black. Every
time we saw some lights, like a town, we got all excited only to sail
past. We were sitting on the driver
side, with the drivers compartment similar to an airline cockpit. The only window we could see out of was to
our left, which had none of the signs on.
If we could have seen how far it was to go, we would have had a better
idea.
8.30pm came and went. Now we were
getting fed up. It has been a fantastic
bus journey – whatever Paul says when we get back – and it was now taking too
long. At last we saw a huge amount of
lights ahead – that must be Salta. It was.
We arrived in the bus station (and it was a proper bus station – it was
huge) at just gone 9.00pm. Then it was a
bun fight for the cases. Two poor chaps
were trying to unload them, and everyone was crowding round to get theirs. We eventually got them, and walked out to the
front where there were taxis waiting. I
had booked the Sheraton for just one night – but the taxi driver didn’t speak
English. I would have thought Sheraton
was the same in any language. I got the
reservation email out to show him the address.
He still didn’t understand. I
don’t think he could read. Paul showed
him the Sheraton logo – the penny then dropped.
I knew I brought Paul for a reason!
It took ten minutes or so to get the hotel, and about 20 pesos - £3 or
so. Bargain! A quick drink in the bar and drop – it is
really exhausting sitting on your bum all day!