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Bolivia's Salar de Uyuni salt flats Chimu Adventures tour review: A wild night out

Ben Groundwater

Cosy abode: The Airstream campervan, imported from the United States, is more luxurious than most hotels.
1 / 20Cosy abode: The Airstream campervan, imported from the United States, is more luxurious than most hotels.Supplied
A general view of Laguna Colorada.
2 / 20A general view of Laguna Colorada.AFP
Striking sight: The crusty salt turns orange, then yellow and finally a deathly blue at sunset.
3 / 20Striking sight: The crusty salt turns orange, then yellow and finally a deathly blue at sunset. Supplied
Must-do: Visitors can take photos that play with the lack of depth perception.
4 / 20Must-do: Visitors can take photos that play with the lack of depth perception.Supplied
Visitors can find various types of flamingos, giant cacti, geysers, hot springs, volcanoes and colorful ponds.
5 / 20Visitors can find various types of flamingos, giant cacti, geysers, hot springs, volcanoes and colorful ponds.AFP
The Uyuni Salt flats has one of the biggest reserves of lithium in the world, estimated in 100,000 metric tons. Companies Bollore (France), Sumitomo (Japan) and Korea Resource (Korea) are interested in taking part in the exploitation of the reserve.
6 / 20The Uyuni Salt flats has one of the biggest reserves of lithium in the world, estimated in 100,000 metric tons. Companies Bollore (France), Sumitomo (Japan) and Korea Resource (Korea) are interested in taking part in the exploitation of the reserve.AFP
The Uyuni salt flats are estimated to contain 10 billion tons of salt - of which 25,000 tonnes are extracted every year - as well as 100 million tons of lithium, making it one of the largest global reserves of this mineral.
7 / 20The Uyuni salt flats are estimated to contain 10 billion tons of salt - of which 25,000 tonnes are extracted every year - as well as 100 million tons of lithium, making it one of the largest global reserves of this mineral.AFP
The salt flats are a major tourist attraction in Bolivia, with around 60 thousand tourists visiting them every year.
8 / 20The salt flats are a major tourist attraction in Bolivia, with around 60 thousand tourists visiting them every year.AFP
A tourist enters the water at a hot spring near the small village of Agua Brava.
9 / 20A tourist enters the water at a hot spring near the small village of Agua Brava.AFP
Tourists bathe in hot springs near the small village of Agua Brava, more than 4000 meters above sea level, in the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.
10 / 20Tourists bathe in hot springs near the small village of Agua Brava, more than 4000 meters above sea level, in the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.AFP
A tourist is seen walking along the salt flats at the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.
11 / 20A tourist is seen walking along the salt flats at the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.AFP
Flags from numerous countries are seen waving at the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.
12 / 20Flags from numerous countries are seen waving at the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.AFP
A tourist is seen walking along the salt flats at the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.
13 / 20A tourist is seen walking along the salt flats at the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.AFP
Salt at the Uyuni Salt Flats in Bolivia.
14 / 20Salt at the Uyuni Salt Flats in Bolivia.AFP
Tourists bathe in hot springs near the small village of Agua Brava, more than 4000 meters above sea level, in the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.
15 / 20Tourists bathe in hot springs near the small village of Agua Brava, more than 4000 meters above sea level, in the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.AFP
An excavator piles up salt at the Uyini Salt Flats in Bolivia.
16 / 20An excavator piles up salt at the Uyini Salt Flats in Bolivia.AFP
Tourists bathe in hot springs near the small village of Agua Brava, more than 4000 meters above sea level, in the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.
17 / 20Tourists bathe in hot springs near the small village of Agua Brava, more than 4000 meters above sea level, in the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.AFP
Tourists bathe in hot springs near the small village of Agua Brava, more than 4000 meters above sea level, in the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.
18 / 20Tourists bathe in hot springs near the small village of Agua Brava, more than 4000 meters above sea level, in the Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia.AFP
A flock of flamingos are seen wading in Laguna Colorada located within the Eduardo Abaroa Andean National Fauna Reserve.
19 / 20A flock of flamingos are seen wading in Laguna Colorada located within the Eduardo Abaroa Andean National Fauna Reserve.AFP
The salt flats are a major tourist attraction in Bolivia, with around 60 thousand tourists visiting them every year.
20 / 20The salt flats are a major tourist attraction in Bolivia, with around 60 thousand tourists visiting them every year.AFP

There's a howl of wind that begins in the middle of the night. It's loud enough to wake us as it whips past the campervan, a sudden noise to replace the eerie silence that had previously settled over the Salar de Uyuni.

You're grateful for a thick continental quilt at times like these, grateful that you're able to snuggle up in the warmth of a heated campervan and listen to that wind in safety, pondering the isolation, dreaming of the wide-open spaces outside.

There's nothing and nobody for miles around out there. The pitch darkness hides vast swaths of salt flat, the largest in the world. There's a small village at the base of a volcano a few kilometres away, but no one else is camped out on the lake tonight.

It's a rare opportunity. There's no other way to stay the night on the salt flat except in this campervan. There are salt hotels on the lake's edge near the town of Uyuni, but nothing else that sits in the middle of this endless white expanse. We're isolated, but we're not exactly roughing it.

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The previous morning, my friend and I were collected from Uyuni airport by Gustavo, our guide, in one of the town's ubiquitous Landcruiser four-wheel-drives. They are the hardiest vehicles for driving on the crusty salt pan, and Uyuni is littered with them.

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We had flown from La Paz, a one-hour journey in a tiny aircraft that deposited us in this dusty, desert town. It's about 3500 metres above sea level, an arid place dotted with volcanoes on every horizon.

Gustavo takes us into the fairly unremarkable town centre for a coffee, before we begin our journey into the great white unknown.

There are more than 10,000 square kilometres of salt flat, and as our tyres crunch onto its surface, the size of the place and the challenge of navigating it become clear.

"You have to navigate like you're in a boat," Gustavo explains. "We can use the volcanoes as landmarks, but inexperienced people get lost out here all the time."

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The Landcruiser hits 80, then 100, then 120km/h as we roar over the salt flats in search of our camp. It's out there somewhere in the endless whiteness. Fortunately, Gustavo seems to know where. After we've been driving in a straight line for about an hour and a half, the silver of the campervan glints in the distance.

We're in the middle of nowhere. There's not a breath of wind or a sound. There's not a soul as far as the eye can see, and the eye can see a very long way out here on the salt flat.

Our abode is a silver Airstream campervan from the United States. Inside, it's more luxurious than most hotels, with two beds, a toilet, shower, living room and kitchen. The kitchen is superfluous, however, because hidden behind the curtained window, on the salt behind us, is a cook's tent from which all of our meals during the next 24 hours appear.

The first is lunch, served on a linen-covered table set up on the salt pan. My mate and I sit down to a feast of melon and prosciutto, followed by grilled steak and potatoes, and a cold beer.

There are certain experiences, however, that every visitor to Uyuni salt flat has to try. One of those is to find a desolate patch of salt (not too hard) and take photos that play with the lack of depth perception in such a featureless landscape. Check. The other is to visit Incahuasi, one of two islands in the salt lake, a rocky outcrop dotted with 500-year-old cacti. It's there that we finally encounter some other people, joining the day-trippers for the climb up to the top of the island to take in views of the lake and the surrounding volcanoes.

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Then we're back in the Landcruiser and heading towards camp, stopping in the middle of the salt pan to see a spectacular sight that none of the day-trippers has the chance to experience: sunset. The crusty salt surrounding us turns orange, then yellow and finally a deathly blue as the sun creeps below the horizon.

There's barely enough light to pick out the shape of the campervan as we arrive back to huddle around a fire as the temperature rapidly drops. Fingers are freezing around wine glasses as we pile into the campervan to eat dinner indoors with Gustavo. After the meal ends, he leaves us alone to enjoy the isolation: the sight of a million stars in the sky above and the sound of silence all around.

Soon, however, the desert wind starts to whip itself into a midnight fury – a howl heard by no one but us few.

Explore the Salar de Uyuni salt flats in the photo gallery above.

The writer travelled as a guest of Chimu Adventures and LAN Airlines.

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TRIP NOTES

More information

chimuadventures.com.au

Getting there

LAN Airlines flies daily from Sydney to La Paz via Santiago, Chile, with connections to Uyuni. See lan.com.

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Staying there

Sydney-based travel operator Chimu Adventures offers seven-night Bolivia tour packages that include one night in the Airstream camper, plus a night in a salt hotel on the edge of the salt flat. Other highlights include accommodation, a city tour in La Paz and a trip to Lake Titicaca. The package costs from $4970. Phone 1300 215 489. See chimuadventures.com.au.

Ben GroundwaterBen Groundwater is a Sydney-based travel writer, columnist, broadcaster, author and occasional tour guide with more than 25 years’ experience in media, and a lifetime of experience traversing the globe. He specialises in food and wine – writing about it, as well as consuming it – and at any given moment in time Ben is probably thinking about either ramen in Tokyo, pintxos in San Sebastian, or carbonara in Rome. Follow him on Instagram @bengroundwaterConnect via email.

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