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In the first week of November, Tim and I had one week off school. It is the only break we get off school between the beginning of August and the end of December, because the winter break is so long. We really wanted to get out of Cochabamba, and I had my friend Claire coming to stay with us for the week, so being the thrill-seekers that we are, we headed off to La Paz to bike ride down the world’s most dangerous road.

Why is it so dangerous? The road from La Paz, down to the Yungas (a rainforest area about 3hrs from La Paz) is a winding, dirt, mostly one lane road. It has been the scene of the worst road accidents in Bolivia, the worst being when a truck, carrying 100 people in an open container, fell off the edge, killing everybody on board.  With no guard rails, this road sometimes has sheer cliffs of over 600m off to one side and traffic goes both ways.

The Death Road

A newer part of the Death Road

However, these days, there is a new, much less dangerous road, with guard rails that people can take and so the death road is left with hardly any traffic and is now mostly used for bike riders like ourselves. The road is 65km long and bike riders start, surrounded by ice-capped mountains, at an altitude of 4600m, descend 3300m over four hours and finish in rainforest at 1300m above sea level.

Tim and Michael ready to go

I am not a hard-core mountain bike rider, so needless to say, I was a little nervous. I also had bad dreams that my friend Claire, after coming all the way to Bolivia to visit, might sail over the edge into oblivion. I had once peer pressured Claire into riding down a steep hill on a small and inadequate bike, only for her to fall off and skin her knees badly. She retains the scar to this day, and this death road adventure had a faintly familiar feel to it. However, there was nothing to fear. The bike ride was amazing. We went with a great company and were equipped with really good gear. We could ride at our own pace and were amazed as we left the ice-capped mountains and headed down into the Amazon basin. After 65km, we finished the road and in a mini-van, headed to an eco-lodge in the jungle to stay for three nights. This was probably the most dangerous part of our journey, riding in a mini-van, on a one lane road, with sheer cliffs off one side and cars coming head on. However, we survived.

Me, cruising the death road

For the next three days we went white-water rafting, zip-lining, hiked to a water fall and relaxed by the pool. It was a truly amazing and very remote place surrounded by rainforest covered mountains. The perfect way to spend a week long holiday from school and to appreciate God’s creation.

A waterfall near our eco-lodge

The best way to enjoy the jungle

Recent Happenings

Now I know it has again been a long time between posts, so in order to cover a spread of the things we have been doing over the past month and a half, I am going to use photos to tell our news.

We have been teaching

The start of a new semester has brought us new students. We have been enjoying getting to know them and have been able to take Grade 6 and Grade 8 out on a fun bowling and ice-cream excursions. Because our classes are so small, you are really able to get to know your students well. It’s been a real blessing, but has also kept us busy.

 

Bowling with Grade 6

 

Day of the Pedestrian

This happens once a year during September. No cars are permitted and everyone has to walk or ride places. It was a beautiful sunny day and markets were set up in the main part of town. Definitely something Sydney should look into.

 

Day of the Pedestrian

 

The boys bought a pool

Yes, they did. A reasonable sized one at that. The sun is hot, hot, hot here and they thought it would be a great way to relax as public pools aren’t that common in Bolivia. They got a great bargain at the Cancha and have tried it out several times. The problem is the water is freezing. The photos don’t really capture the shivering.

 

Chilling in the pool

 

The boys ate a disgustingly huge pizza.

It’s called the interminable and it is pretty gross. Tim had to turn it sideways to get it through the door and it had 40 slices. I’ll let Tim tell you more about it, if he ever gets to writing his ‘food of the week’ again.

The big, big pizza

We had a visitor from SIM Australia

In September we had Jenny Fallon, the personnel manager from SIM Australia come and visit us, along with Jill, a supporter of other SIM missionaries in South America. Jill also happened to be an old family friend of my parents. It was so good to hear the Aussie accent again and to be able to show them around Cochabamba. They came to school and baby washing and spoke to the SIM representatives in Bolivia. It was a great couple of days.

 

Jill, Jenny and I

 

We went on school camp

This was a great couple of days the last week in September. Tim and I went on the High School camp (Grade7-12) and got to see the kids in a different light and get to know them better. Tim went camping with Grade 7 & 8 and for lots of them, it was the first time they had hiked. The Grade 11 & 12 hike was a little more challenging which involved climbing up waterfalls with full packs on and a rope around our waists. We then had to walk another hour in darkness and set up our shelters. I had 12 girls, a tarp, a saw and some rope and was a little skeptical we’d be able to make anything, but luckily we set up some sort of covering for the night. However, the whole campsite was on a hill, so by morning, all the girls had slid down on top of one another.

 

Grade 7 & 8 on their hike

 

We went to the rainforest

About three hours away from Cochabamba is an area called the Chapare, which is a large area of rainforest. We caught public transport down there, which cost about $4 and then spent a couple of days just relaxing. It was so good to get away somewhere green and wet. For Tim, the highlight was the water-slide. We also went rafting down the local river which was fast flowing, but not too dangerous.

Tim loving the slide

We had Canadian Thanksgiving

Our first experience of Thanksgiving was Canadian style. Our friend Julie had 30 people to her place for dinner last week to celebrate the occasion. To our disappointment, not many people seem to like holding hands and saying what they are thankful for. Another Hollywood illusion is dashed.

Thanksgiving at Julie's house

So anyway – I hope this blog makes up for our neglect over the past month. I am very much hoping that the next blog entry will not be so long in coming.

-Liz

At home in Bolivia

We have passed the eight month mark of living and working in Bolivia, and the closer we get to our departure date, the more at home we feel here in Bolivia. Our lives are simpler here. We do not have much stuff and our choice of clothing is limited. I have not been into a shopping centre since living here and have not had any Thai food for 8 months (one of the hardest things about being here.) I also have a mobile phone that I never turn on. However, one of the best things about our choice to come to Bolivia for a year has been seeing the faithfulness of God and experiencing his love for me on a new level. There have been many times here in Bolivia where I felt humbled, confused, anxious and stressed, yet amidst those times, when I have prayed to God, he really has provided ‘peace that transcends understanding’. I really believe our lives are too full of stuff. It is too easy, even as Christians to fill our lives with things that distract us from experiencing a close relationship with God – the thing that can provide us with the most fulfillment.

As we have blogged before – Tim and I have been blessed to be involved with the baby washing ministry here in Cochabamba, run by one of the school families. I thought I would include some pictures of this ministry here.

Lining up outside the bathing tent

Washing the kids

Handing out new clothes

Kids in some new clothes eating a snack

Some of the baby washing helpers - who also work at school

It is a humbling, but wonderful experience to be able to practically share God’s love with others here in Bolivia. Thanks for those of you who have made it possible

- Liz

On our vacation Tim and I and Tim’s parents (Peter and Trish), were able to spend three days in the World Heritage Listed Bolivian town of Potosi. We had travelled through Potosi on our way to Sucre, back at Easter and were not that impressed with the brown, barren landscape. However, we were told that Potosi was very important to the history of Bolivia, so we thought we should stop off for a couple of days.

Potosi sits at the base of a large mountain, Cerro Rico. Due to all the mining that has occurred on and in the mountain over the past 400 years, it is a mixture of browns, greys, oranges and yellows and it towers above the colonial city settled at its feet.

Cerro Rico, Potosi

The modern day population of Potosi is about 200,000, but at the height of the Spanish Empire, it was one of the largest cities in the world. When the Spanish Conquistadors first arrived in Potosi they found gold and silver in the mountain and it has been mined continually ever since. Originally the Spanish wanted gold, but Cerro Rico turned out to have many more silver deposits – and the Spanish decided to mint their coins, using Potosi silver, in Potosi.

We were able to go on a tour of the Casa de Moneda (house of money) in Potosi, which was the Spanish mint. It is a World Heritage listed site filled with artifacts, famous colonial artworks and other objects of significance from around Bolivia. I was even able to mint my own coin – using the impressive hammer and minting machine you can see below.

Minting a coin at La Casa de Moneda

We also had a really interesting morning visiting a convent built in the 1600s into which the wealthiest Spanish parents would send their daughters at the age of 15, never to see the outside world again. There were no windows facing outwards and girls could only speak to their parents once a month for an hour, through a wooden screen. No physical touch was ever allowed.  The nuns would spend most of their day in silence, but were allowed twice a day, for half an hour, to go to a room in which they were allowed to talk to each other. Tim and I wondered if they would really have much to say…

Inside the convent

However, the place that left the strongest impression on us both was definitely our tour of one of the working mines in Cerro Rico. People had recommended we go in the mines for an ‘unforgettable experience’ and were also told it was very important for understanding Bolivia’s history. This trip however, was definitely not pleasant.

I first became worried about our excursion as I read the Lonely Planet, which dedicates a whole page of their ‘South America on a shoe-string’ edition to warning people of the dangers of going into the mines in Potosi. Noxious gasses, runaway mining carts, cave-ins and explosions were all mentioned in this warning…which made me slightly worried, but made Tim want to go even more. So Tim, Trish and I booked with Koala tours (founded by Australians) comforted by the fact that no one had died on one of their tours…yet. Peter, maybe not unwisely, settled in for a good morning of the British Open Golf on ESPN.

The first part of the tour was great. We bought sticks of dynamite and coca to give to the miners and went to a silver processing plant. We dressed up in miners gear and then headed for the mines.

Us in our mining get-up

Tim with a stick of dynamite

For those of you who know me, you might remember me going on caving camps during my school days, and would know that I am used to crawling through dirty little holes, far, far underground. What I wasn’t prepared for in the mines was the heat and the fumes. The tour underground went for one and a half hours. We saw the statue of ‘Tio’ or, the god of the underworld (the devil), which the miners leave offerings to on their way into the mines in exchange for protection. We also met a 15 yr old boy, who had been working in the mines for 3 years already. His job was to chip away, making holes for sticks of dynamite, by himself for about 10 hrs a day. His salary, on average, is $120 a month. Boys like him usually work if they have no father to provide for their family. Most miners die within 10-15 years of starting work in the mines, due to the fumes to which they are constantly exposed. Many live their lives only seeing a couple of hours of sunlight a day.

Inside a chamber in the mines

Sometimes we would be walking down a tunnel, when we would hear the rumble of a mining cart, heading towards us down the slim passageway. We had been warned about these and told they could not be stopped. We had to run to the edges and press our bodies against the sides of the walls to avoid being crushed by the oncoming cart filled with rubble. One barely missed Tim’s foot. We crawled, coughed, breathed in dust and fumes and were very ready to get out of that mine by the end of the tour.

A miner at work

The amazing reality is that 8 million people have died in the mines of Cerro Rico since the Spanish started mining about 400 years ago. Locals were forced into slavery in the mines and the Spanish supplemented this labour with African slaves brought to Bolivia for the sole purpose of digging out more silver. Millions of slaves died in the process. To go into Cerro Ricco is to go to a place which plays a key role in the history and mind-set of this country. Some people in the government are moving to close the mines, as the mountain becomes less and less stable – yet many people in Bolivia do not want to lose this working part of Bolivia’s history. Would I do the tour again? No. But it was definitely one of the most memorable days on our travels.

Liz



Hi!

Now we know it has been an extremely long time since our last post, so to all our regular readers we do apologise and will get back into a regular posting routine from now on. Tim and I start school tomorrow, with a slightly different allocation to what we thought. Tim will teach Grade 6 part time and Grade 7 and 8 Socials, while I am teaching Grade 7 and 8 English and Grade 11 and 12 Socials – we’re looking forward to meeting our new students.

We are back into baby washing and have been kept busy buying the clothes, through people giving us donations. We are also happy to have our friend Michael, from university days, with us here in Bolivia for four months filling in as our school P.E teacher. Michael just finished PE teaching in July and had some spare time, so decided to come on over! It’s been great having another Aussie around.

During July, we had another lot of travels – so instead of filling in all the details, I thought I’d show our travels through pictures. We started in Cochabamba with Tim’s parents and had a four day trip through the South- Western circuit of Bolivia. We drove 900kms through desert and amazing landscapes.

Wild vicunas walking by a lake in the desert

We then headed to Potosi for an eye-opening trip to the mines, where we met 15yr olds working in appalling conditions, with toxic gasses for up to 10 hrs a day for a total of $120 a month. We will write a separate blog about this.

The mountain of silver - Cerro Rico - in Potosi

To Sucre, a night in Santa Cruz and then it was off to Argentina to Buenos Aires – a city of 15 million people with beautiful architecture, great coffee shops and a world famous soccer stadium.

The Congressional Building in B.A

La Boca

At La Bombonera - the home of La Boca Juniors

We also had three nights in Iguazu – a 2 hr flight from B.A – to see some of the most amazing falls in the world.

At the falls

We had an absolutely amazing trip and it was great to be able to do it with Tim’s parents and to utilise our Spanish – we think it helped having to use it so much!

Anyway – it is back to life in Cochabamba, but we are in for a different semester with lots of new teachers, classes and maybe new ministries. More updates and ‘Food of the week’ will be coming shortly.

- Liz

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