Sunday, 1 February 2026

Day 3: Saturday, 24 January Atacama Desert

A drier day today, but only because our tour guide had to mind the weather and adjust our schedule accordingly.  These storms blow in from Bolivia and they are suddenly upon you.  It has been an unseasonally wet summer.  Today was quite an adventure.  Our tour was to Rainbow Valley. 

On our drive there, the bus came to a sudden halt. A herd of llamas was ambling across the road.  They definitely have right-of-way.  We were all cooing over their cuteness.
 













                              Rainbow Valley - the stark beauty of the lunar-like landscape.

A visit to Yerbas Buenas to see petroglyphs. These are rock carvings of various animals - the photos feature a dog, a monkey and a two-headed llama - thought to be a llama giving birth! These carvings are at least 3000 years old.





                                       A relative of our emu - a rhea - was spotted from the bus.


Some of our tour buddies went for a float in one of the Baltinache Lagoons in the Atacama Desert.  The water is much saltier and more buoyant than even the Dead Sea.




Day 2 Friday 23 January Atacama Desert

 An early start this morning for our flight to Calama and then a cramped mini bus ride to our accommodation for the next 3 days, San Pedro de Atacama.  There was an afternoon tour to the Atacama salt flats and the Chaxa Lagoon.  The point of this was to see the flamingos who live on the lagoon.  They are a very intense pink colour because they feed on shrimp. 

Fun Fact:  The bent joint you see in a flamingo’s leg is not their knee.  It is in fact their ankle.  Their knee joint is hidden up under their feathers.

Clarification:  We are in the Atacama Desert – the driest place on earth.  We, however, got to experience a tremendous thunder storm, lightning and an incredible downpour (for which we did not have wet weather gear).  The town of San Pedro where we were staying had flash flooding that afternoon.



Entrance to our hotel.

When we arrived at the Chaxa Lagoon, the weather had cleared sufficiently to start our walk out to see the flamingos.  We were getting close enough to them, when we should have twigged that something wasn’t right.  The group of five flamingos that we could see, suddenly hunkered down in the water. And then down came the rain. Not just ordinary rain, but rain driven by a heavy wind across the salt flats, which picked up tiny bits of salt as it blew towards us. When it hit us, this was like being sand blasted, with the tiny bits of sand stinging all over our exposed skin.  We also got soaked to the skin, and into our shoes as well.  Because this was salt-laden rain, when we returned to our hotel and stripped off our clothes, the salt was already sticky and starting to congeal in our clothes, just like starch.  We had to hose down our clothes and shoes in the shower.  Our Ecco walking shoes are never going to be the same again!  The evening astronomical tour was also cancelled.




               Church of San Pedro