![]() ![]() It’s a remote road trip of around 325 miles, but the ‘roads’ are mere suggestions of routes that run through much of this high desert. It’s an adventure tour linking two of South America’s most bizarre landscapes: Chile’s Atacama, the driest nonpolar desert in the world, and the Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia, the world’s largest salt flat. ![]() This is one of the early stops on a new version of a classic journey that travel company Explora is calling La Travesía, meaning ‘the crossing’ in Spanish. When we pull over in our 4x4 - a swaying cross and rosary beads finally falling still beneath the rear-view mirror - my Chilean guide Micaela Díaz explains that the surreal valley we’ve found ourselves in is known as the Salvador Dalí Desert. Up here, the landscape inspires a plethora of similes the mountains look tie-dyed, psychedelic, rainbowed - like technicolour dream coats. On this high-altitude plateau, life has had to make some extreme adaptations to survive, finding ways to eke out water and nutrition over 4,250 metres above sea level. The dryness would be fatal, and even if they could find water, the ferocious winds wouldn’t allow them to stand. We left the trees far behind as we climbed up to Bolivia’s Altiplano, but this was no place for them anyway. This article was produced by National Geographic Traveller (UK). ![]()
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