Salar de Uyuni
3,800 square-miles of salt flat
spread out across Bolivia’s remote southwest. Salar de Uyuni is the largest
salt flat in the world, an endless sheet of hexagonal tiles (created by the
crystalline nature of the salt), dotted with pyramids of salt. Despite the
desert dryness, freezing night temperatures, and fierce desert sun, this
landscape is not devoid of life. Pink flamingos, ancient cacti, and rare
hummingbirds all live in the Salar de Uyuni.During the wet season, the salt
desert is transformed into a enormous salt lake, albeit one that is only six to
twenty inches deep, traversable by both boat and truck. During this time, the
shallow salt lake perfectly mirrors the sky, creating bizarre illusions of
infinity. In the middle of this seemingly infinite salty lake is a hotel built
entirely out of naturally salt.Created from salt bricks held together with salt
mortar, the hotel and everything inside it, including the chairs and tables, is
made from salt. While the Hotel Playa Blanca has no electricity and little in
the way of amenities, and its water must be trucked in, it does offer even more
important and certainly rarer qualities: utter silence, an all-encompassing
austere beauty, and an astonishing view of the night sky.Also worth traveling
to are the nearby Laguna Colorado and Laguna Verde. Laguna Colorado is a
red-hued lake filled with thousands of pink flamingos, while Laguna Verde is a
blue-green salt lake found at the foot of the volcano Licancabur. Its shifting
aqua color is caused by copper sediments and microorganisms living within the
lake.


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