Attractions
Strike out on the salt of the earth at Salar de Uyuni
Salar de Uyuni, amid the Andes in southwest Bolivia, is the world’s largest salt flat. It’s the legacy of a prehistoric lake that went dry, leaving behind a desertlike, nearly 11,000-sq.-km. landscape of bright-white salt, rock formations and cacti-studded islands. Its otherworldly expanse can be observed from central Incahuasi Island. Though wildlife is rare in this unique ecosystem, it harbors many pink flamingos.
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Strike out on the salt of the earth at Salar de Uyuni
BOLIVIA // Imagine this: you're standing in the middle of the sky. Clouds above. Clouds below. Blue, blue, blue all around. That's what it's like at Salar de Uyuni, the world's biggest salt lake, after rain. The thin layer of water turns the utterly flat salt surface into a vast mirror. The horizon disappears and you seem to float. That's only one of the brain-bending experiences you'll have visiting these 10,582 sq km (4085 sq miles) of salt, high in the Bolivian altiplano. When the lake's dry, the white cracked immensity feels like something from Mad Max - a desolate, sun-scorched post-apocalyptic landscape. In the dry season you can visit the lake's two islands - Isla Incahuasi and Isla del Pescado. Both are craggy husks of land sprouting with cacti (and, increasingly, selfie- taking visitors). See too the geyser fields, hellscapes of boiling mud and sulphur steam. Several of the eerie high-altitude lakes, turned lurid aquamarine from high mineral content, are home to flocks of flamingos. Train your camera on herds of vicuña (a non- domesticated relative of the llama) and the occasional lone culpeo (a type of fox). At the edge of the lake, the settlement of Colchani is a centre of salt mining, producing some 20,000 tons per year. The place to sleep is the Palacio de Sal, made, obviously, of salt. Walls, floor, ceilings and furniture are made from more than a million blocks of salt - no licking allowed (seriously, that's a rule). When you finally return to civilisation after several days on the Salar, you'll feel as discombobulated as an astronaut coming home from Mars.
What is special about Salar de Uyuni?
Is Salar de Uyuni worth visiting?
It is home to an array of stunning and diverse landscapes, from giant cacti and colorful lakes to abundant wildlife, volcanic hot springs, and more. If it's not already on your must-see list, be prepared to put it there. Here are 10 reasons why Salar de Uyuni is worth a visit.
Is Salar de Uyuni hot or cold?
What is the best month to visit Salar de Uyuni?
The best time to visit the Uyuni Salt Flats in Bolivia is between December and April, when the wet season creates a vast mirror effect. The dry season, between May and November, is best for seeing the stunning patterns of crystallized salt.