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You and your partner will discover together the surreal beauty of Bolivia’s southwest on this immersive 4-day overland tour through the Altiplano’s southern high desert and the incomparable Salar de Uyuni. Designed especially for couples celebrating an important milestone in their lives, this journey takes you deep into this magical world — home to colorful high-altitude lagoons, ethereal rock formations, steaming geysers, vast deserts, and ancient volcanoes. And, your entire adventure will be captured by Bolivia’s acclaimed wedding and experience photographer, Pablo Bravo.
Highlights include flamingo-filled lakes like Laguna Colorada and Laguna Hedionda, the bubbling geothermal fields of Sol de Mañana, and the wind-carved rock formations of the Siloli Desert. You’ll soak in natural hot springs, explore fossilized caves, and walk under some of the clearest night skies in the world, with unforgettable views of the Milky Way over volcanic silhouettes.
The journey culminates on the iconic Salar de Uyuni, the world’s largest salt flat, and experience the dazzling white expanse stretching to the horizon where you’ll watch the sun give way to night.
Along the way, you’ll stay in remote lodges and desert refuges—including Tayka del Desierto — for a truly off-the-grid experience. This tour offers you and your partner a once-in-a-lifetime, romantic experience of one of Earth’s most otherworldly landscapes.
What’s Included: Private 4x4 transport • Bilingual guide • Personal photographer • Premium lodging • Meals • Entry fees • Champagne picnic on the Salar • Filtered water and snacks
What’s not Included: Transport to/from Uyuni • Before/after lodging and meals • Alcoholic beverages
Tourist class bus service ($40 USD) between La Paz and Uyuni will be happily arranged with Todo Turismo. Alternatively, the national airline, Boliviana de Aviación (BoA), offers a single direct return flight daily between La Paz and Uyuni for about $115 USD. That said, the airline schedule is less reliable than bus service.
Cost: $2350 USD per couple
DAY ONE | Into the heart of the Altiplano
After breakfast, we’ll set off pre-dawn from Uyuni, where the crisp, high-altitude air hints at the adventures ahead. Our first stop will be the Salar where we will greet the sun as it rises from its slumber. As the sun begins to crest over the salt-crusted landscape, we will turn southward, as your journey takes you into the surreal openness of Bolivia’s altiplano. Your first stop is Iglesia San Cristóbal, an architectural jewel transplanted stone by stone from its original site to accommodate mining operations. Nestled against ochre hills and cobalt skies, the stark white facade of the church offers a beautiful contrast and a moment of quiet reflection in this otherwise windswept terrain. Continue on to the pueblo of Alota, a humble yet vibrant highland village surrounded by dramatic geology. Here, over a simple but hearty Andean lunch, you’ll feel the warmth of local hospitality and perhaps see alpacas threading through the town’s edges. Recharged, head deeper into the desert toward the Bosque de Rocas — a labyrinth of ancient volcanic rock formations sculpted by millennia of wind and weather. This natural stone forest invites both wonder and photographic exploration, with towering spires, balanced boulders, and silhouettes that shift with the afternoon sun. Next we’ll pass through a interesting rock canyon, en route to the Mirador Laguna Vinto, a remote viewpoint offering a sweeping vista of this mineral-rich lake ringed by rugged peaks. As golden hour settles in, the colors of the altiplano intensify—rust-colored earth, sage green slopes, and the glassy surface of Laguna Vinto reflecting it all like a painting come alive. Tonight, you’ll tuck into your cozy room at Mallku Cueva Lodge, after a delicious meal featuring wines of Tarija.
DAY TWO | Into the sky
After a light breakfast including coca tea, we’ll head to the remote Andean village of Quetena Chico, where the morning light spills over adobe homes and distant peaks. Today’s journey climbs even higher into the wild heart of the Bolivian altiplano—a place where time slows and the Earth seems closer to the stars. Your first destination is to the base of the towering Volcán Uturuncu, a dormant giant that looms over the landscape at over 6,000 meters. As you approach along rugged mining roads, the golden light of early day stretches across sweeping plains and reveals the immense scale of the mountain. Whether you hike partway up its ancient flanks or simply photograph its icy summit from below, Uturuncu promises striking compositions and raw, high-altitude drama. Descend through shifting plateaus and flamingo-dotted wetlands to reach the steaming Termas de Polques. Here, warm mineral waters bubble against a stark and silent desert. Take a moment to soak (if you brought a bathing suit), reflect, or simply frame the rising vapors against the stillness of distant salt flats—an oasis of warmth amid the altiplano chill. After lunch, as afternoon deepens, the road winds south toward the surreal beauty of Laguna Verde, its green, mineral-rich waters glowing beneath the shadow of Volcán Lincancabur. The symmetry is painterly: turquoise lake, ochre desert, and the perfect cone of the volcano—all under the high Andean sky. It’s a landscape both elemental and extraterrestrial. Too soon, it will feel, we’ll leave the lake behind to return to our hotel, the Ecolodge de Piedra, near the Polques hot springs where we will spend this night.
DAY THREE | Dreamscapes and fire
Today, we rise early and, after breakfast, leave the hot springs behind and head into the surreal expanse of the Desierto Salvador Dalí. Named for the surrealist painter, this desert lives up to its title: windswept plains scattered with massive rocks and soft dunes that seem sculpted by dream logic rather than erosion. With its strange, desolate beauty, this is a place where minimalism meets the sublime—ideal for wide-angle compositions and abstract frames. Next, cross the salt flats of the Salar de Chaviri, where cracked white crusts stretch into the distance, occasionally interrupted by shallow pools and the shimmer of distant heat. The landscape feels both ancient and alive, shaped by elements over eons and changing with every cloud and gust of wind. From there, climb into the high geothermal zone of Sol de Mañana, a chaotic field of bubbling mud pots, hissing fumaroles, and sulfur-stained earth. Steam plumes rise like ghosts against the cold air, and the contrast between the boiling ground and frigid sky creates a tension that’s striking through the viewfinder. By afternoon, arrive at one of the jewels of the Eduardo Avaroa Reserve — Laguna Colorada. This vast red lake, tinted by algae and minerals, is alive with flamingos feeding in the shallows. As the sun arcs westward, the lake shifts in color, the crimson surface catching orange light, creating photographs rich with movement and palette. The day ends with a final stop at the iconic Árbol de Piedra, a wind-carved stone formation that stands like a sculpture in the middle of nowhere. The silence here is as profound as the sky is wide. Tonight, rest and recharge at the Tayka del Desierto, one of the world’s highest-altitude hotels, where the comforts of warmth and shelter are deeply appreciated after a day immersed in the elements. Outside, the stars are waiting once again.
DAY FOUR | Descent into the salt
After a night among the clouds at Tayka del Desierto, awaken to icy winds and infinite silence. As light filters through frost-glazed windows, the desert beyond begins to glow. This morning, you descend gradually from the high volcanic plains toward the salt flats—trading geysers and lava fields for quiet lagoons and ancient coral islands. Your first stop is Laguna Ramaditas, a tranquil, narrow lake framed by pastel-colored mountains. Here, the water is often glass-still, catching the reflections of the sky and surrounding ridges. It’s a place of quiet contrast—soft tones, delicate textures, and the occasional flutter of a flamingo breaking the stillness. Next is Laguna Honda, with its milky turquoise hue and striking symmetry. A favorite for photographers, it’s framed by ochre ridges and often dotted with feeding birds. As you continue, the colors become richer and the air warmer, arriving at Laguna Hedionda, where flamingos gather in even greater numbers, wading gracefully through sulfuric shallows under the shadow of snow-dusted volcanoes. By midday, you reach Chulluncani, a remote outpost perched along the salt edge—windswept and vast. The time has come to say farewell to the desert, so we will speed east and north again to Uyuni from where we will once again return to the Salar to bid goodnight to the setting sun. The days have passed swiftly, yet the memories will linger long, as we enjoy a luxurious dinner at your hotel before resting for the night. (For the intrepid couple, and with clear skies, you will have the option to add a Milky Way experience under the Salar’s night skies, until the sun rises once again to herald a new day... don’t forget to ask about this special opportunity.)