Cobblestones & Sweat: A Week Lost (and Found) in La Paz
okay, so la paz. it’s…a lot. i’m a freelance photographer, usually chasing light in abandoned buildings or trying to make gas stations look poetic, and this place just hits different. i landed with absolutely zero expectations, just a crumpled boarding pass and a vague idea i needed to be somewhere high up.
first thing i noticed wasn’t the altitude (though, oof, the altitude), it was the air. it’s thick, like breathing through a warm, damp towel. i just checked and it’s hovering around twenty-seven degrees, but feels like someone’s holding a hairdryer to your face. humidity’s through the roof, apparently seventy-eight percent. makes everything feel…sticky. even my thoughts.
spent the first day wandering around the *Plaza Murillo, trying to get my bearings. it’s beautiful, in a crumbling-colonial-grandeur kind of way. the presidential palace is…intense. lots of guards, very serious faces. overheard someone muttering about a protest planned for later in the week, something about water rights. la paz feels like a city constantly holding its breath.
food-wise? forget everything you think you know. i stumbled into this tiny hole-in-the-wall place near the Mercado Lanza (check out the reviews on Yelp) and had the most incredible salteñas. savory, juicy, a little bit messy…exactly my vibe. someone told me to be careful with the street food, though. apparently, a tourist got a bad case of…well, let’s just say they spent a lot of time regretting their life choices.
“Don’t trust anyone who offers you llama jerky. It’s a trap.”
that was old man raul, who runs the little shop next to my hostel. he’s seen everything, i swear. he also warned me about pickpockets around the Witches’ Market (Mercado de las Brujas). apparently, it’s not just tourist trinkets they’re after. i went anyway, obviously. it’s…surreal. dried llama fetuses, potions, herbs…it’s like stepping into a different world. i didn’t buy anything, mostly because i had no idea what i was looking at. you can find more info about the market on TripAdvisor.
my hostel is…interesting. a bunch of backpackers, a perpetually broken washing machine, and a cat named che guevara. if you get bored, the town of Copacabana is just a short bus ride away, apparently it's stunning. the neighbors are mostly quiet, but i did hear some late-night karaoke coming from the building next door. it was…enthusiastic.
“The cable car is the only way to get around. Seriously. Just do it.”
that was a girl i met on the teleférico (cable car). and she’s right. the cable car system is insane. it’s like a network of spiderwebs connecting the whole city. and the views? breathtaking. you can find a map of the routes on La Paz Life. i spent a whole afternoon just riding around, taking photos.
overall? la paz is exhausting, chaotic, and utterly captivating. it’s not a place you go to relax. it’s a place you go to feel* something. i heard that the best time to visit is during the dry season, but honestly, i think the humidity adds to the atmosphere. it’s a city that gets under your skin, and i have a feeling i’ll be dreaming about those cobblestone streets for a long time. i'm already looking at flights to Sucre next!
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