Bike travel, commuting and more

Panamericana

Bolivia XIII: Potosí

Mineral Wagons

Wagons in Cerro Rico, Potosí

The once richest city in the world

Potosí and Sucre were not in our route south towards Uyuni, so we decided to leave the bikes in Oruro and take a bus to visit them. Potosí is mostly known because of the Cerro Rico, the richest silver mine in the world. It was exploited by the Spaniards for centuries, and used to finance the Spanish empire during its heyday.

Bus to Potosi
On our way to Potosi

The silver was transported to Europe in ships, which would be regularly attacked by English pirates, or exchanged with German or Dutch merchants to obtain weapons or technology, which means there is now Bolivian silver all over the world. Even now, in Spanish, when something is very valuable, it is said “it is worth a Potosí”.

Altiplano before Challapata
Thomas checking on the altiplano before Challapata

The trip there follows the road south to Uyuni, but then turns east in Challapata. The first part is relatively boring, just flat, but as soon as it turns left it gets very interesting. First it climbs to an even higher plateau, and then there are huge flatlands with hundreds of llamas scattered all over. We had never seen so many of them together!

Llamas in the distance
All the black spots are llamas

The road then goes downhill towards Potosi, but unfortunately we could not see this part as it was dark already.

Llamas sign on the way to Potosi
The sign does not lie

The Cerro Chico is a huge mountain overseeing the city, and you can see it from nearly everywhere. Right now it’s just a barren mountain with no vegetation, only clouds of dust from the trucks going up and down getting the mineral out. But first we went to visit the city centre.

Cerro Rico from Potosi
Cerro Rico from Tarija street

The highlight is the National Mint Museum. At first all silver was exported, but having the mine so close, they started to produce coins there, for the Spanish kingdom but also for many other countries.

Mint Museum in Potosí
Mint Museum in Potosí

Unfortunately it has not been minting money for nearly 100 years and now it is only a museum. Ironically, Bolivia now does not produce their own coins, but have them made in other countries, like Spain, Canada and Chile.

Jesuit church in Potosi
Remains of the main Jesuit church in Potosi

In the Main Square nearby there is a monument to the Charango, a typical Bolivian small guitar, believed to be invented here in Potosí.

Charango monument
Charango monument

I booked a tour for myself in one of the mines, as it was deemed not suitable for children. Funnily enough, the other guy doing the tour with me was a German guy with a Spanish girlfriend, and his family comes from Darmstadt, the city where we live. What a coincidence!

View of the Cerro Rico
Coming to Cerro Rico, or is it Mordor?

The tour was quite interesting if also scary at times. First we bought some “presents” for the miners, namely coca leaves and juice. We then got into the mine, which was an active one so guys covered in dust were pushing wagons full of mineral every few minutes to the outside.

Inside a Potosí mine
We got somewhere tight to avoid the wagons traffic

The mine we visited is a cooperative. That means that they pool the costs to get health insurance or materials, but each of them will be paid individually, depending on the hours they work and the richness of the rocks they extracted. That is why there are dozens of labs in Potosí that offer to check the contents of your extraction. The problem for those guys is that the mineral gets exported as it is, with no refinement, so they are very exposed to fluctuations in price in the wholesale market. Most of them are very young and with very little financial education, so most just burn their earnings instead of saving for a better future.

Tio in Potosi
The Tio de la Mina watching for us

We met some of them inside the mine, and since it was Friday, they were celebrating the weekend by drinking “double A”, which means Alcohol+Agua. The alcohol can be bought anywhere, has a 96% richness and it’s obtained from sugar cane. The water is just to dilute it a bit. Hence our present of fruit juice, so at least they get some flavor while getting drunk. We drank with them, all sharing from the same shot glass. At least I hope the alcohol helped to keep viruses at bay.

Group of miners in Potosi
Family portrait

We then got to see the “Tio de la Mina”, some kind of “god” that miners believe protect them in the mine. They look like the devil and are built out of clay from the mine and receive all kinds of presents in exchange of favors, but mostly alcohol and cigarettes. The origin comes from the Spanish times, when only the locals would get into the mines to work. The Spanish, from the outside, were afraid their slaves were not working hard enough, so they invented this superstitious figure to watch on them. But in the end it worked the other way, and miners took it as their protector.

Potosina beer
Potosina, claimed to be the highest brewery in the world

Our next stop now will be Sucre, the official capital of Bolivia and only 3 hours away.

Bus station in Potosi
New and fancy bus station in Potosi

5 Comments

  1. Maria

    madre la cueva esa jaja, que miedito

  2. katherine

    Que cambio de clima, raro verlos tan descubiertos :). Me encanta la senal vial.. clarisimo me quedo. Y siii. me lo pensaria dos veces antes de entrar a la mina. Aunque me pregunto, la mina vas avanzando de manera horizontal o van hacia abajo?

  3. Ricardo González García

    Muy conocida para los aficionados a la numismática la “ceca Potosí”, preciosas monedas de plata y oro acuñaron en esa ciudad varios reyes españoles.

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