Five land cruisers waited on the tarmac as the group stepped off the private jet. Soft blindfolds went on before anyone had taken in where they were.
Twenty minutes across the flats — silence, anticipation, the hum of engines — then everyone out, each pointed in a different direction. Count to fifty. Remove the blindfold.
Before them: an endless white expanse, a few inches of water turning the salt flat into a perfect mirror. Sky and earth indistinguishable. Nobody moved. Nobody said anything.
As the group converged, a table had appeared on the salt — a white canopy overhead, set exactly for them. A full team of chefs and wait staff stepped forward and introduced themselves. They had flown in from Gustu in La Paz — one of South America’s most celebrated kitchens — and prepared every course here, under open sky.
The salt stretched to every horizon. Lunch was served.
About Bolivia
Bolivia is one of South America’s most culturally rich and least visited countries — a combination that rarely lasts. The Altiplano sits at altitude so extreme the light feels different, sharper, closer to the sky. Indigenous traditions here aren’t remnants — they’re living: in the markets of La Paz, in the textiles of the highlands, in the festivals that have run uninterrupted for centuries. The salt flats, the pink lagoons, the Amazon to the north — the landscapes are extraordinary. But it is the people, and the depth of what they carry, that stays with you longest.
Rachit’s Note
Most people arrive at Uyuni already knowing what it looks like. The photographs are everywhere. And yet it still moves them — that’s how extraordinary it is. But there is a version of Uyuni that no photograph has prepared you for, because it doesn’t exist until someone builds it. Knowing what to build, and who to call — that’s the work we do quietly, long before anyone steps off a plane.
— Rachit, Co-Founder
Every journey starts with a single conversation — with us, not a form.