Bolivia
Sucre Tours
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Things to Do in Sucre
Starting points for your perfect trip
Cal Orck'o: The Dinosaur Wall at the Edge of Time
A 1.5-kilometer limestone wall rising 100 meters displays more than 12,000 footprints from 68 million years ago. Discovered in 1994, the site preserves at least nine kinds of dinosaur tracks, including the longest trackway ever recorded, left by a large meat-eating theropod and running more than 550 meters. Parallel ankylosaur prints offer rare evidence of social behavior.
Maragua & the Highland Trails
Trek ancient pathways into the Maragua basin, locally called El Crater, where rainbow sediment layers formed over millions of years. The route descends through Jalq'a weaving villages, past cave paintings, the dinosaur footprints at Niñu Mayu, and the 40-meter cascade of Garganta del Diablo, much of it within a single day's walk.
Jalq'a Textile Weaving
Visit Jalq'a weavers whose textiles depict the ukhu pacha, a chaotic underworld of mythical khurus. Black and red threads become winged mammals and many-headed beasts. This nearly lost tradition, revived since 1986 through ASUR, now supports more than 800 women weavers.
Tarabuco Market & Yampara
Journey 65 kilometers southeast to the Sunday market where the Yampara people have traded for centuries. Villagers arrive in traditional ponchos and shawls to sell handwoven textiles and share chicha. Each March the Pujllay festival, recognized by UNESCO as Intangible Cultural Heritage, marks their 1816 victory over Spanish forces.
Casa de la Libertad: Birthplace of Bolivia
On August 6, 1825, representatives signed Bolivia's declaration of independence in this former Jesuit hall on Plaza 25 de Mayo. The original document is still on display, and the cracked Liberty Bell, rung in 1809 when independence first stirred, survives as a national relic. Guided tours bring the history to life.
Colonial Rooftops & Sacred Art: San Felipe Neri
Climb the Convento de San Felipe Neri, built in the late eighteenth century, to a rooftop terrace where monks once meditated above the White City. The sweeping panorama takes in whitewashed facades, terracotta roofs, and bell towers set against the Andean hills, the finest view over Sucre's historic center.
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