Bolivian Independence Day might seem sedate ... at first.Credit:AFP
Where's the party? We had to wonder as we walked around the city centre,hoping to discover where the real action was.
It was Bolivian Independence Day and the crowds were out in force on the streets of La Paz. There were a few flags being waved and everyone was dressed up in their Sunday best - but it was not what you'd call a party.
Not as we know it,anyway. Back home,Australia Day is an excuse to get patriotically paralytic before the clock ticks over to noon.
That's the sort of celebration we know,of getting down to the beach,draping a few flags around the place and cracking open the tinnies. Kiwis seem to do the same thing on Waitangi Day. Americans take the patriotism thing a bit more seriously,then take to the paralytic thing with as much gusto.
But Bolivia looked different. We hadn't even realised the national day was upon us until we stepped out of the hotel and noticed all the closed shops and well-dressed citizens. My friend Dave and I decided to follow the crowd.
La Paz is a strange place,a city built where no city deserves to be. Semi-finished houses cling to steep slopes as the city radiates from a narrow valley up the sheer sides of the surrounding mountains.
Smart people begin their daily explorations walking uphill,knowing the second part of the day will be all the easier - like paddling a kayak upstream then enjoying the ride home. Anyone suffering altitude sickness just does their best to find an even keel,which is almost impossible.
The Independence Day crowd seemed to be heading downhill to the city centre,so Dave and I obliged. It was noon. There would probably be no Hottest 100 but at least there would be a few tinnies being opened.
Of course,we were wrong. It's hard to know what's happening when you don't speak the language but this was like no party I'd ever been to. So formal. Men wore suits - some tattered but still neat - and ties. Women wore shawls and those sensational bowler hats that are Bolivia's signature garment.