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Bolivian boy turns photographer on iconic salt flats – with help from a dinosaur

Salar de Uynui, Bolivia
Reuters

On the otherworldly white salt flats of Bolivia’s Salar de Uyuni, an 11-year-old boy has become a photography success taking quirky and creative pictures of tourists – with a little help from a blue plastic dinosaur toy.

Piter Condori makes use of an unusual trick of perspective on the iconic salt flats, where the even white ground stretches to the horizon, allowing skillful snappers to make small objects close to the camera appear to be much larger and further away.

Bolivia Uyuni Salt Flat tourism1

Piter Condori, 11, takes pictures of a tourist to earn money for his family, at the Uyuni Salt Flat in Bolivia on 27th March. PICTURE: Reuters/Claudia Morales.

In his free time on the weekend, he takes photos of the Spinosaurus appearing to chase and attack tourists across the white plains. In others he uses an empty beer bottle from which his subjects appear to be being poured out of or climbing into.

Condori said this helps get him extra pocket money and to help his parents buy food, which has got pricier amid high inflation. Tourism meanwhile has declined in recent years due to the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

“I help to buy onions, potatoes, and lettuce. I buy clothes for my brothers and toys. When they need school supplies. I give them money for playtime so they can buy things,” said Condori, who can earn between $US9 to $US15 each day he takes photos.



The Uyuni salt flats in southern Bolivia is one of the Andean country’s top tourist attractions. The vast area is also a trove of electric vehicle battery metal lithium, though there is little production and few economic benefits so far.

The pandemic has hit locals hard.

Bolivia Uyuni Salt Flat tourism2

Women in Cholita dresses pose for photos, at the Uyuni Salt Flat in Bolivia on 26th March. PICTURE: Reuters/Claudia Morales

Two thousand Bolivian tourism operators nationwide are pushing the government to relax restrictions on international tourism. The Bolivian Chamber of Hotels and Tourism says the pandemic has cut tourism in the country by 90 per cent.

“With the pandemic, we were in crisis. We didn’t even have enough money to eat,” said Diego Condori, Piter’s father, who works in the salt business. Piter’s mother sells handicrafts on the salt flat and five other siblings sometimes help out too.

“We had small savings, and they ran out. We have dedicated ourselves to working in tourism as a family. Our children help us to take photos,” the father added.

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