Twelve of us take the morning tour, first stop is the warehouse as they call it- change house would be more correct. We get rubber boots, head lamp and hard hat as well as thin coveralls.
We get back on the bus and go to the minerâs market. The deal is pretty much as follows: the miners do not mind us visiting them underground as we, the tourists, bring them presents which help them reduce their running costs.
So what can you buy at the market?
- Fizzy drinks
- Coca leaves for chewing (the miners do not eat underground due to silica dust, and the leaves are appetite suppressants and help with altitude)
- 96% alcohol â which I will explain in more detail
- And explosives- yes, dynamite, detonators and ANFO packages. All three are called a âcompletosâ. The completos are transported underground together, in little plastic shopping bags, not separated like every country requires! Any person can walk off the street and buy some??? A completo costs 20 BOBS or 4 AUD.
- All other pieces of equipment and spares that miners require
So none of this is making any sense if you are used to working for a mining company, so I will provide some more background. The 15,000 miners that work the reefs of Cerro Rico (Rich Hill) belong to cooperatives. They pay for their claims and pay taxes off their earnings. There are approximately 400 tunnels through the mountain, of which 180 are being worked. The miners make their own working groups and can work as much or as little as they want. Most die due to silicosis after 15 years of underground work.
The mine has been operating since mid-1540s (over 470 years) and has over 8 million fatalities in that time!! Yes, 8 million, that is over 17,000 per annum!! Many of the deaths occurred in the earlier centuries when enslaved natives were forced to work for 20 hours per day and were not allowed to leave underground for months at a time!
Let me also explain the gift of alcohol to Tio (Uncle). Every Friday the miners gather by their sectionsâ statues of what they determine to be their protector. He has the look of the Devil. They offer him gifts of cigarettes, coca leaves, alcohol and get completely pissed! So let me just say that going to the mine on a Friday was out of the question for me! I do not know how these guys survive drinking the 96% alcohol?? The miners ask for more minerals and safe conditions in return for their sacrifice. You will see on the photo that Tio is decorated- this is after the recent Carnival festivities.
Women are generally not allowed to work underground as the miners believe that Pachamama (Mother Earth) will be jealous and cause minerals to disappear and safety to decline (well, I am not sure the stats support that view!)
The time has come that we got to the mine tunnel and we all wonder what the next two hours will hold! Before entering, our guide told us not to touch the electrical cable that entered the mine- the cable is thinner than those you would find wiring your house!
We walk in single file but fast as the next wagon filled with ore is being pushed out of the mine by 2 miners. Our guide shouts âRun quickly, another wagon is coming! âand we line up against the tunnel to get out of the way. The main tunnel is small and most of us have to be bent over already. Itâs important to know that running quickly, bent over at 4,400m above sea level does take it out of you a bit!
After about 800m we gather as a group and get some information from our guide. He tells us that the mine we are in has 5 levels, approx. 60m apart. Ore from above is fed into ore passes /chutes and then into the wagons. Ore from below is loaded into rubber bags and hauled by a pulley system from below.
Once the wagons are loaded they weigh 2tonnes and are only pushed by 2-3 men. They have no brakes and with the very dodgy rails can derail at any time too.
We walk further into the depths of the earth and come across two very large holes that have 2 x planks going across them. I thought that they were continuations of ore passes, until our guide tells us that the first working place we are going to is 60m vertically down from us! We all nearly chokeâŚyou mean we are going down there?? HOW? Again the guide says not to touch the wire that is going down. It is some 2in away from us as we crawl through tiny spaces. There are some cut in steps, but they are at an angle and sandy /slippery. I am one of the last to go down as I decide whether this is smart- def NOT! But I have come to see work areas. Descending the 60m is tough- slippery and at the bottom there are two further shafts that are not in any way covered by a grid or anything! If you slip- which is highly likely- you end up carrying on going uncontrollably down! The second hole, about 3m wide needs to be crossed on a 2-3in plank. The only thing you can hold on to is the rock on either side while you contort yourself due to the hanging wall being low! The miners are drilling 5m below us. Everyone starts going down again and one of the girls inadvertently touches the wire and gets an electric shock- she screams from fright but seams OK. Her skin is still warm a few hours later where contact was made. I decide not to go down further, as I consider how the hell Iâm going to make it back up to the top?!
The orebody is very steeply dipping and only about 1 m width gets taken out. The way back up is challenging- trying to avoid falling into the never-ending shafts without too much to hold onto. I get a hand up and then hang onto some metal jutting out the floor. I keep thinking that the miners carry 40-50kg bags of ore up here too as there is no other way out! I must confess that my muscles hurt today!
We move along to a different section to see the pulley system for drawing up ore. Here we split into two groups- one that goes down to another level- def not me this time! And we go up a 5m ladder to a work area. Here the men are literally using hammers and chisels to break the waste from the ore to carry less. The blasts break the rocks up into too bigger pieces to carry in the sacks. As we continue talking it turns out that we are sitting in an ore pass! Oh dear me!
On our way out we hear multiple explosions, though most miners blast in the afternoon. There are no methods of communication between the different levels or working parties- so I am unsure as to how they clear for blasting considering that the whole hill is like a termite mound? The only ventilation is via compressed air, and that doesnât really make it to the working areas.
Considering how there is absolutely no control over what happens on this mine, how the environmental and other regulations have purposefully been relaxed, I wonder how this effects that quality of the water that the town has- and how polluted with heavy metals it is?
As we talk more on the way to town in the bus it turns out that the guys were much more fearful than they made out to be. Especially in the first 15-20 minutes. They were all quietly panicking! We were all glad to have made it back and decided it was among the scariest things we have done, if not top of the list!
In conclusion, like the advert said, it is def not for woosies!