After being on a bus for 25 hours we finally made it to San Pedro where Jenna and Cesar the manager of our hostel Las Kana met us. After eating some wonderful pizza at the picnic table under the stars we hit the sack so we could get up in the morning and figure out which tours we were going to take.
The next morning (Sunday) Jenna and I got up and went for a run which was a little difficult because of the high altitude (about 2500 meters above sea level.) Afterwards Pam, Jessi, Jenna and I went to find out about tours. After speaking with two different agencies we decided to spend a little bit more and book tours through Yassna a friend of Cesars because she was really nice and helpful as opposed to the other guy. We decided to book 4 tours starting with the Valle de la Luna y Valle de la Muerte, then the Tatio Geysers, then Lagunas Cejas, then Lagunas Altiplanicos. Our first tour left at 4 pm Sunday so after talking with Yassna we went and ate a bbq chicken lunch at a place that Cesar suggested. For about 3 dollars a piece the four of us shared a full chicken and a big sharing of french fries. 
At 4 oclock we met up with our tour group and headed to Valle de la Muerte. Our tour guide was able to explain to us what caused the great canyons (water and ice during the ice age.) We also got to see the youngest mountain range in the world and boy was it small compared to the Andes! Valle de la Muerte was awesome, orginally it was called Valle de Marte (Mars) because it looks a lot like Mars. As we walked through the Canyon we kept getting pelted by the sand that the wind tunnel between the two dunes created. The sand was a wonderful mix of red and golden yellow and the canyon was breath taking. We even got to see people sand boarding and sand skiing down the big dunes.

After walking through the whole canyon we got back in the van and headed to Valle de la Luna. Valle de la Luna was neat because there is a mixture of rock and sand formations. We got to see what used to be the "Tres Marias" (stone formations that appear to be a lady kneeling and praying) but is now just the two Marias because a tourist climbed on the third one and broke it before the Valle de la Luna was under protection. We then climbed up a big dune to watch the sun set over the desert. It was especially neat because while the sun was setting on one side the full moon was coming up over the desert on the other side. After we got back we headed to bed because we had to get up at 3:30am to go to the geysers. 