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Huaorani Ecolodge

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Orellana

Huaorani Ecolodge

Huaorani Ecolodge is a small, intimate, harmonious and environmentally sustainable way to share time with the Huaorani and experience the richness of their natural environment, while creating the least possible impact on the surroundings. To that end the lodge provides accommodation for a maximum of ten people housed in five comfortable, traditionally built, palm thatched cabins. All cabins are fully meshed to keep you safe from biting insects, and are spaced to provide privacy and a chance to enjoy the sounds of the balmy Amazon nights.

Acoomodation
All contain: a pair of twin beds (which can be joined to create a double if desired); a private bathroom equipped with a shower and flush toilet; drinking water at all times; a porch with comfortable chairs. Electricity is provided 24 hours a day by solar panels. Environmentally-friendly soaps and shampoos are provided. For those days when relaxing is the priority the Lodge provides a hammock house on the banks of the Shiripuno River.

 

Restaurant
The restaurant provides nutritionally balanced meals, hygienically prepared with care and artistry by the local chefs. Locally grown produce is used wherever possible. Fruit, tea and coffee are always on hand and a bar is available for beer, wine and soft drinks. Locally made handicrafts and souvenirs can be bought from the community shop.

THINGS TO KNOW

Keys: You are provided with a key to your room.

Security: Give the Administrator any valuables to keep in the lock box should you be concerned.

Money: All bar and shop purchases are noted on your tab and are payable on the last evening of your visit (cash only please); if you think you might want to buy some artisanry from the Huaorani, be sure to take cash on your Community Visit.

Electricity: Is provided via solar panels for radio operation, with limited availability for recharging batteries (using your equipment), and we are working on expanding the solar system (neat trick, eh?) to include all lighting, refrigeration and water pumps.

Safety (Rain forest): Although there are some fear-inspiring creatures, the odds of encountering any are extremely rare; it's the biting insects such as sand flies, sweat bees, tabana flies and mosquitoes that are more likely to "bug" you, so wear insect repellant.

Biodegradable Products: are provided in each cabin. Please use only these products and let someone know if you need more.

Medical attention: We have first aid kits and the Administrator and naturalist guides are trained in First Aid. If necessary, a helicopter can be arranged for evacuation.

Dress: is informal. Footwear is recommended for any time you are out of your cabin; the rubber boots provided are best for the trails as there can be substantial mud (and ant columns). Depending on how sensitive you are to heat and insect bites, lightweight long- or short-sleeve cotton shirts and trousers or shorts are appropriate for the trails or canoe trips.

Smoking: is strictly prohibited in the cabins and Lodge due to the highly flammable construction materials, but is allowed on the paths between the cabins. Also, please do not smoke on the trails or in the canoes, and dispose of your cigarette butts in a receptacle.

Tips: at  the Huaorani Ecolodge, tips are not included. We prefer that our guests reward our staff based on their performance. Tipping is a personal matter and visitors are encouraged to tip an amount they find appropriate.

For those clients who inquire, we do suggest the following procedure:
· Huaorani staff: Leave a closed envelope to our manager who will divide and distribute equally with the Huaorani team working during your stay. This includes the local guide, kitchen, motorists, housekeeping, service, etc.
· Naturalists Guides are not included in staff tip. Guides can be tipped directly and individually.

Guideline only:

· Staff: US$10/per person per day

· Naturalist guide: US$15/per person per day

Photography Tips: Avoid tripods! If not using digital, high-speed film is recommended, e.g., 400 ASA, together with a flash (it's dark beneath the rainforest canopy). A wide-angle and a large telephoto lens are useful for birds; for best results with insects, a lens with macro facility is handy. Have some plastic bags available to protect your equipment.

Binoculars: are essential to fully appreciate the birdlife.

The Shop: sells mostly those toiletries that you've forgotten, as well as insect repellant, anti-fogging clothes, water bottles, etc.

Rain days

In a rainforest, rain is inevitable and pleasantly offsets the high humidity and heat. Because of the dense forest canopy, you may not even notice if it is gently raining. However, the sound of approaching rain can be like a tsunami, and the dripping continues long after the shower is done. Rain actually brings out some organisms, mostly fungi and amphibians, and the "giant earthworm" (actually a caecilian) must leave its borrow until the ground has absorbed the water.


Of course, there are ponchos for when the rain comes down hard, or when you are in the canoes. Unless it is a torrential rain, we do not cancel any activities, but we may have to adapt the program accordingly.

The Huaorani have long inhabited the headwaters of the Amazon, living as nomadic hunters and gatherers with no outside contact until the end of the 1950s, and at least one clan continues to shun all contact with the outside world.  Huaorani Ecolodge opened in August 2007, with accommodations for 10 guests in 5 Huaorani-style, palm-thatched cabins along the Shiripuno River.  These are built with local wood, within which are fitted luxury modern tents.   All cabins have a private bathroom with shower and flush toilet and a porch.   The Lodge is committed to minimizing negative impacts on the area while guests explore the extensive  rainforest trails by foot or travel by dugout canoe on the Shiripuno River with the Huao and naturalist guides.  There is time to relax, birdwatch and commune with nature.

IMPORTANT NOTE:

Visitors need to be in good health and good physical condition to be able to fully enjoy the Amazon Headwaters with the Huaorani program. The program involves frequent transfers on and off narrow dugout canoes, which requires some physical effort and balance, and most of the excursions are carried out on trails that can be slippery and irregular, especially during the rainy season (May - July).

If you suffer from any medical condition that might impact or be impacted by your travel experience, you should consult your physician before participating in the program and must advise the Lodge of your condition and associated medical needs at least 30 days prior to your arrival. The Lodge reserves the right not to accept visitors based on medical and health grounds.

The Lodge is located in an area where there may be tropical diseases, so it is strongly recommended that you take an appropriate anti-malaria prophylactic and consult a physician about vaccinations. It is your responsibility to seek professional medical advice before traveling and to take all necessary health precautions and preventative measures during the trip, including making sure that you have sufficient supplies of any prescription medicines.

The Lodge strongly urges you to purchase a comprehensive travel insurance policy that includes trip cancellation/interruption coverage and baggage loss protection.

A travel health insurance policy is required and should include medical coverage as well as for emergency evacuation.

Program 4 days/3 nights

These are the general times for activities/programs at Huaorani Ecolodge, though they may vary according to the program and/or weather; please note that a 24-hour clock is used, punctuality is the norm, and times given for activities are for going only one way unless otherwise noted.

6:30 Wake up knock
7:00
Breakfast
7:30
Morning activity
12:30
Lunch
14:00
Afternoon activity
19:00
Dinner

DAY 1
7:00
Drive from Quito - Shell, flight to Quehueri´ono
Welcome - Canoe downstream - Settle in at Lodge
17:30
Introductory talk
19:00
Dinner

After being picked up early at your hotel, you leave the bustling city of Quito on the first leg of your adventure heading south to the frontier between the Andes proper and the Ecuadorian Amazon, known locally as el Oriente, the East. Following a stretch of the Pan American Highway dubbed the Avenue of Volcanoes, an acknowledgement of Ecuador's membership in the Pacific rim Ring of Fire, you pass through haciendas, towns and protected areas before turning east through a mountain gap to begin the descent toward the rainforest.

The first major town through the pass is Baños ( bah-nyos), named for the thermal baths that draw national and international visitors year round and famous for its sugarcane juice and taffy being pulled in many doorways. There is a definite change in vegetation, noticeably Spanish moss, bananas and tropical palms, although the air may feel a bit chilly still. A brief stop along the way to partake of a box lunch across from one of the larger waterfalls is topped off with local fruits sold at stands along the way.

You arrive after this 4-5 hour drive at the third busiest airport in Ecuador in the town of Shell (yes, after the oil company), where constant flights in and out of el Oriente by the military, missionaries, various aid groups and charter companies facilitate timely transportation in this vast region that still has few overland routes.

If the weather is on your side, you take off around noon in a light aircraft heading northeast, gawking at the green vastness below punctuated by rivers and settlements, and land in the Huaorani community of Quehueri'ono (keh-weri- oh-noh) 45 minutes later to be greeted by your hosts. Your luggage is taken ahead of you, so you may want to keep your camera, binoculars, sunscreen and hat with you (and something dry to keep them in); at this point, we distribute the rain poncho and rubber boots that you use daily for the rest of your visit.

You are then poled downstream in a shallow dugout canoe known as a quilla ( kee-yah), enjoying the thick vegetation growing along the Shiripuno River (shiree- puno) and catching glimpses of riverside birds such as the Yellow-rumped Cacique, the Greater and Lesser Kiskadees, and any of the four Amazonian kingfishers. You arrive at the intimate setting of Huaorani Ecolodge to settle in, listen to an introductory briefing about the Huaorani and their relationship with the rainforest, and have dinner.

DAY 2
7:00
Breakfast
7:30
Depart CeiboTrail & Hormiga Trail
12:30
Lunch
14:00
Depart for Cocha Pequeña continue to Saladero Trail & night outing
19:30
Dinner

After breakfast, you take an introductory hike of about 3 hours that traverses both terra firme (never flooded whose composition is predominantly tall trees with little understory vegetation) and varzea (occasionally-flooded) forest, winding through majestic trees and across quiet streams (10 of them!), often following a Heliconia swamp, to the summit of a small hill on which grows a giant ceibo tree approximately 40 m/131 ft high, with an equally impressive girth, after which this trail is named.

Branching off the Ceibo Trail, you follow a path that parallels the Shiripuno River for some way, crossing several small tributaries including one that some White-collared peccaries have expanded to make a wallow - expect to see tracks and tusk marks and maybe even catch a whiff of their distinctive musk. Up and down several hillocks through some lovely open forest and you reach a leaf-cutter ant metropolis on the edge of a small oxbow lake. An overlook, or mirador, allows you to observe the ants at work as well as catch a glimpse of any aquatic birds (or reptiles!) that may be out that day. You follow the curve of the lake back to the river where the canoe picks you up.

After lunch at the Lodge, you go back downstream to an oxbow lake formed by the Shiripuno River (Cocha Pequeña) and walk inland a few minutes. If lucky, and quiet, you may catch a glimpse of the extraordinary Hoatzin (one of the few birds that feeds almost exclusively on leaves), as well as Anacondas, Capybaras (world's largest rodent) and Caimans (types of alligator).

Rather than returning to the Lodge, you are dropped off across from it to climb a brief series of slopes to the peak of a hill and a heavily-used salt-clay lick. If the lick is inactive (or they've been scared off), you still have the opportunity to see where a variety of animals have trudged uphill to gauge out the mineral-rich soil. The effort put into this activity, including the digging of a small cave over the years, is proof of the importance of this dietary supplement for rainforest creatures.

The return trip is a brief night outing. Since most rainforest animals are nocturnal - especially mammals and amphibians - this is your best opportunity to see some of these elusive creatures, or at least hear them climbing through the trees or digging for food. The stars of the night are the insects and the bats, both attracted by your lights, and other animals reveal their presence by the reflection of their eyes.

DAY 3
6:30
Breakfast
7:00
Depart Cacería Trail
13:30
Box lunch on beach
14:00
Community Visit & craft market
19:00
Dinner
20:00
Charla

Hunting day! And you thought this was an environmentally-friendly project? But the Huaorani are hunters and gatherers, and their main sources of protein are mammals (yes, including monkeys), fish and birds. The goals of this project are to protect the tropical rainforest and provide an opportunity for the Huaorani culture to continue flourishing, not to stop their traditional practices.

After breakfast, you go for a long hike with the Huaorani guide, also an experienced hunter.

You learn firsthand about the secrets of survival in the rainforest without killing any of the creatures that live there. You learn how to set traps, make fire without matches, build a shelter in minutes, use a blowgun, practice the perfect swing of the machete, and catch fish in small creeks. Your guide may also show you edible insects, medicinal plants, the right clay to make pottery, and honey produced by stingless bees. The trail has two overlooks as it winds toward the community; the first one has tree trunk seats for some much-needed rest and to allow you to enjoy the view over the forest canopy, where you may see vultures soaring and trees in bloom.

Now down to the river, where you have time to plunge into the water; the canoe will have brought up your swimsuit and sandals and there are plenty of places to change if you use your imagination. The Huaorani love swimming and playing in the water and may join you. Lunch is served on the beach.

This is your afternoon with the community. Your visit is not intended to be a pre-planned activity as such, but rather a relaxing, informal social visit. You may call on several houses, talk to family members while sharing a bowl of chucula (a sweet drink made of ripe bananas) under the filtered light of the thatched houses, and admire their beautiful handmade artifacts, including woven hammocks and bags, blowguns, traps and necklaces.

Later on, you visit families' gardens and learn how to grow edible plants and try to harvest manioc, also known as yucca or cassava. Perhaps you will be invited to join in a game of soccer!

Some time is left aside to visit the handicraft market to buy handmade products if you desire.

You return to the Lodge by canoe at the end of the afternoon to relax and have dinner, after which your naturalist guide offers a half hour talk, or charla, on a subject of interest.

DAY 4
7:00
Breakfast
7:30
Depart Cascada Trail
11:30
Depart for Quehueri´ono by canoe
12:45
Depart for Quito by plane

After breakfast, a 2-hour hike along a series of ridges through terra firme forest takes you to a picturesque waterfall.  A mirador along the way provides the potential for an exceptional view across miles of lush rainforest to the volcanic peaks of snow-capped Altar and green, multi-peaked Sangay, potential because since these volcanoes are at the edge of a tropical rainforest, they are often obscured by clouds as the rising, warm air condenses on the slopes. To improve your chances, you spend some time at the overlook while your Huaorani guide helps you learn how to weave, make a blowgun, hollow out a canoe and carve a spear. You can experience firsthand how challenging it is to work without tools such as sandpaper, saws, hammers, or nails.

You return to the Lodge for last-minute packing and farewells before heading upstream while eating a box lunch in order to catch your flight to Shell and from there the drive to Quito, hopefully catching some glimpses of the volcanoes along the way. Since you are not personally experiencing the effects of the influx of roads, settlers and petroleum companies on the Huaorani and their territory, a DVD about these issues is played on the drive back.

Program 5 days/4 nights

These are the general times for activities/programs at Huaorani Ecolodge, though they may vary according to the program and/or weather; please note that a 24-hour clock is used, punctuality is the norm, and times given for activities are for going only one way unless otherwise noted.

6:30    Wake up knock
7:00
    Breakfast
7:30
    Morning activity
12:30
  Lunch
14:00
  Afternoon activity
19:00
  Dinner

 

DAY 1        
7:00
Drive from Quito - Shell, flight to Quehueri´ono
Welcome - Canoe downstream - Settle in at Lodge
17:30
Introductory talk
19:00
Dinner

After being picked up early at your hotel, you leave the bustling city of Quito on the first leg of your adventure heading south to the frontier between the Andes proper and the Ecuadorian Amazon, known locally as el Oriente, the East. Following a stretch of the Pan American Highway dubbed the Avenue of Volcanoes, an acknowledgement of Ecuador's membership in the Pacific rim Ring of Fire, you pass through haciendas, towns and protected areas before turning east through a mountain gap to begin the descent toward the rainforest. Many of the haciendas are huge, mostly for raising dairy cows and bullfighting bulls, and invite neighboring indigenous cowboys, chagras, to carry out an annual roundup of scattered cattle known as a rodeo.

Among the towns is one famous for ice cream (Salacedo), for jeans (Pelileo) and for ugliness (Latacunga), and should the weather hold, you may see one or more of the peaks for which the Avenue is named, all high and steep-sided stratovolcanoes known to have sudden and violent eruptions with long periods of dormancy - among them Cotopaxi, Tungurahua, and Antisana. From the city of Tulcan in the north to Riobamba in the south, there are more than 60 volcanoes, eight of which are considered "active" (have erupted at least once since the Spanish conquest) and 10 of which are "potentially active" (have erupted at least once in the past thousand years). You physically pass over proof of Tungurahua's recent (late 1999) activities in the form of a river of ash and sediment covering the road, and pass by large stands of non-indigenous eucalyptus and conifer planted to contain erosion and provide firewood, a mixed blessing, and clusters of greenhouses for the huge market in fresh flowers.

The first major town through the pass is Baños (bah-nyos), named for the thermal baths that draw national and international visitors year round and famous for its sugarcane juice and taffy being pulled in many doorways. Here you join the Agoyan River (which changes name to the Pastaza once it crosses into the province of the same name) and pass through several fairly new tunnels built to avoid some of the many landslides that once upon a time brought traffic to a halt for days on end, while admiring the waterfalls on the other side of the ravine and wondering how anyone could farm such steep slopes.

There is a definite change in vegetation, noticeably Spanish moss, bananas and tropical palms, although the air may feel a bit chilly still. A brief stop along the way to partake of a box lunch across from one of the larger waterfalls is topped off with local fruits sold at stands along the way, from the same fields you wondered about earlier, including tomate de arbol and granadilla. You arrive after this 4-5 hour drive at the third busiest airport in Ecuador in the town of Shell (yes, after the oil company), where constant flights in and out of el Oriente by the military, missionaries, various aid groups and charter companies facilitate timely transportation in this vast region that still has few overland routes.

If the weather is on your side, you take off around noon in a light aircraft heading northeast, gawking at the green vastness below punctuated by rivers and settlements, and land in the Huaorani community of Quehueri'ono (keh-weri-oh-noh) 45 minutes later to be greeted by your hosts. Your luggage is taken ahead of you, so you may want to keep your camera, binoculars, sunscreen and hat with you (and something dry to keep them in); at this point, we distribute the rain poncho and rubber boots that you use daily for the rest of your visit.

You are then poled downstream in a shallow dugout canoe known as a quilla (kee-yah), enjoying the thick vegetation growing along the Shiripuno River (shiree-puno) and catching glimpses of riverside birds such as the Yellow-rumped Cacique, the Greater and Lesser Kiskadees, and any of the four Amazonian kingfishers. You arrive at the intimate setting of Huaorani Ecolodge to settle in, listen to an introductory briefing about the Huaorani and their relationship with the rainforest, and have dinner.

DAY 2            
7:00
   Breakfast
7:30
    Depart CeiboTrail & Hormiga Trail
12:30
Lunch
14:00
Depart for Cocha Pequeña continue to Saladero Trail & night outing
19:30
Dinner

After breakfast, you take an introductory hike of about 3 hours that traverses both terra firme (never flooded whose composition is predominantly tall trees with little understory vegetation) and varzea (occasionally-flooded) forest, winding through majestic trees and across quiet streams (10 of them!), often following a Heliconia swamp, to the summit of a small hill on which grows a giant ceibo tree approximately 40 m/131 ft high, with an equally impressive girth, after which this trail is named.

Branching off the Ceibo Trail, you follow a path that parallels the Shiripuno River for some way, crossing several small tributaries including one that some White-collared peccaries have expanded to make a wallow - expect to see tracks and tusk marks and maybe even catch a whiff of their distinctive musk. Up and down several hillocks through some lovely open forest and you reach a leaf-cutter ant metropolis on the edge of a small oxbow lake. An overlook, or mirador, allows you to observe the ants at work as well as catch a glimpse of any aquatic birds (or reptiles!) that may be out that day. You follow the curve of the lake back to the river where the canoe picks you up.

After lunch at the Lodge, you go back downstream to an oxbow lake formed by the Shiripuno River (Cocha Pequeña) and walk inland a few minutes. If lucky, and quiet, you may catch a glimpse of the extraordinary Hoatzin (one of the few birds that feeds almost exclusively on leaves), as well as Anacondas, Capybaras (world's largest rodent) and Caimans (types of alligator).

Rather than returning to the Lodge, you are dropped off across from it to climb a series of slopes to the peak of a hill and a heavily-used salt-clay lick. If the lick is inactive (or they've been scared off), you still have the opportunity to see where a variety of animals have trudged uphill to gauge out the mineral-rich soil. The effort put into this activity, including the digging of a small cave over the years, is proof of the importance of this dietary supplement for rainforest creatures.

The return trip is a brief night outing. Since most rainforest animals are nocturnal - especially mammals and amphibians - this is your best opportunity to see some of these elusive creatures, or at least hear them climbing through the trees or digging for food. The stars of the night are the insects and the bats, both attracted by your lights, and other animals reveal their presence by the reflection of their eyes.

DAY 3            
6:30
   Breakfast
7:00
   Depart Cacería Trail
13:30
Box lunch on beach
14:00
Community Visit & craft market
19:00
Dinner
20:00
  Charla

 Hunting day! And you thought this was an environmentally-friendly project? But the Huaorani are hunters and gatherers, and their main sources of protein are mammals (yes, including monkeys), fish and birds. The goals of this project are to protect the tropical rainforest and provide an opportunity for the Huaorani culture to continue flourishing, not to stop their traditional practices.

After breakfast, you go for a long hike with the Huaorani guide, also an experienced hunter. You learn firsthand about the secrets of survival in the rainforest without killing any of the creatures that live there. You learn how to set traps, make fire without matches, build a shelter in minutes, use a blowgun, practice the perfect swing of the machete, and catch fish in small creeks. Your guide may also show you edible insects, medicinal plants, the right clay to make pottery, and honey produced by stingless bees.

The trail has two overlooks as it winds toward the community; the first one has tree trunk seats for some much-needed rest and to allow you to enjoy the view over the forest canopy, where you may see vultures soaring and trees in bloom.

Now down to the river, where you have time to plunge into the water; the canoe will have brought up your swimsuit and sandals and there are plenty of places to change if you use your imagination. The Huaorani love swimming and playing in the water and may join you. Lunch is served on the beach.

This is your afternoon with the community. Your visit is not intended to be a pre-planned activity as such, but rather a relaxing, informal social visit. You may call on several houses, talk to family members while sharing a bowl of chucula (a sweet drink made of ripe bananas) under the filtered light of the thatched houses, and admire their beautiful handmade artifacts, including woven hammocks and bags, blowguns, traps and necklaces.

Later on, you visit families' gardens and learn how to grow edible plants and try to harvest manioc, also known as yucca or cassava. Perhaps you will be invited to join in a game of soccer!

Some time is left aside to visit the handicraft market to buy handmade products if you desire.

You return to the Lodge by canoe at the end of the afternoon to relax and have dinner, after which your naturalist guide offers a half hour talk, or charla, on a subject of interest.

DAY 04         
6:00   
Wake up call
6:30   
Breakfast
7:00
   Depart for Nenquepare
14:00
  Visit waterfall camp at Nenquepare campsite charla

After breakfast, you set off poling down the Shiripuno River in traditional Huaorani style in order to appreciate the sounds and sights of the rainforest. Leaving early, you´re sure to catch many birds unawares, and the tranquility allows you to appreciate what life must have been like before the advent of motorized canoes. You can use this time to have intimate conversations with your spouse, to review the past few days with the guide, to learn some Huaorani and/or Spanish vocabulary, or just nap. A short stop for lunch and a swim recharge you for the rest of the trip.

This 6-7 hour journey takes you near the Huaorani village of Nenquepare where you have the opportunity to visit an impressive waterfall. After a 3-hour roundtrip hike, you return to the campsite, dinner and perhaps a bonfire.

 DAY 5            
7:00
Breakfast
7:30
Depart for Via Auca Bridge and continue journey to Coca

Late afternoon flight to Quito

After breakfast, you continue downstream towards the border between traditional Huaorani territory and that of the petroleum companies (although it all used to be Huaorani territory). At the point where a road built by oil companies in the early 1990s crosses the river, you leave the forest and head to "civilization".

The symbols of modern deforestation are the roads. They provide access and means for human populations to grow at a rapid rate, which affects indigenous peoples by displacing them from the best and most accessible agricultural soils (which aren't particularly well-suited to begin with); reducing territory available for hunting and gathering; and encouraging them via settler example and government policy to increase their reliance on agriculture and timber extraction and to convert their land from communal resource.

Here, you witness the crude reality of our collective thirst for oil as you ride alongside the miles of pipelines, which go from the Huaorani community of Tihuino to Lago Agrio, the oil hub of el Oriente, to be pumped across the Andes to the port of Esmeraldas. This brief journey through oil territory illustrates the reality of the threat facing the rainforest and the Huaorani people.

After a 2.5 hour ride, you reach the banks of the Rio Napo and the town of Coca, where you catch your flight to Quito.

Program 6 days/5 nights

DAY 1:

- 07:00 Drive from Quito - Shell, flight to Quehueri´ono Welcome Canoe downstream - Settle in at Lodge
- 17:30 Introductory talk
- 19:00 Dinner


DAY 2:

- 07:00 Breakfast
- 07:30 Depart Ceibo Trail & Hormiga Trail
- 12:30 Lunch
- 14:00 Depart for Cocha Pequeña continue to Saladero Trail & night walk
- 19:30 Dinner


DAY 3:

- 06:30 Breakfast
- 07:00 Depart Caseria Trail
- 13:30 Box lunch on beach
- 14:00 Community visit & craft market
- 19:00 Dinner
- 20:00 Charla


DAY 4:

- 07:00 Breakfast
- 07:30 Depart for Cocha Grande
- 12:30 Box lunch
- 19:00 Dinner


DAY 5:

- 06:00 Wake up call
- 06:30 Breakfast
- 07:00 Depart for Nenkepare
- 14:00 Visit waterfall Camp at Nenkepare campsite Charla


DAY 6:

- 07:00 Breakfast
- 17:30 Depart for Via Auca Bridge and continue journey to Coca late afternoon flight to Quito

 

Included in all programs

  • Accommodations at the Lodge
  • All meals & drinks (except soft drinks and alcoholic beverages)
  • All activities
  • Local Huaorani guide
  • Bilingual naturalist guide
  • Use of camping gear
  • Use of rain poncho (from Quito on)
  • Use of rubber/Wellington boots up to sizes: European 44; American M 10.5/F 12; British M 10/F 9.5
  • Use of umbrella (in cabin at Lodge)
  • Biodegradable soap & shampoo

Not Included

  • Transportation outside of the vicinity of the Lodge area
  • Entrance fee to Huaorani Territory (US$10 per person)
  • Soft drinks and alcoholic beverages
  • Accommodations in Quito or Coca
  • Transfers from and to airport in Quito
  • Rubber/Wellington boots greater than sizes: European 44; American M 10.5/F 12; British M 10/F 9.5

 

Information Price per Person (USD)

Explore

Explore Ecuador's Rainforest World  
"The big trees of the forest are very powerful," claims my Achuar guide Gilberto, standing in the shadow of a mammoth ceiba tree. "All plants and trees are people, but you can't see them normally. The tall ceiba earns great respect, but is also dangerous for newly born children. It whispers to them and makes them ill." He pauses and arches his neck back to look at the tree's top, some 40 m (130 ft) up in the canopy.

Walking through the forest with Gilberto, the green and brown morass of decay and destruction in turn comes alive. After an hour on a trail, his knowledge of plants, flowers, animals, myths and customs turns what seems like an impenetrable mass of life and death into a forest of revelation.

Dream world
In common with many other Amazonian peoples, the Achuar, who are part of the jívaro linguistic family, don't separate the waking world from the dream world, the "real" from the "spiritual." They use hallucinogens such as naatam, known more commonly as ayahuasca, or "the truth vine" Banisteriopsis caapi, under the guidance of a shaman for ritual trance purposes, a practice not recommended for the uninitiated.

"When you take naatam, the forest comes alive." For most people, the forest itself is hallucinogen enough. Although the missionaries have done their best to banish shamanism and prohibit the use of the forest's hallucinogens, both practices are still integral to the older generation of Achuar.

Further on, Gilberto points out an arrow-leafed plant carpeting the forest floor. "The shishin speaks kind words while you are in a trance. It is very friendly. The shamans brush it over the body of a patient, chasing bad spirits." Another plant, chirikiaspi, gives the hunter strength and fortifies the lungs to be able to shoot monkeys high in the canopy with a blow pipe. "It also anaesthetizes the body," explains Gilberto, "making you feel numb and able to walk for days without much food," which is exactly what the Achuar use it for: their territory is the size of Belgium or Maryland.

During the afternoon we sit on a little wooden bench drinking nijiamanch, a slightly acidic, yeasty, milky-white broth. It is made by one the village women by chewing up manioc and spitting it into a big, earthenware pot where it ferments for a few days. It is said that this "beer" or chicha as it's known in most of the country after its Quechua name, tastes of the woman who makes it. As practiced beer drinkers, we had no trouble quaffing it down from bowls continually refilled by the local shaman's first wife. Following Achuar custom, we carefully avoided looking her in the eye as she served us.

The Amazon Experience
Drinking strange beer, taking herbal teas, eating new foods, and learning about the day-to-day lives of the Indians of Ecuador's rainforest is a worthwhile and humbling experience. It is worthwhile as an opportunity to glimpse a way of life different in almost every respect to that with which we are familiar. Also because revenues from tourism undoubtedly play a part in protecting the fragile forests. Humbling because we are confronted with a totally alien environment which most of us would be unable to cope with alone and unaided. Most people come away from meeting jungle peoples in awe of their self-reliance and their apparently simple, uncluttered lives. Most regard their jungle trips as among their most lasting memories.

The Ecuadorian Amazon options
One of the most positive developments in the last years in Ecuador has been the development and consolidation of community-based and community-benefiting tourism. There are several excellent initiatives that Metropolitan Touring works with.

We also take guests to lodges that have large nature reserves where the chances of spotting the rainforest's elusive creatures are high. Sacha Lodge's canopy walkway, for instance, is an amazing structure that young and old enjoy no end, allowing one to appreciate the forest from a unique perspective. We also arrange tours aboard the Manatee Amazon Explorer boat, which takes passengers on cruises of varying days along the Napo River, an Amazon tributary, offering yet another perspective on this region's great riches.

 

Amazon Rainforest - Ecuador

Ecuador's rainforest is located in the heart of the world's largest and most famous tropical rainforest, the Amazon Basin. A short flight, or a descent by road down the flanks of the Andes, leads modern explorers and adventurers along the same routes the first Spanish Conquerors ventured through in their search of El Dorado or the land of Cinnamon... and found the mighty River Amazon instead.

Accessibility
Ecuador's portion of the Amazon is regarded as the most accessible of all the countries that share the Basin. Leaving Quito in the morning, you can be swinging in a hammock at your chosen lodge by lunchtime. The country is also a continent-leader in nature- and community-based tourism initiatives, where the value of the forest and of its inhabitants' heritage has been recognised and prized above its short-term exploitation. By visiting the rainforest and staying at responsible lodges, you are actively contributing to its conservation for future generations - and of course, exploring one of the planet's most fascinating ecosystems.

Explorations and Discoveries
Our Ecuadorian Amazon itineraries offer environmentally-conscious programs for all ages, enjoyed in safety and comfort with reliable operators and experienced naturalist guides: explore the rain forest on treks on terra firma forest beneath the gigantic Amazon trees, along boardwalks crossing palm swamps and up observation towers for a close look at the forest canopy. Take to native dugout canoes to paddle up rivers and creeks, or start early for birdwatching outings. Climb canopy towers or walkways for wonderful perspectives of the forests and its denizens... A new, green world awaits.

Metropolitan Touring is currently developing a new lodge, Mashpi Rainforest Biodiversity Reserve, located on the western, Pacific, slopes of the Andes. The reserve harbours some 1,000 hectares of cloud- and rainforest, and is located a mere two hours' drive from the capital, Quito. Find out more here.

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Metropolitan Touring is one of South America’s best-known and most-respected travel companies. It has provided unrivalled service to guests for over five decades. The company runs its own ground operations in Ecuador, Peru, Argentina and Chile, and owns and operates the finest ships for expedition cruises in the Galapagos Islands, the M/V Santa Cruz, Yacht Isabella II and Yacht La Pinta, as well as the Finch Bay Eco Hotel. Come explore with us!
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