9553055467?profile=originalAmazon Nature Tours

 

I am a hiker. But at home no one uses a machete to blaze the trail prior to walking on it as did our guide Souza, creating a path in the overgrown rainforest step by step. Slicing, swatting, swooping, chopping, no branch, bush, vine or twig was safe.

The hike was one of four daily activities during our eight-day adventure exploring Brazil's Amazonia. Calling the Tucano, an 18-passenger river yacht operated by Amazon Nature Tours home, we traveled over 200 miles along the Rio Negro, where the only other waterborne human we saw was the rare fisherman in a dugout canoe. For our daily excursions, we clamored aboard a small power launch which took us hiking, bird-watching, and village hopping, and on night-time outings that dramatized the allure of the river not experienced in any other way. But more on that later.  

 

9553055663?profile=RESIZE_930xAmazon Nature Tours

 

Souza demanded quiet during our launch rides, using all of his senses to read the forest, listening for the breaking of a branch or a flutter through the trees, sniffing for animal odors, scanning leaves above and below for motion, or the water for ripples - and alerting us at every junction of what he has discovered. On our own, we would have heard, felt and discerned nothing.

 

9553055881?profile=RESIZE_930xAmazon Nature Tours

 

Souza’s most amazing talent was his ability to identify the multitudes of birds traversing the river and forest, many of whose calls he could replicate precisely. What to us was a dot on a limb was declared a green ibis.Then a snow egret, crane hawk, red-breasted blackbird, jacana, snail kite –- so many I just stopped taking notes. So confidently did he identify the inhabitants, we would have believed: “That’s a green-tongued, red-beaked ibirus with one brown eye and a pimple on his right cheek…”

 

9553056065?profile=RESIZE_930xVictor Block

 

He also could imitate more birds (see below) than the most gifted comedian can impersonate celebrities. He carried on such intimate conversations that halfway through a lengthy discussion with a blackish gray antshrike, I think they became engaged. Then Souza, fickle male that he is, romanced a colorful azure blue-beaked trogan perched upon a dead branch high in a tree. Birds have a surprising preference for dead tree parts. As one of my travel companions observed, “If you don’t like birds, you might as well take the next flight home.”

 

9553056677?profile=RESIZE_930x Victor Block

 

Learning About Other Aspects of the Rain Forest

Back to Machete Man.Our forest walks also were a time for observation, not conversation.On a stop to view teca ants swarming over the bark, Souza wiped his hand across it, proceeding then to rub the ants over his forearms. Instant mosquito repellant –- an extremely handy tool in the Amazon. 

At one point, I looked down and saw a long brown twig draping a log.Souza saw a snake.I looked again and still saw a twig, albeit one that now had an eye.I stepped more gingerly.

We learned about the many boons the forest supplies to the natives: medications (below); vines for baskets and brooms; bark for strong rope; plants yielding poison for arrows.As we heeded orders to be quiet, the dried leaves below screamed in protest at being trampled, the buzz of the horsefly the most persistent sound.

 

9553056883?profile=RESIZE_930xAmazon Nature Tours

 

And then there are the leaf cutter ants! A long assembly line of tiny leaves paraded up a hill, as organized as a marching band. A closer look revealed leaf cutter ants to be the burly carriers. Hard to believe something so fragile can carry so large and unwieldy a load as much as half a mile to its colony.

Surprised at how much he learned about himself on the trip, Ritesh Beriwal, a 23-year-old worn-out Wall Street trainee, noted: “I didn’t realize how interested I’d be in the little things, like how insects such as the leaf-carrying ants build homes. Before it was just an ant; now it’s an ant with an entire life and work history.”

Each day brought new revelations and insight into our surroundings whether on land or water. Our visits to several villages only reinforced that impression

9553056285?profile=RESIZE_930xAmazon Nature Tours

 

Visiting Remote Communities

Commonalities among villages: a dance hall where residents party once a month; a soccer field where youth exercise once a day; a school room where students of all grades learn; a clinic that caters to the medical needs of the community, two or three churches where parishioners of different persuasions pray -– and a generator. But the differences are notable as well.

I found the contrast particularly interesting between one village of no more than 30 families producing one crop and a larger “company” town in which thrives an asphalt industry. In the larger village, there is a convenience store, a small café, a bakery. Each hut has its own outhouse and there are several satellite dishes throughout the community.

In the other, the entire economy of the farm community revolves around manioc –- a product made from grain that is the mainstay of the Amazonian diet. “If there is no manioc on the table, there is no meal,” explains Souza.There are no stores in the village, no satellite dishes, not even any outhouses. Using the woods that border their village as their toilet, it was clearly the largest bathroom facility I had ever seen.(On the other hand, the men don’t have to worry about remembering to put the seat down.)

Every Day and Especially Every Night an Adventure

Although our daytime excursions were certainly cool, nothing compared with the nighttime jaunts Our post-dinner sojourns, beginning around 8 pm, pitched Souza and his searchlight against the dark horizon, scanning shoreline and trees desperately searching for something to entertain his charges. An all-pervasive quiet loomed, yet everything, including the sounds, seemed magnified: dolphins snorting, fish jumping, caimans slithering, monkeys howling -– all vying for attention. Whereas during the day the trills, tweets and twerps of the birds dominate the landscape, at night it’s the croaks, caws and throaty outpourings of the frogs and caimans.

On this particular night, eventually the flashlight, seemingly darting randomly above, below and beyond the trees, alighted (so to speak) on a caiman in the brush, his whole snout protruding for a moment before slinking away. Or perhaps instead the light reflected off a kingfisher’s eyes, temporarily blinding him so that we could drift in almost close enough to touch.Then for an encore we watched a spider grab a dragonfly from a crack in a tree directly in front of us -– and diligently devour it. Did I mention it was pitch black?

Once again, the refrain in my head: “How does Souza do that?” Either he has a seventh sense about the animals, or the Amazon Tourist Board set them up ahead of time.

 

9553056463?profile=RESIZE_930xVictor Block


Amazonian Eats

In between our first launch at 6 am to our final return sometime after 9, we pretty much spend the rest of the time eating. The native foods, beautifully prepared and presented, are a surprise this far from "civilization."

 

9553057098?profile=RESIZE_930xAmazon Nature Tours


Gone Fishin'

As much as that is a typical day, so are the exceptions.One particular day we got to sleep in until 6 (!) - still early enough to watch the sun pull itself over the forest yet late enough to feel the already oppressive heat seep into my lightweight, washable. bug-repellent-treated blouse (though overall, the weather was much more comfortable than anticipated). We were going fishing.

I sat with my Tom Sawyer fishing pole thinking the Amazon’s a long way from the Mississippi River. I attached the chunks of beef to the end of the line thinking this was strange bait until I remembered our prey. Watching Souza rattle the water with his pole, I remembered that being quiet was the order of the day on most fishing sojourns. Still, I followed his lead -– make the quarry think there’s a wounded fish thrashing about -- and within a minute I knew I had snagged the big prize: at the end of my line was the famed carnivorous predator -– a six-inch piranha.

 

9553057477?profile=RESIZE_930xVictor Block

Souza held it up to a tree and used it like a scissors to cut a branch in two.Just looking at its imposing teeth, it was clear that piranhas come by their reputation honestly. Still, they get a bad rep. The truth is that unless they’re starving or you’re bleeding, we’re really not in their food chain. That night, however, they were ours - fried piranhas as appetizers and scrumptious, their tiny bones crunchy and the meat flaky, proving the wise adage that more people eat piranhas than piranhas eat people –- at least in Amazonia.

 

If You Go

How

I flew United, one of several airlines that go nonstop from several U.S. cities to São Paulo, then LATAM or Gol for the four-hour flight onward to Manaus. You can also fly Azul, American, LATAM, and Avianca. There are currently no direct flights to Manaus from the USA.

When 

The January-to-June rainy season brings heavy but relatively brief downpours. Rivers rise dramatically, often as high as 45 feet. The high water enables small boats to reach areas inaccessible at other times of year During dry season, roughly July to December, rivers run shallow, and while white sand beaches –- excellent for a refreshing swim -– appear, most of the area is more arid and less lush.  The best time to visit is April to September.

 

Several Caveats  

  • If you’re looking to see a lot of four-legged wildlife, go on a safari, various companies offer them, both in the Amazon and the Pantanal, the world's largest tropical wetland, down in Mato Grosso do Sul
  • On the vessel there are hot water showers only during the day
  • Although we didn’t experience any, the pre-trip information warns of glitches, inconveniences and delays and advises to bring along a lot of tolerance and patience.
  • Post-hike showers are required, including the need to wash out your clothes to prevent any insect mishaps.
  • There is a certain sameness to the daily activities.
  • There is also a five-day/four-night option.

 

 

For more information, log onto log onto latinamericanescapes.com.(which by the way also runs a wide variety of tours elsewhere in Brazil as well as most other South - and Central - American countries); in th USA you can also call 800-510-5999..

 

E-mail me when people leave their comments –

You need to be a member of Tripatini to add comments!

Join Tripatini