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Bird Watching Grab the binoculars and tell us what’s in your backyard.

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Old 01-20-2007, 03:11 AM   #1
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Default Going to see wild Parrots at Tambopata, Brazil!

Trying to persuade someone to join me and my husband, they only have one more room left in md July.

DAY 1 LIMA – PUERTO MALDONADO

Transfer to the airport for a flight to Puerto Maldonado.
Arrival & Reception by Rainforest Expeditions Guide. Our guides are biologists, tourism professionals, or community members. Unless noted otherwise, our guides speak English. We assign guides at 6:1 ratio in Tambopata Research Center. This means groups smaller than 6 people will be merged with other groups under one guide. If you would like a private guide or a guide in a language other than English please let us know.
Transfer Airport to Puerto Maldonado Headquarters. Upon arrival from Lima or Cusco, we will welcome you at the airport and drive you ten minutes to our Puerto Maldonado headquarters. While enjoying your first taste of the forest in our gardens we will ask you to pack only the necessary gear for your next few days, and leave the rest at our safe deposit. This helps us keep the boats and cargo light.
Tambopata River Port to Refugio Amazonas. The two and a half hour boat ride from the Tambopata Port to Refugio Amazonas will take us past the Community of Infierno and the Tambopata National Reserve´s checkpoint and into the buffer zone of this 1.3 million hectare conservation unit.
Boxed Lunch.
Orientation. Upon arrival, the lodge manager will welcome you and brief you with important navigation and security tips.
Dinner.
Caiman searches. We will be out at the river’s edge at night, scanning the shores with headlamps and flashlights to catch the red gleams of reflection from caiman eyes.
Overnight in Refugio Amazonas.

Day 2
Canopy tower: A thirty minute walk from Refugio Amazonas leads to the 25 meter scaffolding canopy tower. A bannistered staircase running through the middle provides safe access to the platforms above. The tower has been built upon high ground, therefore increasing your horizon of the continuous primary forest extending out towards the Tambopata National Reserve. From here views of mixed species canopy flocks as well as toucans, macaws and raptors are likely.
Breakfast.
Brazil nut trail and camp: A few minutes hike from the lodge is a beautiful old growth patch of Brazil Nut forest that has been harvested for decades (if not centuries) where the precarious remains of a camp used two months a year by Brazil Nut gatherers can still be experienced. We will be demonstrating the whole process of the rain forest's only sustainably harvested product from collection through transportation to drying.
Refugio Amazonas to Tambopata Research Center. Four and half hours by boat from Refugio Amazonas, in the pristine heart of the reserve, lies the Tambopata Research Center. One and half hours into our boat journey, as we cross the confluence with the Malinowski River, we will leave the final traces of human habitation behind. Within the 700,000 hectare uninhabited nucleus of the reserve, sightings of capybara, caiman, geese, macaws and other large species will become more frequent.
Boxed Lunch.
Orientation. Upon arrival, the lodge manager will welcome you and brief you with important navigation and security tips.
Overlook Trail: A three to five kilometer hike will lead us to overlooks commanding magnificent views of the Tambopata winding its way into the lowlands. The forest on this trail, regenerating on old bamboo forest, is good for Howler Monkey and Dusky Titi Monkey.
Dinner.
Macaw Project Lectures: After dinner scientists will provide an in depth look at the biology of macaws, their feeding habits, the theories for clay lick use, their breeding and feeding ecology, population fluctuations and the threats to their conservation.
Overnight in Tambopata Research Center.
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Old 01-20-2007, 03:12 AM   #2
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Day 3
Macaw Clay Lick: On most clear mornings of the year dozens of large macaws and hundreds of parrots congregate on this large river bank in a raucous and colorful spectacle which inspired a National Geographic cover story. Discretely located fifty meters from the cliff, we will observe Green-winged, Scarlet and Blue-and-gold Macaws and several species of smaller parrots descend to ingest clay. Outings are at dawn when the lick is most active.
Breakfast.
Floodplain Trail: This five kilometer trail covers the prototypical rain forest with immense trees criss-crossed by creeks and ponds. Amongst the figs, ceibas and shihuahuacos we will look for Squirrel, Brown Capuchin, and Spider Monkeys as well as peccaries. TRC is located within this habitat.
Lunch.
Pond Platform: Ten minutes upriver from the lodge is a tiny pond with a platform in the middle. It is a great place to spot waterfowl such as Muscovy duck, sunbittern and hoatzin along with the woodpeckers, oropendolas, flycatchers and parakeets that call this pond their home.
Dinner.
Night walk. You will have the option of hiking out at night, when most of the mammals are active but rarely seen. Much easier to find are frogs with shapes and sounds as bizarre as their natural histories.
Overnight in Tambopata Research Center.

Day 4
Breakfast.
Tambopata Research Center to Refugio Amazonas. A three and a half hour boat ride brings us to Refugio Amazonas.
Boxed Lunch.
Condenado Oxbow Lake - CONDEL: A forty minute hike takes you Condenado Lake. You paddle canoes around the lake looking for lakeside wildlife such as hoatzin and caiman, hoping to see the otters which are infrequently seen here. You will also be rewarded with overhead sightings of macaws.
Dinner.
Tambopata National Reserve Lecture. Nightly lectures prepared by the staff of Refugio Amazonas cover conservation threats, opportunities and projects in the Tambopata National Reserve.
Overnight in Refugio Amazonas

Day 5.
Breakfast.
Transfer Boat - Refugio Amazonas to Tambopata River Port.
Transfer Tambopata River Port to Pto Maldonado Headquarters.
Transfer Pto Maldonado Headquarters – Airport. We retrace our river and road journey back to Puerto Maldonado, our office and the airport. Depending on airline schedules, this may require dawn departures.

Boat Transportation. All our boats are 20 foot long, roofed canoes with 55 hp outboard motors. Daily arrivals and departures from every port are scheduled to meet every airline´s arrival and departure with a maximum two hour wait.

-----------------------OK, so who wants to come with us?
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Old 01-20-2007, 07:38 AM   #3
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Wow, what an awsome vacation!
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Old 01-20-2007, 10:01 AM   #4
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tiki View Post

-----------------------OK, so who wants to come with us?
Me me me!!! Pick me! That sounds awesome!
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Old 01-20-2007, 03:18 PM   #5
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Joyce, wait until I post where I am staying in Brazil/Pantanal! Pouasada Ecologico Caiman...............they have a breedeing & research program for Big Blues (Arara Azul) there!

Camille, I would sooooo love for you to come! Seriously!!! Travel is awesome!
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Old 01-20-2007, 03:24 PM   #6
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OMG! I am soooooooooooooo jealous!
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Old 01-27-2007, 12:32 PM   #7
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I went in 79 before they had eco vacations.

Did you get to go during the wet or dry season?

I was there during both and their weather is totally crazy not to mention we had to stay in tents with the snakes, leaches and ants LMAO

Everyone should go at least 1 time in their life just to get away from it all for a while.
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Old 01-27-2007, 01:26 PM   #8
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Ok how kewl this that going to be WOW I'm so jealous.
I've never done an eco-vaca however I have been to Costa Rica & Columbia on a Panama Canal cruise and was thrilled to see the Parrots flying free. We even had one that landed on a potted plant on the ship I was on .. it was FAB..
Sounds like you are going to have a wonderful time, I can't wait to hear all about it and see the pics.
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Old 01-27-2007, 02:49 PM   #9
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John, I'm going in July this year. I just saw an ad in Bird Talk (we get the mags late in Australia) that Kaytee is doing an eco tour there in July also but to a place called Piura which is harder to get to and more expensive.

I'm not sure how I am going to do it technically, live rss feeds or podcasts but I will be reporting live from South America. At the very least, my Kodak camera has a video function, I can take the SD card into an internet cafe and upload reports to PC. I'm hoping to get interviews with the macaw researchers too!
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Old 01-27-2007, 05:00 PM   #10
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How much does this trip cost a person or a couple?
If I was a little older, I would go in a heart beat, I am very jealous of everyone going on the trip! I hope you have a lot of fun (even though I already know you will).
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