Saturday, July 6, 2002

Peru: The Jungle and (almost) Machu Picchu, Part 1


What We Did During Our Summer Vacation
June 20 - July 5, 2002
Part One (of three)

Our visit to Peru was better than we expected it to be. Peru is a wonderful, wonderful country! After a night in Lima, we spent the first seven days visiting Parque Nacional Manu, two days exploring and shopping in the city of Cusco (formerly the center of the Inca world), and nearly a week in the town of Urubamba (one hour outside of Cusco and situated in beautiful Sacred Valley). There is nothing quite like the rain forest and the Andes - both filled our eyes with beauty. We feel fortunate to have witnessed animals in the wild and to have met really good people.  Illness kept us from visiting Machu Picchu, but this only means we will return one day. We left happy and fulfilled with our experiences, our feelings and with new friends in our hearts.
Here's more on the jungle: http://www.pbs.org/edens/manu/history.htm

People
  • People stared at us and returned our smiles. When they saw our cameras, they motioned for us to move closer for a better photo. People were very warm and kind.
  • Vendors of postcards, cigarettes, shoeshines and tourist trips were somewhat pesky, but they also went away easily after we said, "No, gracias." Many of these vendors were children. One small fry jokingly offered to trade one of his postcard for Tien's hiking boots.
  • Everywhere we went, it was apparent that Peruvians work very hard. Many are farmers, rising at 3a to care for their crops. We saw untold citizens carrying large packs on their backs, most of which were women. Here is a hard working couple.
  • Folk dance and music are taught at all levels of education. The many festivals are an occasion for children to dance in Cusco's streets wearing costumes.
  • In the town of Pisac a Sunday market is held and is a gathering place for highland locals who bring their crops to barter for other food necessities - a real sense of sharing is present in this process.
Landscape
  • Small villages dotted the roads. There was livestock everywhere and children played in the streets.
  • Remains of ancient pre-Inca and Inca structures stood out. We stopped at this Chanka burial site. The insides were empty.
  • Jungle highlands have steep walls of densely filled forestry. It was BEAUTIFUL!
  • Jungle lowlands are a tight growth of greenery. Why anyone would want to destroy a lush rainforest? Think of tall trees with long, narrow limbs and foliage at the very top (like Jurassic Park movies); they all fight for sunlight.
  • Low water levels during the dry season exposed many trees lying on the riverbed, which made navigating a boat a real challenge.
  • Oxbow lakes are formed from highly meandering rivers when rising and falling waters from successive wet and dry seasons cause the tight river bends to get cut across and ultimately isolated from the rest of the river.
  • Terraced agriculture in the highlands means water must be hand carried to the crops in areas where water sources do not exist. Agricultural terraces built by Incas are still in use today.
  • Rolling hills between Cusco and Sacred Valley looked like patchwork quilts of various crops. Craggy Andean peaks are capped with snow. 
New Foods and Drinks We Consumed
  • Alpaca meat was beefy and used in stews. Chunks of it were served with sauces over rice.
  • Cuy (guinea pig) was oven-roasted; the skin is crispy; the meat tasted like duck with the texture of chicken - we LOVED this dish!
  • Cuzqueña beer is available in white or black; Tien tried the white which has a light flavor.
  • Huacatay is a fresh herb grown in the Cusco area and used in cooking. It is one of the main flavors for roasting cuy. It grows in the highland, and despite Lauren's persistent research, cannot be found anywhere except as a fresh herb in the areas we visited.
  • Inka Cola is a popular soft drink that tasted like fizzy pineapple. Nice!
  • Mate de coca is illegal in the U.S. Dried coca leaves are used extensively in Peru for tea or for chewing. The leaves are rich in vitamins, protein, calcium, iron and fiber, and are a mild stimulant.
  • Pisco sour is a popular cocktail served to tourists; Tien said it tasted similar to a margarita.
  • Quinoa, a grain, is served in cereal as well as in soups.
  • Roasted corn kernels - they appear "gently popped" and are three times as large as our corn kernels.
Cusco Sightseeing
  • Plaza de Armas is in the center of Cusco and is the central meeting place for all activities for locals and for tourists.
  • Catedral on Plaza de Armas was built over a one hundred year period beginning 1559 and has a solid silver altar. Behind the silver altar is an ornately carved wood altar even more beautiful. The catedral has about a dozen small sanctuaries surrounding it. There is a Last Supper painting with a feast of cuy. The catedral has a meeting room with two rows of elaborately carved chairs which looked like a small Parliament.
  • Inca walls exist everywhere as foundations of newer structures. The stones fit precisely and without mortar. It is impossible to fit a piece of paper between them! The Spanish tore down the Inca structures and built on the Inca foundations; an earthquake toppled the Spanish structures, but the Inca foundations were intact.
  • El Templo del Coricancho was the most important Inca worshiping place. Iglesia Santo Domingo (Spanish) was built OVER the Inca structure after the Inca gold was stripped from the bricks, the precious stones removed and the solid gold statues were stolen, then the gold was melted into bullion to take back to Spain. Although it made us sick to know what was once there, the solid Inca workmanship remains. 
Some Hardships
  • Cold showers
  • Cold weather (stormy nights with thunder and lightening during our Sacred Valley stay)
  • El Gato Negro Magellan was home all alone...
  • Public bathrooms at aeropuerto provide toilet tissue outside of stalls
  • Rising early everyday was difficult (4:15a, 6:30a, 5a, 4:45a, 3:20a; 6:20a, 5a, 5:15a, 5a, 6:30a, 8a, 8a, 6:30a, 7:20a…), but it was necessary as the animals didn't wait for us to get out of bed!
  • Toilets without seats at the tented campsite
  • The lack of modern sewage processing systems in the cities of Cusco and Lima require all toilet paper to be disposed of in garbage cans, no matter how you used it. All flushed items go into a local river. There are septic tanks at Manu lodges and campsites.
Physical Ailments
  • Altitude sickness
  • Food poisoning
  • Headaches (daily, due to excessive binocular usage)
  • Insect bites
  • Pneumonia in right lung (Tien)
  • Tailbone/knee soreness (caballo riding)
  • Traveler's diarrhea
Immunizations
  • Typhoid
  • Yellow fever 
Chemical Assistance
  • Oxygen
  • Mate de coca (coca tea)
  • Chewing coca leaves
Medications
  • Cipro
  • Cough syrup
  • Diomox
  • Immodium
  • Malarone
  • Penicillin
Things We'll Miss Seeing/Breathing/Feeling
  • Indian women's colorful native clothing
  • Cool, crisp highland air
  • Beautiful lush green jungle
  • Peace and silence in the rain forest and on oxbow lakes
  • A cup of mate de coca each morning (similar to Asian green teas)
The Magic of Life 
Continuous energy of the jungle's regrowth - we can feel it around us!

Tidbits
  • Bricks of mud and straw are used to build homes, thatching covers the roofs.
  • Produce grows two to three times larger than in the U.S. You should see the basketball-sized papayas!
  • Established forest on one bank of the Madre de Dios River erodes due to seasonal changes. The opposite bank is "pioneer forest" comprised of new growth of three distinct plant layers: tessaria, gynereum and cecropia, all of which eventually become the compost material to provide new growth as the jungle re-establishes.
  • Two seasons: rainy season and dry season. During the rainy season, the river will rise up to 26 feet. During the dry season, it can be as low as four feet.
  • American ornithologists' names are used for identifying birds. If you ask a native about a bird, he is likely to answer, "Doesn't taste good".
  • Cowbirds lay their eggs in the vacant nests of the Oropendula. If Oropendula eggs exist there, the Mother Oropendula will return and sit on both eggs. Cowbird eggs hatch quickly and the chicks are skilled at pushing out unhatched Oropendula eggs. Mother Oropendula returns and raises the Cowbird chicks, unaware of the duplicity.
  • Howler monkey groups are led by a dominant male who howls like a windstorm to mark his group's territory for half an hour (from 5-5:30a!) and the sound can be heard up to two miles away. The females in the group "bark" in response. To avoid competition, the dominant male eats his male offspring.
  • The flag of the Incas is a rainbow. Turn it upside down and it becomes what we know as the gay pride flag.
  • Termites are blind.
  • Many birds mate for life. If one dies, the mate remains alone.
  • If you agitate a Wooley Monkey, he or she will urinate on you.
  • We had vivid dreams every night of this vacation. They stopped when we returned home.
  • In the city of Cusco, sheep were being herded on the sidewalk.
  • Noted ornithologist Daniel Blanco was a passenger on our small plane leaving Parque Nacional Manu. Our departure was delayed by four hours due to a flat tire.
  • Tourism is a popular subject in universities. Eight years ago, it wasn't.
  • Children wearing brightly colored native clothing and flowers in their hats carry tiny lambs in their satchels and offer to be photographed for a fee.
  • Cuscanians don't like the city of Lima because of its poor air quality and lack of sunlight. Lima people tell us they might have three months of brightness during each year. The remainder of the year is overcast and grey with fog and pollution.
  • Although there are handfuls of American fast food places, we only saw Dunkin' Donuts and Subway Sandwich.
  • Cool weather in the Cloud Forest means no mosquitoes!
  • Lauren had the best hot chocolate and cinnamon drink EVER at moni café in Cusco. They have fabulous food. Moni is owned/run by Michael and Ester, of Britain and Peru, respectively. We left moni with two new friends and happy stomachs. This little restaurant is a must for great food and fine people.
Niceties

In Lima and Cusco we had excellent drivers who "held our hand" the moment we stepped off the plane, accompanied us to our hotel or lodges and returned us to aeropuerto so there was no chance of getting confused. Without them we could have been lost. Our stopping point in Lima was Mami Panchita Hostal where Dutchman "Toon" provided his good services. In Cusco, we rested at Cristina Hostal which is centrally located, clean and inexpensive. They also provided an oxygen tank for Lauren's initial altitude sickness.

What GOOD Luck!
  • Two colorful butterflies allowed me to hold them on my fingertip!
  • During lunch on the patio at Cloud Forest Lodge, Tien opened a bird field guide and asked our guide Alvaro, "What is this bird like?" Just then, Alvaro pointed skyward as an example flew overhead!
  • Unusually cold weather kept mosquitoes at bay. As the mosquito eggs have a four-day incubation period, we encountered less than the usual amount. Phew!
  • Ears of corn which grow misshaped (i.e. two or more ears within the same husk) are kept inside a farmer's home as good luck for next year's crop.
  • One type of traditional doll is made entirely of hand-woven materials in natural colors in various natural shades. They are burned in offering ceremonies for various needs such as crops, health, livestock, etc.
  • Sara-sara seeds are used as beads to bring good luck as well as to ward away evil.

Peru: The Jungle and (almost) Machu Picchu, Part 3



What We Did During Our Summer Vacation
June 20 - July 5, 2002
Part Three (of three)

Double-headed deer
Conjoined lambs
Weird Stuff
  • Natural History Museum: stuffed animals such as birds and mammals, examples of insects, cats, snakes, sloths, monkeys, turtle shells, sea life, fossils, cow fetus at two months in a jar, a six-legged lamb with two tails and six legs in formaldehyde, several human fetuses in various early stages of development, the double-head of a deear and stuffed lamb-twins joined at the cheek.
  • Candiru catfish is small as a toothpick and favors orifices to hide such as swimmer's urethra, vagina or anus. Surgery is required for removal. Don't go swimming in the Amazon! 
Chemicals and Effects
  • Mate de coca is a common tea made from dried flat green leaves steeped in hot water. In addition, the leaves are chewed. The medicinal effect includes mood "brightening" and pain relief. Another product of coca leaves is cocaine.
  • One of our guides had a personal coca leaf bag made from the skin of a white baby alpaca which died in infancy. The head had been removed and the skin sewed closed at the shoulders; hand-woven fabric trimmed the raw edge of the opening. The bag was folded in half and the tail served as a closure. It was beautiful and soft. It felt very personal.
  • Ayahuasca tea report (second hand knowledge): It is reputed that those who consume this drink are bestowed with the ability to commune with spirits, diagnose illness, treat disease and even predict the future. Senses become acute, out of body experiences occur and relationships can be "seen."
Escabeche de Pollo Recipe (Cusco version)
6 pieces of boiled chicken
steamed onion, asparagus, carrots, cauliflower, green beans
broth from boiling chicken
4 T white vinegar
1 T olive oil
1 tsp dry mustard
salt and pepper to taste

Season chicken with salt and pepper
Boil chicken
Remove chicken and reserve broth
To reserved broth, add remainder of dry ingredients; cool
Add cooked chicken and steamed vegetables to broth
Marinate for a minimum of two hours
Serve over a bed of lettuce with hard-boiled egg wedges and black olives

(For the Lima version, add a crushed dried red pepper and substitute chunks of fish that you have fried in flour and seasoned with salt.)

Vacation Scents
  • Mildew from the moisture in the air inside our tents and in some clothes
  • City car exhaust from poor air quality control
  • Sacred Valley corn stalks were burned from the remainder of last season's crops
  • A herd of peccaries… Once we smelled these beasts, we can never forget. Even as we sped by on our motor boat, we caught their scent and knew they were nearby.
Phrases, Words And Greetings
  • "Buenos dias," "Buenos tardes" and "Buenos noches" (rarely did we hear "Hola")
  • "Chao" or "chao-chao" to say goodbye
  • Handshake and a kiss on the cheek between men and women
  • "No problem"
  • Chifa, the name for Asian restaurants, whether it be Chinese, Japanese and/or Korean
Handwoven coca leaf bag
Traditional dolls made from handwoven textiles

Cool Things We Purchased
  • Coca leaf bag:  The vendor said it was from the Huari Period (600-1000 AD), but Lauren didn't believe him. Regardless of its vintage, Lauren bought it because it is beautiful and very finely woven.
  • Erotic candleholder with very large genitalia
  • Necklaces made by the Piro people:  Necklaces are made of fish bones, grey sara-sara seeds, orange/black wairuo seeds with centerpieces of a snail shell or a peccary tooth. The seeds bring good luck and also guard against evil spirits. The Piro people migrate along the banks of the river, wear Western clothing and fish for their food. They salt their fish to preserve for eating.
  • Rug for our home hand-woven in brilliant oranges, reds, browns and greens.
  • Traditional dolls are used for offerings and then burned in a ceremony. These dolls are made entirely of hand-woven textiles. 
Items We Saw Which Should NOT Be For Sale
  • Ocelot or margay skin
  • Puma paw made into a small bag
Our Sol Y Luna lodging

Sol Y Luna

This resort had fabulous food, architecture that I really liked, beautiful gardens and flowers, solid wood alongside iron work, clever art worked into the plaster walls, custom wall tiles, daily towel service, but was missing a heart and a soul, and had American prices in South America's poorest country. If leaving with a feeling of warmth, friendliness and a desire to return is important, this place is not for you. 

Livestock
  • Cows
  • Lambs
  • Donkeys or mules
  • Pigs
  • Chickens and turkeys
  • Guinea pigs
Lauren's horse

Peruvian Paso Horses

The horses are smaller, somewhat narrower and have a "sideways gait" which causes the horses to step high and prance -- it's beautiful! There is less bounce for us inexperienced riders.
Sore: Lauren's knees, ankles, tailbone… oh my. Did Lauren mention it rained during our half-day lesson? Riding was great fun, until the pain from the lesson took over during the next full day of riding. In addition, it's not nice to ride after a sleepless night of food poisoning.



Tien, his nurse and his Dr. Batallanos
Dr. D. Cesar Pinto Batallanos and "Señor Efemero"

These kind and caring men provided excellent medical care during Tien's high altitude pneumonia. The doctor had a peaceful demeanor and the nurse smiled easily - we really liked them. They made "house calls" every four to six hours to administer Tien's penicillin via IV, struggled with us when our interpreter/guide named Moises was not available ("Nosotro preocupadamos!"), and they were patient and generous with their time. The US$130 fee included all house calls and medications. The hotel provided the oxygen tank. When I wanted to take this photo, they called us Los Locos Americanos. During their visits, they told us of two other pneumonia patients in their hospital due to the unseasonably cold weather we had, thanks to El Niño. 

Weather
  • Lima: dowdy, grey, misty and cool… This is typical and Lima gets about three months of sunshine per year.
  • Cusco: sunny, bright, chilly, thin air, colder when the sun goes down. The thick clouds were bright white against the blue sky.
  • High jungle in the Cloud Forest: humid, cool, cloudy and bright; chilly at night, toasty by the fireplace
  • Low jungle near the Madre de Dios: humid, sunny and warm but not hot, comfortable
  • Sacred Valley: bright between high clouds, snow in the highest peaks, rain rain rain along with thunder and lightening, drafty in our room (no insulation around the doors or windows). Very unusual weather, report the locals, especially for this time of year.

Peru: The Jungle and (almost) Machu Picchu, Part 2

What We Did During Our Summer Vacation
June 20 - July 5, 2002
Part Two (of three)

Rain Forest Visit with Manu Nature Tours

Our trip with Manu Nature Tours was private. Their staff outnumbered the two of us with a guide, chef, waitperson, and up to two boatpersons. They see to the excellent care of all details and hire only the most personable, professional and knowledgeable people for all aspects of the trip. All meals, transportation and porter service were included. We only carried our daypacks. It was obvious that their guides really love what they do: sharing their knowledge of animals and conservation of their country. We are still talking between ourselves about how great this jungle trip was due to them and we highly recommend this tour company.

Itinerary

  • Two nights at plush and comfortable Cloud Forest Lodge with full private bathrooms, hot water and the rush of a stream outside our window
  • Two nights at comfortable Manu Lodge with screens for windows and bathroom facilities in a separate building (sorry Ladies, no hot water); this was formerly the site of a timber camp and is situated on the edge of Cocha Juarez, an oxbow lake.
  • Two nights at Manu Tented Campsite with very large tents, mattresses and sheets with blanket (Sorry, ladies, no hot water and no toilet seats) and situtated a short hike from Cocha Salvador.


Food
We wish we could eat like this everyday! Most meals began with soup and finished with fruit. All meals included sweet oropeso bread which is yummy but filling (one piece was plenty). Leyla, Mateo and Manuel prepared excellent Peruvian dishes - now we're fans. The food was hearty and I learned to say "Estoy llena" after my first meal ("I'm full"). If we were served box lunches, they were also well prepared. There was rarely any need for all the Cliff Bars we brought except for the pre-breakfast excursions we took. The staple foods in Peru are corn and potates, both of which grow in many shapes, sizes and colors. Here are a few potatoes.

Guides

  • Herbert "White-Faced Capuchin" patiently answered every single question we had and even gave us Spanish lessons ("Me gustan aqui!" and "Como se dice blah-blah-blah?")
  • Alvaro (single Ladies, you would have loved this good-looking young man); Tien taught him to say, "Yo, ese!" Pretty funny.
  • Leo "Howler" went to medical school but did not find the relationships fulfilling. His research includes the effects of tourism on nature and we expect that he will make many positive changes in his country. Leo is married with a beautiful 4-year-old daughter named after his wife Peggy (also a naturalist guide), and they have another child on the way. We spent the most time with Leo who is extremely good at his job due to his great knowledge. We were shocked to learn he is only 27 years old. Leo has a take-charge demeanor and is now our standard for all future tour guides - those are VERY BIG shoes to fill!

We intend to remain friends with them - they are each fun, funny and great to be with.

Boatsmen

  • Julio hardly spoke, is handsome and young with a hat pulled low over his eyes, walked barefoot in the jungle and skillfully maneuvered our craft through the shallow waters of the Madre de Dios.
  • Wilburt, the assistant boatsman, also handsome and young… he was chatty among his friends.


Waitpersons

  • Jeni at Cloud Forest Lodge is cute and giggly
  • Jannet at Manu Lodge is young, friendly, chatty and fun. She taught me "refrigerio" which means snack. Our last memory of her is her tee shirt: "Sex and Sun."
  • Giraldo who also served as an assistant boatsman has classic Indian features, is 30 years old, quiet, reserved and shy, and he can repair anything.


Tio Esteban
  • Uncle Esteban arrived at Manu Lodge intending to stay for 15 days and has been there for 15 years. He believes himself to be about 70 years of age. Tio has good energy, is physically slight but is as strong as an ox, sharp in mind and with an excellent memory. One of his many duties includes clearing jungle paths. Tio is unafraid of most things, including jaguars, peccaries and snakes, except he fears natives and has sometimes encountered human tracks during his trail clearing. Manu Lodge is his home and Tio is the heart of Manu Lodge.
Tio Esteban has a way with animals and has several pets who come when he calls the names he gives them:
  • "Benito" is a toucan.
  • "Bicky" was a baby tapir when Tio adopted and raised her. A jaguar had killed Bicky's mother and Bicky ran right into the arms of Tio. When Bicky was six years old, she went for a drink in the lake and was eaten by Clotilde. Tio cried for weeks after Bicky died.
  • "Clotilde" is a black caiman, about 14 feet long with a missing foot
  • "Maria" is a pale-winged trumpeter bird.
  • "Marsalino" is a black caiman, about eight feet long
  • "Verjeña" the peccary was relocated after attacking several tourists.
Jungle Plants
  • Bamboo lives in the jungle. These varieties look different from Asian bamboo and are equally beautiful.
  • Bromeliads grow everywhere, as do orchids. Orchids were not blooming during our visit.
  • Fungus and epiphytes: so many types, textures and colors! We rarely saw the same kind twice.
  • Ginger and heliconia grow profusely.. We think they look so unusual in our tropical floral arrangements and they are everywhere in the jungle.
  • Mimosa plants! Have you ever touched one? It's short and delicate; when you touch it, the leaves immediately expire.
  • "Strangler trees" grow beside a host tree, eventually surrounding and killing it. We stood inside a strangler tree that had already devoured its host.
  • Trees in the rain forest are long limbed with foliage at the top. Favorites include cecropia and, the giants of the jungle, Ceiba. Capirona trees shed their bark three times annually in a successful effort to keep climbing plants from adhering. The surface is red, smooth and beautiful. Many rain forest trees do not root deeply and their trunks spread wide for balance.
  • Unusual begonias amazed Lauren. The leaves look familiar, but the flowers are different.
Wild Animals
  • Butterflies, more beautiful and colorful than any we have seen before, among others, Blue Morpho and transparent Ithomiidae
  • Caimans (both black and white varieties). These became quite common to see and the largest one was about 15 feet long.
  • Capybaras (three sightings)
  • Crabs (in the jungle?! Yes, the forest variety!)
  • Frogs
  • Giant otters (three sightings of each two, eight and three animals)
  • Glass fish
  • Lizards
  • Monkeys (WooleyHowlerSquirrelBrown Capuchin, White Capuchin, Spider, Dusky Titi)
  • King Vulture (very rare, first sighting of the year for our guide Leo!)
  • Mosquitoes, termites, flies, bees, wasps, ICK!
  • Nests of birds, termites and wasps
  • Possum, which scampered onto the dinner table in our dining tent in an unsuccessful attempt to help itself to a serving of oropeso bread
  • Parrot flock of about one thousand (noisy!)
  • Peccary herd of about 60 wild pigs (scary sounding, smelly and dangerous)
  • Side-necked turtles, called this because they are unable retract their heads. Usually, several are stacked head-to-tail on a log taking in the sun.
  • Stick insects
  • Tayra (one sighting)
  • Urania moth
  • Wild turkeys who freeze in their tracks when they sense your presence; if you stop for a few minutes, they begin walking again (Hey, where did THOSE come from?!!!!)
  • Worm we named "Alvaro's Halloween Fluke"
  • Tracks of a jaguar (two days old), tapir tracks and peccary tracks 
Great Stories from Naturalist Guide Leo
  • Peccary attack required a female tourist to receive stitches on her back thigh.
  • Male tourist strayed from the group when Nature called ("numero dos en la selva"). While crouching, a fer-de-lance snake bit him on the butt. He felt a sting but did not give it much attention. As the day wore on, the poison caused more and more pain. Eventually, he was taken to the hospital and his leg was amputated.
  • Yellow-rumped cacique birds are skilled imitators. During the construction of Manu Lodge, workers heard the sounds of hammering, a creaking door and a circular band saw even though no equipment was in use - the clever mimicry of this bird!
  • While doing research alone, Leo found himself stuck in the middle of a herd of peccaries. He managed to climb an arched vine and hold onto another vine while being surrounded by an inner ring of vicious males and an outer ring of females. It was two and a half hours before he was freed. How frightening!
  • Mateo, the chef at the Manu Tented Campsite, slept alone in a tent. During the middle of the night, a tapir that was unable to see the tent bumped into Mateo sleeping inside! Here's someone else's photo of a tapir.
  • Natives attacked a Manu Nature Tours boat as it traveled along the river. The arrow stuck in the wooden side of the boat after being shot from the trees above. The arrow is now in the office of Boris Gomez-Luna, owner of Manu Nature Tours.
Drinking Game (also from Leo)

During a party where cuy is served, the heads are also devoured. Inside the cuy there is a tiny ear bone shaped like a dog. This bone is dropped into a shot glass and filled with a strong sugar cane alcoholic beverage. The shot must be downed in one swig along with the bone. If not, the glass is filled again until the tiny bone is swallowed!


Dumb Tourist Award

"What's this?" Lauren asked our guide Leo as she turned over a large leaf. The item that caught her eye swarmed. "Be VERY CAREFUL and leave it alone. It's a wasps' nest." Here's a picture of another wasp nest in the viewing platform.


Cool Thing To Do in the Jungle

Take a walk alone. Stop in the path and don't move except to observe with eyes, ears and nose. Listen to leaves fall, birds sing and fly overhead, lizards move, wild turkeys come to life, insects buzz… The jungle is alive!






Canopy Climbing
We wore chest and leg harnesses and, with mountain gear, we were pulled 100 feet up onto a platform built by Giraldo in the safety of a giant Ceiba tree. The sun rose, the mist cleared, and we could see the tops of the trees. We had breakfast up here on white china and a red tablecloth.


With Leo's knowledge, we identified the following birds on this activity:
We saw a great many other birds throughout the entire jungle trip. Here are more which Leo and Alvaro identified for us:
  • Anhinga, the "snake bird" because it swims well and looks like a swimming snake
  • Cinnamon or Cliff flycatcher
  • Cock of the Rock
  • Cowbirds
  • Great egret
  • Green jays
  • Green kingfisher
  • Highland motmot
  • Hoatzins, clumsy, beautiful, can't fly far
  • Horned screamers
  • King vulture
  • Kingfishers
  • Marsh birds
  • Orinoco geese
  • Phoebe
  • Quetzal
  • Razor-billed curassow
  • Red-throated Caracara
  • Ridge kingfisher
  • Roadside hawk
  • Scarlet macaws
  • Snowy egret
  • Tiger heron
  • Torent ducks
  • Turkeys
  • White necked heron
  • White winged swallows 
Giant Otters

This endangered animal is similar to those we are familiar with, except this species averages six feet in length. They live in family groups of about four or five individuals, live in burrows on the edge of oxbow lakes ("cochas") and sometimes rivers, and are fast swimmers. They are good bio-indicators and, if they've left the area, the quality of their surroundings has declined. Due to fur trade, they have been hunted and few animals remain. We were lucky to visit three oxbow lakes and view three separate otter groups.

  • Juarez Cocha: In our catamaran, we followed two otters who disappeared into the grasses at the end of the Cocha. Thinking we missed them, we disembarked the catamaran to climb into another boat for traveling up river. As we departed, the otters came out to "say goodbye" from the bank.
  • Salvador Cocha: We had the rare opportunity to view for over an hour eight animals near their burrow while they went about their daily duties of fishing, eating, snuggling, grooming each other, peeing, playing, barking a warning when we got too close and hearing their cubs "mew" from the nest. This kind of viewing NEVER happens - it was "Discovery Channel" without commercial interruptions!
  • Otorongo Cocha: We watched from a steel viewing platform as a trio fished. One otter caught a 15" white piranha and carried in its mouth to the end of the lake to enjoy. 
Jungle Sounds
  • The high-pitched hum of mosquitoes at Salvador Cocha surrounded us for miles. ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ!!
  • Howler monkeys at Manu Lodge woke us at 5a each day to howl for thirty minutes to mark his group's territory. The females in his group barked in response. We are told that the dominant male howler eats his male offspring to prevent competition.
  • Frogs at Manu Tented Campsite croaked from about 6p to 9p (perhaps longer, but we were asleep).
  • Birds, crickets or monkeys? After a while, it was difficult to distinguish between sounds!
  • Peccary herd: a herd of about sixty wild pigs was frightening after listening to stories of injuries they inflict. In addition, we heard the ground rumble as the herd moved nearby. There is something really horrible about listening to these unpredictable animals as they cracked hard palm seeds in their teeth and grunted uncontrollably.  Oh, and the smell -- the SMELL!
  • A bird whose song sounded like a Casio watch alarm
  • Another bird whose song sounded like an old-fashioned telephone ring
  • The rushing stream alongside Manu Cloud Forest Lodge provided a soothing white noise to sleep to.