| country: | Ecuador |
| location: | Amazon rainforest |
| departures: | 2009: 21 Nov |
| price: | From £2135 (9 days) including flights from the UK. Based on twin share. Price includes transfers, bilingual naturalist guide, accommodation on a full board basis, camping gear, entrance fee to the Huaorani community and all activities as outlined |
| vouchers: | Gift vouchers can be used with this holiday |
the amazing things you'll be doing
The main aim of this unique trip is to allow those who prefer to take the path less travelled, to experience and explore this pristine wilderness in the company of and through the eyes of your Huaorani guides.
Highlights include:
Through daily guided excursions in the forest you will learn about its many wonders and from visiting the local Huaorani communities you will gain an introduction to their unique way of life and customs. Additional activities will range from cooling dips in the river and trying your skills with a traditional eight foot long blowgun to an evening’s stake out in a hide in the hope of seeing a tapir.
The first three nights in the jungle will be spent at the newly constructed lodge, deep in Huao Territory, built as a joint project with The Huaorani people, and the fourth night will be spent camping out on sleeping platforms further downriver.
Highlights include:
- A totally unique jungle and river adventure, travelling by small plane, dugout canoe and on foot in a remote area
- Explore pristine rainforest with local Huaorani guides, the forest’s traditional guardians
- Learn and experience Huaorani traditions, in one of the world’s most bio diverse places
Through daily guided excursions in the forest you will learn about its many wonders and from visiting the local Huaorani communities you will gain an introduction to their unique way of life and customs. Additional activities will range from cooling dips in the river and trying your skills with a traditional eight foot long blowgun to an evening’s stake out in a hide in the hope of seeing a tapir.
The first three nights in the jungle will be spent at the newly constructed lodge, deep in Huao Territory, built as a joint project with The Huaorani people, and the fourth night will be spent camping out on sleeping platforms further downriver.
day-by-day itinerary
| Day 1: | Depart London Heathrow for Quito travelling via Miami. Late afternoon arrival into Quito, the capital, where you will be met by a local English-speaking guide and transferred to your hotel in the historic part of the city. Evening pre-dinner presentation on The Huaorani and outline of your trip |
| Day 2: | Today we give you time to recover from your previous day of traveling and then in the afternoon you will have a Half Day City Tour of Quito showing you all the highlights with your English speaking guide. |
| Day 3: | Today you have an early start heading South through the famous ‘Avenue of Volcanoes’ to the charming town of Banos, the gateway to the Amazon Basin (journey time approx. 4.5 hours). From here you continue eastwards descending down to the frontier town of Shell in time for lunch, by which time the cooler temperatures of the high Andes will have been replaced by the heat of the tropics. After lunch you will fly by small light aircraft (max. 5 passengers per plane) on a breathtaking 45-minute flight eastwards over the seemingly endless rainforest canopy to land on the grass landing strip at the Huaorani community of Quehueri'ono. Quehueri'ono is one of the most established communities along this section of the Shiripuno River and plays home to a fluctuating population made up of a number of families who will come out to meet you. Welcome to Huaorani Territory! Transfer to dugout canoes on the nearby Shiripuno River journeying downstream (approx. 45 minutes) to the Huao Lodge, your base for the next 4 nights. The Shiripuno River is a major means of communication for The Huaorani and should provide plenty of opportunity for bird watching. From here on in all transportation will be by either dugout canoe or on foot. Rest of the day to unwind after your journey and familiarise yourself with the lodge. Overnight at Huao Lodge. |
| Day 4-5: | Full days exploring the surrounding area with your Huaorani guide. Activities and excursions will include daily guided walks through the forest learning about the flora and fauna, bird watching (over 500 species have been identified in the area), visiting the local Huaorani community of nearby Quehueri'ono, evening stake-out at a tapir clay lick, wildlife viewing in some of the river’s many ox-bow lakes, swimming in The Shiripuno River, informal lessons involving traditional Huaorani life, from how to handle a traditional 8ft long blowgun, basket weaving, setting traps and building temporary shelters to carving a 10 ft war spear from palm wood. Overnight at Huao Lodge. |
| Day 6: | After breakfast you will set off in the canoes down The Shiripuno, heading for the Huaorani community of Nenkepare, close to where you will camp tonight (journey time approx. 4 hours, depending upon river conditions). Poling down the river, this quiet mode of travel allows you to savour the sights and sounds of the jungle enclosed river and enjoy some of the many colourful birds who live there. En route you may stop at one of the many ox-bow lakes, where there is a good chance to spot the unique hoatzin (the only leaf-eating bird in the world) and you may even see a caiman lurking on the banks. Afternoon spent visiting the small community of Nenkepare and walking to a stunning waterfall hidden in the jungle behind the camp, where you can swim in the plunge pool, known to be frequented by tapir. Overnight in jungle camp. |
| Day 7: | Continue downstream for a couple of hours until you pass out of Huaorani territory and into the land of The Shuar people, The Huaorani’s traditional enermies. Exchange dugout for 4x4 vehicle and drive northwards up the infamous ‘Via Auca’ to the town of Coca on the Napo River from where you will fly back to Quito and re-enter the 21st-century world. Final night in Quito. |
| Day 8: | For those who aren’t extending their stay in Ecuador, morning transfer to the airport for the flight back to the UK, flying overnight. |
| Day 9: | Arrive back into London Heathrow. |
wildlife specialist
Typically trips are expertly guided by a leading specialist with a good knowledge of the area to be visited. Inevitably, wildlife is the main focus of attention however, the aim will be to incorporate all other aspects of the natural world in an attempt to be as broad-minded as possible. A local guide may often accompany trips. how this holiday makes a difference
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Environment & community
There is little doubt that you will be overwhelmed with your visit to this unique destination, as the Huaorani territory encompasses an exceptionally ecologically diverse area and unique culture. But this area and other parts of the Amazon are under potential threat of being forever lost to outside influences. But with community based eco-projects such as this, we inspire to protect and conserve this fragile region through sustainable use for future generations. Inspired by a number of visionary leaders, the Huaorani, have not fled, nor assimilated, nor disappeared. The Huaorani leader Moi Enomenga developed the concept of community tourism for his people, tourism that would help rather than hinder, that would be lead and controlled by the community itself that would provide an alternative to oil money, to deforestation, to disappearance. After many years of consultation with the families, with the group, with neighboring communities, a plan was developed, a plan to build the Lodge in which you are now staying, a plan to show others who the Huaorani are, why they will survive, a plan to offer others a way to understand and support. After 15 years of work and one year with their Huaorani Ecolodge open the community have won international awards for its sustainable operation and recently awarded in the UK as the best Sustainable Tourism project in Latin America of the year 2008. The community agreed to continue protecting the 55 thousand hectares they are responsible for and establish an intangible area of more than 5 thousand dedicated to conservation and tourism. The Huaorani territory has been subject to outside influences since 1953, they were the last of the major ethnic groups to be contacted. The initial contact came through the missionaries, and it has been said that some of these evangelists often worked closely with oil companies to further their mutual objectives (Colby and Dennet 1995). The discovery of oil in 1967 significantly increased these disruptive influences. Texaco initiated oil development near Lago Agrio. Eventually several other foreign companies and Petroecuador became involved in large parts of Sucumbios and the Napo provinces. Many indigenous men were introduced to the temporary wage labor, prostitution and consumer goods during the oil exploitation phase. Woman often lived in fear of the abusive practices of the oil-workers. The routine dumping of toxic formation water and frequent oil spills into the rivers on which the indigenous communities depend created huge negative impacts on their lives. The flood of settlers which followed the new, oil financed road network affected the locals in several ways. First it displaced them from some of the best and most accessible agricultural soils. Second, it reduced the territory available for hunting and gathering. Finally, the example of the settlers and government policy encouraged the indigenous people to increase their reliance on agriculture and lumbar extraction and to covet the land as private property rather than a communal resource. The country´s most important source of foreign income is its oil exports, and most of the oil lies beneath the rainforests. Oil exploitation and natural resource conservation are not necessarily incompatible, as we can see in Europe and North America where there are strict environmental controls on this type of activity. Thus community based eco-lodge maintains a way of life for the Huaorani independent of gifts and handouts from oil companies. This venture links the Huaorani to tourism as an alternative means of income, in their irreversibly changed world, enabling them to preserve their culture, heritage, traditions and at the same time conserve the land. During the first 10 years of work, we limited the group sizes (up to 8 people) and only one group per month, to slowly transmit what tourism is all about and how it operates, once the community were happy with the operations and a well designed code of conduct for the visitors, the community and guided we decided to build a fixed infrastructure entirely powered by renewable energy and with capacity to only 10 people. The lodge and operation belongs entirely to the community. All the finances are managed under the Quehueri’ono Association, its financial sustainability depends on your booking. The commitment towards sustainability and the new model and approach works as a model to many communities and operations. For the community the decision to work with tourism is an alternative to many extractive operations that surrounds the territory, so we believe is no longer a matter of making a difference, tourism is no longer the motive. Tourism is no longer the end, but rather the means. The end is the survival and strengthening of indigenous peoples and their forest environments in the Ecuadorian Amazon. The end is to save unique human cultures. This community based lodge is an example towards our environmental and cultural goals of sustainable development. By facilitating a greater flow of interested Amazon visitors to this community, who manage the operation, allows the generated income to be put back into the community and conserve the natural resources. What is more, the visitors will, through the unique experience of seeing the rainforest through the eyes of the people that live there, almost certainly gain insights which will make them a new ally in our common struggle to defend the rainforest. |
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