Showing posts with label La Estrella Amazonica. Show all posts
Showing posts with label La Estrella Amazonica. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Day 6 Swimming & Piranha Fishing

No Insect Repellant 

Our crew does not use insect repellant.  Instead they cover exposed skin with long pants, long sleeves and neck/face wraps.  I learned repellant (particularly Deet) is corrosive to metals (camera equipment, jewelry, etc) and bad for plant and animal life.  Yesterday, Martin said his watch melted to his skin.  We speculated that this may have been a combination of the DEET and/or the heat.  Also, I was unable to touch last night's caimans because I had repellant on...  

And so,  I too stopped using insect repellant.  I figured I could handle the bites I might get in my remaining 4 days.



Wildlife

On the way to our swimming destination, we passed CP1 (Check Point 1/Ranger Station) and saw a variety of wildlife:
Ranger
Old Ranger Station/CP1

Black Collared Hawk 
Red Howler
Red Howler

Red Howler - leaping to another tree
Capped Heron
working on ID
Flame-tailed Pondhawk
__ - spotted by me!  Reportedly rare to see in Peru
Great Potoo!! (nocturnal and related to Nightjar).  Very far away and incredibly camouflaged!  Parked skiff under one last night, in the dark; but unable to see/photo it, due to darkness.
Great Potoo!
Cane Toad
Black-capped Donacobius
Black-capped Donacobius
Black-capped Donacobius
Neotropical Cormorants
Cocoi Heron
Woodpecker

Swam in the Amazon!

It was at the Reserve's Check Point 2 ranger station on the Yana Yaku blackwater lake accessed by skiff from the Ucayali River (connected to the Amazon).  Despite all my pre-trip reading and friends' cautions about the candiru fish, parasites and predators... our expedition leader (Renzo) was first in.  Nancy (from Fredericksburg, VA) went next; and I was third in!  (I did not have a bathing suit; so I jumped in with my clothes on.)  Less than half of our 20 swam that morning.  Logan was the only male. The water was fantastic!  Refreshing, perfect temp - and clean!
Ranger station (CP2) at Yana Yaku blackwater lake.  Where more than half of our group of 20 waited for the swimmers.


Piranha Fishing!

We took the skiffs to Dorado Creek, off the Ucayali River.  - and under some trees to this former flatland forest now covered in water.  The air was quite still and stuffy because of the tree/vegetation volume. 

Wonderfully Reflective Water
We used the same kind of simple sticks and fishing lines we saw in yesterday's village.  Beef tenderloin was the bait.  With one lesson, I caught a fish right away, as did others.  We fell into a competition with the other skiff about who could holler louder and more often with each catch.  Once I felt a hint of competition, my squeamishness about fishing went out the window; and it was ON!  LOL!  When we finished, and the two teams compared catches, I teased the other team about stopping at the market and buying their fish!
Red Bellied Piranha
Julio & Dennis
Jair & Martin
Piranha Fishing, Dorado Creek

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Day 2 Tour Lima, Flyover Andes, Board Boat

Breakfast buffet at hotel

8:30 a.m. meeting with Expedition Leader (Renzo) and 19 expedition mates from 3 countries (USA, UK and Canada).  Introduced to our Lima tour guide: Sonia - 
our guide, for morning drive and walking tour of Lima.

Lima has no street drains, because it almost never rains.  Their lush vegetation does not get their water from rain; but from the glaciers.

Lima has 700 gambling houses - predominantly owned by Chinese and Korean.

Government
Peru has 25 regions (like the US' states) and the province of Lima.  Each region, including Lima, has an elected representative.  Lima has 43 districts with 43 mayors and one ‘big’ mayor.  
Casa Aliaga, a private home dating back to the Conquistadors
Casa Aliaga, a private home dating back to the Conquistadors
Plaza de Armas of Lima
Pretty Steet
Man was photoing me/our group across the street; so I photoed him.
Outside Catacombs of San Francisco
Ashley noticed... that is a copy machine (!) laying on its back
Buffet Lunch at Sheraton in Lima.  Then, off to the airport - to leave this city of 9 million (larger than NYC's 7 million) and fly northeast, over the Andes... to the Amazon!!!

Guns NRoses in Peru

There I was in Lima, Peru's airport - among thousands awaiting various in-country flights.  Not only was our flight delayed; but we had shlepped our sweaty tired selves - and gear - to yet a third newly assigned gate.  There I was - when I heard it.  Whistling.  The song "Patience" by G&R!  

I scanned the crowd to ID the source, and it was a handsome, muscular, young dad playing with his toddler son.  Earlier I had heard the dad call his son Eduardo.  Eduardo waddled over to our group, and started playing with the hair on Logan's leg.  Logan is 13 and traveling with his grandparents.  When I asked the pervuvian dad about Guns N' Roses, he told me he did not speak english.  In the absence of spoken language, we did as many do - and shared the language of laughter and smiles at Eduardo's extended affinity for Logan's leg hair!  I asked, "Dos aƱos?" and the dad told me the boy would be two next month.   

Salut, Axl Rose - to your music reaching Amazonia!

After the weather cleared atop the Andes Mountains, we took a late afternoon flight over the Andes to Iquitos (90 minute flight / 630 miles northeast).  The Andes are the world's longest mountain range.  Iquitos is said to be the largest city in the world that cannot be accessed by road - it is accessible only by river and air.

map's source: http://jenericjourney.com/category/peru-trip/preparation/ 
glimpse of Andes Mountain
Captivating cloud formations - a welcome distraction for my VERY anticipatory heart
(eager to lay eyes on the Amazon River)!

Sunset over the Amazon River (Peru)
After sunset, took a coach from the airport, through Iquitos to the dock- and boarded our boat - home for the next 7 days.

Link to next post: http://lauralovesamazonbirds.blogspot.com/2015/04/day-3-in-peri-but-day-1-on-river.html

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

The Boat

La Estrella Amazonica

  • Built: 2013, custom designed for cruising the Amazon and its tributaries.  Air-conditioned throughout.
  • Length: 140 ft
  • Beam: 30 ft
  • Capacity: 28-31 passengers in 15 cabins, plus crew of 11, expedition leader and 2 naturalists.  (This trip has only 20 passengers booked, including a couple from Virginia and a couple from Massachusetts.  We 20 represent three countries:  USA, Canada and the UK.)




  • Generator: 2 X Perkins 90 kW
  • Engine: 2 X Volvo Penta 235 H
  • Cruising Speed: 8 - 10 knot
  • Water: 2 x 820 Gallon fresh water tank
  • Water Treatment: 2 Aerobic Biofilter Plant
  • Communication: Radio HF, Satellite phone for emergencies, and limited Wifi internet
  • Navigation: GPS, Radar, Sona
  • Launch Boats: 2 motorized open skiffs with four-stroke engines and safety equipment for up to 18 passengers each
  • Kayaks
Link to next blog post:  Movies & Books