I am on my way from Quito to Santiago as I write this with a layover in Panama City. Yes you read that right. Unfortunately I have to go north to Panama to head back south to Chile because there is nothing direct from Quito and the flight was cheaper than going through Bogota. Anyways, clearly I have fallen way behind as I just spent 7 weeks in Ecuador and I still have a few more Peru blog posts to go. That being said, I have taken a lot of good notes about my Ecuadorian journey along the way. And even though I’m way behind, it is fun to put together these stories from earlier in my trip and start to relive the experience. Anyways enough on that, onto the jungle of Peru.
Manu National Park
Manu National Park is one of the largest protected areas in the world, containing much of the Peruvian Amazon’s greatest flora and fauna. It is the largest national park in Peru with an area of 15,328 square kilometers and has almost 25,000 rare and endemic species reside here. Travelers and researchers are only permitted to enter here with a guide and permit so much of the land is untouched.
Getting In
Matt and I signed up for a 4 day, 3 night trip to the jungle and decided to go to Manu National Park over Puerto Maldonado. I thought Manu looked like a more fun and unique experience, but also it was going to be a shorter commute…or so I thought. They told me it was a 4-5 hour car ride which turned out to be totally wrong. We got picked up from the hostel around 4:30am in a van and I slept the entire way for the first few hours. After about 4 hours we stopped in the town of Paucartambo and Matt and I ate breakfast chicken soup at the market. The lady was serving from a giant pot with a whole chicken in it.
After another hour or so we were at the entrance to Manu National Park, but there was still another few hours of driving to go. It was a windy uphill narrow dirt road through misty clouds. The landscape quickly changed from highlands to jungle. This cloud forest like ambiance is created because the humidity gets trapped between the Andes and the rainforest. Once we got to the top of the mountain pass, the roads began to squiggle downhill with steep mountain drop offs. The road made Colorado mountain roads look easy and while it would be hard to drive on a normal day, today was so cloudy you could barely see more than 15 feet in front. Talia was incredibly scared the whole way down. You really learn to trust your van drivers out here. The driver would honk around blind corners to warn if another person is there.
We had to stop multiple times for construction work for an undetermined amount of time. Sometimes it was a few minutes and other times it took 20+ minutes before we drove again. The landscape was absolutely gorgeous with luscious plants and trees of all shades of green. It was a totally different look and feel than the rest of the places I had visited in Peru. At one point, we stopped for a lunch break on the side of the road and it gave me a chance to meet the fellow members of our jungle group. As we got closer to our boat launch off point, we drove through some tiny villages deep into Manu National Park. As I looked out the window and saw little kids in the streets getting out of school, I tried to imagine what it would be like to grow in a remote village in the jungle. All the kids looked very free and happy living in their own world miles away from everything. Finally after driving for 9-10 hours, we got to Atalaya where the boat take off was. We had a final chance to buy any last minute goods at the convenience store before starting our adventure (naturally Matt and I bought some rum).
The People
We had an interesting group for this trip; it wasn’t your standard backpacker crew. Overall it was a very tame group, but I think that turned out to be a good thing. Luckily I had Matt with me otherwise I would have probably been pretty bored. The group consisted of 3 German dentists who were in Peru doing volunteer dentist work: Lea, Lara, and can’t remember the 3rd girl’s name. I accidentally deleted the note with everyone’s name before writing this section. The other 2 people in the group was an Israeli couple in their late 40s/early 50s name Talia and Dalton. Everyone was really nice and we did have some good conversations throughout the couple of days, but again just not the most exciting group compared to being with a bunch of backpackers.
Our guide was named Angel and I liked him a lot. He grew up in Manu National Park in a house along the river we were floating down so he was a true jungle man. He was a wealth of knowledge about the land, the plants, the animals, the river, and anything in the surrounding area. It made the experience so much more fruitful hearing his stories and perspective on the jungle. I had spoken with him in Spanish when getting info on the tour and during the first boat ride we sat next to each other and spoke Spanish. It was nice however then he thought my Spanish was better than it really was. I only had about 30-45 minutes worth of Spanish in me, not 4 days.
The Food
The food was incredible…minus when I got food poisoning on the last night. It was my first time ever having food poisoning and what an absolutely miserable experience. I won’t go into details but let’s just say my last night was very unpleasant and I didn’t get much sleep. Luckily I felt a little better the next morning, although I was still struggling. Angel had some special jungle stomach tea made for me and I took a Western medicine pill from Lea so I started feeling better. Thank god too because that was a very long day of travel and would have absolutely sucked if I felt like I did at night time. I wasn’t the only one in the group who felt sick so it was clearly the food from the last night. Even Matt started feeling rough later in the day and into the next day.
Anyways back to the more pleasant side of things. The chef Lucio did a great job preparing the meals and cooked up some very creative dishes. Every meal started out with a soup (my favorites were cocona and chuño) and there was a giant spread with 3-4 different dishes served on huge platters that always provided enough food. If anything I was eating too much because there was always so much available. The drinks we got served with our meals were also incredible. One day we had boiled pineapple skin juice that was so delicious and such a resourceful use of the extra pieces of the fruit.
The meals were also a good time for the group to chat and get to know each other better. Angel was a very interesting guy with lots of great stories about the jungle. He also showed general interest in all of us asking good questions and really wanting to learn more about our lives and culture.
The Lodging
After our 2 hour boat ride, we spent the first night in cabins nearby where Angel grew up. Matt and I had our own space but we shared a wall that didn’t go all the way up to the roof with Talia and Dalton. The “resort” was family run as we met Angel’s mother. There was no electricity or bathrooms in the rooms. It was a beautiful property with colorful jungle plants and surrounded by insane green vegetation. Even just the walk here from the river was incredibly beautiful and now it felt like I was truly in the Amazon.
I loved waking up the every morning to the sights, smells, and sounds of the jungle. Angel had his super nice binoculars setup on their stand and we were able to see a group of monkeys swinging in the trees. Love a good monkey wake up. They were a different type of monkey than we had seen the night before. Super camoflauge with the leaves and branches and always moving. Great shot when Angel could get his binoculars on them.
After breakfast, Angel walked us around the property and gave us some history and info on the different plants. There is an incredible wealth of knowledge from Angel and people that live in the jungle about plants and natural medicine. The type of knowledge that isn’t learned from any books or the Internet but just from living off the land and then it gets passed along for so many generations. They have a different plant or procurement process for all sorts any illness you can think of. Angel showed us the bayan plant used for cooking ayahuasca; moco moco which is vapored like a sauna and during Covid in Cusco it was used in a product called Matico to help fight symptoms; and sangre de grado (dragon blood sap) which helps heal wounds and is a strong stimulant for the immune system, amongst other properties. It is popularly sold in stores around Peru. He provided all sorts of details and stories about each plant that I wish I remembered but I didn’t want to sit there with my phone out taking notes the whole time.
After another hour long boat ride in which we got on a different river, we showed up at our lodging for the 2nd and 3rd night. This space was more developed with a hangout space and tree houses for us to sleep in. We had our own bathrooms, electricity, and elevated living. The tree house was a little bit creaky and the bathroom a bit slanted but hey it worked. I wasn’t going to be super surprised if Matt fell through the floor. Overall this property was even more beautiful than the last one.
The Experience
One of favorite parts about being in the jungle was the constant chatter of noise outside. There was never a moment of silence as birds chirped, insects buzzed, and other jungle sounds resonated in the air. I loved either sitting outside or even just lying in my bed and listening to the noises. Whenever we had down time, the sights and sounds of the jungle was my form of entertainment. One afternoon I lied on a log bird watching. I would listen to the sounds and trying to spot them with my shitty binoculares.
The sounds were incredibly peaceful for falling asleep, although in the mornings the birds would get very loud and wake me up with all sorts of different interesting calls and cackles. There were some very distinctive bird noises that sounded cartoon like. I really liked the whooshing noise that the oropendula made. Even better was when I would spot it in the act of making the noise ducking its head in between its legs before cackling but.
The Boat Rides
On the first day, after our incredibly long driving journey, we departed from the small village of Atalaya and took a 2 hour boat ride on the river in a long skinny boat that looked like what you would expect a jungle boat to look like. It was beautiful on the river looking at all the different variety of plants and trees with their vibrant greens and crazy shapes. I always love the perspective from the water. The boat driver was navigating the waters perfectly. Now it really felt like we were in the Amazon. Had a much different energy than the Sierra Nevada De Santa Marta jungle in Colombia.
On the second day we took a pikay pikay boat which was smaller than the first boat and we went down Rip Pallotoa. It was about an hour ride deeper into the jungle with more incredible views of the luscious landscape. At one point our boat got stuck in a strong current and we had to park on an island for a minute before going after it round 2. Luckily the captain was a pro and we made it with ease the second time. As a fellow boat driver, it’s quite amazing to watch them navigate these river waters. It’s nice that the boats are crafted in such a manner to handle the shallow sections.
On the fourth and final day we had to do both boat rides together. Luckily my stomach was feeling a bit better from the food poisoning after the tea and medicine or this would have been even more miserable. It was about 6am so it was super cold and my stomach was still a bit uneasy so I didn’t really enjoy the ride as much as I would have liked.
The River
On the second day when we got to the lodge, we spent about an hour in the afternoon hanging out on a rock by the river. While there was the potential for piranhas and other sketchy river creatures, Angel said it was fine to jump off the rock into the river. I just had to ignore the idea of anything sketchy in the water and did a few jumps. The water was cold, but felt so refreshing on a hot day. The river current is super strong and you really had to swim against it after jumping off the rock or you’d end up way downstream in a matter of seconds. Honestly I hate swimming in rivers. It reminds me that I’m really not a good swimmer. Put me in a pool, I’m fine. Put me in a body of water with a current and I struggle.
On the third afternoon, we got driven in the boat a little upstream so that we could tube back down to the lodge. It was actually very mellow tubing and felt great lazily making our way down the water for the 20 minute ride. The only thing missing was an ice cold beer in my hand.
The Night Walks
My favorite part of the whole trip was the nightly spooky walks in the jungle in search of animals. The jungle at night time is an incredibly scary place. It’s super dark and mysterious. You can hear a bunch of creatures, but you don’t see them. Plus the thought of snakes crawling on the ground, tarantulas coming out of holes, and jaguars roaming in the bushes is enough to scare anyone. Most jungle creatures don’t actually want to be spotted, especially at night time. We had to stay incredibly quiet and occasionally we would turn off our headlamps and just wait in the pitch black for animals to accumulate. That was always terrifying. Angel was incredible at somehow spotting creatures in the dark, even if they were just tiny frogs blending in with the leaves. Many years of experience for that man.
On the first night walk, we got a sense for what it was all about. Beforehand, Angel was scaring the German girls with his talks about the different snakes and how some are deadly. He has this calm sense to him even when explaining terrifying things. I guess that’s what happens when you’ve lived in the jungle your whole life. During our roughly one hour walk, we saw a few monkeys swinging in the trees, a frog, and a variety of interesting looking birds. Angel was slashing the plants in the pathway with his machete like a true jungle man. It’s interesting because I was just looking around in all directions with my headlamp in hopes that I see something but in reality I have no clue where I’m looking/what I’m looking for. And I’m always a little on edge walking around the jungle at night. On the one hand I want to see crazy jungle creatures, but on the other hand I feel very vulnerable being out there on foot so the thought of seeing certain creatures is terrifying. Especially once all the lights are off and it’s just pitch black hearing all these jungle noises.
On the second night, we started the walk just before sunset and posted up in a spot in the trees by the river with Angel’s nice binoculars on his tripod. Unfortunately 30-40 minutes of waiting in silence in that spot didn’t really bring anything exciting besides a few birds. At this point it was dark and we started our second night walk. We walked around for awhile without seeing anything and it looked like the night was going to be a bust. When seeking out animals in the wild, you aren’t always guaranteed to have success. It’s all part of the game. Animals really don’t want to be spotted. Plus they probably know to avoid the trails we walked, even if we tried to make as little noise as possible.
But then all the sudden, Lara spotted something in the tree that turned out to be a sloth! Yessss!!! One of the creatures that I really wanted to see. And it’s a good one because you know it’s harmless. It clearly didn’t like having the light shine on it so Angel would only do it for a brief time before turning it back off. It looked so soft and fuzzy clinging onto the tree up there. I wished it would just fall and I could catch it then it would clinch me like it does the tree. Eventually we had to move on even though I could have kept staring at it. This sloth spotting saved an otherwise uneventful walk.
On the third and final night walk, I was starting to get used to this nightly routine. It really was a fun way to start out the evening. We walked a short way before Angel somehow spotted a tarantula just outside its little hole in the ground. I don’t know how he sees these things, I swear he has night vision. He also spotted another frog on the ground. Then we went by the lagoon and sat there with our lights off. This was extra spooky since snakes like to hang out over here. There was something both calming and terrifying about all the noises resonating by the lake. It got super loud at certain points. Unfortunately nothing more exciting happened and we made our way back to the lodge. Overall we didn’t see too much on the night walks but it was still a super fun and unique experience.
Other Walks/Animal Searches
Sunrise Bird Watch
On the third morning, we got up at sunrise to go back to the spot by the river we were at the day before to see all the macaws and parrots do their morning migration. We sat there for about 20 minutes with nothing happening other than us wondering why we got up so early. Then finally a large flock of birds came to their usual spot: chestnut fronted macaws, blue headed parrots, and yellow crowned parrots. You could see them decently when they were flying, but with Angel’s binoculars we got some really cool close up views of them hanging out on the rock. Okay this was worth the early wake up.
Day Hike (2.7 miles, 469 feet elevation gain)
On the third afternoon, we went for a day time hike/animal hunt. We walked slowly along the trail keeping our eyes and ears open. It was cool to walk along the trail during the day for once so I could actually see all the jungle plants. We saw a cappuccino monkey and a few more macaws. Whenever Angel sensed an animal he would setup his binoculars and we would get silent. Much different style of hiking when you are also searching for animals.
Angel would also explain some of the different plants and trees along the way. He explained how the palo santo tree and ants have a symbiosis providing each other with nutrients. Then he told us that in the jungle if you commit a crime against your tribe then they punish you by tying you to the tree for 24 hours and if you survive the ants then you are re-accepted into the community with your past actions forgiven. I think it’s a really interesting way to go about punishment because it provides immediate justice to your action.
After a bit of animal searching, we hiked about 25 minutes uphill to a Mirador with a beautiful view of the jungle, the river behind it, and all the rolling hills in the backdrop. Angel told us a bit about the family history of their land in Manu. His dad was in the army and helped build the road in the park then became a ranger. His mom stayed at home raising 10 kids. It was cool to learn how his family came to owning this land. Such a wild and different lifestyle out here in the jungle.
After enjoying the view for about 30 minutes we walked back down and started headed toward the lodge. I’m sure Angel never truly gets lost but we ended up in an overgrown where Angel had to chop our way out making tunnels below the trees. You could tell some people in the group were getting hangry and tired and this was the last thing they wanted to deal with. I found it quite entertaining to watch him hack our way back to the main path.
The Way Home
After nearly 3 hours on the river, we now had to start the long drive home in the van. My stomach was better but I still didn’t feel amazing. Luckily I slept for the first few hours and woke up to find out there was a landslide on the road ahead of us. Oh great. This is now the second landslide on my trip, but unlike the Colombia one where it was known beforehand and a bus was waiting on the other side, this landslide had clearly just happened. It sure wasn’t there when we were on this road 3 days before. We walked up to where it happened and it was a shit show of a scene. The main road was completely gone. There was a bulldozer working in the dirt hills to level out the earth and create a few platforms. This looked like the type of thing that could take forever.
We ended up having lunch outside the van, and I was glad that I could eat a little. Then we started playing cards. Sure enough in about 4 hours, they had fixed the road enough for cars to start going. Wow actually very impressive. I guess they are used to this type of thing happening on this crazy road. The other side of cars went first, which gave us some assurance the new road worked. I can’t imagine being the first car to go across this makeshift road that was created in a few hours. The driver put his seatbelt on right before it was our turn to go over so you know it was serious. We all held our breaths as we crossed the new road. It was absolutely terrifying looking over the steep edge where the landslide had just destroyed the road. But we passed safely so props to the construction team. And of course we still had to continue along this squiggly mountain road for a few more hours. The adventure in South America never ends until you reach your final destination. We had left the jungle on the boats around 6am and didn’t get back to Cusco until close to 9pm. It was a long ass day of travel but at least we made it back. Things were looking dicey for awhile with that landslide.