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Condor Travel - Incoming Packages - Manu Reserve

Refuge for Unique Species

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PERU'S MANU BIOSPHERE PARK
The village of Boca ManuManu Biosphere Reserve is an immense area of undisturbed Amazonian rain forest located some 150 miles northeast of Cusco. A bird watchers paradise, no other area on earth contains so many birds.
Leaving rushing streams and montane forest of the the Andes behind, the visitor to Manu soon discovers flat humid tropical forest ...the legionary Amazon Basin. Containing a great variety of high to low altitude eco zones, forests grasslands, lakes and micro-habitats, Manu is home to more than 900 varieties of birds and diverse neo-tropical wildlife.
The Manu River, a meandering, slow flowing watercourse with pristine white sand beaches, forms high banks at favored spots where Macaws, Parrots and smaller birds congregate to eat mineralized clay essential to digestion. The spectacle of hundreds of Macaws, the worlds largest Parrot screaming and wheeling overhead is surely one of the world’s great wildlife shows.
....  see details on the Manu National Park

MANU WILDLIFE CENTER
Located in pristine rain forest, our comfortable lodge facility with hot showers and private cabins is located close to active mammal and macaw mineral licks. The surrounding forests and lakes have the greatest bio-diversity in the area. Since opening in May 1996, the lodge's wildlife sightings include more than 500 birds and many hard-to-see mammals such as goeldi's monkey and monk saki. Research is always underway. On-site scientists are frequently available to share their discoveries.
Traveling by motorized canoe and foot, we explore one of the earth's last great tropical wetlands. This remarkable Amazonian reserve teams with birds and unique wildlife in undisturbed and largely unexplored lowland mountains accessible only by rivers. We offer an assortment of carefully designed programs from 3 to 9 days from nearby Cusco. Our programs please serious birders as well as the casual traveler who seeks authentic discovery away from the standard Amazon tour. All of our Manu trips include: Round trip transportation from Cusco.
All meals from lunch on Day 1 to lunch on the last day...Lodging and camps

Rates 2007/08
The Manu Macaw Lick at the Manu Wildlife Centre -  4 and 5 days
4 days - $ 890  p/p Leaves each Friday  (from Cusco ) 
PROGRAM "C"
... plus Boca Air flight  and Park fees $420    --   Code: ZZ-OUT-ManuC(4)
5 days - $ 1091  p/p Leaves each Monday  (from Cusco )  PROGRAM "C"
... plus Boca Air flight  and Park fees $420    --   Code: ZZ-OUT-ManuC(5)

Manu Biosphere Reserve Adventure - 6 days
$ 1247  p/p Leaves each Sunday  (from Cusco ) 
PROGRAM "B"
... plus Boca Air flight and Park Fee $440  --   Code: ZZ-OUT-ManuB

The complete Manu Biosphere Reserve Experience - 9 days
$ 1792  p/p Leaves each Sunday  (from Cusco )   
PROGRAM "A"
... plus Boca Air flight and Park Fee $440  --   Code: ZZ-OUT-ManuA


Single room supplements apply if requested.

Read more info on: Manu Wildlife Centre, Guides, Machuenga Project, Climate
Note : Minimum of four participants. Single travelers welcome.

Manu Reserve


The Manu Macaw Lick at the Manu Wildlife Centre - 4 or 5 days
Leaves each Friday (Monday for 5 day trip)  (from Cusco )   PROGRAM "C"
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This program is designed for visitors to the Manu area, with limited time available, and who want to maximize their rainforest experience in Peru staying at Manu’s premier lodge. This area of forest and lakes has a higher diversity of life than the Manu River itself..  This trip has two major wildlife attractions – the Macaw lick and the worlds only know Tapir lick where in the comfort of mattresses and mosquito nets you may watch the largest of all South American Land Mammals visit mineral lick

DAY ONE : We pick you up at your hotel in Cusco and drive to the airport for the 35 minute flight to a small airstrip cut into the rainforest at Boca Manu. On arrival at the airport you will be met by your rainforest guide. Our motorized dugout will take you on the two hour (approx) trip down the Madre de Dios River to the Manu Wildlife Centre, a strategically located lodge owned by Manu Expeditions and a local conservation group. On the river journey we will see our first Amazonian wildlife and riverside birds such as Skimmers, Terns, Herons, Egrets and Orinoco Geese. We should arrive at the lodge for lunch and meet some of the visiting biologists working here. In the afternoon we explore a trail that leads out to a lookout point high above the river to watch roosting flights of Parrots as the sun sets, and we may encounter a troop of monkeys in the forest. Those who wish can do a night walk with the guide in search of nocturnal inhabitants of the forest. Night Manu Wildlife Centre.  L:D
DAY TWO : Early start for the Macaw Clay Lick. This is truly one of the worlds great wildlife spectacles as hundreds of Parrots and their larger relatives, the Macaws, congregate at this traditional locality to eat clay that is essential to their digestion . We'll use a floating blind to get close to the birds. The noise alone is incredible, but the sight of these brightly colored birds at the lick is unforgettable. As the lick slows down in mid-morning we'll head for Cocha Blanco, an old ox-bow lake, in search of a Giant Otter family that lives here. We'll canoe around the lake on our floating platform looking for other wildlife. After a leisurely lunch, we'll explore other trails in search of Emperor and Saddleback Tamarins, and we have seen the rare Goeldi's Monkey repeatedly in this area. Night at Manu Wildlife Centre   B:L:D
DAY THREE : Full day to explore the forest and trails around the lodge.. We'll be on the lookout for Monk Saki - an uncommon and rarely seen monkey that is occasionally seen here. We'll explore trails where groups of Manakins, perhaps the most enigmatic of neo-tropical birds, perform their strange mating dances and walk to one of our blinds at a large mammal lick where Guans and forest Parakeets and Parrotlets come for clay. Here too groups of Black Spider Monkeys visit on occasions for clay to help their digestion. Those who wish will return with the guide to the lodge in the late afternoon, however there is an opportunity to stay at the lick after dark until midnight to see what nocturnal creatures come to the lick. Tapirs, the largest South American land mammal are frequent visitors with up to 12 animals visiting in one night.Other nocturnal creatures are always possible. Night Manu Wildlife Centre. B:L:D
IF YOU ARE ON THE MONDAY 5 DAY TOUR YOU WOULD SPEND ANOTHER FULL DAY EXPLORING THE TRAILS, LAKES, CANOPY TOWERS AND WILDLIFE ATTRACTIONS AT THE MANU WILDLIFE CENTER LODGE.
DAY FOUR (or FIVE) :After breakfast we head upriver ( about 2 hours ) to the small airstrip at Boca Manu. Early morning flocks of birds pass over the boat and we may see a Capybara, the worlds largest rodent. Arriving at the airstrip we board our aircraft for the 35 minute flight over seemingly endless rainforest and then over the Andes , passing  glaciers and snow peaks to the ancient Inca capital of Cusco, where our staff will be waiting to take you to your hotel.   B.

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Boarding the canoe for the first time.

Photographing Macaws from the floating blind at Manu Wildlife Center

The Macaw Lick


Waiting in front of the Airport
lounge at Boca Manu.


The floating platform used to view the Macaw Lick.

THIS IS A FIXED DEPARTURE TRIP AND LEAVES EVERY FRIDAY EVERY MONTH OF THE YEAR.  
Rated   Easy



Manu Biosphere Reserve Adventure - 6 days
   PROGRAM "B"
Leaves each Sunday  (from Cusco)
+$150 for each first departure of the month using the Casa Machiguenga.   

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Day 1:

Jaguar Crosssing the Manu RiverLeaving Cusco after breakfast we travel through traditional Quechua communities and through the spectacular eastern ranges of the Andes to the village of Paucartambo, passing snow-peaks and small Andean farmsteads. We will have time here to look around this picturesque village and visit local craftsmen famous for their production of masks used in local festivals. We then ascend to the last pass overlooking the Amazon Basin and begin the breath taking descent from 3500 meters to 1600 meters above sea-level to our comfortable lodge in the orchid laden Cloud Forest. This is a spectacular journey passing cascading waterfalls and multicolored birds along the way. In the late afternoon, we'll walk into the lodge to the sounds of Quetzals, Trogons and Gray-breasted Wood-wrens. Night at Cock-of-the-Rock Lodge. L:D:
 
Day 2:
Squirrel MonkeyPre breakfast walk to a nearby spot in the Cloud Forest where the strange and beautiful Cocks-of-the-Rock display at dawn. This is a wonderful sight as up to 25 bright red-orange males dance and sing attempting to attract the favors of the duller, burgundy colored females. After visiting this lek we return to the Lodge for a leisurely breakfast and continue in our all terrain bus to the Madre de Dios River and our motorized dugouts and we begin our journey down the river, past the last folds of the Andes, to it's confluence with the Manu River. We ll pass settlements and native communities during the trip. Just before we get to the village of Boca Manu we pass the native community of Diamante. Their culture is Piro and this is the largest settlement in the area. There is a small handcraft shop here, which offers hand painted fabrics, necklaces of seeds native to the region and a small selection of weavings and ceramics. A stop here must be pre-arranged through your guide. Passing the village of Boca Manu we arrive at to-nights destination -a small, locally built and managed lodge. The lodge is across the river from the tiny airstrip of Boca Manu. The two species of Tamarin monkeys are here -the Saddleback and Emperor. There is a trail system we can explore if time permits. The latter with their long, white moustaches are a rare and precious sight. B:L:D
 
Day 3:
The Settlement of Boca ManuWell fed and rested we leave Boca Manu, leaving the relatively clean waters of the Madre de Dios behind, we enter the clay laden waters of the Manu  River. With a brief stop at the park ranger station at Limonal to present our permits we travel for about five hours up the Manu. Beaches, especially in the dry season, are loaded with nesting birds and feeding Herons, Egrets, Orinoco Geese, Terns and Skimmers to name but a few. Some beaches will host sunning White and Black Caimans (South American relatives of the  Alligators) and breeding Side-necked Turtles. Hundreds of Sand-colored Nightjars roost during the day on logs and beaches and there is a chance of encountering a sunning Jaguar - the worlds third largest cat. In 1999 one in three of our trips saw Jaguar in Manu. We will see some species of primate on this river trip, possibly Red Howler Monkeys or the smaller Squirrel Monkeys. After Walk up Canopy Tower having lunched by the river we arrive at our Safari Camp near the lake of Cocha Salvador. We'll have the afternoon to explore some of the trails through the pristine rainforest in the area. A visit to  the lake of Cocha Otorongo is planned, where observation piers and a 20 meter observation tower in the rainforest canopy overlooking the lake are available for observing wildlife. We will also be on the lookout for a large family of Giant Otters that inhabit this lake. Before or after dinner an optional excursion into the forest at night is available with your guide in search of nocturnal creatures. The lakes are full of eye-shine of the large Black Caiman and if we are lucky we may encounter an Olingo Kinkajou or even an Ocelot on the trails. Certainly the night-time noise of tree frogs and insects in the forest is an experience not to be forgotten. Night at Cocha Salvador Safari Camp. The camp is really not a camp. There are flush toilet and shower facilities and large walk-in tents on raised roofed wooden platforms with cots for sleeping B:L:D

Note: The first fixed departure of each month will stay at the Casa Machiguenga Lodge.
 
Day 4:

Cocha Salvador Lake After breakfast we'll spend the morning at the lake of Cocha Salvador. Some of the time will be spent canoeing the lake on a floating platform observing ox-bow lake animal life from the water. We may encounter an Agami Heron or a Sungrebe and Brown Cappuchin Monkeys are usually feeding on fruits nearby. Specially constructed piers that jut out into the lake enable us to look for a family of Giant Otters that live here. These, the worlds largest freshwater carnivores, remain common only in Manu, having been hunted to extinction throughout most of their former range. Each animal consumes between 4 and 5 kilos of fish daily and often they can be seen eating large fish on logs at the lakeside. The rest of the day will be spent walking the trails in the area in search of some of the 13 species of Monkey found in the forest here. Your guide will explain some of the basics of rainforest ecosystems and point out some of the medicinal plants of the area used by local, indigenous groups. We may cross paths with a group of Peccaries - a species of wild boar found here. A late afternoon swim in the river near the camp as the sun sets . Night at Cocha Salvador Safari Camp. B:L:D.

Note: The first fixed departure of each month will stay at the Machiguenga Lodge.
 

 

Day 5:

Giant Otters Today we'll walk from camp for 4-5 hours through the forest to Cocha Otorongo. We may encounter troops of Monkeys. This is a particularly good trail for Woolly Monkey. We'll pay special attention to the plant life on this walk and take it slowly listening for the rustle of vegetation or the soft sound of fruits falling to the rainforest floor that may betray the presence of animals or large birds. We'll be met at the river by our cook with a picnic lunch and then board our motorized dugout for the 4 hour trip down river to Boca Manu for the night. The river trip may hold surprises and we'll be attentive for any wildlife on the beaches. Night in the lodge at Boca Manu.. B:L:D

Day 6:

Hyla Frog
This morning we have time to explore the small trail system at the lodge before heading across the river to the tiny airstrip of Boca Manu. On arrival at the strip we board our aircraft for the 35 minute flight to Cusco. First we fly over seemingly endless rainforest and then past snow peaks and glaciers to Cusco, where our staff will be waiting to take you to your hotel. B:

 


THIS IS A FIXED DEPARTURE TRIP AND LEAVES EVERY SUNDAY THROUGHOUT THE YEAR EXCEPT FOR THE MONTHS OF JANUARY, FEBRUARY AND MARCH, WHEN ONLY THE FIRST SUNDAY OF EACH MONTH IS A SCHEDULED DEPARTURE.


The Giant OtterThe first fixed departure of each month, day three and four will be spent at the Machiguenga Lodge instead of our camp at Cocha Salvador. The lodge is across the river from our camp and gives the opportunity to experience an aspect of Manu otherwise neglected.

Rated Easy

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The complete Manu Biosphere Reserve Experience - 9 days
Leaves each Sunday  (from Cusco )   PROGRAM "A"
Price for first departure of the month using the Casa Machiguenga: $1745
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THIS TRIP IS THE COMPLETE MANU EXPERIENCE. WE VISIT ALL POINTS OF INTEREST FROM THE MANU MACAW LICK TO THE OX-BOW LAKES OF THE BIOSPHERE RESERVE. A GREAT COMBINATION OF LODGES AND COMFORTABLE CAMPS....

Day 1:
JaguarLeaving Cusco after breakfast we travel through traditional Quechua communities and through the spectacular eastern ranges of the Andes to the village of Paucartambo, passing snow-peaks and small Andean farmsteads. We will have time here to look around this picturesque village and visit local craftsmen famous for their production of masks used in local festivals. We then ascend to the last pass overlooking the Amazon Basin and begin the breath taking descent from 3500 meters to 1600 meters above sea-level to our comfortable lodge in the orchid laden Cloud Forest. This is a spectacular journey passing cascading waterfalls and multicolored birds along the way. In the late afternoon, we'll walk into the lodge to the sounds of Quetzals, Trogons and Gray-breasted Wood-wrens. Night at Cock-of-the-Rock Lodge. L:D:
 
Day 2:
Giant Otter FamilyPre breakfast walk to a nearby spot in the Cloud Forest where the strange and beautiful Cocks-of-the-Rock display at dawn. This is a wonderful sight as up to 25 bright red-orange males dance and sing attempting to attract the favors of the duller, burgundy colored females. After visiting this lek we return to the Lodge for a leisurely breakfast and continue in our all terrain bus to the Madre de Dios River and our motorized dugouts and we begin our journey down the river, past the last folds of the Andes, to it's confluence with the Manu River. Well pass settlements and native communities during the trip. Just before we get to the village of Boca Manu we pass the native community of Diamante. Their culture is Piro and this is the largest settlement in the area. There is a small handcraft shop here, which offers hand painted fabrics, necklaces of seeds native to the region and a small selection of weavings and ceramics. A stop here must be pre-arranged through your guide. Passing the village of Boca Manu we arrive at to-nights destination -a small, locally built and managed lodge. The lodge is across the river from the tiny airstrip of Boca Manu. The two species of Tamarin monkeys are here -the Saddleback and Emperor. There is a trail system we can explore if time permits. The latter with their long, white moustaches are a rare and precious sight. B:L:D
 
Day 3:

Exploring an Ox-bow Lake Well fed and rested we leave Boca Manu, leaving the relatively clean waters of the Madre de Dios behind, we enter the clay laden waters of the Manu River. With a brief stop at the park ranger station at Limonal to present our permits we travel for about five hours up the Manu. Beaches, especially in the dry season, are loaded with nesting birds and feeding Herons, Egrets, Orinoco Geese, Terns and Skimmers to name but a few. Some beaches will host sunning White and Black Caimans (South American relatives of the  Alligators) and breeding Side-necked Turtles. Hundreds of Sand-colored Nightjars roost during the day on logs and beaches and there is a chance of encountering a sunning Jaguar - the worlds third largest cat. In 1999 one in three of our trips saw Jaguar in Manu. We will see some species of primate on this river trip, possibly Red Howler Monkeys or the smaller Squirrel Monkeys. After having lunched by the river we arrive at our Safari Camp near the lake of Cocha Cocha Salvador Safari Camp Salvador. We'll have the afternoon to explore some of the trails through the pristine rainforest in the area. A visit to the lake of Cocha Otorongo is planned, where observation piers and a 20 meter observation tower in the rainforest canopy overlooking the lake are available for observing wildlife. We will also be on the lookout for a large family of Giant Otters that inhabit this lake. Before or after dinner an optional excursion into the forest at night is available with your guide in search of nocturnal creatures. The lakes are full of eye-shine of the large Black Caiman and if we are lucky we may encounter an Olingo Kinkajou or even an Ocelot on the trails. Certainly the nighttime noise of tree frogs and insects in the forest is an experience not to be forgotten. Night at Cocha Salvador Safari Camp. The camp is really not a camp. There are flush toilet and shower facilities and large walk-in tents on raised roofed wooden platforms with cots for sleeping. B:L:D

Note: The first fixed departure of each month will stay at the Casa Machiguenga Lodge.

   
Day 4:

Cocha Salvador Safari CampAfter breakfast we'll spend the morning at the lake of Cocha Salvador. Some of the time will be spent canoeing the lake on a floating platform observing ox-bow lake animal life from the water. We may encounter an Agami Heron or a Sungrebe and Brown Cappuchin Monkeys are usually feeding on fruits nearby. Specially constructed piers that jut out into the lake enable us to look for a family of Giant Otters that live here. These, the world’s largest freshwater carnivores, remain common only in Manu, having been hunted to extinction throughout most of their former range. Each animal consumes between 4 and 5 kilos of fish daily and often they can be seen eating large fish on logs at the lakeside. The rest of the day will be spent walking the trails in the area in search of some of the 13 species of Monkey found in the forest here. Your guide will explain some of the basics of rainforest ecosystems and point out some of the medicinal plants of the area used by local, indigenous groups. We may cross paths with a group of Peccaries - a species of wild boar found here. A late afternoon swim in the river near the camp as the sun sets . Night at Cocha Salvador Safari Camp. B:L:D.

Note: The first fixed departure of each month will stay at the Machiguenga Lodge.

 
Day 5:

Goeldi's MonkeyToday we'll walk from camp for 4-5 hours through the forest to Cocha Otorongo. We may encounter troops of Monkeys. This is a particularly good trail for Woolly Monkey. We'll pay special attention to the plant life on this walk and take it slowly listening for the rustle of vegetation or the soft sound of fruits falling to the rainforest floor that may betray the presence of animals or large birds. We'll be met at the river by our cook with a picnic lunch and then board our motorized dugout for the 4 hour trip down river to Boca Manu for the night. The river trip may hold surprises and we'll be attentive for any wildlife on the beaches. Night at the lodge at Boca Manu. B:L:D

 
Day 6:
Giant OttersLeaving the lodge we'll head down the Madre de Dios River for two hours to the comfortable lodge facility near the Macaw Clay Lick - Manu Wildlife Center. This strategically located lodge facility is jointly owned and run by Manu Expeditions and a local conservation group and is a base for scientific research in the area and a center for visitors wanting to explore the rainforest. We should arrive in time for lunch and a shower (hot water) and get to meet whichever researchers are onsite. The afternoon is set aside to relax or, if you want, to explore a trail through the untouched forest to a lookout point on a cliff over the river to watch roosting flights of Parrots and Macaws as the sun sets. Manu Wildlife Center has a canopy platform and an observation tower. The canopy platform is accessible via a staircase so everyone can get to enjoy the rainforest canopy. Those who wish can participate in a night walk with your guide in search of nocturnal animals. Night at Manu Wildlife Center. B:L;D

IMPORTANT NOTE:
IF YOU ARE TAKING THE 9 DAY TRIP, AND CONTINUING ON TO MANU WILDLIFE CENTER, A DELAY MAY OCCUR AT THE BOCA MANU AIRSTRIP EN ROUTE AS SOME OF YOUR TRAVELING COMPANIONS MAY BE TAKING THE 6 DAY OPTION AND FLYING TO CUSCO.
 
Day 7:
The Manu Macaw LickEarly start to-day for the Macaw Clay Lick. This is truly one of the world’s great wildlife spectacles as hundreds of Parrots and their larger relatives, the Macaws, congregate at this traditional locality to eat the mineral rich clay that is essential to their digestion. We'll use a floating blind to get close to the birds. The noise alone is incredible and the sight of these brightly colored birds at the lick is a sight not to be forgotten. As the lick slows down in midmorning we'll head for Cocha Blanco, an old ox-bow lake, in search of a family of Giant Otters that live there, and canoe around the lake on our floating platform looking for other wildlife. After a leisurely lunch at the lodge we'll explore other trails in search of Emperor and Saddleback Tamarins, and we have seen the rare Goeldi's Monkey repeatedly in this area. Night at the Manu Wildlife Center B:L:D
 
 
Day 8:
Cocha Slavador Safari CampFull day to explore the forest and trails around the lodge. We'll be on the lookout for Monk Saki - an uncommon and rarely seen monkey of the tierra firme forest that is occasionally seen here. We'll explore trails where groups of Manakins , perhaps the most enigmatic of neo-tropical birds, perform their strange mating dances and walk to one of our blinds at a large mammal lick where Guans and forest Parakeets and Parrotlets come for clay. Here too, groups of Black Spider Monkeys visit on occasions for clay to help their digestion. Those who wish will return with the guide to the lodge in the late afternoon, however there is an opportunity to stay at the lick after dark until midnight to see what nocturnal creatures come to the lick. Tapirs, the largest South American land mammal are frequent visitors with up to 12 animals visiting in one night. We watch them from the comfort of mosquito nets and mattresses from our specially constructed blind Other nocturnal creatures are always possible. Night at the Manu Wildlife Center. B:L:D
 
 
Day 9:
Squirrel MonkeysAfter breakfast we head upriver (about 2 hours) to the small airstrip at Boca Manu. Early morning flocks of birds pass over the boat, and we may see a Capybara, the world’s largest rodent. Arriving at the airstrip we board our aircraft for the 35 minute flight over seemingly endless rainforest and then over the Andes, passing glaciers and snow peaks to the ancient Inca capital of Cusco where our staff will be waiting to take you to your hotel. B:

THIS IS A FIXED DEPARTURE TRIP AND LEAVES EVERY SUNDAY THROUGHOUT THE YEAR EXCEPT FOR THE MONTHS OF JANUARY , FEBRUARY AND MARCH WHEN ONLY THE FIRST SUNDAY OF EACH MONTH IS A SCHEDULED DEPARTURE

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MANU WILDLIFE CENTRE
The Manu Wildlife Center is a 44 bed lodge located on the Madre de Dios river only 90 minutes by motorized dugout canoe from the Boca Manu airstrip at the confluence of the Manu and Alto Madre de Dios rivers.It is a privately owned rainforest reserve which forms part of the Manu Biosphere Reserve. It is located in the Cultural Reserved zone, set aside for indigenous Amazonian peoples. The lodge is on the banks of the Madre de Dios River in pristine rainforest and next to the Macaw Lick. Rain forest research is constantly underway at this facility. We also run a safari camp concession at Cocha Salvador deep in the Manu Biosphere Reserve - here everyone sleeps in tents but spacious dining rooms and toilet/shower facilities are available. Our partners actively participate in conservation programs investing time, money and resources in conservation projects.
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THE MACHIGUENGA PROJECT
Our conservation interests lie not only in the flora and fauna of this natural sanctuary. When its secrets were recognized in 1973 and Manu was declared a National Park, there was already an active and established culture of indigenous Machiguenga people who go back for eons as an integral ingredient of the region and often took a backseat as tourism developed in Manu, despite being the true owners of the forsest. In 1996 a project was initiated by the native communities of Yomebato and Tayakome, in conjunction with a non-government organization from Germany, to establish a lodge in the Cocha Salvador area, deep in Manu.The object of this project is to give the visitor the opportunity to learn about and understand not only the natural wonders of Manu but also the cultural history and traditions of its inhabitants. In 1999 the lodge, Casa Machiguenga, received its first guests but there is still much to be done before the full potential is realized and the aims and dreams of these quiet, gentle people to become included in, and benefit from, the attraction that Manu offers, are achieved. This, after all, is their home. For this reason, our partners, in agreement with the Machiguenga communities, will use the Casa Machiguenga in the first fixed departure of each month. As a alternative to staying at our safari camp at Cocha Salvador we will be using the Machiguenga Lodge. This agreement means the visitor will benefit in experiencing an aspect of the magic of Manu they otherwise would not have been exposed to. At the same time they will be assisting in an essential aspect in the long term preservation of Manu and helping native Amerindian communities of Manu enter the ever shrinking world without losing their cultural values. Manu expeditions guides will be co-leading with Machiguengaís on this trip.
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CLIMATE AND WEATHER
Located some 13 degrees south of the equator, the Manu amazon rain forest is hot and humid all year round with little variation from midsummer (December) to midwinter (June). Daytime temperatures regularly reach into the mid-thirties celsius. In mid-winter cold wind movements from the patagonian plains move far enough north to affect the southern edge of the amazon. These infrequent weather movements, known locally as "friajes", last from one to three days and temperatures at night can drop as low as 10c. Rain may be encountered at any time of year. However, during the dry season, May to October, there is less rain. A trip to Manu is feasible any month of the year.
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ABOUT OUR NATURAL HISTORY GUIDES

WHO WE ARE: The owners/operators of our Peruvian adventure program represent a highly skilled staff of professionals. Hidden Trails partner Gary Ziegler, has a far flung history which includes a Ph.D in archaeology, archaeological expeditions into remote Peru and Mexico, work for National Geographic, museums and universities. Gary has been organizing and leading expeditions and groups in Peru since 1964. His accomplishments include the first ascent of seven high ice peaks and the discovery of new archaeological sites. He led the first group to bicycle to Machu Picchu in 1982. In June, 2000, he co-directed and led an expedition documentary film production in Peru for the Discovery Channel. Our partners in Peru are Barry Walker and Rosario Velarde. The centre of operations is the ancient inca capital of Cusco. Barry is recognized as the leading authority on neo-tropical birds in Peru. He has just completed a new book on the birds of Machu Picchu. They maintain a reliable team of expert boat crews for the rainforest, wranglers for the mountains and trained camp cooks. our trip leaders are fluent in English, Spanish and in most cases other languages. They are all recognized experts in their fields. Leaders on mountain trips are knowledgeable about Inca history, archeology and local culture. Our rainforest leaders are naturalists and biologists who have spent much time researching in the Manu Biosphere Reserve area.
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RAMIRO YABAR
Ramiro is in his early thirties and has been leading trips into Manu for 5 years. He is owner of the Amazonia Lodge and spent his childhood growing up between Cusco and the family rainforest lodge.
Ramiro has built up a reputation as one of the best Peruvian birdwatchers and his knowledge of plants and traditional medicines is well known. Ramiro knows the local rainforest peoples well and he has a wealth of information and stories concerning local tribes. He is well known for his wildlife finding capabilities.

TINO AUCCA
Tino is in his twenties and holds a Biology degree from San Antonio Abad University in Cusco. He speaks English and Quechua as well as Spanish. Tino is much sought after as a field worker for international biological expeditions and spends his time between research and leading trips into Manu. Tino has worked on conservation projects concerning endangered remnant high Andean woodlands and assisted many major expeditions such as the Smithsonian Institute and national geographic Expeditions. Tino is known for his knowledge of Quechua customs, medicinal plants and high Andean bird communities. One of the most experienced Manu guides he has also studied Giant Otters in Manu extensively.

JESSICA BERTRAM
Jessica is 28 years old and was born and raised in Bremen, Germany, and has been a resident in Peru since 1994. She is married to a Peruvian and speaks Spanish, English, German and Quechua fluently. She has been working as a guide in Manu and along the Inca Trail since 1995 and has a profound knowledge of the rainforests and mountains of Peru. Jessica is particularly interested in the indigenous peoples of Manu , and has many friends amongst the Machiguenga and Piro native communities in and often visits them.

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Manu National Park Location

 

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