Ecuador - Napo Wildlife Center

Thursday 28 June to Saturday 7 July 2012

with Steve Howell and local guides as leaders

Cost: £2160 plus extra for flights* (see below) (2012)
Single room supplement: £480

*  There are a number of flight options for this tour with prices ranging from about £1000 to about £1600. Please contact the Sunbird office for details.

Please click here for details and an explanation of the price breakdown

Maximum group size: 12 participants and 2 leaders.

Bird List

Map

Booking Form

 

 

The great attraction of this tour is the ability to spend so much time at just one place, allowing us to really immerse ourselves in the wonders of the Amazon rainforest.

Unequalled for great comforts and magical bird diversity, the Napo Wildlife Center sits amid pristine Amazonian rainforest in Yasuni National Park, a UNESCO biosphere reserve. Built and administered by the native Añango Quichua Community on ancestral land, this fine new lodge on the south bank of the Napo River offers access to over 550 bird species and is simply one of the best wildlife experiences there is. Our trip there will seem brief, but we'll leave with lots of wonderful memories locked in place – from paddling on quiet rivers as Giant River Otters snort with curiosity and King Vultures soar overhead, to hearing and seeing the forest come alive at dawn from the superb canopy tower as woodcreepers, toucans, cotingas, parrots, and antbirds take over from owls and potoos.

 

Day 1: The tour begins in London with a flight to Quito. Night in Quito.

Day 2: As a hedge against travel or baggage delays (once the group leaves Quito, it’s difficult and expensive to catch up), we’ll spend the day birding in the Andes to the east of Quito, visiting the spectacular Papallacta Pass where birds include Stout-billed Cinclodes, Carunculated Caracara, Many-striped Canastero, and, with luck, a Rufous-bellied Seedsnipe or Andean Condor.

We’ll also visit some hummingbird feeders on the east slope, where many species can be viewed at close range and Tourmaline Sunangels may even perch on one’s finger! Other species here include White-bellied Woodstar, the spectacular Sword-billed Hummingbird, and perhaps the rarely seen Mountain Avocetbill. We’ll return to Quito in good time to repack and get a good sleep before our Amazonian adventure begins. Night in Quito.

Day 3: This morning we’ll take a short (about 30-minutes) flight from Quito to the town of Coca, gateway to the Amazon from where, in 1541, Francisco de Orellana set sail on a locally constructed brigantine and made the first navigation to the Atlantic. Our ride will be far more comfortable – a canoe powered by twin outboard motors that will take us downstream about 2.5 hours to the Napo Wildlife Center (NWC) welcome station, where we’ll transfer to smaller canoes and paddle up Añangu Creek to the NWC lodge, set on the bank of a tranquil lake amid a huge tract of primary rainforest where hunting is prohibited. Along the way we’ll see our first Hoatzins and get a taste for the diversity of the region, with birds perhaps including Rufescent Tiger-Heron, Sungrebe, Red-bellied Macaw, and Green-and-rufous Kingfisher. Night at NWC lodge.

Days 4-8: Five full days is just enough time to scratch the surface of the avifauna in western Amazonia and get a feel for the complexity of rich habitats and microhabitats within easy reach of the lodge. One or two mornings we’ll visit the very sturdy canopy tower, which offers privileged access to a world apart from the rest of the rainforest. Flocks of oropendolas, aracaris, tanagers, and euphonias roam the canopy in search of fruit, Spangled and Plum-throated Cotingas glow from the treetops, raptors perch on vantage points to dry off in the morning sun, White-browed Purpletufts and Crowned Slaty Flycatchers sally for insects, numerous parrots and macaws fly by or drop in if there is a fruiting tree nearby, and many other species wander past (and through!) the tower tree.

Good forest trails offer access to another component of the avifauna, with woodcreepers, antbirds, and tinamous particularly well represented, and we should encounter the vocally striking Screaming Piha and the visually striking Black-necked Red Cotinga. A number of clay licks or saladeros exist on the NWC lands, and here we should see and hear the spectacle of hundreds of parrots and parakeets coming in to eat clay. We’ll also enjoy numerous canoe rides around the lake by the lodge and along adjacent creeks, where the songs of Silvered and Plumbeous Antbirds reverberate through the flooded forest. Birds we’ll be seeking here include the poorly known Zigzag Heron, the habitat specialist Point-tailed Palmcreeper, Orange-crested Manakin, and the striking Long-billed Woodcreeper, plus several species of monkeys and the impressive Giant River Otter.

The river-edge forest, where we’ll visit the local community that built and so ably runs the lodge, is home to numerous other species such as Turquoise and Magpie Tanagers, Rufous-headed Woodpecker, and Swallow-winged Puffbird. And then there are islands in the Río Napo, which, depending on their age, support a varied avifauna distinct from that found on the mainland only a few hundred yards away. Island specialties we hope to see include Black-and-white Antbird, Olive-spotted Hummingbird, and at least three species of spinetails, plus more expected river birds such as Capped Heron, Collared Plover, and Yellow-billed Tern. Nights at NWC lodge.

Day 9: Today we’ll head back to Coca for our return flight to Quito, where there will be time to relax before our evening flight back to London where the tour ends on Day 10.

 

The ground arrangements for this tour are organised by our American associates WINGS.

 

E-mail or phone +44 (0)1767 262522 for availability.

 

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