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Detour, The Adventure Travel Marketplace - Napo Wildlife Center

Napo Wildlife Center

From USD $650.00 Per Person

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Start city(s):
End city(s):
Trip length:
Activities: Birdwatching, Wildlife Viewing, Jungle Lodge, Community Based Tourism
Destinations: Coca--Amazon, Amazon River, Amazon
Min/Max group size: -
Comfort: First Class
First Class
Difficulty: Moderate Difficulty
Moderate Difficulty
*Details may vary with dates. Select dates to see exact details.
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The Amazon Basin is famous for its wildlife but not for its creature comforts.  At the Napo Wildlife Center you get the best of both: amazing Amazon Wildlife and comfortable lodging.

Here you can see hundreds of parrots at the two parrot clay licks, Giant Otters in the lake and streams, eleven species of monkeys in the trees, and 568 species of birds in the forest.

With only ten cabanas in the enormous reserve, you will have the place virtually to yourself.  When your day is done you can take a hot shower, sit on your private porch overlooking the lake, have a cold beer from the bar, and enjoy a healthy international dinner in the dining room.  This is the jungle in style!

From start to finish, the Napo Wildlife Center combines creature comforts with incredible wildlife.  Bilingual guides explain the intricacies of the rainforest while the staff works to make your stay the trip of a lifetime.  And why wouldn't they?  They are not only our staff, but also major stockholders of the lodge!

In addition to being the best lodge in the Amazon of Ecuador, the Napo Wildlife Center is the finest example of community-based ecotourism in the country and actively protects 82 square miles of pristine rainforest in its private reserve, based on a true conservation partnership with the local community.

Highlights

Small, comfortable, intimate lodge in its own private reserve.

Spacious bungalows with king size beds and hot-water showers.

Amazing wildlife, including giant river otters, 11 species of monkeys, and 568 species of birds.

Visit two of Ecuador's most easily accessed parrot clay licks and climb the two canopy towers.

Travel in small groups, lead by native a Añangu guide, who is also an official Yasuni Park Ranger.

100% community owned, the lodge is helping to protect the Amazon Basin as well as enhance the lives of local people.
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Trip Dates

4 day trips begin every Friday, and 5-day trips begin every Monday,
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Complete Tour Package or a la Carte Trip

Overview

Itinerary

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Detailed Itinerary

DAY 1: Arrive in Quito.

You will board another plane with the private
airline ICARO that will take you to Coca. The flight takes 25 minutes (Quito - Coca).
Followed by a 15 minute transfer in a Chiva (open bus) from the airport in Coca to a private dock where a motorized canoe will be waiting to take you down the River Napo (2 ½ hours). A boxed lunch will be provided during your float.

Arrive to LA SELVA dock... A complementary cocktail awaits your arrival. The Naturalist guides will organize groups as desired for an afternoon activity. You will have your choice from a variety of activities, including:
WALK TO SILVERIO’S HOUSE: Cross Garzacocha Lake. Two and a half to three hour walk on a purposely underdeveloped trail which has some physical challenge. Half of the walk takes place in primary forest and the other half passes the huts of our indigenous neighbors along the Napo River.

MANDICOCHA TRAIL: An easy trail close to the hotel which is usually filled with wildlife no matter what hour of the day you do it. The excursion can last as long as you want.

MANDICOCHA-MANDIYACU: A 3 to 4 hour trip. Follow the Mandicocha trail until you reach Mandicocha Lake which has a completely different ecosystem than Lake Garzacocha (where the hotel is located). Board paddle canoes for a one and half hour glide down Mandiyacu stream. One easily sees the myriad of wildlife that presents itself along the shores of the stream. Arriving at the Napo River, board a motorized canoe for the trip back to LA SELVA.

EL SALADO: It’s a two-hour excursion often combined with a picnic lunch and trips across the Napo River (see following). Visit a site where with a little luck, parrots, parakeets and macaws can be seen by the thousands.

HIGH FOREST TRAIL: The duration can vary between 3 to 5 hours. Cross the Napo River and arrive at a challenging mountainous trail which offers yet another ecosystem. It is a chance to see birds and other wildlife nowhere else seen. Also a chance to eat lemon ants.

PILCHE TRAIL: Cross Garzacocha Lake then one hour or more of walking. See and enormous colony of leafcutter ants and whatever wildlife may come your way.

135 FOOT OBSERVATION TOWER: Not far from the lodge you can spend many hours observing birds flying by at eye-level, wildlife of all kinds, and yes, a bird’s-eye view of it all.

BUTTERFLY FARM: Available every afternoon. Close to the lodge, watch and photograph butterflies at close range. With any luck, witness the miracle of metamorphosis.

PEDRO’S TRAIL: Two versions available. Cross Garzacocha Lake, walk through virgin forest, and arrive at the tower: 4 hours.
Short version: pass Butterfly farm and join trail in the middle (two hours).

CHAWAMANGO’S TRAIL: Head east at Mandicocha trailhead and walk parallel tot eh lake. Arrive at Napo River. Return by elevated walkway and cross Garzacocha by canoe, 3 hours.

LITTLE CHAWAMANGO: Short trip by foot around the edge of Lake Garzacocha. Return by canoe to the lodge.

RUTH’S TRAIL: Across Mandicocha, it goes on and on and on. Good place to look for Jaguars. (Named after owner’s mother)

7:00 P.M. - Dinner
Night Excursions are available every night and include: Canoe or walking trips to view nocturnal animals such as caiman, monkeys, insect, owls, caiman...

*** All the excursions will be organized day by day with your guide and the group.

Meal schedule can change.

Day 2:

6:00 A.M. - Wake up call.
6:30 A.M. - Breakfast
7:10 A.M. - Departure for morning excursion
1:00 P.M. - Lunch
Leisure time until 4:00 P.M
4:00 P.M. - Your choice of afternoon activity
7:00 P.M. - Dinner
Night Excursion



Day 3:

6:00 A.M. - Wake up call.
6:30 A.M. - Breakfast
7:10 A.M. - Departure for morning excursion
1:00 P.M. - Lunch
Leisure time until 4:00 P.M
4:00 P.M. - Your choice of afternoon activity
7:00 P.M. - Dinner
Night Excursion


Day 4:

6:00 A.M. - Wake up call.
6:30 A.M. - Breakfast
7:10 A.M. - Departure for morning excursion
1:00 P.M. - Lunch
Leisure time until 4:00 P.M
4:00 P.M. - Your choice of afternoon activity
7:00 P.M. - Dinner
Night Excursion


Day 5: (Last day)

Early wake-up to catch flight back to Quito.
12:00 P.M. - Arrive at Quito Airport


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Trip Dates & Prices

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Additional Services

This provider can help with your other additional needs

  • local flights
  • transfers
  • additional accomodations
  • trip extensions
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Request these additional services when you check availability above

What's Included

Accommodations, all meals, English speaking guide and guided activities.

Not Included

Airfare Quito-Coca-Quito (Approx $135 per person), drinks, tips, service taxes, and personal expenses

Overview

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Overview

Itinerary

Dates & Prices

Customer Reviews

Details

Photos

What's Included

What's Included

Accommodations, all meals, English speaking guide and guided activities.

Not Included

Not Included

Airfare Quito-Coca-Quito (Approx $135 per person), drinks, tips, service taxes, and personal expenses

Transportation to Trip Departure Point

Arriving to trip starting point

Transportation can be arranged either by provider or traveler

Type of transportation available to trip starting point

Commercial flight

Arriving to trip starting point description:

Travel from Quito to Coca by commercial flight.

Transportation On Trip

Transportation Description

To get to Napo Wildlife Center (map), guests fly by jet from Quito to the town of Coca (officially known as Francisco de Orellana) on the Napo River. After a short drive from the airport to the dock, we board a large, motorized, covered canoe for a scenic two-hour trip down the Napo River. Upon arriving at the entrance to the NWC Reserve, we switch to smaller, dugout canoes and are paddled up the blackwater creek to the lake and lodge (no motorized transport is allowed on the creek or lake so that wildlife isn't disturbed).

This paddle can take anywhere from one to three hours, as on the creek guests might see Giant Otters, potoos, kingfishers, Hoatzins, jacamars, hawks, and monkeys. We eat lunch en route and arrive at the lodge by late afternoon.

Transportation Types

Motor Boat
Commercial Jet
Commercial Airplane

Lodging - Accommodations

What are the accommodations like?

The lodge consists of 10 luxury cabañas and a large dining hall with a library and a well-stocked bar. Attached to the bar is a 50-foot viewing tower from which you can see the Andes on a clear day!

The rooms are huge (over 450 sq. ft.), always clean, and include:

• one king-sized bed and one twin-sized bed (up to 3 people)
• private bathrooms with on-demand hot water showers
• private porches with lake views
• 24-hour electricity with plenty of lights and plenty of 120v outlets
• ceiling fans and secure screens for plenty of bug-free ventilation

The lodge itself is beautiful with local architecture, hardwood floors and well considered amenities. Nearby blinds built at parrot clay licks bring the action to you, a 120-foot canopy tower deep in the forest allows you to experience the life above the forest floor, and the natural attractions are simply unmatched in Amazonian Ecuador.

Lodging Types

3 Nights Jungle Lodge

Lodging capacity (Average)

21-30

Details

Social and Environmental Responsibility

Hard questions, straight answers.

Q: This looks like any other lodge business. How is this a conservation project?
A: The proceeds of this lodge directly pay for the conservation of 82 square miles of pristine lowland rainforest (map).

That is the short answer. This community decided years ago that it was not going to succumb to local pressures to destroy the forest. Logging, market hunting, and oil extraction are all actively destroying local forests, and the income from the lodge will allow the community to continue to resist these pressures into the distant future. Often the most important part of a conservation project is the people.

The community land is located inside Yasuní National Park, and one might think that park status would confer substantive protection to the forest and its animals - after all, Yasuní was declared a National Park in 1979 and a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in 1989. Unfortunately, the National Parks System in Ecuador is as under-funded as any other and does not have the resources to adequately patrol and protect Yasuní. Our project has worked closely with the Ecuadorian Parks System and the relationship has allowed the Parks System to rely on the Añangu community and the Napo Wildlife Center as their primary source of on-the-ground protection for this region of Yasuní. The Napo Wildlife Center also provides virtually 100% of the Park's tourism income by being the only lodge in the region to pay park fees.

And what could be more effective than local residents protecting what belongs to them? All one must do is look at the barren cattle pastures of adjacent communities to know what could have become of this community territory in the absence of a legitimate, non-extractive income base.

Q: What happens to the profits from the lodge?
A: Net profits go to the the Añangu community.

The community receives all of the net profits. The community has a democratic political structure that has decided how funds will be spent. The primary expenditures are for education and health care. The community does not maintain any debt from the construction of the lodge. All employees, whether from the community or not, are paid market salaries for the jobs that they perform. Members of the Añangu community make up between 85-93% of the total workforce at the lodge at any given time, and this variation is primarily dependent upon scheduling.

Q: What about the other lodges in the region? Aren't all ecotourism lodges in favor of conservation?
A: You should probably ask them. They did not pay Yasuní National Park entrance fees for decades.

The other lodges in the area are fine as businesses, but they are not conservation projects. You know how the Napo Wildlife Center's net profits are used, and the conservation motivation of the lodge. Ask other lodges how they use their profits. We are not aware of any other lodge in the area devoting a significant portion of its net profits to supporting conservation. In fact, despite lodges operating across the Napo River from Yasuní National Park for almost a quarter of a century, and frequently venturing into the Park, no lodge paid the Park its entrance fees until the Napo Wildlife Center began doing so. Now that the Napo Wildlife Center helps guard Yasuní National Park, we are able to help the Park collect its entrance fees from guests of these other lodges when we welcome them to the observation blinds that we have built at the parrot clay licks.

This question raises the issues of what really constitutes "ecotourism." In practice, the term is unregulated, has a large number of "official" meanings, and its use is up to the discretion of the individual operator. Some operators use it as a description of the activities that they offer, others use it to describe the area where they are located, and others use it to describe their business motivation. The Napo Wildlife Center uses the following definition: "Ecotourism is responsible travel that promotes the conservation of natural areas and sustains the well-being of local peoples."

Q: What about potential damage from tourists?
A: Take a look at our facility. Think about the alternatives.

The footprint of the lodge compound is approximately 1 hectare, and this is the sum total of the forest that has been cleared for the lodge. We feel this is very reasonable. Judging from archeological evidence, humans have likely inhabited this site since at least 700 AD. Other concerns are typically wastewater, electrical generation, trash, and impact on wildlife from viewing:

Wastewater: we have installed a two man-made wetlands that treat the effluent naturally and result in water that is safe to drink.
Electricity: we have installed solar panels that charge a bank of batteries. In addition, we have two state-of-the-art diesel generators that also charge the batteries and provide power at peak times. Although we would love to have a fully solar-powered system, we have found that the technology is just not there yet. We use our generators sparingly and with the combined system we are able to provide efficient and reliable 24-hour power in a seamless manner that is transparent to our clients.
Trash: there are not many options, and the most important issue is that we seek to minimize our consumption of items that become trash. We compost what we can compost, we burn and bury what is safe to burn, and we pack out the remainder to designated landfills.
Wildlife disturbance: we have worked with a number of internationally recognized biologists, and we are all satisfied that small groups of people quietly viewing wildlife from a distance does not significantly impact the wildlife. We have constructed blinds at the parrot licks to ensure that the human activity is hidden from the parrots. If we detect problems, we will address them. If you have a specific concern, please let us know.

As you think about the impact of this lodge upon the 82 square miles of pristine forest that it is directly supporting, please keep in mind that the most likely secondary option for this land would have been to clear it for cattle or agriculture. Ask yourself, will a tourist watching a monkey disturb that monkey more than shooting it and cutting down the forest? Although obvious, this is the harsh reality of Eastern Ecuador, and this reality makes the Añangu community that much more impressive.

Maximum Age

None

Travel Provider

Provider Name

Tropic, Journeys in Nature

Provider Policies

Terms and Conditions


BOOKING CONDITIONS FOR TROPIC


THE NATURE OF THE TRIPS

Tropic specializes in trips that run mostly in remote or developing areas. You must be aware of the possible dangers of this type of travel (e.g. limited medical facilities in some areas, mountain and river travel, non standard accommodation), and that conditions can mean a greater risk of discomfort, sickness, theft, natural disaster, etc.


HEALTH REQUIREMENTS

Make sure you have sufficient supplies of any prescription medicine, it might be wise to bring a small personal first aid kit, including any patent medicines your prefer. You are the responsible for taking all necessary health precautions before and during your trip. It is the client's responsibility to ensure they seek professional medical advice before travelling and to take all necessary health precautions and preventative measures.


CHILDREN AND INFANTS

The risks of taking children on a trip are entirely the responsibility of the adults accompanying them.


RESPONSIBILITY

TROPIC Ecological Adventures Cia. Ltda. acts only as agent for the passenger in regard to travel, whether by surface, air or water, by whatever means of transport whether it be mechanical, non-mechanical or animal and assumes no liability for injury, damage, loss, accident, death, delay or irregularity which may be occasioned either by reason of defect in any vehicle or other means of transport or for any reason whatsoever or through the act of default of any hotels, carrier, boat, restaurant, company or person rendering any of the services included on the trip, or any other circumstances beyond their direct control.

Tropic and or its agents accept no responsibility for losses or additional expenses due to the delay or changes in air schedules, loss of (or damage to) baggage or any article belonging to the passenger, sickness, personal health, weather, strikes, fires, explosions, earthquakes, floods, epidemics, conditions of trails, river levels, road conditions, transportation delays, wars, accidents, chance, acts of God, force majeure or other causes. Any and all such losses or expenses will have to be borne by the passenger, as tour rates provide for arrangements only for the time stated.

Pricing Policies

PRICE

The prices quoted may be subject to surcharges on the following: currency fluctuation, aircraft fuel costs, local transport costs, dues, taxes or fees for services such as landing taxes or embarkation, or dis-embarking fees at ports or airports, governmental actions. We will absorb amounts up to 2% of the trip cost. Amounts over this will be passed on to you, though if this means more than a 10% increase on your trip cost you are entitled to cancel your booking and claim a full refund, providing that such a claim is made within 7 days of notification.


Cancellation Policies

CANCELLATION FEES

If cancellation is received before 120 days prior to the excursion date the first deposit will be forfeited as a cancellation fee.

If cancellation is received between 119 and 60 days prior to the excursion date the first and the second deposit will be forfeited as a cancellation fee.

If cancellation is received between 59 or less days prior to the excursion date: 100% of the full cost.

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TESTIMONIALS

We are back from a fabulous time at the Refugio Amazonas! I have nothing but raves about it all! Thanks for your help in getting us to this great place!

-- Susan L, Refugio Amazonas Family Adventure

We just got back from Peru on Sunday. It was a GREAT trip. We thoroughly enjoyed it! The highlight was truly the trek to Machu Picchu. Thanks for all of your help in making the trip very special. Everything went off without a hitch. We were very impressed.

-- Mary Ann, B., Multi-Activity Peru

We had a great time on the Galapagos Cruise. Our guides were very engaging and informative and everything was timed just right. We had the right amount of activity, food and leisure time every day. We are not \"cruising\" people and were apprehensive at first about being stuck on a boat for 7 days but we didn\'t feel \"stuck\" given the number of excursions we had each day and the fact that we snorkeled at least once or twice a day. We also extended our trip on the Islands and stayed at a hotel but definitely would recommend a cruise over staying on the islands. The islands gets very hot and there are lots of mosquitos but on the boat there is shade, wind and no bugs! Great amount of variety of animals and geography we saw. Sad to leave!

-- Wendy K., Galapagos Islands on the Eric, Letty, and Flamingo

I want to say I LOVED the trip. ECOCAMP was divine. Really amazing setting. The mix of people in the group was healthy. We all liked each other enough to dine every meal together.

-- Roshi G., Torres del Paine 7-day Trek

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