The Amazonian lowlands of eastern Ecuador harbor one of the most diverse avian assemblages in the world, comparable to parts of eastern and southeastern Peru in both richness and beauty. Sani Lodge, three hours by boat down the Napo River from the end of the road at the Amazonian town of Coca, is situated on an oxbow lake in the heart of the Amazon rainforest and offers us excellent access to the region’s extraordinary diversity. Nearly 600 species of birds are known from this single locality, including five species of macaw, 10 puffbirds, seven toucans and more than 40 species of antbirds. From the lodge it is possible to see classic Amazonian species like White-throated Toucan, Red-bellied Macaw, Hoatzin, Masked Crimson Tanager, and Black-fronted Nunbird, all common, and with only a short canoe ride the rare and local become possible, including species like Zigzag Heron, Black-banded Owl, White-lored Antpitta, Orange-eyed Flycatcher, Orange-crowned Manakin, and the extremely local Cocha Antshrike. A sturdy steel 150-foot high canopy tower, easily accessible by stairs, supplies a brilliant dimension to Amazonian birdwatching: the ability to observe many rarely seen canopy species, such as King Vulture, Gray Antbird, Bare-necked Fruitcrow, Plum-throated Cotinga, White-browed Purpletuft, and a wide array of canopy tanagers and flycatchers.
This tour can be taken in conjunction with our tour Ecuador: The East Slope of the Andes.
This tour can be taken in conjunction with our tour Ecuador: The East Slope of the Andes.
Day 1: The tour begins this evening in Puembo, a colonial suburb of Quito. Night in Puembo.
The Amazon Lowlands tour was excellent. Jon was very knowledgable, kind, considerate and funny, and a great team player. I cannot imagine anything else I could hope for in a guide. The trip itself was a marvelous adventure, from the trip up the Napo River to arriving at the Sani Lodge to the excellent bird watching, to the great local guides, canoe trips, canopy tower and interaction with the Sani people. The food was very good and the Sani people couldn’t do enough for us. Thank you WINGS for your excellent organizational skills in putting together this amazing trip. -Harvey K.
Day 2: We’ll fly this morning over the Andes to the Amazonian oil town of Coca and board our motor boat for the three-hour ride down the Napo River to Sani Lodge. As the lodge itself is located on an oxbow lake, not the main river, we’ll walk for about 15 minutes on a boardwalk trail to the lake then transfer to small dugout canoes for the tranquil 15-minute paddle to our accommodations for the next seven nights. After a welcome drink, we may make our first of many excursions out onto Challuacocha, the lake that is not only our “highway” to various parts of the nearby jungle, but also a prime birding spot of its own.
In fact, one of the most appealing aspects of our stay at Sani will be the leisurely canoe rides around this serene lake. We’ll be watched by the prehistoric-looking Hoatzins as we’re paddled around the edge in search of species found only in flooded forest and along the lake edges, including specialties such as White-chinned Jacamar, Dot-backed and Silvered Antbirds, Cinnamon Attila, Black-capped Donacobious, Buff-breasted Wren and the striking Masked Crimson Tanager. One of our main goals will be to snatch a glimpse of the local and elusive Zigzag Heron, a regular nocturnal denizen of thick vegetation along Amazonian lakeshores. The boardwalk between the Napo River and Challuacocha traverses excellent semi-flooded forest, and we’ll look for the shockingly yellow Cream-colored Woodpecker, as well as Plumbeous and White-shouldered Antbirds and Cocha Antshrike, a species that until 1990 was known to science only from a single female specimen. Night at Sani Lodge.
Days 3-8: Six full days at Sani will give us ample time to explore and re-explore the many different habitats accessible from the lodge. A highlight of any trip to Sani is a visit to two easily reached parrot clay licks. Literally hundreds of parrots come early in the morning to replenish their mineral supply by licking and pecking at exposed rocky areas. If we are fortunate, we may see as many as four or five species using the lick at the same time, including hundreds of Mealy and Blue-headed Parrots and the sublime Orange-cheeked Parrot. The trail system of Sani Lodge will enable us to explore superb primary varzea rainforest. The list of species found in this vanishing habitat is seemingly endless, and we’ll spend time walking through the forest in a quest for mixed-species flocks of woodcreepers, antbirds, ovenbirds, flycatchers and tanagers. Among the more beautiful birds that we’ll search for in this forest are Long-billed Woodcreeper, Many-banded and Lettered Aracaris, Golden-collared Toucanet, Chestnut-capped Puffbird, Waved, Ringed and Rufous-headed Woodpeckers, Fulvous Antshrike, Spot-backed Antbird, Wire-tailed, Striolated, Blue-crowned and Golden-headed Manakins, and Fulvous Shrike-Tanager. At night, we’ll look for Black-banded, Crested and Spectacled Owls and Tawny-bellied and Tropical Screech-Owls, as well as Great, Common and Long-tailed Potoos and Sand-colored Nighthawk.
One of our regular birding destinations during our stay will be canopy tower. With a sturdy metal staircase and a large metal platform that wraps around a gargantuan kapok tree, the tower will permit us access to one of the least-known habitats in the tropical rainforest, the canopy. Some of the many possibilities from the tower are Blue-throated Piping-Guan, Great Potoo, Blue-and-yellow Macaws, Spangled and Plum-throated Cotingas, White-browed Purpletuft, and Paradise, Green-and-gold, Turquoise, Opal-rumped, and Yellow-bellied Tanagers…perhaps even a Harpy or Crested Eagle. Each visit to the tower brings something unexpected.
Yasuni National Park on the south bank of the Rio Napo will be another of our destinations, and it is such rich birding that we will likely spend at least one full day exploring the trails that wind up into the upland terra firma forest. This drier hilly forest supports a different assortment of species and can also be productive for finding ant swarms. A swarm of army ants with birds feeding around them is one of the great rainforest birding spectacles, and some of the specialties here include Ochre-striped Antpitta, Lunulated, Hairy-crested, White-plumed and Banded Antbirds, Ringed Antpipit, and Blue-backed Manakin.
A morning or afternoon will be devoted to visiting islands in the Napo River, where a yet another different set of species can be found, some of which are so specialized in their unique habitats that they have never been recorded on the mainland. We’ll look particularly for White-bellied Spinetail, Castelnau’s Antshrike, Black-and-white Antbird, Lesser Wagtail-Tyrant, River Tyrannulet, Mottle-backed Elaenia and Orange-headed Tanager. Along the river itself we will hopefully see Collared Plover, Pied Lapwing, Large-billed and Yellow-billed Terns and possibly roosting Ladder-tailed Nightjars that frequent the sandbars. Nights at Sani Lodge.
Day 9: We may have a little time to bird around in the morning before we depart the lodge for our boat ride back to Coca and our flight back to Quito, arriving at our hotel before dinner. Night in Puembo.
Day 10: The tour concludes this morning in Puembo.
Note: The information presented below has been extracted from our formal General Information for this tour. It covers topics we feel potential registrants may wish to consider before booking space. The complete General Information for this tour will be sent to all tour registrants and of course supplemental information, if needed, is available from the WINGS office.
ENTERING AND LEAVING ECUADOR: Ecuadorian authorities require a passport that is valid for at least six months after the date of your arrival in Ecuador. Visas are not required for U.S. and Canadian citizens. Tourist cards are prepared by your arriving airline. At present, there is a $40.80 departure tax in Ecuador, which is now rolled into the air ticket price by most airlines.
Proof of health insurance is now required when entering Ecuador. The exact requirements are unclear, but have your insurance card or travel insurance confirmation with you on arrival. If for some reason your coverage doesn’t meet the requirement, we have been told that medical insurance can be purchased at the airport and that there are 2 or 3 companies stationed just outside of the baggage area. The basic insurance plans offered at the airport run about $35 for 30 days of coverage. The more comprehensive plans run somewhere around $95 for the same length of time.
Certification of yellow fever vaccination is not required unless you are entering Ecuador from a country where yellow fever is present (check with your local public health agency or the Centers for Disease Control for this list); if you are entering Ecuador from the US, this is not required, but see below under “Health.”
COUNTRY INFORMATION: You can review the U.S. Department of State Country Specific Travel Information here: https://travel.state.gov/content/travel.html and the CIA World Factbook here: https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/. Review foreign travel advice from the UK government here: https://www.gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice and travel advice and advisories from the Government of Canada here: https://travel.gc.ca/travelling/advisories.
PACE OF THE TOUR: This tour is of a moderate pace, though pre-dawn starts are the norm, and the hot, humid weather is unrelenting and can be very draining even with minimal activity. Most days will be broken up into modules: we’ll go birding early in the morning returning before lunch, then a siesta, and another birding excursion before dinner perhaps staying out until dark for some target species. A few of the days we’ll be longer away from the lodge and we’ll eat a boxed lunch on a forest trail or elsewhere.
Birding is mostly done from a paddled canoe or on foot on forest trails. The conditions of the trails at Sani vary. Most of the trails around the lodge are relatively flat. Across the river in Yasuni National Park, the trails are typically hilly and some have carved earthen steps. When they’re dry, the trails are not difficult, though rain is always a possibility and mud in the trails is to be expected. Some trails may also have small stream crossings depending on weather. After rain, when the trails are wet, they can be slippery and difficult, and some of the boardwalks can become slick and a little hazardous. A collapsible walking stick can be useful. February is a drier period here, and we hope for a visit with minimal rain.
The small canoes that we use almost every day are paddled by one of the lodge staff. It can be a bit awkward getting into or out of the canoes, depending on water levels. The seats are made of wood with separate vinyl cushions.
HEALTH: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that all travelers be up to date on routine vaccinations. These include measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine, diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis vaccine, varicella (chickenpox) vaccine, polio vaccine, and your yearly flu shot.
They further recommend that most travelers have protection against Hepatitis A and Typhoid.
Please contact your doctor well in advance of your tour’s departure as some medications must be initiated weeks before the period of possible exposure.
The most current information about travelers’ health recommendations can be found on the CDC’s Travel Health website here: https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/destinations/list
Important note: Sani is an isolated jungle lodge. There are no local doctors, and emergency evacuation procedures are certain to be slow and expensive. Please be sure that you are in good physical condition before scheduling this trip.
Malaria: Malaria is present in the Amazon basin of Eastern Ecuador, so a malaria prophylaxis is important. Please check with your physician to determine which is best for you.
Yellow Fever: The CDC currently recommends a yellow fever vaccination for travelers to Ecuador who plan to be outside of urban areas.
Elevation: Puembo is at about 8,000 feet in elevation. The tour itinerary takes place in the Amazon lowlands at about 700 feet elevation.
Smoking: Smoking is prohibited in the vehicles or when the group is gathered for meals, checklists, etc. If you are sharing a room with a nonsmoker, please do not smoke in the room. If you smoke in the field, do so well away and downwind from the group. If any location where the group is gathered has a stricter policy than the WINGS policy, that stricter policy will prevail.
Miscellaneous: One can never completely escape the risk of parasites or fungal infections. Please consult with your physician. We avoid tap water, but bottled water is readily available. You may wish to bring a broad?spectrum antibiotic in case of stubborn bacterial infections, and an anti-diarrhea medication such as Imodium.
Biting insects are occasionally a problem, and can be worse at dawn and dusk (when we’re often out birding in the forest). We recommend using insect repellents with a high concentration of DEET.
CLIMATE: Quito has been called the city of eternal spring, and the climate there is crisp and cool with chilly nights and pleasantly warm days. Rain is possible, but sunburn is more likely. At Sani Lodge in the Amazonian lowlands, we can expect occasional rain and warm, muggy days with cooler nights.
ACCOMMODATIONS: Sani is a clean and comfortable jungle lodge. The cabins are constructed of wood and have screened windows. Each has one king or two double beds with good mattresses, mosquito netting, and a fan. Each has its own bathroom with sink, flush toilet, and shower. Electricity for the lodge and cabins is supplied by a main generator and is typically available in the mornings (4 to 9AM), evenings (5 to 10PM), and around lunchtime (12 to 2PM). Hot water is supplied by solar heaters, though it can cut out occasionally. The cabins are separate but are connected by common walkways to the bar and dining room. We should note that occasionally spiders, crickets, mice or tree frogs find their way into the bathrooms. If something really neat shows up in your cabin, please alert your leader!! There is WIFI available in the common area of the lodge when the generator is running.
FOOD: Meals at Sani are excellent and run the gamut of international fare, and often include lots of vegetables, great soups, various salads and splendid desserts to accompany the fresh meat, chicken and fish. Vegetarians are easily accommodated, but please let us know your preference in advance.
WINGS tours are all-inclusive and no refunds can be issued for any missed tour meals.
Food Allergies / Requirements: We cannot guarantee that all food allergies can be accommodated at every destination. Participants with significant food allergies or special dietary requirements should bring appropriate foods with them for those times when their needs cannot be met. Announced meal times are always approximate depending on how the day unfolds. Participants who need to eat according to a fixed schedule should bring supplemental food. Please contact the WINGS office if you have any questions.
TRANSPORTATION: Flights from Quito to Coca are on modern jets. We’ll use canoes of varying sizes to get from Coca to Sani and around Sani. The long (about three hour) motorized canoe ride from Coca to Sani will have a canopy for sun/rain protection and padded seats with backs. The shorter canoe rides at Sani are paddled by staff and have padded seats with a back but no cover (we’re often shaded by nature). Otherwise we’ll be on foot.
There are few places in the world that, when mentioned, inspire such pause as the Amazon rainforest. It is remote, mysterious, and perhaps a little scary, but this tour was a way to get past that stuff and get into this crucible of biodiversity to experience it in comfort and see the birds that, when mentioned, inspire pause in themselves. With six full days of rainforest birding we visited the canopy, the lagoons, the islands in the river, and, of course, the deep forest. Some of our highlights included the bizarre Hoatzins, the mythical Harpy Eagle, iconic Blue-and-yellow and Scarlet Macaws and seven species of toucans, the enigmatic Zigzag Heron, glowing Wire-tailed Manakins, subtle Lunulated Antbird, and classic Screaming Piha. These, and many more, were all without a car (once we got in there), and from a comfortable home base hosted by the indigenous Sani people. It was a memorable week indeed.
Birding the remote jungle first requires getting to the remote jungle. There’s a flight, then a long boat ride, some hiking, canoeing, and then “poof” there’s a posh lodge aside a tranquil lagoon. We got there just fine, sat out a little of the hottest part of the afternoon, and then did a canoe paddle around the lagoon. Without leaving the porch, the Hoatzins were out, bizarre creatures that crash about through the leaves, make weird noises, and generally look like alien-bird-dinosaurs. Also on the edge of the lagoon were bright Masked Crimson Tanagers flying around. We canoed into the flooded forest a little thanks to heavy rain in the Andes and high water in the jungle. The wet, viney darkness was perfect for some of its specialties including the dainty Dot-backed Antbird, the somber Rufous-tailed Flatbill, and the outrageous Cream-colored Woodpecker. We finished our first afternoon with a sunset over the lagoon as we rolled back into the lodge for dinner.
Though it’s all forest all around us, the type of forest and our position in the forest determines the birds we see. The canopy has different species than the understory, and the wetter, varzea, forest has different species than the drier, terra firma, forest. To see the canopy, we can scope it from the ground in neck-twisting fashion, or we can use the canopy tower! Two-hundred and one steps later we’re up in the treetops with the canopy birds. After a night of heavy rain, the bigger birds were up in the sun drying off and we had some of South America’s most celebrated raptors including the big daddy himself, Harpy Eagle. We watched it, far, but in a scope for nearly an hour as it preened, stretched, and ruffled its feathers. There was also an Ornate Hawk-Eagle and a Black-and-white Hawk-Eagle out there catching some sun. There were monkeys, too, but being very quiet… Elsewhere in the canopy, we saw some Many-banded Aracari’s, White-throated and Channel-billed Toucans, and loads of Mealy Parrots. Four species of macaw flew by, as well, making it a full morning of iconic rainforest birds.
We also needed to get into the understory, the humid darkness in which the skulkers of the rainforest call their home. To do that, with help from our native guides, we get out there and walk the trails that lead off into the woods. Some of the birds in there are pretty wild-looking, like Wire-tailed Manakins. We saw two males and a female of them chasing each other around. Some are rather in the middle like Chestnut Woodpecker, well named, though it doesn’t mention the snazzy crest. And, some are better heard than seen. Antbirds come to mind, but we were entranced by a Lawrence’s Thrush as it worked through its repertoire of perfectly mimicked jungle bird sounds. A cacophony of parrots, mostly Mealy Parrots, in the canopy while we were trying to work on the understory birds was charming, but seriously? Can you guys keep it down?
The following morning started hot right off the lodge porch. In the darkness of breakfast, we spotlighted a Common Potoo on a stick calling and, well, moving, something that we don’t see as they’re usually found sleeping in the daytime. Then while getting ready to leave we saw a duo of Sand-colored Nighthawks flying around the lagoon. It was a surprise, but they are also gorgeous birds, white and brown wing flashes as they coursed back and forth and eventually settled on a branch where they spent the rest of the day. Then it became daytime and the remainder of our morning was entirely in the dark forest. Birding was a lot of work, winkling out shy understory birds, but, that’s the game, and those birds aren’t going to be anywhere else. Perhaps our best find was a Black-tailed Leaftosser, a bird rarely seen by anyone but was seen well by all of us. Our afternoon was in a canoe in the flooded woods where we encountered a nice flock with the endemic Cocha Antshrike, White-chinned Jacamar, a few species of woodcreepers, and probably a bunch of stuff that just got by us while we worked on the things in the foreground. It was a dizzying flurry.
With subtle variations in habitat or even variations within a single habitat, changing the bird life, it’s no wonder that the islands in the Rio Napo are yet another special place. Indeed, an entirely different avifauna lives in the various successional levels of forest on these small islands. The following day we wandered around on a few of them, some choked with tall cane, others more low and brushy. A Burrowing Owl was pretty cool out there, flushed from the grass and onto a big pile of driftwood. We also saw Gray-breasted Crake, and two spinetails, White-bellied and Parker’s. Big, bright Oriole Blackbirds flew overhead. This day was a hot one. The kind of steamy, humid day one imagines the Amazon must feel like, and the afternoon was well spent being not in the sun. The later afternoon, though, we returned to the forest. The birds were still relaxing and it was mostly quiet, but a Screaming Piha, the loudest bird in the woods was making up for the other birds by letting out its spectacular call. We were even able to track it down in the canopy and watch it scream. A big, amazing sound from a drab, gray little thing.
Soundscapes played big into the next day, as well: our day of parrots. We visited two very impressive parrot shows. The first was a big, dead tree in someone’s backyard that had dozens of macaws crawling all over it, chewing on the dead wood. It was hard to say exactly what they were up to, but they were really into it (and so were we). There were about 20 Blue-and-yellow Macaws, and lesser numbers of the lesser macaws, Chestnut-fronted and Red-bellied. The next parrot spot is a well-visited spring in the jungle at which hundreds of screaming Cobalt-winged Parakeets come to drink. They do their thing and in the midst of them Scarlet Macaws land and begin drinking, scattering the small parakeets. There were also a few Orange-cheeked Parrots in the mix, less affected by the big macaws. We made some other stops, too, and found goodies like Rufous-headed Woodpecker, Orange-eyed Flatbill, Crane Hawk, and Lettered and Chestnut-eared Aracaris. It was fun to have a day of big showy birds to contrast with our days of digging out subtly-colored forest skulkers (but those are great, too).
With dry weather and clear skies, heat continued to build and made birding pretty much a morning and evening endeavor. We began the next morning with a return trip to the tower. In the bright sun, it got pretty quiet pretty quickly, but we had a few newies like Blue-throated Piping-Guan and Double-toothed and Gray-headed Kites. We tried our luck in the forest a little and came up with a couple of Purplish Jacamars and a dapper male Golden-headed Manakin. Rather than spend more time thrashing around in the heat, we hid in the shade of the lodge for the afternoon then ventured out in the late afternoon for night stuff. The big one was Zigzag Heron (actually a little one, for a heron) that turned out to be quite an adventure sloshing through flooded forest to get to a spot to see it. A canoe ride back to the lodge in the dark and some cold beverages later was a fine way to end the day.
Our final full day was our day to explore Yasuni National Park on the south side of the Rio Napo. The “upland” terra firma forest there offers us some different species than the lowland varzea forest around the lodge. That said, it was a bit of a slippery, muddy walk to get from the Rio Napo to the higher ground. But, once inside, we were treated to scarce species like Lunulated Antbird, more colorful species like Golden-collared Toucanet, and a new oropendola, Olive Oropendola. By the end of our hike and after lunch it was pretty hot, so we retreated to the lodge, but stopped by some exposed mud in the Rio Napo for Collared Plover, a species we had been scanning for during every river visit and finally popped up at the eleventh hour.
Having such an opportunity to be birding in such a remote wilderness, does, alas, mean that at some point we have to leave, and leaving a remote wilderness is a process. The inverse of our way in involved a canoe ride in the dark, a long motorboat ride back up a Rio Napo that had dropped more than 2 meters in the past few days, so steering around logs and getting hung up on sandbars. We made it to Coca, caught our flight back to Puembo, and were there in time for lunch. After opening up our luggage to let out the jungle humidity, and who knows what crawly things, and after a nap, we took a walk around the neighborhood for a last look at some tropical, dry country birds, before we had sushi for dinner and summed up our week of good times.
Jon is just outstanding. Easy to talk to, fun to be with, and exhibiting a breadth of knowledge that is astounding.
- Michael J. on Ecuador: The Amazon Lowlands 1
The Amazon Lowlands tour was excellent. Jon was very knowledgable, kind, considerate and funny, and a great team player. I cannot imagine anything else I could hope for in a guide. The trip itself was a marvelous adventure, from the trip up the Napo River to arriving at the Sani Lodge to the excellent bird watching, to the great local guides, canoe trips, canopy tower and interaction with the Sani people. The food was very good and the Sani people couldn’t do enough for us. Thank you WINGS for your excellent organizational skills in putting together this amazing trip.
- Harvey K. on Ecuador: The Amazon Lowlands 1
Maximum group size seven with one leader.