On our first morning in the Amazon, we awoke in total
darkness. After a 4:30am breakfast at the Sani Lodge, where our group was
staying, my husband, Alexis, and I pulled on our rubber boots. Our birding
guide, Jeison Gualinga, whistled for a canoe while flashing his light among the
reeds by the main dock. Under branches that arched like the interior of a
cathedral, we paddled in two boats through the flooded forests. Howler monkeys
whirred like gale-force winds in the distance.
اضافة اعلان
“Ringed kingfisher,” Gualinga whispered, pointing to a
perched bird, barely visible in the gloom. Occasionally he’d whistle, perhaps
to a ladder-tailed nightjar, or point out an anhinga, with its elegant long
neck, still sleeping on a branch, and our boat would rock like a cradle as we
drifted in groggy silence, in water the color of chocolate milk.
Our birding trip in Ecuador arose like a bird call, by
word-of-mouth. Our friend Olaf Soltau, a devout birder, was tipped off by a
respected birder friend to enlist Pablo Barrera of Adventures Columbia to
coordinate a tour. The 15-day trip would descend in steps from the cloud
forests of the high Andes, down the mountain range’s easternmost slope and into
the rainforest at the heart of Ecuadorean Amazonia.
The idea was to see how bird species evolved and multiplied
as the elevation lowered, while staying at four comfortable eco-lodges and
enjoying Ecuadorean food. There were seven of us in all. Our levels of
experience varied, from Olaf, the most skilled, to Alexis and me, first-time
birders. Our trip would culminate with five days in the Yasuní National Park,
whose humid green jungles are a birding paradise.
Barrera would serve as our tour operator, accompanied by his
exuberant companion, Luz Osorio, who would translate. Luis Panama, who grew up
in the cloud forest northwest of Quito and spoke excellent English, would be
our chief birder until we reached the Amazon basin, when the Sani Lodge would
provide its own guides.
First glimpsesOn our first day, our minibus broke down on a dirt road in
Cayambe-Coca National Park, in the high Andes region known as the Páramo.
Osorio began naming a few birds we had spotted that afternoon, and soon bird
names were ricocheting from seat to seat, a cheery distraction from the
precipitous view and the gloomy prospect of getting stranded overnight in an
ecosystem comparable to the Arctic tundra. Barrera contacted the Guango Lodge;
they dispatched a car and two trucks to our rescue, arriving just as night
fell.
Birds spotted at the various lodges, including hoatzin
(bottom left) harpy eagle (front and low-center), paradise tanager (above
eagle), chestnut-fronted macaw, (flying off to the right), and gray-breasted
mountain toucan (flying off to the left).
As we careened through the winding mountain pass of Paso
Pallapacta, the light rain switched to blinding fog and sleet. We slid past
accidents, breakdowns, police cars, white roadside crosses.
The next morning we were back in the Páramo, having packed
rubber boots for mud, ponchos for rain, quick-drying pants and socks and, of
course, binoculars. Alexis was still adjusting to the roughly 3,352km altitude;
I felt fine, if a little tired.
The sky was overcast and clouds clung to rocky ledges as we
hiked past a primary forest of knobby, slow-growing Polylepis trees that,
according to Panama, had provided habitats for birds in that inhospitable
climate for 20,000 to 40,000 years. Rain clicked on electrical wires above us.
Cliffs seemed to exhale steam.
Touching a ravaged heart of palm, Panama observed that a
bear had recently been feeding there. I spotted a brown chestnut-winged
cinclodes with a little pointy beak, and a slate-blue plumbeous sierra finch
with pink legs. Seeing me struggle with my new binoculars, Barrera kindly
removed one of the lens caps.
At our second stop, a spectacled bear, black with
goggle-shaped white markings around its eyes, tore through the mist and down a
hill, taking shelter behind a cluster of boulders.
Osorio was ecstatic. “This is a rare sight!” she cried.
“Alexis did you see it? Dorothy, did you see it?”
A black-and-chestnut eagle — among the most endangered birds
of prey in South America — flew in circles above us, calling. We admired its
beautiful black crest and impressive wingspan before it swooped into the
canopy. There are only about 1,000 left in the world, Barrera said, in Spanish,
tapping his baseball cap. The black-and-chestnut eagle was the logo for his
tour company.
A luxurious lodgeOn our third morning, we watched a breathtaking assortment
of hummingbirds buzz around feeders. A hen-like Andean guan and her chicks were
perched on a high branch. Two parent torrent ducks taught their chick how to
swim in the rapids of the Rio Guango. Afterward we were back in our minibus,
chugging above cliffs, in and out of clouds.
On a wide deck that wrapped around the main lodge at Cabañas
San Isidro, Alexis and I sampled fresh-pressed juices. Two russet-colored
woodcreepers nipped insects with their long sturdy bills as they marched up and
down tree trunks. Green-winged Inca jays, with yellow bellies and
black-and-blue faces, fluttered and squawked in nearby branches, and a dazzling
array of hummingbirds purred and thumped, jostling for space at assorted
feeders.
Panama spotted a masked trogon perched on a branch. Its red
belly and green throat, improbably paired with a black-and-white pinstriped undertail,
were all in perfect view when he casually reached for my iPhone to tap an
elegant photo through his spotting scope. The mist lifted over the valley. At
his suggestion, we hiked to a waterfall near his friend’s reforestation
project, where we each planted a native tree.
But I would just as soon have stayed at San Isidro, the most
comfortable of our four lodges, whose spacious cabins each boasted a hammock
hanging from a small porch — some with stunning views. There were kilometers of
fantastic hiking trails on its large property, which bridged two parts of the
Antisana National Park. One trail led to a river with a sandy beach, another to
a waterfall. Still another led through primary, uncut forest, where lush ferns
draped along branches like drying laundry, and night monkeys crept along the
treetops, and a summer tanager devoured a moth, scattering its wings like
confetti through the air.
One afternoon, a group of us — everyone except Panama and
Olaf, who were checking off birds, and our friend Steve, who was recovering
from a medical issue and sticking closer to the lodge — followed Ben Lucking, a
volunteer at the lodge, down a trail, where we discovered two brilliant
red-orange male Andean cocks-of-the-rock braying across the canopy in full
territorial display, their oddly shaped and overstuffed crests bobbing
emphatically as they hopped from branch to branch.
It was a bucket-list bird for most of us, and particularly gratifying
for our friend Martha, a retired hospice social worker, who had privileged hope
over knee pain on the muddy hike down.
Vertical biodiversityBefore we arrived at our next stop, Wild Sumaco Lodge, in
the eastern foothills of the Andes, Panama passed some loose change to our bus
driver, Darwin Vera, who bought a handful of long green pods from a roadside
stand. Panama opened a pod and passed it around, and we sucked on the sweet
pulp of ice cream beans.
Hummingbirds buzzing
around a feeder at San Isidro.
Wild Sumaco was named after the 3,962m volcano that can be
seen looming in the distance. The main lodge resembled a huge log cabin, with
high ceilings and a big corner fireplace. The food was good, and the proprietor
had a sense of humor, appearing on the wide-open veranda one morning while
holding a nearly 1km-long earthworm, which Alexis immediately grabbed,
delighted, as it hung from his fist, undulating like a live rope.
Donning headlamps, we spent a fun night spotting small
frogs, snakes, and spiders. We saw our first chestnut-eared aracari, a kind of
toucan with a signature blue patch around its eye. We also spotted six large
black-mandibled toucans feeding in the treetops, their long banana-shaped,
yellow-and-black beaks upturned as they called to each other. Seeing a
yellow-tufted woodpecker poke holes in a dead palm, Panama explained that
macaws and other birds would eventually make nests there. “It’s an example of
vertical biodiversity,” he said.
“Or a high-rise,” joked Alexis.
But after the comfort of San Isidro, the rooms at Wild
Sumaco felt more in keeping with a motel. And beyond the lodge’s lush
rainforest property, the expanding wildlife was under increasing threat from
loggers.
Sani lodgeIn the somewhat downtrodden oil-industry city of Coca, we
bid farewell to Panama and Vera. After a night at a utilitarian hotel, we met
Gualinga and his cousin, Gustavo Javier Andy, our guides for the duration of
our stay at Sani Lodge, at the city dock.
The three-hour ride in a motorized canoe along the Rio Napo
was broken up by two stops. At the first, we got lucky: Two magnificent harpy
eagles high in the canopy were carrying clusters of dried branches to their
growing nest in the crown of a ceiba tree. The world’s most powerful bird of
prey, the harpy’s wingspan measures up to 2m, and its massive body and 10cm
talons are perfect for plucking up monkeys and sloths.
We spent five blissful days at Sani Lodge, which is owned
and operated by the Indigenous Sani tribe. We watched the sun rise over the
jungle from a 36.5-high metal platform — Gualinga helped build it when he was
14, he said — in the crown of a 900-year-old ceiba tree, and waited for scarlet
macaws to descend upon a clay-lick to eat minerals that neutralize toxins in
their diet.
For lunch one day we took instruction from a group of Sani
Village mamitas in the community center, folding tilapia and heart of palm into
long, green rumi panka leaves, which we then roasted over an open fire, along
with two types of plantains and chontacuro beetle larvae. We paddled through
flooded forests looking for anacondas and fished for piranhas along a small
creek.
Richness and wonderOne morning, Martha and I were gazing through our binoculars
at a marvelous paradise tanager — green, blue, and red — when I was filled with
a kind of piercing joy that had been sneaking up on me at odd moments. “This
trip is particularly poignant for me,” Martha said, “because it may be the last
time I see a lot of these birds in the wild.” I put my arm around her,
considering this.
Birding is not for everyone. I am not even sure it is for
me. What is for me, however, is experiencing the natural world in all
its richness and wonder, and seeing how other people live, and hearing their
stories, all while understanding how very different we may be, and also how
very similar.
By then, I had gotten used to my binoculars. I had also
noticed that when Gualinga tracked a bird, he moved low and quiet through the
forest, whistling softly, as if speaking directly to the bird until it
responded, when he’d stand very still on one leg, while slowly motioning for us
to come look.
On our last morning, as we headed back to Coca in our
motorized canoe, Andy smiled gamely in the driving rain as he pushed large
Styrofoam containers packed with our breakfast — fresh fruit, scrambled eggs
and toast — to the front of our boat. He then handed them out, a parody of a
flight attendant on an airplane. Passing around ceramic cups wrapped in
napkins, he poured hot coffee from a thermos and offered spoons of sugar to
anyone who wanted it. Our alternative to tea in the Sahara was coffee in the
Amazon in a torrential downpour. I smiled out at the rain. I am the rain, I
thought. I am rain.
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