Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center: Jan 10—19, 2010
Register NowTour Details
Price: To Be Announced.
Departs: Quito
Tour Limit: 14
Operations Manager: Edna Murray
Download Previous Itinerary (2009): PDF (84.6 KB)
Tour Leaders
David Wolf
David Wolf is a senior member of the VENT staff and one of our most experienced tour leaders. After birding the U.S. and Mexico...Paul Greenfield
Paul Greenfield grew up near New York City and became interested in birds as a child. He received his B.F.A. from Temple Univer...More Information
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Tour Reports:
- Aug 22, 08: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center
- Feb 19, 08: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center
- Sep 18, 07: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center
- Feb 08, 07: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center
- Sep 18, 06: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center
- Feb 08, 06: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center
- Sep 07, 05: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center
Past Birdlists:
- Jul 09, 08: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center: PDF (116.9 KB)
- Jan 10, 08: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center: PDF (120 KB)
- Aug 04, 07: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center: PDF (108.3 KB)
- Jan 05, 07: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center: PDF (66.8 KB)
- Aug 06, 06: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center: PDF (148.6 KB)
- Jan 06, 06: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center: PDF (117.3 KB)
- Aug 07, 05: Ecuador: Amazonia at Napo Wildlife Center: PDF (111.7 KB)
Connecting Trips:
Register for this Tour
You can register for this tour by phone (800-328-VENT or 512-328-5221) or by downloading a printable file of our full tour registration form. Signed and completed forms can be faxed to 512-328-2919 or mailed to our office.
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Plum-throated Cotinga— Photo: David Wolf |
Visit true Amazonian wilderness with a full complement of rainforest birds and mammals at a wonderful new lodge that serves as a paradigm for sustainable development.
Ecuador is a little country with lots to offer. From the lush Amazonian rainforests to the high Andean páramos, it boasts good access to birding habitat, unsurpassed scenic splendor, friendly people, and a stable government. Incredibly, over 1,600 species of birds have been recorded in the country, in an area smaller than the state of Colorado! Among them are many of the most spectacular and distinctive Neotropical species. Our January departure is the first of a two-part tour (followed by "Ecuador: Eastern Slope of the Andes") designed to sample this magnificent avifauna at two choice locations, representing very different regions. Between them they offer a full range of birding possibilities.
The exciting and comfortable new Napo Wildlife Center, in the Rio Napo lowlands of northeastern Ecuador, lies within the most diverse avifaunal zone in the world, the vast rainforests of upper Amazonia. Located in the huge Yasuni National Park, it is a model in sustainable development, born of the hard work of the local indigenous community of Añangu. Their vision is one of a healthy environment that will support their traditional way of life, while at the same time keep them connected to a constantly more globalized world through sustainable management.
The lowland rainforests of Amazonia, superficially so uniform in appearance, are marvelously complex in reality. They are home to a web of species inhabiting every imaginable niche, and almost 600 species of birds have been recorded near the Napo Wildlife Center. The full array of lowland birds is present, including large raptors, guans, and macaws. Antbirds are numerous and diverse, and mixed-flocks of a great variety of birds regularly forage through the understory and subcanopy here. An excellent tower offers great chances for viewing the birdlife of the forest canopy. Clay licks along the Napo and inside the forest attract large numbers of parrots, an unforgettable spectacle, and blackwater swamps and river islands add yet another dimension to birding here.
Good accommodations in private bungalows in a jungle lodge; electricity; birding excursions by dugout canoe; walking on jungle trails that can be muddy; midday breaks most days; warm and humid climate.
If you would like to receive a free, 20-minute DVD about Ecuador's wonderful new lodge, the Napo Wildlife Center, please contact the VENT office.
View Peter English's Napo Wildlife Center photo gallery.
Laura Jones, Peter English's wife, has produced an excellent documentary about the NWC called The Napo Wildlife Center: Para Los Futuros. For more information see http://www.greentreks.org/naturalheroes/season2/napowildlifecenter.asp
