Skip to Content

Tales from the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador

By dugout canoe I travelled with two friends through the Amazon basin, deep into the rainforest of Ecuador. Our 10 day river journey took us from Puyo on the Rio Bobonaza, as far as Kapawi close to the Peruvian border, and from here we flew back by light aircraft. Mostly we camped by the river, stopping at any riverside villages we passed, with several days spent in the rainforest community of Sarayaku.

Originally published as individual articles, these are some of my tales from the Amazon rainforest in Ecuador.

This article may contain affiliate links that provide commission on purchases you make at no extra cost to you. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Loading the dug-out canoe

Our guide Luiz had hired the biggest dug-out canoe on the upper river, for our journey down to Sarayaku. But we still couldn’t quite believe that all our rucksacks, food, tents, not to mention 5 of our party, plus 4 boatmen could fit in.

Oh yes, then there was the lady with her toddler who also hitched a lift with us at the last minute.

Loading the dugout canoe in Ecuador

As it had been raining heavily for the previous couple of days, the river was high and fast-flowing, and we were all feeling a little nervous.

When we mentioned life jackets, our guide Luiz, who had clearly not expected the water to be so high, got a local to cut down some logs of balsa wood for us to cling on to if we capsized. Then he suggested we take off our Wellington boots when in the canoe, as if we capsized, they might drag us under.

If we went overboard, he advised, we should not fight the current, but just let it take us to the riverbank. We never quite knew when Luiz was joking and when he was serious!

Luckily, we didn’t have to make use of his useful tips and made it safely, in record time down to Sarayaku.

Catfish and Anaconda on the Rio Bobonaza

Accompanying us on the river trip was Ingaro, one of our guides from the rainforest community of Sarayaku. We had stopped on a sandbank to camp for the night, when a local fisherman approached to show us the two enormous catfish he had caught on that stretch of the river.

Our guide Ingaro with catfish, Rio Bobonaza

The man told us the story of how he had been fishing from that very sandbank, when he had been attacked by an Anaconda. These large boas live on the water’s edge and coil themselves round their prey and crush them to death. Luckily, his wife heard the barking of his dogs and came to rescue him by shooting the snake in the head.

The Anaconda are the creatures most feared by the local people who live by these Amazon tributaries. Later we were pointed out a muddy bank below a military post, where a soldier had been taken by one. Even so they are very rare and our guide Ingaro admitted that he had only seen one a few times in his lifetime.

As we girls walked round the curve of the sandbank to find a more private place to wash, the boatmen frantically called us back. We must stay beside the camp to wash, they advised us, and suddenly we knew the reason why.

A pet monkey in the rainforest

What do you keep as a pet if you live in the rainforest? Not a pet snake, that’s for sure. We saw this little girl and her pet monkey in the village of Pacayaku, on our river journey down the Rio Bobonaza in Ecuador.

Pet monkey in the rainforest Ecuador

Normally these little creatures are adopted as pets when their mother has been killed in a hunt and brought back to the village as food.

Although it seems unthinkable to us to kill a species with features so close to our own, as a meat eater I can’t deny the villagers one of the few local sources of meat in their diet. You can see how irresistible these little monkeys are as pets.

A Wika tattoo

Snake tatoos with Wika fruit dye at Sarayaku

While staying in the village of Sarayacu, the children had fun painting a snake tattoo painted on my arm. The black dye is made by roasting a local fruit in the embers of the fire and grinding up the pulp to make a black ink called Wika, which is painted on with a palm stalk.

In days gone by this was used as war-paint to scare the enemy but now children and grown-ups use it for decorating their faces & bodies, a bit like henna. These children painted a snake curving up my arm which lasted for a couple of weeks. I was so sad when my Wika snake tattoo faded away – it represented my happy memories of my time in the village of Sarayacu.

Defenders of the Rainforest

While in Sarayaku we met a young film-maker named Heriberto, the brother of our two local guides, Ingaro and Gerado who made the week-long river journey with us from Puyo down to Kapawi near the Peruvian border.

In his traditionally built family home made of wood and palm thatch, Heriberto set up his laptop (powered by solar panels) and gave us an impromptu viewing of his film Soy Defensor de la Selva (I am the defender of the rainforest).

He had been sponsored to make his film by Accion Creativa, an organisation which supports social change through the use of film and other creative media.

The film shows the struggle in Sarayaku against the incursions of the oil companies who had been granted exploration rights by the Ecuadorian government. The community at Sarayaku strongly oppose this exploration which would destroy the rainforest and when oil workers moved into their territory, Heriberto was there to film their resistance.

Heriberto gave us a copy of the film, which I’d shown to friends, but now I see it’s up on Youtube, so I’d love you to watch it. The version above is 3 minutes long, but if you’d like to see the full 15 min film, the links are also below.

It was a lesson for me in how the use of media is crucial in allowing remote communities to have a voice and take their message to the wider world.

Soy Defensor de la Selva (I am the defender of the rainforest) Part 1
Soy Defensor de la Selva (I am the defender of the rainforest) Part 2
Soy Defensor de la Selva (I am the defender of the rainforest) Part 3

Read Next

Visiting Baños in Ecuador – for warm baths and waterfalls

Public baths in Banos Ecuador

More about Ecuador

Ecuador and the Amazon Rainforest – Podcast

See all my Ecuador photos on Flickr

This article is originally published at Heatheronhertravels.com

Never miss an update! – Subscribe to receive our latest articles and newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter and latest articles

The lady at McDonalds in Cusco in Peru | Heather on her travels

Sunday 9th of October 2011

[...] Related Posts A grown up backpacker at Machu Picchu Meeting Margariette in Lima Defending the rainforest in Ecuador [...]

A grown-up backpacker at Machu Picchu in Peru | Heather on her travels

Tuesday 13th of April 2010

[...] Read related posts Meeting Margariette in Lima A grown-up backpacker at Machu Picchu Defending the rainforest in Ecuador [...]

Meeting Margariette in Lima - in Peru | Heather on her travels

Tuesday 13th of April 2010

[...] Read related posts My Indian Sponsor Child Sleeping in a canoe in Ecuador Defending the rainforest in Ecuador [...]

Relaxing in the rainforest at the Tambopata Ecolodge - in Peru : Heather on her travels

Thursday 16th of April 2009

[...] may also enjoy: Defending the rainforest in Ecuador Kapawi Ecolodge at the World Travel Market A grown-up backpacker at Machu [...]

Dominique

Monday 19th of January 2009

Intriguing how people in such isolated areas are able to harness new media to get their story out to other parts of the world. The reach of the Internet, etc. never ceases to amaze me.