Just a quick update, as I'm not on my own laptop at the moment, but I've made it to Sergipe safely and am having a nice time. I'm living with a Brazillian girl called Lorena who speaks no English, so communication is interesting so far. She and her housemates are very friendly though and they're making me feel quite at home. Will post again soon with photos again soon.
Missing everyone in England (especially Jonny!)
Claire xx
Thursday, 25 February 2010
Wednesday, 24 February 2010
Leaving the Amazon
Hey, assuming all is going according to plan so far, I'm leaving the Amazon today to head over to my field site in Sergipe. Below is a map of where I'll be travelling.
Hopefully my internet access should be more frequent from now on, so I'll be trying to upload more updates and photos.
Claire xx
Tuesday, 23 February 2010
Update: My Amazon Adventure
After a gruelling 27 hours of travelling and 4 airports, I arrived in Manaus. A 20minute boat ride and one brief dolphin sighting later, and we arrived at the Eco lodge, where we were greeted with welcome drinks and shown to our room. After some lunch and a shower, I headed out to start my first tour of the trip – to see a local Amazonian tribe.
The tour began with a 45-minute ride down the Rio Negro on a two-storey boat. The scenery was stunning. It’s hard to express the scale of the river, especially when you consider that it is just a small tributary of the Amazon itself. Where exactly the river ends and the land begins is difficult to tell, as the trees at the edge are partly submerged. On past a strange contrast of ram-shackle huts and expensive condos, we finally arrived at a small patch of shore slopping steeply up into what appeared to be dense forest. A few meters through the trees though, and I found myself
standing in a large wooden hut, with a dried-grass roof. Inside were a small tribe of authentic Amazonian people. Dressed in grass skirts, with red face paint forming dots and lines across their faces, they proceeded to demonstrate a series of traditional dances with traditional musical instruments. For the final dance a few of the men in our tour were selected, adorned with elaborate headgear made from grass and feathers, and asked to join in. To my dismay, although not total shock, not long into the dance, the tribes men came over to select some women to join in as well, and before I knew what was happening, I was being dragged to centre stage to join in with the dance, which seemed to consist of a mixture of a conga line and the hokey-kokey. If you had told me this morning if I would have been getting up and dancing a traditional tribal dance, I would have thought you were crazy.
After a short break on-land, I returned to the boats for an evening of alligator spotting. In a small, green, roofed canoe, holding about 10 people, we set out into the darkness with nothing but a torch, in
The next day we set out in the boat towards the Amazon river, and the point where the clear, dark Rio Negro meets its silty waters. The ride took about 3 hours, and took us past Manaus, the bizarre city set in the heart of the jungle. It is quite a strange site to see skyscrapers jutting out above the dense forest. Finally we reached the ‘meeting of the waters’ a dramatic 30km where the Rio Negro and the Amazon meet, but do not mix. The two rivers take so long to mix fully because they are so different; the Rio Negro is considerably more acidic than the Amazon, at about 4.5pH. It is also slower moving, denser and cooler. So for a short stretch of water, the two run side by side, with the clear, dark waters of the Negro contrasted by the pale, sandy waters of the Amazon.
We then continued on to a visit a few of the local communities whose homes are on the edge of the mighty Amazon. First, we visited a village of about 200 people, where we were shown rubber trees, and the traditional method for making rubber. We then moved on to another community where we had lunch.
My last full day in the Amazon began with a 2.5-hour nature hike through the jungle surrounding the lodge, with our guide, Urey. The walk mainly consisted of him pointing out the variety of interesting trees, plants and fruits which can be found in the jungle, and explaining their medicinal function. One particular vine, apparently can be used to treat insomnia, and prevent diabetes. I would maintain, however, that steering clear of too many sugary foods is likely to prove far more effective. But what do I know?
We spent the rest of the afternoon on an almost entirely fruitless piranha fishing trip. One of our group did manage to catch a small piranha, about 3 inches long, but the rest of us were not so lucky. I learned that, as I have always suspected, I have no patience for fishing.
After the fishing trip, I had a few hours to kill before dinner, so I decided to take my book and head down to try and see the sunset. Within the grounds of the lodge is a smallish hut with some hammocks, and hanging benches in, which looks out over the river. I decided this would be an ideal spot to wait for the sunset. So I sat and read, and got bitten by insects as the sun went down. It wasn’t so much a sunset, though, as just a getting darker, which was quite disappointing. As twilight was fading into complete darkness, one of the lodge staff suddenly appeared, walking down from the restaurant, carrying a broom with a large, red parrot sat on one end. She came into the hut where I was sitting, and, speaking firmly in Portuguese to the Parrot, encouraged it onto the ropes supporting the swinging bench next to me. I was quite excited, and immediately grabbed my camera, and approached the parrot for a photo. The lady, still apparently shoeing the parrot in Portuguese, left and I took a few pictures. The parrot looked at me for a few moments, and then carefully climbed down the rope, using its beak to support it, and made its way down onto the floor. I was only a meter or so away at this point, and still trying to get a good photo. As soon as it reached the ground, it charged at me and pecked me in the leg. Apparently this was one parrot that didn’t like to have its photo taken.
Labels:
Amazon,
Brazil,
BRZL10,
Jungle,
Manaus,
Rainforest,
South America
Friday, 19 February 2010
I'm off to Brazil!
I'm flying to Brazil today!
Below is a map of where I'll be flying. I'm heading out to Manaus first where I'm having a 4 day holiday in the Amazon rainforest.
It's quite likely that I wont have internet or phone signal out there, but I should be contactable once I get back to Manaus on the 23rd.
Claire xx
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