Anyhoo, we got to Sani by way of a 3 hour boat ride down Rio Napo, after which we walked for 20 minutes (Hayley and I were briefly lost in the Amazon jungle before one of the guides came and found us; also on that detour I kicked a spiny plant and my foot still hurts), and then a 15 minutes canoe trip to the lodge itself. All I can say is, it was beautiful and sort of surreal to find myself in a totally foreign, magic place. While we were there we went on a bunch of different hikes in small groups of 6 or 7 with our own guides. My group's guide was Sergio and was pretty quiet but also awesome. He would charge off into the woods with us running along behind and then all of a sudden he'd have found monkeys or parrots to look at. It was like a sixth sense for cool animals in the jungle. We went to a bird viewing tower and saw toucans, howler monkeys, parrots, parakeets, woodpeckers, tanagers and a bunch more that I didn't catch the names of. Some girls in my group were making a list so I'll have to borrow that from them for the full report.
The only bummer of the trip was that our whole group got sick a one point or other. In fact several of us are still feeling a bit ill. It wasn't the food from the most excellent Sani Lodge because the handful of Brits, Germans and other Americans who were there didn't get sick, just us. Who knows what caused it, but apparently at least some people have amoebas.
Now for the serious part of the trip. We spent the first day on a bus trekking through people's farms to get to petrol pools and spying burning poles above the treetops burning off excess natural gas. When petroleum is extracted, they find petroleum, toxic water that can barely be called water anymore, and natural gas. The water and the unusable petroleum get pumped into these horrific pools, which a basically shallow holes in the dirt in the middle of the forest or someone's old farm that the oil companies have paid for the right to dump there.
The pools look like this but way bigger. |
The trip was beautiful and sickening (oh, puns) in a myriad of ways and I am amazed at my luck and privilege that allowed me to go.
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