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DAY 2:
BLANQUILLO MACAW CLAY LICK
Ccollpa Blanquillo is
located about 10 minutes downstream on a motorized canoe; after that a 10
minutes walk through a secondary forest will takes us to a especially build
observatory. The direct sun, at that time of the day, bathes the lick phase with
a 2 – 2.5 more F- stops of light that can not be encounter at other licks. With
this extra light, plus short distance and stability, a photographer can freeze
flying birds with fast shutter speeds even when using a low grain film.
Breakfast will be served at the blind and there is a toilette facility aboard if
needed.
If time and weather favour us, a typical day at the Collpa will start around
6:00 a.m. when the first pairs of parrots fly in to land in the treetops above
the lick. They are followed by hundreds who screech and squawk until the first
ones (generally the blue-headed parrots) descend on to the clay.
Around 8:00 a.m. the first of the larger macaws arrive in family groups and
perch in the treetops. The most common are the red and greens, the scarlet and
the blue and yellow macaws. The exact arrival time of each species may vary
slightly, but the order seems surprisingly fixed. At 10:30 a.m., around 40 to
150 macaws will have gathered and begin their descent to the clay. The birds
apparently relaxed remain alert for eagles. If one is spotted, between 50 and
100 macaws often of different species, will circle and mob it, generally
succeeding in chasing it from the area. The return to Tambo Blanquillo is around
11:30 a.m.
12 PM: Lunch
OXBOW LAKE BLANCO
A
motorized canoe is boarded for a 10-minute upstream ride to Cocha Blanco, then
we make a pleasant 15 minute walk through a pristine seasonally flooded
rainforest trail until we reach the shore of the lake where a small catamaran is
waiting. Hoatzins, wild turkeys, the Band-tailed Antbird, the Silvered Antbird,
the Black-capped Donacobius and Agami herons are some bird species commonly
spotted on the lake, also there is a family of giant river otters which appear
regularly (see sighting graph information). Around 5:00 p.m. the motorized canoe
must be boarded for the return trip to Tambo Blanquillo.
7:30pmDinner:
DAY 3:
Breakafast
TINAMOU TRAIL
This trail will takes us to the Blanquillo Oxbow Lake, home of black alligators,
hoatzins, kingfishers, white winged turkey and paujiles. On the trail we will
contemplate the different ecological niches created by the movement in
geological time of the meandearing Madre de Dios River, the reason why this
rainforest is the most biodiverse in the world.
We will row around the lake for about 2 hours, then we will enter through one of
its tributaries were Capuchin and Howler monkey, tapir and dears are usually
encounter. Truly a wonderful rainforest experience.
1:00pm Lunch
SHEBONAL TRAIL
One distinctive habitat around Tambo Blanquillo is the shebonal, named after the
abundance of one local palm called shebon. Its high clay content makes it
waterproof and seasonally flooded during the rainy season, ideal refugee for
animals such as dears, peccaries, snakes and wild turkeys.
Trogons are
usually spotted on these trails.
7:30pm Dinner
DAY 4
Am Breakfast
Early transfer to Boca Manu landing strip to take the flight to Cusco.
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