|

Home
Tour
Portfolio
Opulent Itineraries
Inquiries
Peru
Tours

Legacy of the Incas
Machu Picchu - Lake
Titicaca (11
days/10 nights)

Sacred Sites of the Incas
Machu Picchu - Lake
Titicaca (12 days/11 nights)

Empire of the Sun
Machu Picchu - Lake
Titicaca (14 days/13 nights)

Ancient Civilizations of Peru
Colca Canyon - Machu
Picchu Lake Titicaca (16 days/15 nights)

Archaeological & Ecological Treasures
Galapagos - Machu Picchu Lake Titicaca (or Amazon) (18 days/17
nights)

Grand Tour of the Inca Empire
Colca Canyon - Amazon Machu Picchu - Lake Titicaca (22 days/21 nights)

Ancient & Colonial Capitals
Machu Picchu (10
days/9 nights)

Inca Trail to Machu Picchu
Machu Picchu (13 days/12 nights)

Machu Picchu & Galapagos
Machu Picchu - Galapagos (15 days/14 nights)

Galapagos & Machu Picchu
Galapagos - Machu Picchu (18 days/17 nights)

Amazon
Bio-Trip
Manu National Park (8 days/7 nights)
Galapagos Cruises

Enchanted
Isles of the Galapagos
Galapagos (11
days/10 nights)

Galapagos & the Kingdom of Quito
Galapagos - Andes (16 days/15 nights)

Galapagos
& the Amazon
Galapagos - Amazon (16 days/15 nights)
Ecuador Tours

Historic Haciendas of the Andes
Cotopaxi - Antisana
- Otavalo (7 days/6 nights)
© 2010
Inka's Empire Corporation. All rights reserved.
|


Parnaiba Headwaters
National Park
Amazon Rainforest, Brazil

Hyacinth Macaw. Photo: Pete
Oxford.
Land Price (Private)
4 nights US$
2,320 5 nights US$ 2,765
6 nights US$ 3,210 per person
Excursions depart daily from Barreiras,
Brazil, which can be reached on weekday flights from the cities
of São Paulo or Salvador da Bahia. We meet you in Barreiras
to begin the five-hour drive through the wooded savannah, dry
scrubland and the red mesas of Hyacinth Cliffs. The first four
hours are bumpy, but the last hour between Corrente and the lodges
is a scenic and driving pleasure. An optional charter flight
from Barreiras to Corrente avoids the first four hours and is
available at additional cost. Season: Hyacinth Macaw viewing
is guaranteed only from 15 April to 15 July.
The land price includes escorted
transfers, private excursions with a naturalist guide, entrance
fees, private bungalow with private bath, all meals (see
details), all land and water transportation,
and travel insurance for
guests through the age of 59 years (over that age, there is a
supplementary fee). All prices are per person based on two people
sharing a guest room. For a detailed description of our services,
see Opulent
Itineraries.
Map Amazon Lodges
Intra-Tour Flights
& Fares
Air fares are in addition
to the land price.
Barreiras - Corrente
- Barreiras
An optional charter
flight is available at additional cost:

Hyacinth Cliffs and
Valley. Photo:
Pete Oxford.
What Luxury Link has to say about
Hyacinth Cliffs:
Saving the Amazon Rainforest in style...
-- Kimberly
Fay, LuxuryLink.com, April 2005
Inka's Empire Tours is like a generous, adventurous friend who's
always at your side as you travel to some of the world's most
enchanting destinations. With its Hyacinth Cliffs expedition,
this gracious companion guides you into the compelling beauty
of northeastern Brazil's Parnaiba Headwaters National Park.
Your journey begins and ends in Barreiras with a stay
at the luxurious Hyacinth Valley Lodge, established by
South American conservationists to guard rare species. You will
find the surrounding backdrop of palm-studded valleys, red-rock
cliffs and mesas ideal for close-up wildlife encounters and trophy
photo opportunities.
From a discreet blind, you will witness
the ballet of Hyacinth Macaws, the world's largest parrots,
as they gather to search for palm nuts. In the comfort of a hammock,
you will await the arrival of the endangered Maned Wolf.
Tool-using Brown Capuchin Monkeys and flocks of Red-and-Green
Macaws are among the other amazing creatures you will observe.
From chats with your native guides to swimming in the local river
and enjoying evening caipirinhas, this is a unique adventure
through the mysterious spirit of the Amazon.
Discover the wildlife treasures of
the Amazon on this fascinating 5-night escape.
As featured on PBS: The Real Macaw.

Brown Capuchin Monkey
with palm nuts.
Photo:
Pete Oxford.
Highlights
Hyacinth Valley Lodge
Day 1: Barreiras - Corrente -
Hyacinth Valley. Upon your
arrival in Barreiras from São Paulo or Salvador da Bahia,
we will meet you in the airport to begin the four-hour drive
in a 4 x 4 to Corrente, the biggest city in Brazil's northeastern
state of Piauí, then an hour more to Hyacinth Valley,
accessed by way of the tiny hamlet of São Gonzalo do Gurguéia.
After a day of traveling, have a relaxing dinner and discover
how the conservation project works by chatting with the local
guides, whose livelihood depends on the success of the enterprise,
which in turn relies on their incredible knowledge of the fauna
in the reserve. Iced mineral water, soft drinks and beer will
be available at the camp. If you are feeling a bit more adventurous,
try Brazil's famous "caipirinha", made from local rum
known as cachaça. We turn in early, by 9 pm, to be well
rested for our early start the next day.

Burrowing Owl.
Photo: Pete Oxford.
Day 2: Hyacinth Valley. Coffee and light breakfast are served when
guests are awakened at 4:30 am. Daybreak is about 5:30 am and
we aim to be in the blind at this time, before the first macaws
arrive to eat palm nuts at this dry forest clearing. The blind,
which accommodates up to 16 people, with eight front-row seats,
overlooks a feeding site for a large flock of Hyacinth Macaws.
Viewing dozens of the world's largest and most spectacular parrots
in their natural environment is pure magic. And the perfect photo
conditions will ensure the time you spend in this natural playground
will stay with you forever. Rays of soft light illuminate the
birds as they feed, rendering pictures of azure splendor. We
watch them feed on their staple palm nuts and playfully jockey
for position on favorite perches in the trees that surround the
blind.
Just a few years ago, these same birds
were targeted by trappers. The success of the project ensures
that these birds can now nest in unblemished cliffs and feed
in the preserved dry forest without any interference. The birds
usually arrive at 6 am and leave by 8:30 or 9 am. We then return
to camp for a full, relaxing breakfast. The balance of the day
is enjoyed hiking from the camp to look for birds or swimming
in a nearby crystalline river. In the afternoon, we return to
the Hyacinth blind, where the birds return to feed between 3:30
and 6 pm.

Maned Wolves scouting
for mice.
Photo:
Pete Oxford.
Day 3: Hyacinth Valley - Hyacinth
Cliffs - Hyacinth Valley.
We rise early again to view the Hyacinths. After lunch, we grab
our daypacks for the journey out to the Hyacinth Cliffs Lodge,
BioBrasil's other property. On the leisurely, two-hour journey
to the Hyacinth Cliffs, travelers may encounter Burrowing Owls,
Red-legged Seriemas, Greater Rheas, Toco Toucans, Red-bellied
Macaws, Amazon parrots, Sun Parquets, large hawks or any of the
other over 200 bird species that call the reserve home.
We arrive at dusk and enjoy the extreme
isolation of this lovely spot, where the nearest people are at
least 10 miles (16 km) away. Before dark, at 4:00 pm, we will
return to Hyacinth Valley. After dinner, we will wait for the
elusive Maned Wolf, who usually makes us stay up late before
putting in an appearance. Hammocks are provided to ease the wait.
It is well worth it, however, since this graceful animal is as
beautiful as it is elusive.

Blue-fronted Parrot.
Photo: Pete
Oxford.
Greenwing Valley Camp
Day 4: Hyacinth Valley - Greenwing
Valley. On this day, we
will go to the breathtaking Greenwing Valley site. From here,
we head to a blind to watch the antics of the Brown Capuchin
Monkeys, who demonstrate why their reputation as the chimpanzee
of the New World is well deserved. They use stones to crack open
nuts in an unparalleled display of manual dexterity -- all within
30 feet (9 m) of the visitor. We will overnight in a tented camp
close to the Capuchins and other creatures, such as the Great
Potoo or Horned Screamer as well as Greenwinged (Red-and-Green)
Macaws.
Hyacinth Valley Lodge
Day 5: Greewing Valley - Hyacinth
Valley. We're again enchanted
by Capuchin and Greenwinged (Red-and-Green) Macaw activity in
the morning. After lunch, we head back to the Hyacinth Valley
Lodge. On the way, we stop at a lovely century-old mango grove,
where groups of Black Howler Monkeys perch on trees, curiously
scrutinizing our bewildered stares.
Day 6: Hyacinth Valley - Corrente
- Barreiras - Home. We have
a final chance to visit the Hyacinth Macaw blind and explore
the area around the lodge. After an early lunch, we will set
off on the return journey to Barreiras just in time to take the
flight back home.
Details

Brown Capuchin Monkey
smashing palm nut.
Photo: Pete Oxford.
Recently scientists caught a glimpse of
wild monkeys
using tools in a surprisingly sophisticated
way.
-- Jennifer Steinberg Holland
Tool Time,
Monkey Style, National Geographic Magazine, January 2004
Hyacinth Cliffs
Location: Parnaíba Headwaters
National Park, Brazil. Reserve
size: 19,000 acres within and adjacent to the 1.8-million-acre
Parnaíba Headwaters National Park. Wildlife it protects: Hyacinth Macaws, Red-and-Green
Macaws, Blue-and-Gold Macaws, Burrowing Owls, Great Potoos, Maned
Wolves, Jaguars, tool-using Brown Capuchin Monkeys and Black-and-Gold
Howler Monkeys.
Every half century or so, an amazing
new wildlife destination bursts onto the South American scene.
Such is the case for Hyacinth Cliffs of the sunny, dry forests
of central Brazil. No other destination in Brazil offers so much
charismatic wildlife in so little time -- and with so much comfort.

Maned Wolf scouting
for mice. Photo:
Pete Oxford.
This new lodge complex is located at
Brazil's new, 1.8-million-acre Parnaiba Headwaters National Park.
At one-third the size of New Jersey, this park is Brazil's largest
park outside the Amazon and protects far more dry tropical forest
than any other reserve on Earth. Only 10% of the world's original
dry tropical forest remains today, while half of all wet tropical
forest still stands, so the Parnaiba Headwaters National Park
is of exceptional conservation importance.

Brown Capuchin Monkey
wielding "hammer" rock to smash palm nuts. Photo: Pete Oxford.
From the comfort of Hyacinth Cliffs,
you can see some of the most exciting wildlife in Brazil. The
Park harbors more than 1,500 Hyacinth Macaws -- 50-100 times
more than any other national park. It also is the most important
reserve for the endangered Maned Wolf, which is the world's largest
and most beautiful wild canid. Finally, Parnaiba Park is the
only place on Earth where Brown Capuchin Monkeys demonstrate
the world's most complex tool use by nonhuman primates. This
incredible display of intelligence was reported for the first
time in 2004, initially in National Geographic Magazine and then
worldwide in a BBC TV documentary. There is only one place to
see all of these amazing creatures, and that is Hyacinth Cliffs.

A private bungalow at
the Hyacinth Valley Lodge. Photo: Pete Oxford.
Hyacinth Cliffs are the only visitor
infrastructure at the Parnaiba Headwaters National Park. The
lodge complex is divided into three strategically-located compounds,
separated by scenic drives of 60-90 minutes: Hyacinth Cliffs
Lodge, Hyacinth Valley Lodge, and Greenwing Valley Camp. Each
of the two lodges has seven double-occupancy bungalows with private
bathrooms, while the camp has walk-in tents equipped with full
beds and shared bathrooms. With its green, open, palm-studded
valleys rimmed by 300-600-foot-tall, red-rock cliffs and mesas,
the scenery at our locales looks remarkably like verdant parts
of the American southwest.

Scientifically-designed
photo blind near the flock of Hyacinth Macaws. Photo: Pete Oxford.
Excellent sunlight for photography,
superb scenery, and extraordinarily exotic animals create a unique
opportunity to become the nature photographer of your dreams.
Scientifically-designed observation blinds deliver unbelievable
photo opportunities, including dozens of Hyacinth Macaws and
Greenwinged (Red-and-Green) Macaws at only 30 feet (9 m), Maned
Wolves at only 10 feet (3 m) and tool-using Brown Capuchin Monkeys
at 30 feet. Additionally, we are often rewarded with excellent
views of Red-legged Seriemas, Blue-and-Gold Macaws, Greater Rheas,
White Woodpeckers, Jenday Conures, and Black-and-Gold Howler
Monkeys.

Hyacinth Macaws gather
to search for ground-level palm nuts. Photo: Pete Oxford.
Hyacinth Cliffs surprised the world
by instantly shouldering aside the Pantanal as the best wildlife
destination in Brazil. The Parnaiba Headwaters Park is three
times larger than all the protected areas in the Pantanal combined,
and no lodge or combination of lodges in the Pantanal can provide
so much charismatic, colorful wildlife at such close range and
in as little as three or four nights!

Greenwinged (Red-and-Green)
Macaws. Photo:
Pete Oxford.
The distant herons and caimans of the
Pantanal, while wonderful, simply cannot compare with charismatic
wolves, "Einstein monkeys", and close-up macaws. Moreover,
Hyacinth Cliffs is easy and fun to visit at any time of year,
as it never floods and is virtually free of mosquitoes.

Burití palms
(Mauritia flexuosa). Photo: Pete Oxford.
Hyacinth Cliffs allows you to visit
the world's largest and most spectacular dry forest park and
enjoy some of the rarest and most beautiful wildlife of the Americas.
Your friends will never have seen anything like the quality of
wildlife photos and video that you will bring home. Enjoy a wildlife
experience you thought was available only to National Geographic
photographers, and at a surprisingly affordable price.

Blue-and-Gold Macaw. Photo: Pete
Oxford.
Hyacinth Cliffs consists of three separate
lodging locations, separated by scenic, 60-90 minute drives.
You reach the lodges by flying on large turboprop planes from
the cities of Sao Paulo or Salvador da Bahia to the city of Barreiras
and then driving 5 hours north. This region of Brazil has no
malaria and almost no mosquitoes or other biting flies.

Red-legged Seriema. Photo: Pete
Oxford.
We recommend 3-6 nights at a combination
of the three sites to properly view all four of these unique
spectacles: Maned Wolves, tool-using Brown Capuchin Monkeys,
and separate, large flocks of Hyacinth and Greenwinged (Red-and-Green)
Macaws at close range. All the additional wildlife and world-class
cliff scenery represent "icing on the cake". These
attractions peak during the long, cooler dry season, running
from April through October, but there is excellent wildlife viewing
in every month of the year.
More
about Hyacinth Cliffs
-- Dr. Charles
A. Munn, ornithologist and vice president of the BioBrasil Foundation.
 
Inka's
Empire Tours...
Extraordinary explorations.
© 2010
Inka's Empire Corporation, Luxury Peru Tours & Travel. All rights reserved.
|