sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Delights of the Amazon: swimming with dolphins, gawking at alligators

MANAUS, Brazil The warning from our guide made clear that this 鈥渇orest walk鈥 would be anything but a leisurely stroll. 鈥淟ook before grabbing any branches because the ants bite.
D1-brazil.jpg
A sunset in the Amazon rainforest is seen from a tributary of the Rio Negro outside Manaus, Brazil. Boat travel is common throughout the Amazon basin, both for forest dwellers and tourists.

MANAUS, Brazil

The warning from our guide made clear that this 鈥渇orest walk鈥 would be anything but a leisurely stroll.

鈥淟ook before grabbing any branches because the ants bite. You will be in pain for 24 hours,鈥 said Jackson Edirley da Silva, wearing a bright yellow shirt and rubber boots. 鈥淎nd watch where you step. You don鈥檛 want to get bitten by a snake.鈥

Our group, about a dozen tourists, got quiet.

鈥淒on鈥檛 worry,鈥 I whispered to our sons, ages 6 and 7. 鈥淲e will be careful where we step.鈥

My wife and I had flown with our kids from Rio de Janeiro to Manaus, a major jumping-off point for Brazil鈥檚 Amazon rain forest.

From there, we took a boat for an hour ride up a tributary of the Rio Negro, or Black River, and then walked 15 minutes to an 鈥渆co lodge鈥 in the middle of a forest.

Even at the edge of the forest, the sounds made a strong impression. Monkeys screeched, birds bellowed and bugs buzzed, a cacophony that felt both terrifying and calming.

Ironically, we would learn that it鈥檚 rare to actually see most of the animals. You are in their house, and they know how to hide.

Our cabin was sparse, but had some essentials: a small refrigerator for bottled water, mosquito screens on the windows and an air-conditioning unit that combated the oppressive humidity that would cling to us upon walking outside.

Despite its worldwide fame, not to mention increasing importance as climate change becomes a global issue, the Amazon is not visited in great numbers.

Amazonas, Brazil鈥檚 largest and heavily forested state, which includes Manaus, was visited by just under 1.2 million foreign and Brazilian tourists in 2014, the most recent year for available statistics.

By comparison, the Eiffel Tower in Paris gets roughly seven million visitors a year.

For those who get here, it鈥檚 hard to imagine disappointment.

Over the course of a week, we swam with fresh-water dolphins, gawked at alligators wrestled from river banks by scrappy guides, fished for piranhas and stood in awe at 鈥渢he meeting鈥 of the Negro and Solimoes Rivers (called the Amazon River in Manaus and eastward), where a difference in density and temperature means that for miles, black and yellow waters flow side by side.

The food also has unique tastes. Massive tucunare fish get chopped into fillets that taste like chicken with an extra dose of zest, potato-like manioc roots are prepared with forest spices that most people have never heard of and acai berries are ubiquitous 鈥 the kids particularly enjoyed sucking on acai popsicles during the afternoon heat.

The Amazon basin, which spans several countries in South America and is nearly as large as the continental United States, has always been central to Brazilian identity, even if most Brazilians will never visit.

Conspiracy theories periodically erupt about other countries鈥 alleged attempts to take the territory or plunder its myriad resources, and pressure from international organizations to stop deforestation often draws the ire of politicians.

Luiz Inacio 鈥淟ula鈥 da Silva, president between 2003 and 2010 and poll leader for next year鈥檚 race, once famously said: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want any gringo coming here asking us to let an Amazon dweller die of hunger under a tree.鈥

Te Batista, a boat operator who we hired two days to take us to several areas of the Rio Negro, told me tourists always ask him about conservation.

鈥淔oreigners are afraid about the future of the forest,鈥 said Batista, who added flatly that he was not. 鈥淭hey worry that the cutting here will mean they die in their countries鈥 because of global warming.

At the heart of conservation discussions are indigenous tribes, who provide windows into life in the Amazon both before the arrival of Portuguese colonists in the 16th century and today. While there are still scores of 鈥渦ncontacted鈥 tribes in the Amazon, most are at least partially connected to Brazilian society and live in ways that combine their traditions with aspects of modern-day life.

One day we visited a small village of about 100 people belonging to the Dessana tribe.

As they have for centuries, the women wore hay skirts and were topless. The men wore small woven cloths on their hips, though noticeably with tight black briefs underneath. They all had red face paint and many wore feathers on their heads and necklaces made with alligator and jaguar teeth. Recently caught fish cooked over a fire and a pottery bowl of large baked black ants were available to snack on.

Speaking limited Portuguese, a young man named Bohoka told me the tribe lived as they always had 鈥 in little huts without electricity, running water or cellphones 鈥 but with a few modern twists that included allowing tourists to visit.

鈥淭ourism allows us to maintain our way of life,鈥 said Bohoka, 24, who showed us necklaces and other handcrafts for sale.

The village was only about a 90-minute boat trip from Manaus but worlds away. The gritty port city of over 2 million people is an eclectic mix of a colonial architecture, urban sprawl and hustle from hardscrabble touts trying to eke out a living. It reached its splendor in the 19th century when growing global demand for rubber brought throngs to the area to cut and gather sap from rubber trees. A beautiful opera house built during that time, which today hosts several shows each year, is the city鈥檚 main tourist attraction.

As I chatted with Bohoka, a small boat pulled up on the riverbank. About a dozen members of the tribe, all dressed in slacks and T-shirts, got off carrying plastic bags. They disappeared into their huts and remerged a few minutes later wearing traditional clothes.

Bohoka explained they had gone to 鈥渢he city,鈥 or Manaus, to buy sewing materials.

鈥淲hy couldn鈥檛 they just wear traditional clothing there?鈥 I asked, somewhat jokingly.

Bohoka laughed. 鈥淚mpossible,鈥 he said. 鈥淚ndians鈥 home is the forest.鈥

Peter Prengaman is The Associated Press news director in Brazil.