Peruvian Wildlife to Sandoval Lake 2 day

Peruvian Wildlife to Sandoval Lake  -This tour offers an exciting opportunity to experience the diverse wildlife and stunning scenery of the Peruvian jungle, providing memorable encounters with nature.

 

SUMMARY

Peruvian Wildlife to Sandoval Lake 2 day

This tour to observe the Peruvian Wildlife to Sandoval Lake  flora and fauna in a few days you will be able to observe and enjoy different species that inhabit this magical paradise that is very natural.

  • Length: 2 Days/1 Nights
  •  Location: Southern Peru, Madre de Dios Department, Puerto Maldonado
  •  Type of service: Private or Group in the Travel
  •  Start Point : Pick-up from the Hotel/Airbnb/Aiport or Bus Terminal in Puerto Maldonado
  •  Ending Point: Drop off the Hotel/Airport or Bus Terminal in Puerto Maldonado
  •  Departure: Every Day
  •  Activities:Sunrise and Sunset Photography, Amazon Peru, Sandoval Lake, walking in amazon , Night walk  
  •  Best time to visit:March – November
  •  Accomodation :1 night
  •  Meals .1 Breakfast /1 Lunch /1 Dinner
  •  Tour Guides : Professional bilingual local guide (well-equipped with guiding gear)
  •  Minimum of participants: 2
  •  Maximum of participants: 10
  •  Price per person: USD
  •  Additional :Single Room

Peruvian Wildlife to Sandoval Lake 2 day

  Peruvian Wildlife to Sandoval Lake offers an immersive experience in the Peruvian jungle, allowing participants to

encounter a variety of wildlife and explore the natural beauty of the region. Here’s an overview of what to expect:

Day 1: Puerto Maldonado To Sandoval Lake  .

Pickup and Transfer: You’ll be picked up from the Airport or Bus terminal in Maldonado by a guide who will

transfer you to the tour office for registration and a briefing.

Boat Trip: Transfer to the port where a boat awaits to start the tour. During the trip, there are opportunities to observe different species of wildlife.

Jungle Walk: After arriving at the checkpoint, embark on a 4-kilometer flat walk through the jungle with stops to observe and learn about various species including birds, monkeys, insects, and possibly larger animals.

Canoe Ride: Following the jungle walk, embark on a canoe ride through the jungle to reach the accommodation.

Afternoon Exploration: After lunch, explore the jungle on foot, observing flora and fauna up close.

Sunset Photography: Return to the lodge to capture photos of the sunset.

Night Activities: Enjoy a night walk and a thrilling canoe ride in the dark.

Day 2: Sandoval lake adventure to Aerport / Bus Station  -Peruvian Wildlife to Sandoval Lake.

Early Morning Activity: Rise early to observe the palm clay licks where birds gather to feed.

Breakfast: Return to the lodge for breakfast.

Canoe Ride: Take a canoe ride to capture photos of the sunrise and explore the lake to observe species such as

alligators, turtles, migratory birds, and otters.

Return Journey: Pack belongings and board a canoe to navigate back to the port in the jungle.

Return to Puerto Maldonado: Walk back to the checkpoint and then transfer by boat on the Madre de Dios

River to Puerto Maldonado.

Transfer: Transfer to the tour office to collect luggage before being taken to the airport or bus stations.

 

 

ITINERARY

Peruvian Wildlife to Sandoval Lake 2 day

1 Dayas : Puerto Maldonado To Sandoval Lake  .

Peruvian Wildlife to Sandoval Lake  -Pick up from the Airport/Bus terminal of the City of Maldonado, where our guide will meet you waiting 30 minutes before your arrival, then transfer to our office to register where we will have a brief talk about the tour. We recommend you carry the necessary luggage and leave in the warehouse.
Transfer to the port where our boat awaits us. To begin the tour, during the trip we will have great possibilities of observing different species. We will arrive at the checkpoint where we will register. From there we will begin a 4-kilometer flat walk through the middle of the jungle. different stops where our guide will explain to us about the species that we will catch such as birds, monkeys, insects with the possibility of seeing some large animals, at the end of the walk, we will embark on our rowing canoe in a winding shape through the middle of the jungle approximately of 1 hour 20 minutes which will be the next port, from there we will take a short 7 minute walk where our hostel is located.
accommodation, in the afternoon after our lunch we will explore a walk through the deep jungle observed from very close the wild flora and fauna, more than different species, such as anthill, sloth, among others and native and medicinal plants, orchids, fern, etc.
Return to the lodge to take the best photos of the sunset. And at night we will take a night walk and then a ride in our Aremo canoe will be a very exciting adventure.

Day 2: Return to Puerto Maldonado – Peruvian Wildlife to Lake Sandoval.

Today we will get up very early to go see the palm clay licks where every morning these birds gather to eat the bark and leaves and nuts that are very rich in protein.
Return to enjoy our breakfast.
We will go out in our rowing canoe where we will have the best photos of the sunrise and then we will enter the deepest part of the lake to observe different species such as alligators, turtles, migratory birds with the luck of seeing the family of otters.

Return to the hostel now we will pack our things to board the canoe again and navigate Lake Sandoval to the small port that is located in the middle of the jungle and then we will start walking back to the checkpoint and where our boat awaits us outside. overboard and navigate the Madre de Dios River to the city of Puerto Maldonado.

Transfer to our office to collect your luggage and then we transfer to the airport or bus stations.

INCLUDED (NOT)

Included in the  Peruvian Wildlife to Sandoval Lake  :

  • A professional naturalist Tour Guide;
  • Motorboat transportation;
  • Transfer transportation to the airport.
  • Meals: 1 Breakfast, 1 Lunch, 1 Dinner and drinking water (Please note: vegetarian option upon request for no extra cost!);
  • Rooms with private bathroom  1 nights in our Lodge;
  • First aid kit,
  • Rubber boots.

Not included in the Peruvian Wildlife to Sandoval Lake   :

  • Any flight nor airport departure taxes;
  • Travel insurance;
  • Vaccination;
  • Breakfast on the first day and Lunch on the last day;
  • Drinks;
  • Tips to local staff.
  • Entrance fee to the Sandoval Lake Reserve;

What to take with you to the Peruvian Wildlife to Sandoval Lake :

  • Mosquito repellent (DEET 35 recommended as a MINIMUM!!),
  • Original passport,
  • Small backpack,
  • Long sleeved cotton shirts (preferably green coloured),
  • Long cotton trousers,
  • Cotton long socks (to be put into your trousers),
  • Comfortable walking shoes,
  • Sandals or light shoes,
  • Rain gear (e.g. rain poncho),
  • Swimsuit;
  • Binoculars (we also rent it),
  • Camera and its charger,
  • Plastic bags to be used for clothes and a camera,
  • A hat as a protection against the Sun or rain,
  • Toiletries,
  • Small towel,
  • Toilet paper,
  • Sun cream,
  • Sunglasses,
  • Flashlight (with spare bulb and batteries),
  • A bottled water (1 litre as a minimum),
  • Pocket money (Soles) to buy some beverages and souvenirs as well as to tip.

GALLERY LODGE

FREE INFO

AMAZON MONKEYS

 The BCI Howler Monkey is the Alouatta palliata, the mantled howler monkey, so-called because of the long reddish ruff of hair along the flanks of adult.Howler monkeys are among the largest of the New Worldprimates,

weighing 6 to 9 kilograms when adult. They have one of the widest geographical distributions of any New World primates, being found all the way from southern Mexico to northern Argentina. Six species of howler monkey are recognized – one only in Central America, one in Central and South America and four only in South America.

The howler species found on Barro Colorado Island is Alouatta palliata, the mantled howler monkey, so-called because of the long reddish ruff of hair along the flanks of adults. This species is found throughout Central America, extending south into Colombia. All howler species appear to occupy the same dietary niche.

They are vegetarian, eating new leaves, fruits and flowers for much of the year. But when fruit is in short supply, which on Barro Colorado Island generally occurs at the end of the rainy season and during the transition into the dry season – late  October, November, December – howlers are able to live for weeks or months at a time on diets composed entirely or almost entirely of leaves.

Howler monkeys have large sections in their gastrointestinal tract where the cellulose and hemicellulose of leaves is broken down by bacterial colonies. This process, known as fermentation, produces energy- rich fatty acids which are used by howler monkeys to help fuel their daily activities.Visitors to Barro Colorado Island

will inevitably hear howler monkey calls,

particularly in the early morning and late afternoon but also at other times of day. In fact, the most outstanding characteristic of howler monkeys is their howl – a long, drawn-out sonorous call produced by drawing air into an enlarged hyoid bone in the throat.

This vocalization, produced primarily by males, is regarded as the loudest call of any Neotropical animal and can be heard for a distance of two kilometers or more under appropriate conditions. All howler monkey troops typically give this call early in the morning in a type of “dawn chorus” which serves to let other howler monkey troops in their general area know their precise location. Howler troops dislike one another intensely and tend to fight if they come into contact. By howling, troops are able to space themselves efficiently throughout the forest canopy and avoid energetically costly and dangerous fights with other groups.

Howler monkeys also tend to howl in the late afternoon to announce their sleeping site as well as prior to heavy rainstorms. On Barro Colorado Island there are an estimated 60 howler monkey troops, averaging 19 monkeys per troop or around 1100-1200

monkeys in total. Most troops are composed of some 3-4 adult males, 7-10 adult females, 2-3 juveniles, and 3 to 5 infants. Female howlers give birth to a new infant every 18 to 24 months. In A. palliata, these babies are pale cream in color and are carried on the belly of the mother until they are a few weeks old. Then their fur begins to darken and they move to the mother’s back .

 A new howler monkey baby is intensely attractive to other troop members,

particularly adult females, and a new mother is constantly harassed and pressured by other members of the troop who want to sniff, look at and touch the new infant. The single infant is carried by the mother until it is around six months old. After the infant completes its first year, it is largely independent of the mother and moves about with the troop on its own.

On BCI, howler monkeys eat an average of 7.7 plant species per day – 5.1 leaf species, 1.7 fruit species and 0.8 flower species; over the course of an annual cycle, foods are taken from more than 125 plant species, largely canopy trees. All howler monkeys show a strong preference for foods from the plant family Moraceae, a

 

family which includes the genus Ficus

(or fig). On BCI, you will often find howlers in huge, tall wild fig trees as they eat both the tender new leaves and fruits of all of the fig species on the island. Because howlers often eat a lot of leaves, which are very low in sugars, they are energy conservers and on BCI troops spend an average of 66% of their daylight hours quietly resting and snoozing. Howler home ranges overlap with one another, each troop using about 32 hectares of the forest over the course of a year.

Howler troops on BCI are persistently infested with larvae of a parasitic fly, Alouattamyia baeri, the howler monkey bot fly – a host-specific species which
apparently can live only on howler monkeys.

These larvae tend to be localized in the throat region of howlers and can generally be seen with the naked eye. Having only a few larvae does not appear to harm the howler host to any notable degree, but if a monkey is reinfested repeatedly or is in poor physical condition, the cost of feeding multiple larvae may prove too high for the monkey to sustain and it may become ill or die. Howler monkeys die in highest numbers during the mid- to late rainy season on Barro Colorado Island (August through November), the time of year when nutritionally rich plant foods are in very short supply and howler monkeys appear least able to support the cost of bot fly larvae.

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