Lake three Chimbadas Tambopata

 

Lake three Chimbadas Tambopata:

Located on the left bank of the river Tambopata Lake three Chimbadas Tambopata , 15 minutes there plying upstream from the native community Hell is within the buffer zone of the Tambopata National Reserve. This lake is

the second most visited by tourists who come to the Madre de Dios. The Lake Three Chimbadas has a length of 3 km in the jungle.

It is characterized near the shore abundant submerged vegetation where you can watch herons and tuqui tuqui bird looking for food is presented; on the shores of the lake and watch the shanshos there an area where bats are almost

always sleeping on the tree trunks. On the other margins, vegetation is wooded and there are trees like huayo sugar

and shihuahuaco in this tree makes its nest harpy eagles, with two meters wide with outstretched wings, is the bird of prey larger size Peruvian Amazonia.

The Lake Three Chimbadas and its resources are used by the native community Infierno as part of their ancestral

territory, the villagers know the existing medicinal plants in the vicinity, such as cord grass whose sap serves as

anesthesia. It closed its settings and lafalta contact with river Tambopata on Lake fish of various species inhabit as

boquichico, sea bass and piranhas; and mammals like squirrel monkeys or huasitas, peccaries, tapirs and others in

the jungle.

Informations

native community – Lake three Chimbadas Tambopata .

This settlement, located along the Baawaja or Tambopata River is formed by a segment of population that identifies as baawajakuiñaji u ‘originating from Baawaja river. “It has been recognized as native community since April 20,

1976; The families also live mestizos, a fact that has been the cause of many internal conflicts. The town is located on

both sides of River and includes the period from the hamlet of Chonta and lake three chimbadas, about three laps

down to the mouth of the creek La Torre territory.

It has a population of 345 inhabitants, but only a portion is recognized as the only ects and adults speak or understand the language. This is due to the presence of mestizos and intermarriage in the jungle.

Adventure on Lake three Chimbadas Tambopata:

Visit the Lake Three Chimbadas. Thirty minutes by boat and walk forty-five minutes lead us to the shores of Lake Three Chimbadas. From here, a catamaran and a native paddler lead us to give a silent around the lake, to

appreciate the lake fauna at its peak of activity in the Peruvian jungle. Seek alligators, riverside birds, the peculiar

shanshos, and hopefully be able to observe family otters (seen by 60% of our visitors), known as otters world’s

largest freshwater. Your point most active from dawn until about 8 or 9 am (lunch) inside the jungle adventure.

Ethnobotanical Tour on Lake Three Chimbadas: A twenty minute boat downstream, is the Ñape Center. This center is a communal organization that produces medicines using as a basis the medicinal plants that grow in

this ethnobotanical center and given to people who come up there to heal. In a system of roads plants used for

medicinal purposes as well as for other purposes such as construction or transportation in the jungle are presented. (Dinner).

Clay lick: The clay lick is only twenty minutes from the hostel. From a blind can be observed at a distance of approximately 20 meters descend on most clear, dozens of parrots and parakeets to feed the clay lick days. The lick is

early visit in the morning, late morning or afternoon, depending on when you are watching more activity. Return to the lodge for lunch.

Night Walk at Lake three Chimbadas: You will have the opportunity to walk at night, it’s time activity most mammals, but rarely seen. Much more common are frogs with shapes and sounds as bizarre as their natural

histories. Overnight at Posada Amazonas.

Lake Tupac Amaru – Tambopata Reserve – Lake three Chimbadas Tambopata

Located in the territories of the Tupac Amaru community, approximately 25 minutes from the city of Puerto Maldonado, the water mirror has an area of approximately 166 hectares. It is suitable for the practice of tourism and

recreational activities, observation of flora and fauna in the Peruvian jungle. In this lake you can find fish like

piranhas, smooth, bujurquis, cops, carachamas, zúngaros and maidens; among the reptiles are the taricayas and

black alligator. The animals that frequent the banks are añujes, peccaries, picuros, some herds of peccaries and

occasionally the jaguar in the Peruvian jungle.

The lake invites visitors to pasearen canoe and catamarans and sports activities like fishing (catch pelease) and swimming in the jungle.

 

Lake Yacumama Puerto Maldonado .

is located on the left bank of the Madre de Dios River, it is an old meander and abandoned watercourse Madre de Dios River. To reach the lake you travel 30 minutes by the Interoceanic Highway from Puerto Maldonado to the

height of the village of Madama, where a diversion with a carrozable way in which it is entered to the lake. The body

of water has a current length of 1.5 km in length.

This lake Madama is one of the few that is located in the district of Las Piedras, in the surrounding areas of

agriculture and livestock activities are developed. It is characterized by a landscape of palm trees rising tide and

flood large areas, giving the lake a special beauty. You can also observe reptiles like the black caiman, birds like

egrets, the hoatzin or shansho and cormorants.

The Peruvian Amazon has had different historical and social processes, which are mainly related to economic booms

that have marked the first settlements and the consequent migration caused by the extraction of natural resources

and the expansion of the agricultural frontier without proper and sustainable management of those resources. In this

process, some native ethnic groups joined the Western market economy, while others, because of its location,

remained basically excluded.

Thus, extraction of different natural resources and search for interconnecting the centers Amazon villages to the big

cities for the transfer of goods have led, over time, different forms of integration and land use. In this context, the

Amazon region has been characterized in different ways depending on the political and economic priorities of each country.

The importance of the Peruvian Amazon,

for its biodiversity, genetic resources and water resources, as a source of food and also a deposit of large amounts of minerals, oil and gas, has caused large infrastructure integration projects are developed to scale regional as well as

initiatives conservation looking to integrate the rational and sustainable use of natural resources and mitigate the

impacts of unsustainable economic activities, the effects of climate change and indirect impacts of large infrastructure projects.

In this panorama stands Amazon in Peru, the region of Madre de Dios, a regional space, and is recognized as one of

the most important biodiversity hotspots in the world, characterized by three features: the fact that this region has

implemented a set of instruments of zoning and land use; by the fact that it is one of the Peruvian regions with a recent decline in poverty levels due to increased economic activities and rehabilitation construction of the

Interoceanic Sur highway, the main road infrastructure project in the region.

The Madre de Dios region also highlighted by dynamic economic and environmental partner posing in different

processes of cultural, economic and territorial displacement, and because it is one of the areas recently seized in the

Peruvian Amazon: 46.30% of its territory It consists of protected natural areas.

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