Today was the day we had been looking forward to–our Amazon jungle adventure. The Amazon is a mythical place and everyone has different expectations. For me, I would have liked to have had a chance to venture deep into the heart of the jungle where no human has ever ventured and the plants are so thick no light can permeate; to discover a cancer curing plant that has never been documented by modern science; to narrowly escape being crushed and swallowed by an 18 meter long Anaconda; to witness monkeys swinging from branch to branch; and to spot insects larger than my hand. But that is a lot to accomplish during a 3 hour hike.
We started out in the canoes again, and headed to the hotel’s private reserve in the Amazon. We had to wear the rubber boots again because of the mud. (This means that we did not need to bring those darn hiking boots that take up half the suitcase and weigh a hundred pounds! Two trips in a row where we took boots and didn’t need to use them. Ugh!). We decided that since we were wearing ill-fitting Wellies, the hike couldn’t be too tough, so we also left behind our new trekking poles we bought on Prime Day. As soon as we got there, though, they said everyone grab a stick. There weren’t enough to go around, so the guides quickly disappeared into the forest with their machetes to cut some more.
Then they said people who want the easy hike, go to the right. People who want the hard hike, go to the left. And thetwinsontour chose…..to go to the left! That’s correct! We were ready to brave everything the Amazon had to throw at us.
We sloshed through mud puddles, climbed a few steps, and stopped to talk about a lot of plants. The most interesting to us was the iron tree. When you tap on it with a machete it sounds like metal clinking against metal, but that’s not the interesting part. The cool part is the root system. It has a lot of straight roots above the ground, which look for water. These roots effectively act like feet as they look for water, they make the tree walk. I don’t remember how many meters they can move per year though. I stared at it for quite a while willing it with my mind to start walking, but watching a tree walk is even slower than watching paint dry.
Then we got to do a tiny zipline chair to cross over a deep valley! It was slow going because only one person could go at a time, and then they had to manually pull the chair back for the next person. It was just a short ride, but it was still pretty awesome. We also walked one by one over a suspension bridge.
The whole while I am thinking this is a really easy hike, and wondering how easy the easy hike is. Then our guide said you two go that way. It took me a minute, but then I realized that he was putting the slowest people at the front of the line. Yep, I am the slowest and proud of it! But to be fair, part of the reason I am slow is because I stop to take pictures. How can you go to the Amazon and not take some selfies?
Anyways, we immediately started climbing steps and more steps. We made it to the hard part of the hike! It still wasn’t super hard though–there were random railings to keep us from falling into an amazonian abyss. Mostly it was just a ton of muddy steps and an uphill ascent. We finally made it to a panoramic vista with incredible views–perfect for a few selfies! Then it was time to go back down. Again he put us at the front of the group, but it was them other people that had trouble keeping up with me, the expert Amazon trekker. Nothing slows me down, not even all of the butterflies we saw– because they were way too fast and fluttering all over the place. I never even had a chance to pull my phone out of my pocket before they were gone.
Did I mention, that this hike was also slightly awkward due to the fact that I was wearing my swimsuit underneath my clothes? Well, it was. Why did I wear my swimsuit under my clothes for a hot, sticky Amazon hike you ask? Well, because we were riding on a balsa wood raft after the hike to cool down, and you get a little wet on the raft as it rises and falls with the swells of the river.
Our guide said put all of the young people on the first raft, so thetwinsontour quickly jumped on. We weren’t the youngest on the trip, but we are definitely young at heart.We got on the raft and as more people got on the cold water seeped through the logs, and sloshed us. We pushed out into the river and the guide promptly pushed one of the guys overboard, and then he jumped in as well. After a minute’s hesitation, I decided to jump in too. It was even colder once I jumped in, but I got accustomed to it real quickly, in like 10 seconds.
I got back on the raft– really graceful like when I get out of my ladder-less pool and roll around on my deck like a beached whale, but then I realized that most of the people were staying in the river, so I jumped back in too. After all, how many chances do you have to swim in the Amazon River? It was actually a tributary to the Amazon, but it was a river in the Amazon jungle. And you didn’t need to swim. You just float in your life vest and let the current take you downstream because the current is quite fast. But these are just minor details. It was amazing to float in the muddy brown waters and just watch the amazing scenery as you pass by.
Somehow our boat got way ahead of the other 2 boats in the group, so I am glad that I got on that first boat of “young people” because the other people didn’t know that they could swim instead of sit on the raft. I think 97% of them would have stayed on the rafts anyways, but I hate to think that I would have missed this incredible experience had I gotten on a different raft. As one of the people in our group said, he can check this off the bucket list. He didn’t know it was on the bucket list until he checked it off. I feel the exact same way!
I’m not sure how long we floated, but it felt like forever and yet just a few minutes at the same time. As we got to a shallow rocky spot, we had to get back onto the raft. Then the canoes showed up and we had to transfer from one moving vessel to another to head back to the hotel for lunch. Just picture it– thetwinsontour standing on a raft in the Amazon, surfing down the river, trying to leap from a raft to a canoe, without falling. I am sure this is exactly what it is like to leap from the roof to roof of moving train cars like in the movies. Anyway you look at it, I was pretty bad ass.
I decided to take a quick shower before lunch, and it was a good thing that I did. My body was covered in sand from the brown river water.
After lunch we went on a chocolate plantation tour and to the animal rescue. I didn’t care much about the chocolate tour, but I was really keen to see some animals. It’s basically a zoo full of rescued macaws that squawk like crazy whenever someone walks by. I’m sure these beautiful yet extremely evil birds drive the poor monkeys crazy. Some were rescued from smuggling in the black market pet trade and others were rescued from abusive captivity. They try to release the animals back to the wild where they belong, but if they have injuries or were in captivity too long they would never survive in the wild. They also have a caiman that someone was keeping in a home aquarium, and a jaguar and leopard that I think were rescued from drug dealers. Both of the big cats have large 1 acre enclosures and were of course hiding from us.
On the way back to the hotel we found some monkeys in trees along the river bank, so our guide fed them some fruit by putting it on the end of a long bamboo stick. I am pretty sure that I am morally opposed to this, as it’s probably not a good idea to feed the monkeys because they may start to attack passing boats wanting yummy Ecuadorian bananas (and– thetwinsontour have tasted Ecuadorian bananas and clamor for them as well), but it was amazing to see them. I was in a different boat than the guide, so I didn’t get as close to them. Luckily I had my good zoom camera with me. My sister was in the third boat, so she was even further away than I was. After a few minutes one of the monkeys pulled the bamboo stick out of our guide’s hands and it fell into the water. That was our sign that it was time to leave.
And that pretty much sums up our Amazing Amazon Adventure (don’t you just love alliteration?).
Goodbye for now.
Love,
thetwinsontour



