RSS

Day 7 in La Selva, March 22

The day after the rainstorm, we breakfasted on fish and boiled bananas. We were at this point quite mosquito-bitten, the natural result of sleeping with our feet too close to the mosquito net, or not reapplying the DEET immediately after washing. But that didn’t matter to us, because today we were crossing the region thickest with bufeos colorados.

The pink dolphins didn’t disappoint us. They were everywhere – in the deep stretches, following us through the flooded forest, leaping full-bodied out of the water so we could see their eraser-pink fins. Sometimes they would exhale sharply and loudly through their blowholes.

They were hard to photograph, as they saved their most dramatic leaps for their most surprising one, namely the first in a set of surfacings. And since this was whitewater, it was hard to predict where they would surface, though of course Señor and Señora were better at this than us.

I was most thrilled at the dolphin couple, which surfaced together every time, the bigger male and the smaller female side by side. I held the Professor’s hand and made goofy eyes at him.

We had been seeing them for a good hour, and frequently one or more would follow the boat. Señor and Señora were not pleased. Eventually, Señora asked Señor to pass her back one of the plants he had uprooted while we were on dry land. He had shown them to us, and said they were a good remedy for arthritis, and also to heat and revitalize the body (and make a man potent, which seemed to be a property of most of the plants he described,in addition to whatever else they did). These plants smelled just like garlic, though they did not look at all similar.

Señora took the root and made the sign of the cross on the paddle of her oar! I asked if that was good against dolphins. She said yes, and that one had been right next to her in the water, which was way too close.

Later, another dolphin followed us and I delighted to see its odd, smiling face turned right at us from just behind the boat. Señora tied the plant to a string and dropped it it he water, so it would drag behind the boat and ward off the dolphin.

IMG_3199

It is so odd to think about the relationship these people have with these animals. The Professor said, and I agree, that the closest parallel is to the faery: people, but not us, and not safe.

We also saw big iguanas on this day, as well as squirrel monkeys and a special type of ant whose nickname is the “balls-seeker.”

That night, we stayed at Poza Gloria, the nicest of the cabanas. We had a treat – another tourist was there! I will call him Kindergarten Cop, because he is a former kindergarten teacher who is traveling before he begins the police academy. A German man, he did not speak much English, but we all made the effort for a while.

Another woman at the cabana had heart trouble that night, so Señora gave her one of her own heart pills. It helped, and we all turned in. It was our last night in the jungle.

– The Private Eye

 

Day 6 in La Selva, March 21

At 3 am on the dot, I awoke to the sound of the radio playing a tinny AM station so romantically, I was briefly transported to a time I think more recognizable to my father, or even grandfather. Why not grandmother, you might ask? Sadly, when I think of old-fashioned radios and AM stations, I only think of men.

The stars were dim in the misty night, but visible. We drank coffee, loaded up the canoe, and began the long morning’s journey.

Shortly after beginning, Señor pulled our boat to the side of the river. He pointed out to us a very small crocodilian creature, I think a caiman. It was only a year old, and its eyes shone just above the water in the torchlight. Señor picked it up, and put it in a big shopping bag. We came across a second one, but let it go. We tried to make our best time, cutting out bends in the river by going straight through the flooded forest, which left me with a small lizard on my head. I have not mentioned them, but these lizards were abundant. Señor called them iguanas, but I will need to look up their English name at home.

IMG_3185

When we arrived at the little ruined cabana for breakfast, Señor pulled the caiman from its bag. He let each of us pet its pleasantly firm, ridged back, and showed us how to hold the beast. We each got to hold it, and then we let it go in the river. It stood in the bottom of the shallow water for a few minutes, and then crawled away into the waterlogged plants. We commented that we had just made the bathroom a bit dangerous, as I went wading in my rubber boots into the forest to answer the call of nature.

IMG_3190IMG_3195 IMG_3188

As we were eating breakfast, the sky darkened. We piled our things quickly into the boat, knowing that the cabana was in danger of collapse in a major storm. We covered everything with tarps. I put on my raincoat and the Professor’s rain pants, which he did not want, because they were hot and he would be rowing. Señor and Señora had made it clear that the larger boat required of this journey was a real bitch to row upstream, and the effort was hard on their older bones.

I was not feeling great either – I had slept on my back in a bad way the night before, and found myself unable to move my torso without a great spike of pain in my left hip. There we only a few positions I could take in the boat that were not painful, and none were comfortable. The Professor was not in pain, but had slept badly and was exhausted. We were none of us at our best.

We paddled off into the river. The sky opened in a terrific rainstorm. At first, I felt nonchalant about it, and enjoyed being in a real rainshower in a real rainforest. But soon, I began to feel like my wrists were wet. That’s odd, I thought, I am wearing a good raincoat, an old reliable that has kept me dry for years.

But I felt inside my sleeves, and sure enough, I was wet. My shirt felt damp too. As the rain poured on, I quickly discovered that my raincoat was failing me. Later, upon removing it, I saw that through heat in the backpack or simple wear, the waterproofing of the fabric had rubbed off along the seams in my shoulders, upper back, and hood.

In very little time, water was coursing down my chest. My legs, in brand-new rain pants, remained dry for longer, but soon the rivulets across my body flowed into a lake in the seat and underthighs of the pants. Being waterproof, they of course held the water excellently, just like a balloon.

Trying to adjust my position for the sake of my back, the back of my hands were briefly on the outside of the boat. The boat brushed into a section of palm tree poking out through the water. It was covered with spines. They embedded themselves in my knuckles. We paused a few minutes to work out the splinters.

Señor and Señora were working their hearts out, with the Professor speeding us along in high-current areas. I was distressed: in pain, soaking, and very very worried that Señor would throw out his back, or that Senora’s heart would burst. She had told us over breakfast that she took medication for her heart. There was nothing practical I could do besides keep my mouth shut and stay out of the way.

There was no sightseeing of animals, of course. Every single time Señor could cut off a meander by crossing the flooded forest, he did so. Sometimes, this made us pause as he stood in the front of the canoe, machete in hand, cutting us a path in the pouring rain. Once or twice, the big canoe got stuck between two saplings, or on submerged wood. At the most difficult one, Señor hopped out of the boat onto a log blocking our way. The log collapsed a few feet under the water, leaving him thigh deep in the wet stuff, but letting the boat go forward a little further.

It was still wedged between trees too close to each other. At the front of the boat, Señor pushed one half-submerged broken sapling aside. Señora stood on the collapsed log at the back of the boat, pushing. The Professor grabbed a tree to his right and a sapling to his left and mantled as though he was pushing himself above two rocks. The boat inched forward. It inched forward again. Finally, we were free. Señora got back in the boat, Señor hacked through some trivial brush like a swordsman among green opponents, and we finally gained the main body of the river. We crossed it and entered the forest again.

Señor had said it would be three o’clock by the time we got to the ranger station, but with all the shortcuts and The Professor’s help, we were there by noon. We were so happy to be somewhere dry. We all hung out our wet clothes, changed into dry ones, and ate pasta for lunch. We did our best not to bother Señor and Señora, so they could rest. I read a booklet from the ranger office about conservation of the lobos del rio, or giant river otter. We didn’t see any, but Señor had told me they had returned to being numerous in the region.

For dinner, we ate grilled goat with starches and salad. I asked Señor again about the man who had been sick back at the cabana.

He clarified things for me. In the heart of the forest, he said, lives a second kind of anaconda – the black anaconda. Everyone knows the yellow anaconda, he said, but the black one has never been in any book. Once, his own father was hunting for tapir, and he came across one, and tried to attack it. It ran as well as it could, but not far – it already had a young black anaconda wrapped around one of its legs. The little beast could not subdue the tapir, but it began calling for its mother, who could and did appreciate the giant meal.

The sick man had come across one of these black anaconda, Señor said. The man was struck by terror of the snake. The fear made him sick.

I asked Señor if he had any questions about the United States. He asked when boys and girls first get boyfriends and girlfriends. I told him usually between 13 and 17, though of course there are early and late bloomers. He said it was much the same locally, and told us that the (apparently 20something) ranger’s girlfriend, who was living with him at the station, was 15 years old and pregnant.

I was quick to say that we don’t generally want our people to start their families so early, and that teenagers often use birth control. He asked if we use the three-month shots, and I told him that we use those, and the pill, and also condoms and IUDs and implants. He was surprised at how long the latter two last. I felt a bit like an alien. He said he does not trust the pill because he has seen a case where a woman got pregnant while taking it, and the child was not normal.

He also was surprised that we neuter our cats and dogs. And I could understand why. After all our travels, I have come to the view that our pets are far more domesticated and controlled in the USA than in perhaps anywhere else in the world. I approve, but it is remarkable how unique it is.

– The Private Eye

 

The Second Story of Señor

Once upon a time, there was a monkey who was starving. He looked in all the trees, but couldn’t find any fruit or eggs, not even any insects that were safe to eat.

Eventually, he exhausted himself in his search. Sitting in a tree on yet another empty branch, he sighed in despair, because he did not have the energy to search any further.

But then suddenly, he had an idea.

Very carefully, he stuck his finger up his own butt and worked it around for a bit, since it had been so long since he had eaten. Then, he raised it up into the air. After a minute, he impatiently checked it – nothing. So he put his finger back in his butt and then, removing it, raised it into the air again. This time, he left it aloft for five minutes.

Sure enough, when he lowered his hand this time, there were flies on it. Lunchtime for the monkey!

In this way, he was able to sustain himself until he found more fruit.

THE END

– The Private Eye

 
 

Day 5 in La Selva, March 20

“Buenos dias!” called Señor from just outside the mosquito net. “Mira!”

We obediently raised the mosquito net and I put on my glasses. It was 7 a.m. Propping myself on my elbows, I could see an armadillo about a foot from our noses. It was an interesting naked little fellow with a few wiry hairs. It was also dead, with a gunshot to its neck just behind the ear.

Señor said Señora would be cooking it for breakfast; did we want any?

We said we would try it, then swiftly consulted the Neotropical Companion, our useful book on the flora, fauna and ecology of the New World tropics. Armadillos are incredibly common, as it turns out. So the Professor and I each ate a quarter of the beast with no problems. It was delicious, very much like good pork, and Señora served it with sautéed red onions, which marries well with both pork and armadillo. It was a nice change from fish, though I never was unhappy to eat fish.

(We hadn’t only eaten fish. Once or twice we ate pasta tossed in a light tomato-onion-chicken bouillon sauce and served with boiled eggs. Señora apologized for this, as she did for every meal that did not involve fresh meat and three kinds of starch, but The Professor was so happy.)

After breakfast, Señor, the Professor and I all boarded our canoe. Leaving Señora behind at camp, we returned to our trail of the previous night. We hiked through the rainforest to a tapir salt lick – a place where tapirs come to eat dirt. We had come there last night hoping to see tapirs, but had not. It was by an uprooted tree, and very muddy. Señor told us that people who hunt tapirs will sometimes re-salt a salt lick by peeing on it; I think I have mentioned that their diet is very salty. We did see some tapir tracks. It appears to be a large animal, but I have not seen one in the wild.

As we were walking, Señor cut a length of vine. It bled with a white juice, which he motioned to me to put over my mouth. “For your insides,” he said in Spanish; I had told him about the worms. I let the vine drip into my mouth for a few seconds, and it had a cool and mild taste. I asked him if I should have more, and he said no. The Professor tried a drop, thinking that dentro referred to teeth rather than insides.

I felt a bit funny for about 10 minutes after that, but it could easily have been the heat. I am happy to report, however, that the medicine appears to have worked, although of course I will see my doctor for a checkup after I return to San Francisco.

We returned to the cabana, and Señora prepared us fried fish, salad, yuca, rice and lemonade for lunch. Delicious. We were supposed to head back to the ramshackle cabana for another night after lunch, but there was a dark storm on the horizon. We should wait out the rain, Señor said.

We napped in our hammocks. Later, I opened up the Neotropical Companion, and Señor taught me the Spanish words for animals in the photos. I, in turn, taught him some English. He had a sheet of practical sentences in English written out, but he wanted to know more.

The storm was a long time coming. After a while, Señor asked us what we thought of waiting out the storm, sleeping in the same place, and getting up at 3 am. We could boat to the old cabana, have breakfast, and then continue on to the ranger station for the night. As The Professor observed, Señor and Señora seemed very happy to be in this nicer cabana, with a few of their good fisherman friends, a solid roof and happy memories of when they had lived here. So we were happy to oblige Señor on his plan, especially since getting rained on in the cabana of the vultures was not especially appealing.

We ate fried eggs and popcorn for dinner, and turned in early. As I was preparing for bed, I took out my contact lenses and washed them with solution. This was the first time I had done so in public, and Señora asked me if they were for my vision. She had never seen contact lenses before, so I showed them to her. She told me she is a little nearsighted, which is astonishing to me given how many animals she personally spotted high in branches. The Professor told her he prefers his glasses.

I should mention that the Professor came to this adventure without any Spanish at all, though he had some Italian and French, which are similar. I think this did not impress our hosts, but they – and I – became impressed with how quickly he picked up some of the language.

– The Private Eye

 

Day 4 in La Selva, March 19

I slept poorly on our first night of camping out of doors, kept awake by the desire to not wear earplugs in a strange and possibly dangerous place, with no walls to keep out animal or man. There was a great cacophony of sound, pleasant but complicated and intellectually stimulating, bad for sleep. One sound in particular haunted me, a mammal call (I later learned) similar to the rattling of bones.

Eventually the night ended, and we arose, ate delicious fried fish, potatoes and bananas with coffee. It was our first breakfast without any friends of Señor and Señora present, and we talked about some quite personal matters. I felt like we understood each other better, and that we did not seem as strange to our hosts as they learned that we have the same sort of human problems as they.

I did make an unpleasant discovery shortly after breakfast, which was that I had contracted worms. However, since i did not feel bad, i did not let it bother me much, and I did gain a certain amount of excitement when Señor promised to make me a traditional plant remedy.

Soon, we continued on our way – our last day moving forward into the wilderness before we began our return. We saw red howler monkeys quite clearly in some trees near the riverbank as we began, including a mother and child, followed by a whole troop of little squirrel monkeys, with adorable little faces and large eyes. Señor imitated their calls and they came even further out over the river on their branches to investigate.

We also saw several ring-necked kingfishers, a common bird we had seen before and which I admired for its handsome mallard-green body and striking black and white heads. Señor calls these birds martins pescadors. Strangely, it is St. Peter and not St. Martin who is the patron saint of fishermen.

We were not traveling so far this day, so we stopped en route to a location of dry(ish) land and took a walk through the jungle, with Señor making our way with his machete. It was hot, and buggy, and we were glad of our mosquito repellent clothing, but it was wonderful to see the stilt-root trees and the buttressed-root trees up close. We also came across a man with a rifle, and Señor told us that this was ok, because the man was hunting within the legal limit to feed himself and his family.

IMG_3149 IMG_3165 IMG_3147

Continuing on, we reached another cabana, this one in far better repair than the first. Some laundry and a backpack told us that we would not be alone on this night. Señor informed us that he and señora had lived there for a year and had put a lot of work into the cabana. However, he said, now many people used it to sleep in, but they did not upkeep the gardens or improve the structure in any way. Nevertheless, the floor was solid and so was the roof, and there were sturdy posts where we promptly tied our hammocks.

IMG_3181

Several fishermen returned, one of them obviously very ill. There was a tense conversation, with some significant glances in our direction, but I could not understand all the talk. Eventually, Señor explained to me that the sick man had a terrible headache. I, of course, offered ibuprofen, and then the Professor and I talked about how best to help, not being doctors. The man was already resting, and the Professor said fluids were the next most important thing, so I asked the other fisherman, through Señor, if the sick man had been drinking. His fellow replied nothing to eat or drink for three days! We had already noted, during the trip, that the people here drink very little – just a handful of river water on occasion, and lemonade from the local limons at lunch, much less than I would expect for hard workers like themselves. They do, however, eat a good deal of salt, and fish and yucca in broth.

I told them that the ibuprofen should be taken with lots of water. They did not look at me as if I were a pretentious ass for advising them on how to take Advil. The previous day’s adventure, this day’s experience, and further adventures instilled in me new appreciation for the medicine of richer countries. Ibuprofen is a precious rarity here where people are poor and all goods are brought in by slow boat. At home I buy generic bottles of 1,000 pills at Target.

I asked how the man became ill, and was told a story that beggars belief, and I still do not know if Señor told me this because he believes it to be true, or because he thought it was a good story, or because the truth is bad for tourist to know and he knew his tale would leave me speechless. It was this: three days prior, when the man was out seeking food for his family in the forest, he came across a young snake, which he tried to kill. He failed to do so, and the little beast called for its mother, who then gave the man the evil eye! The serpent can spit venom, but did not, in this case – merely gazed upon him.

It is possible that I have misunderstood the details of this story, but I asked several times about the gist and the answer was the same – the old snake eyes got to him.

He also had a fever. I put a cool washcloth on his head and refreshed it a few times. I did not get the washcloth back, but I didn’t want it anyway.

Two bufeo dolphins passed us on the river.

While we lolled in hammocks and did some laundry in the river, and Senora cooked for us, señor carved us a walking path in the jungle with his machete. That night, we viewed it in the darkness, with the moonlight illuminating small blue windows of foliage. We saw a tarantula, and tapir tracks.

– The Private Eye

 
 

Day 3 in La Selva, March 18

We started our third day in the rainforest with good things – a bunch of fish in the net for later, sloths stationed really close to the river, a few bufeo dolphins on the water. But then we had an accident – while we were passing under a low tree branch, Señora hit her head and fell in the water. She grabbed the branch to keep the current from dragging here along and climbed back into the boat with no problems.

But afterwards she had a wretched headache, and had gotten water in her ear. Señor was worried about her until we stopped for lunch, as was I. I gave her some of my ibuprofen for her headache, and she was incredibly grateful. I realized how much further off the beaten path we were than places we had been before. I realized that there might not be a pharmacy in Lagunas, and that Señora maybe couldn’t afford even mild, over-the-counter pain medicine if there is a pharmacy. I realized that it was a good thing that the Professor and I had our own first aid kit, because our guides’ kit probably consisted of what they could glean from the rainforest. Which I am sure is a lot, but apparently doesn’t include painkillers. Or mosquito repellent.

Things got better after we viewed an enormous tree in the middle of the flooded forest. Señora seemed happy to show us the tree, and was perkier. We even backed the canoe into its crevasses for photos, which unfortunately caused the Professor to get many, many bug bites. Señora had, the previous day, washed his clothes in the river (she offered), and we surmised that the vigorous scrubbing might have scrubbed out some of the built-in permethrin. But looking up at the giant trunk from between its buttressed roots was, in fact, very neat.

IMG_3094

Heading back into the main river, we traveled on. We saw a hoatzin, a fascinating bird whose young retain two claw fingers on the bend of their wings (!) for clambering around on vegetation. They lose these claws when they mature, but still look awfully prehistoric. They only eat leaves, and smell bad, which saves them from human hunting.

When we were almost at the end of the day’s journey, a sound of a fountain of liquid caught our attention. We backed up the boat, and sure enough, it was a sloth hanging from a branch with only its two hands, noisily eliminating into the river while keeping its own person relatively tidy.

IMG_3086IMG_3100

Sometimes, traveling on the river, I felt as though I was in the midst of an animated movie montage, probably Disney, where the heroine sings about how wonderful the world is, and the animators set out to dazzle you. I mean that it was a parade of macaws, parrots, butterflies and monkeys, with the occasional dolphin for a big crescendo. As we passed close to branches poking up out of the water, dozens of tiny vampire bats would fly away in a burst. It was magical.

Arriving at our destination, I think we were all a bit dismayed. It was a simple open-sided cabana in terrible repair. The thatched roof was falling apart. Fully half the boards were missing from the floor, fortunately all on one side of the structure. The other side was mostly solid, apart from a few iffy bits. Black-headed vultures and a hawk were congregated on the roof. They flew off when we approached. There was no dry land at all.

IMG_3103

Señor cursed a bit, but said that the next cabana was too far away to make before dark. Cutting some wood to make a new beam, he rigged up a tarp to keep the rain off us for the night, and added some poles to be the tie points for our mosquito nets. Señora swept the bird droppings off the floor with a twig broom. We were to sleep on the two mattress pads under a mosquito net, while Señor and Señora slept on a blanket under another net.

For the first but far from the last time, I felt uncomfortable that these people almost 20 years our senior were doing all of the work and bearing much of the discomfort. But this was their job, and we were paying them. It was a quandary for me. We often offered to help out more, but they generally refused, and sometimes even stopped us when we attempted to help without asking permission.

Leaving our things at the cabana (except for my backpack, which I said was to lean on but was actually for my peace of mind), we rowed off to another oxbow lake where the beautiful La Victoria Reina water lilies grow. Their enormous leaves, which start out as fleshy purple buds that look like blossoms, are big enough to float a cat on. Even a big cat like Rudimouse Prime, aka Butterball Rudy, my fat creamsicle-colored fella back home. And the lake where they were was lovely, with patches of peridot-green water plants.

IMG_3107IMG_3112

Clouds were piling up, and we began rowing quickly back to the cabana. The rain began, dazzling because the cloud cover was not complete, and the sun was setting. Everything was gold touched and full of watery light, and we were only a little damp when we made our shelter.

That night, I asked Señor if he knew more stories about the dolphins. He said he did, but the stories turned out to be a description of the traditional medicinal uses for dolphin body parts (they are apparently rarely hunted, but when they are, this is the purpose). The traditional medicinal uses amount to sympathetic magic to overcome male lack of confidence with women.

I told Señor that since he had told me that dolphins are like people, I felt sad for the dolphin’s parents, spouse, children and brothers and sisters. He agreed that it was “mucho peine” for the dolphin family – the same word Señora had used to describe the emotional anguish of the loss of their daughter.

– The Private Eye

 

Day 2 in La Selva, March 17

I awoke under the mosquito net in our little room with the walls just above face height on me. The door was a piece of cloth and ripped screens formed the remaining top two feet of wall, but we had a bed frame and a little bit of privacy, so it was the most luxurious room of the week. It was 5 am, and the sound of the winter wind was powerful, waking me with confusion.

It was not really a blizzard-bringer. It was monkeys. Red howler monkeys. The sound was uncanny.

IMG_3070IMG_3081

Before breakfast, Señor summoned us out to the canoe, and we paddled until we were just under a tree. “Mantona,” he said. It was some kind of constrictor. It eats baby monkeys, among other things.

We returned to the cabana, where Señora was making us tortilla de huevos, an egg pancake with tomatoes, onions, MSG salt mix, and paprika salt mix, combined with wheat flour. She was unfortunately not feeling well, so Señor made her a traditional remedy of a local raw chicken egg, sugar, chicken bouillon, and condensed milk. It is important that the chicken egg be local and not from the supermarket, he told me.

Señora still looked quite miserable afterwards. Some time later, I came into the kitchen and asked how she was faring, and she told me she was in pain. I asked if it was the headache, but she said no, it was emotional pain. It turned out that she and her husband had suffered the untimely death of their adult daughter some seven months ago, while they were in fact on the river guiding. I expressed my sympathies, and imagined how hard it must have been. There are no cell phones here, and the only form of outside contact is through the official radios at the government outposts, and some but not all of the way station cabanas. Señor and Señora are presently raising this daughter’s son, along with a few of their younger children.

We took to the river again, and soon saw our first sloth! It was high in a tree, so slow it was hard to tell it was moving. We saw another eagle, and little toucans on the wing, and an animal called an “achouney” that I still have yet to identify. It looked vaguely like a coati. We also saw the “tijuanguro” (please don’t rely on my spelling), a bird who gives a special call when the floodwater starts to rise, or so Señor said. I dubbed it the “ave de las noticias,” or newsbird.

IMG_3033

And we saw pink dolphins. Around a dozen, as soon as we rounded a bend into a deep water oxbow lake. They live there at this time of year, and are not seen during the dry season, Señor told me. He also explained to me that they are people, and that was easy to believe. They surfaced to breathe with a sinuous motion more akin to a human swimmer than the straight-necked shuttle of the surfacing sea dolphin. It was hard to tell what they were doing beyond surfacing, as this part of the river was nutrient-rich whitewater, the color and opacity of chalky mud. But several times they seemed playful, leaping full-bodied out of the water.

IMG_3049

I, of course, was in heaven, but they made our guides nervous. Señor told me that the bufeo Colorado is dangerous to women, that they will grab women swimmers and try to separate them from their men, in order to have sex with them under the water. He said that it was reasonably safe on the boat, but that he would not stick around to watch them for more than an hour or so, and that it would be bad if Señora or I were menstruating.

They were not entirely pink. Rather, they were particolored like a human with dual pigmentation, part pink, part gray, and freckling between the two. A few times they seemed to be following the boat. The group contained both male and female dolphins, Señor said.

That night, we bunked at a ranger station, which was also a wooden building on stilts, but with wooden walls from roof to floor, a door, a tin roof, and a radio tower. I took my first river bath here, wishing I had brought some soap that was more environmentally friendly, but since apparently everyone both washes and does laundry in the river, I got over my guilt. The Professor told me that given the volume of water here and the small scale of the use, we weren’t likely hurting anything by washing.

As evidence of the health of the river, we ate fish for nearly every meal, cooked by Señora. She is a great fish cook. We ate so many kinds of fish, and I sadly can’t remember their names, except for the piranha of course. Generally they were fried, which was my favorite, but sometimes cooked whole in various ways. Fish generally was accompanied by multiple starches, generally cooked bananas and rice. Sometimes we had a little salad of cabbage, tomatoes and onions. It wasn’t the same food that our guides ate, as they preferred fish in broth with yucca.

– The Private Eye

 

The first story of Señor

This is a story about the dolphins, bufeos. Take it with a grain of salt – it is the story as I understood it, which may not be the same as the story that was told me.

There once was a man who wanted to kill a manatee. All night, he waited and waited, harpoon in hand. But when he finally threw the weapon, he did not hit a manatee – instead, he hit one of many dolphins that were swimming around agitatedly.

He pulled back his harpoon, but the tip was left behind in the creature’s back.. Since his harpoon was ruined, he went home.

“Did you catch the manatee?” asked his wife, who wanted to cook the beast.

“No,” replied the man. “I harpooned a dolphin by accident.”

“Oh, ok,” said his wife.

They went to sleep. But at 2 a.m., there was a knock at the door.

“Police!” came the voice from the threshold.

The man went to his door.

“You are under arrest,” said the two officers.

“But why?” asked the man.

“For assault and torture of a doctor,” said the police. “You are coming with us.”

The man protested that he had harpooned a dolphin that evening but had not hurt a human being, but the officers were insistent. He was handcuffed and led to the their boat, and told that they were going to the hospital in Iquitos, where he could see the victim.

The boat was swallowed by a whirlpool as they were traveling. At the bottom, they came to a beautiful city, full of lights. They went to the hospital, and there they saw the doctor – a big tall white man with really broad shoulders. The doctor had the tip of a harpoon embedded in his back. The officers gave the fisherman a knife and told him to cut the spear point out of the doctor’s back, and he did so.

They were then going to take him to the court. Figuring he was in trouble so he might as well enjoy what he could, the man took out some tobacco, rolled a cigarette, and began to smoke. Now, tobacco is a friend to man, but dolphins detest it. The people demanded he put it out, but he simply blew the smoke and replied that if he was under arrest, he was going to enjoy a cigarette before he went to jail. Pretty soon, all the people began vomiting spectacularly – the doctor, the police, everyone.

The man ran away and was able to get on the police boat. He started back for his own home, but as he traveled, still smoking, the boat and everything on it regained its true form. The boat itself was a crocodile! The paddle was an anaconda! The benches were turtles. Nevertheless, the man gained the surface of the water, leaving the city, and returned to his own home. He went to bed and later awoke there, as if from a dream.

The End

– The Private Eye

 

Day 1 in La Selva, March 16

Jefe introduced us to our guides on the night of the 15th, but we met them for real on the morning of the 16th. I will call them Señor and Señora, a married couple in their early 50s. Señor is a trim, dapper man, short, muscled, beginning to feel his age a little, but still plenty strong. Señora has a sadder face, a stouter figure, and a few missing teeth, but comes by them honestly. Jefe picked The Professor and I up in a moto version of a pickup truck, and drove us to his office, where we met the two of them.

We were fitted for tall rubber boots, and left our sneakers and my oversized straw hats in the office for a week. We did not want to get the former dirty, nor potentially spread Asian tropical pests into virgin rainforest with the latter.

The Professor, I, Señor, and Señora were bundled into the moto-pickup again, along with a lot of stuff – big lidded buckets of water, basins, fruit, dry goods, mattress pads, blankets, mosquito nets, etc. Heading out of town, we stopped at the police station, where the police logged our passport numbers and told us that if we have any problems we should come to them. Though their T-shirts with police logo rather than more formal uniforms, inscrutable eyes and machine guns made me feel insecure, I was quite sure they were sincere about keeping the gringo tourists safe.

We drove for about half an hour to the Pacaya Samiria National Reserve. Once there, Señor and Señora loaded things into a wooden dugout canoe, while Jefe, the Professor and I went to sign in at another register, this one for the government controllers of the reservation. For some reason this discussion seemed a little tense between Jefe and the controller, and we had the distinctly (or so I have heard) Latin American situation of sitting around in an office for an unaccountable delay, waiting for the fellow to sign off on our entry. But eventually he signed.

Meanwhile, Señor and Señora had moved our things from their usual boat to a bigger boat. Not many people come to Pacaya Samiria in the rainy season, so it had been a while since there was anyone touring with them for more than a week, obviously requiring more room in the boat for provisions.

We boarded our wooden vessel, Señor manning an oar in the front, then me, then The Professor, and then Señora manning an oar in the far back. The Professor had an oar, but wouldn’t be using it for the downriver portion of the trip. We would be canoeing four days into the reserve, and then returning the way we had come, heading into the current for the way home. We were sailing on the Samiria River, one of the two that gives the reserve its name.

IMG_2999

We smoothly and silently entered a world of vivid, vivid green, more vivid than Ireland because it is more all-encompassing, green plants beside us, green trees above us, green reflection in the river below us. The first day’s journey was largely on blackwater, one of a few river types in the Amazon basin. Nutrient poor, it looks like strong black tea, and logs in the water are the color of tea-boiled eggs.

The government allows the local mestizo people around Pacaya Samiria to continue their subsistence and small scale economic activities in the park, within limits. Logging is not allowed, but fishing for both personal consumption and small scale marketing appears to be. Hunting of the non-endangered wildlife for personal and family consumption is allowed. As a result, the local fishing people appear quite earnest about supporting the restrictions on use for the preservation of the forest long-term.

At least, Señor is. One of the fishermen who plies the rivers when he is not guiding turistas, he merrily told us over the week which animals are delicious, and which forbidden. As such, both he and his wife know the river very, very well, and how to spot the animals in the gallery forest on either side. I doubt we would have seen 1/4 of the animals we did without them.

But with them, it was a safari. We had not been in the reserve for more than an hour when Señora called out for us to stop and observe an enormous, handsome green lizard with orange spangles around its eyes. It was perched in some branches that were almost at eye level. “Chameleon,” Señor told me. We saw a second within another hour. There were also many birds, including a number of large hawks and a startling amount of blue and gold macaws.

IMG_3009

The gallery forest on either side of us was completely flooded. What I mean by that is that there was no land, that we could literally have taken the boat anywhere we could have fit it between trees. Sometimes we did. Doing so, we saw what Señor called a renaco, a giant tree whose branches all had sent roots of their own to the ground, like a tentacular tree monster or forest spirit. It was very beautiful. Señor showed us our first piranha of many that we would see and eat.

IMG_3004

We stopped for lunch at what I would learn to call a cabana, a wooden structure, stilted, with minimal to no walls and a thatched-palm roof. While we were eating, a majestic hawk (or eagle, still need to identify it) landed on the outhouse building, where it took an enormous projectile dump as I watched with my mouth open. It took us a while to stop laughing.

IMG_3025

We saw two kinds of monkeys, one tiny kind in a big family group, possibly saddleback tamarins. The bigger variety were black monkeys with white hair on their faces. At one point, we saw a monkey leap right over a stream, from tree to tree like a heroine from building to building.

We stopped for the night at Poza Gloria, a very established cabana with half walls and even a shower. We ate dinner and went to bed early.

IMG_3029

– The Private Eye

 

To Lagunas, March 15

Early in the morning (think 5?) in Yurimaguas, we awoke and, for lack of anything else to do, walked to the area around the plaza to see if there was a market and if we could get cash, bug repellent, and breakfast. There was indeed a market, and it was a more “authentic” experience than most we had been to in Asia, if by authentic you mean that were the only gringos there, no English was spoken, and people looked a little wary. The Professor had a tasty little sandwich and we each got a fresh grapefruit juice (yum) but there was no coffee readily apparent. So after getting cash and repellent, we returned to our hotel.

It had a nice dining room with big windows on the second floor overlooking the Huallaga River, and we enjoyed some coffee. Our neighbors at the next table were fellow Americans, an evangelical biker gang if you can believe it. “Riding for the Son” was on the backs of their jackets, and they had the kind of deep voices of men from manly states, Wyoming or Nevada or Idaho, where the air is clear and there’s room to think and all that. Voices with an echo, that you can imagine telling cowboy tales during a pause while you are out fixing fences together. Anyway, it made me homesick, but they didn’t strike up a conversation with us, and we didn’t strike one up with them.

We met up with our tour company at 7 ish, and we took a mototaxi down to the boat dock. It was a dirty, noisy, messy place and we were swarmed by people telling us which boat to board, and also to try to secure us as clients I am sure. I told them in Spanish that we were waiting for the man I will call Jefe, the company’s owner, and they immediately backed off and told us he was just behind us on his own motorcycle.

IMG_2955

Jefe is just a touch older than us, a middle-aged father with a round head and a pleasant smile. He boarded the bus with us and rode with us all the way to Lagunas, which is a full day’s boat ride – the boat left at 9 a.m. and arrived at 7 p.m. Along the way, we talked a good deal, and he pointed out things to us along the riverbank – garsas, which are egrets, for example. When we boarded, rather than set us up in the giant common area in the middle of the boat, he quickly hustled us up to the smaller area up a short ladder – above the engine, kitchen and bathroom. Open-frame walls at the front and back of the little cabin made it not too unpleasant despite the engine notice and smell. This was not a special or private cabin, as we three were some of about 7 hammocks in the place, but its size kept it from being as overwhelming as the main deck, and we felt more comfortable using electronics.

IMG_2961

I came to like Jefe a fair bit as the ride continued. He had been guiding for some 15 years before he started his company some three years ago, at around the time his daughter was born. We all alternated talking and napping in our hammocks, swaying as the boat drifted downriver. At lunchtime, we were served rice and carrots and yucca and a little bit of chicken, the latter from more rubbery parts than I typically eat.

IMG_2995

I also spoke with another passenger, an hombre de comercios, who makes a living buying things in bigger cities, and bringing them on the boat downriver to sell in Lagunas. He had a lot of toilet paper, and bags of rice, and brooms. It reminded me, for the second time that day, of the old west.

Eventually we arrived in Lagunas, and we walked down a wooden plank, into some muddy water, and up onto the shore. Jefe booked us into a cheap but serviceable hotel, and we went out with him and his wife for chicken and plantains at a chicken restaurant.

And then we turned in, and slept in our last real bed for a week.

– The Private Eye