Hotel Review: Holiday Inn Guayaquil Airport

I know you aren’t supposed to take pictures in the immigration line but I couldn’t resist because of the Guayaquil Macaw on the poster!

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One of the best things about booking the Holiday Inn Guayaquil Airport is that it is literally 5 minutes from the airport.  See the green neon in the photo?  We could have walked but when we got outside, the shuttle was already there.  I had mentioned which flight we were on when I booked it using 20,000 points and they showed up without us having to call!  Great service!

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The room was nice and very typical Holiday Inn.  There isn’t much in the local area but there were some fast food places a couple blocks away so we grabbed some snacks and drinks for the birding trip the next day and crashed out.

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This hotel is currently on Pointbreaks for 5000 points a night until 31 July which is a steal!  Of course this Pointbreak list was published after we left South America!

The shuttle to and from the airport is free both directions.  Even though it’s not far, it was still nice to avoid the mid-day heat.

Lodge Review: Mata-Mata Rest Camp, Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park

We only had 2 nights here and wish we had more as this place was amazing!  Mata-Mata Rest Camp is the perfect solution for people who want to feel like they are in the remote wilderness yet still have the convenience of 2wd sedan car access.

Mata-Mata is a very small camp with limited facilities so book online in advance and make sure you have enough food and drink with you to last your stay.  We took one of the budget chalets (shown in yellow).

Kgalagadi MataMata

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Our chaletIMG_0885 IMG_0886 IMG_0887

“Please can I have some of your sandwich”?

The correct answer is no!IMG_0889 IMG_0890

You can book these excursions with rangers for both evening and night safaris.  Book them with reception as soon as you arrive.   More on that later!IMG_0897

Lodge Review: Molopo Kalahari Lodge, South Africa

After leaving Oudtshoorn, our next destination was the Kgalagadi (Kalahari) Transfrontier Park.  It’s quite a ways and I wasn’t confident of reaching the park entrance before it closed so I played it safe and booked the Molopo Kalahari Lodge by email (on the 2009 trip).  There wasn’t a lot of information about it that I could find back then but they now have a nice website with tons of photos.  It seems to have expanded a lot since we were there!

We arrived around 4pm-ish so had time to check the place out and even get some laundry done!

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We stayed in this cute rondavel.IMG_0813 IMG_0814 IMG_0815

The facilities are beautiful with a natural garden and swimming pool.  There are a lot of birds on the property and (in 2009) they had a Blue & Gold Macaw in an aviary.IMG_0816 IMG_0817 IMG_0824 IMG_0825

 

We probably weren’t supposed to hang laundry here (which we hand washed in the sink) but it dried really quickly in the hot dry air.IMG_0826 IMG_0827 IMG_0828 IMG_0819

The restaurant has some amazing African decor and the food was really good and not expensive.  IMG_0818 IMG_0823 IMG_0822 IMG_0821 IMG_0820

You can book the Molopo Kalahari Lodge on their website.  It isn’t instant, it’s an email system.  It wasn’t expensive when we were there and it looks like it is still budget priced going by Trip Advisor.  Of course it’s best to stay in the park but if you need an overnighter, this is a nice place to stay!

Lodge Review: Cristalino Jungle Lodge

Cristalino Jungle Lodge is one of the holy grails for birders and if you plan to go birding in Brazil you should definitely plan to stay here.  The location is spectacular and the bird list is amazing!

You arrive there after about an hour boat ride down the Cristalino River.  They have several levels of accommodation ranging from standard rooms to special bungalows and since we were on a budget, we got one of the cheaper rooms which was still really nice!

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There is a map of the grounds and walking trails but most people stick with their guide.  If you aren’t in an organized group, they make a small group with around 6-8 people and assign you a guide.  Every day you have a different place to visit, one in the morning and one after lunch and they try to keep groups separated so each place doesn’t get swamped with people.

Even the budget rooms are spacious and attractively furnished.  No tv or wifi, you are here to commune with nature!

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This is the restaurant where you are served breakfast, lunch and dinner.  Drinking water is free.D11

They have a lounge with maps, guide books and other educational materials where people can relax in the evening and compare notes.  Try the excellent Mojitos!D12 D13

At the time of our visit, a Blue-headed Parrot (Pionus) had been found injured and rescued by one of the staff.  My pics came out blurry, but it looked like he had a broken wing so he was very lucky someone found him who wasn’t planning to eat him!  D06 D08 D07 D10

You are probably best booking Cristalino Jungle Lodge with them direct as I haven’t seen it pop up on any hotel booking engines.  They have a secure credit card payment system which I used back in 2012 to pay for our booking.

Lodge Review: Floresta Amazonica, Alta Floresta, Brazil

The Floresta Amazonica Hotel makes a great welcome to the Cristalino experience and I highly recommend at least a night here before or after visiting Cristalino.  We arrived by bus from Cuiaba and the hotel staff picked us up at the bus station and brought us back in time for a wonderful breakfast buffet (only included if you are staying the previous night, otherwise payable separately).  We had gotten a bit of sleep on the bus and were re-energized after breakfast to walk around the hotel grounds.  There was a rare Harpy Eagle nesting in the grounds and they said to be back by 10am to join the guide to go see them so we didn’t stray too far.

Our actual stay was after the Cristalino Lodge for only 1 night (wish it could have been more).

Hotel entrance

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Gotta love a restaurant named after the beautiful Crimson-bellied Conure called Tiriba in Portuguese.A04

Magazines in lobbyA05

Artwork in lobbyA06

Time to go birding!A07

Grounds in front of the hotelA025

Rooms facing nice bird habitatA046

Our room was decent sized but to be honest we only slept there – too many birds to find!A047

In Sept it got hot in the afternoon so we swam in the lovely pool until it cooled off a bit.A043 A044

Some fruit trees that attract birdsA045

Stand by for more details of the birds we found!

A Morning At Pousada Piuval

After leaving Curicara Lodge and starting back towards Pocone & Cuiaba, we were birding the Transpantaneira and saw the turn-off to Pousada Piuval.

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Just for fun, we turned in for a look.  At the time, they didn’t have a day visit package (they do now) so we had coffee and a snack at the restaurant.

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They have a really nice little gift shop and I ended up buying a few things.

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Best of all – the garden is full of birds!

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Yellow-chevroned Parakeet

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Quaker Parrot

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Vermilion flycatcher

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Blue-crowned Parakeet

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It’s a shame we didn’t have more time (and money) as this place looked really nice, but there is hopefully a next time!  For now, we were bound for Chapada dos Guimarães!

Lodge Review: Curicaca Lodge, Transpantaneira, Brazil

Curicara Lodge has a stunning location along the Transpantaneria in the northern Panatanal fo Brazil.  They don’t seem to have a website of their own, but there is good information here.

We were there in Sept, 2012 so things may have changed.  The one thing that needed improvement was the access road which was very bumpy!  Hopefully they have fixed it up since then.

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Once you get to the lodge, it is beautiful and natural with lots of bird-attracting habitat so you don’t even have to leave the grounds to find birds.

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This was our cottage – very cute!ZC-06 ZC-03 ZC-04 ZC-05

 

Monkey keeping an eye on us.ZC-07

This is the dining room – most rates will include full board and you need this because there are no other places to eat except at other lodges.ZC-08 ZC-09 ZC-85

 

Take a stroll down to the river and look for caiman.ZC-84 ZC-86 ZC-87

Of course I will save the best for the next post – birding the grounds of Curicaca Lodge!

Day Visit To Araras Eco-Lodge

When I was doing the planning for this trip, I really wanted to stay here but it’s just so difficult to book it if you aren’t on some kind of package tour.  Their website doesn’t even have prices or a booking page!  I decided to take a chance they may have unbooked roooms when we arrived and we could get a good last minute deal.  It wasn’t to be, when I called the day before, I found out that they were fully booked.  They did offer day visits in which one of their guides takes you around the property and shows you the wildlife.  In 2012 it was around $25-ish per person and we ended up having a late lunch there too.

Driving into the property

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A Chestnut-eared Aracari welcomed us in.ZA-03

Gift shop and dining room where we had a very late lunch.

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Rooms

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Swimming pool

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Red Capped Cardinals bathing

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Now the Chestnut-eared Aracari has a friend

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Red Capped Cardinals eating ZA-08 ZA-12

Quakers foraging in the grass and in trees above

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Blue Crowned Conure  ZA-17 ZA-18 ZA-19 ZA-20

Capybaras ZA-21

CaimansZA-14

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Why are these capybaras swimming in the same pond with the caimans?ZA-24 ZA-26

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Quakers, Peach-fronted Conures and other birds foraging on the lawn

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All this in just a couple hours in the late afternoon at Araras Eco-Lodge!

Lodge Review: Caiman Ecologico Refuge, Pantanal

*Originally published on Feathered and Free.  These historical reviews are gradually being merged to MTTW.

The Pantanal region of Brazil is one of the “holy grails” of any parrot lover or bird watcher. This vast wetland wilderness is home to the rare Hyacinth Macaw as well as some commonly found species such as Nanday Conures, Amazons, Quakers and Maximilian Pionus. I began researching two years in advance on the internet to insure we would have the best possible experience. I like to give preference to ecotourism projects that benefit endangered species and provide employment opportunities to locals who might otherwise have engaged in the heinous practice of poaching. After careful consideration, I chose the Refugio Ecologico Caiman because it is home to the Projeto Arara Azul founded by Neiva Guedes. This project has been instrumental in bringing back the Hyacinth Macaw from near extinction and studying their breeding habits. The project has succeeded in bringing the population of Hyacinth Macaws from 1500 to 6000!   Since 2007, small groups can arrange to accompany the volunteers of the project on their daily activities and studies.

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I arranged our package through Open Door Tur which is a reliable tour operator based in Campo Grande, Brazil. Campo Grande is the gateway to the Pantanal and is accessed by plane from Sao Paulo or by bus from many Brazilian cities. We took the comfortable overnight bus from Foz do Iguacu and spent one day in Campo Grande to rest up before our big adventure.

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Sylvia from Open Door Tur picked us up at our hotel and took us on the 3.5 hour drive to Refugio Ecologico Caiman.

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We were met on arrival by the staff and immediately shown to a room near the swimming pool at Sede Lodge.

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Everyone was very friendly and they explained about the board with the tours and activities.  They divide everyone into two groups-yellow (English) and blue (Portuguese).  A buffet lunch was served at noon and then we discovered that so far, we were the only tourists to arrive in our yellow group.

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The flights were still chaotic and everyone else was delayed.  While resting after lunch, I heard the distinctive Macaw squawk and ran out into the garden to see two Hyacinth Macaws munching on nuts in a palm tree right there in the hotel garden!  Not even on a tour and already seeing Hyacinths!!!

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The afternoon activity was the bike ride and it was only us and the guide, two other guides went along just for the fun of it, nothing else to do.  Rheas which look like ostritches were on the grounds.

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We had barely gotten out the gate when we saw about 7 or 8 Hyacinths flying around so I leapt off the bike to grab pics.

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Then we passed the small airstrip and there were 2 mango trees just full of parrots-BF Amazons, Nandays and Maximillian Pionus!

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I flat out refused to leave the area, lucky there were no other tourists in the group!  Ina and one of the guides biked on ahead but later on, he said he didn’t see anything else.  The other guide finally managed to drag me away from the parrot trees kicking and screaming!  

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We reconfirmed with the people from Projecto Arara Azul for tomorrow.  Cezar and one of the volunteers who spoke English-Julianne would be taking us with them on their normal daily routine.  Neiva Guedes, the manager was out of the area so I didn’t get to meet her.  Cezar runs the show in the field now with help of 3 volunteers.

Dinner was at 7:30, a nice buffet.  Some of the other yellow group tourists had started to arrive, quite a mix-Americans, French, Belgians and Dutch.  We jad a short night safari to see nocturnal animals which were VERY hard to spot and it was freezing cold!  Then we made an early night so we could get up early for tomorrow.

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To be Continued…………………………..

Lodge Review: Rainbow Waters Holiday Park

Rainbow Waters Holiday Park is typical of most Australian holiday parks in offering all kinds of accommodation options from campsites for a tent to furnished cabins so there is something for everyone.  It’s located a couple km from the small town of Rainbow Beach next to the boat ramp in the the Great Sandy Straits.

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This is the cheapest option to get a roof over our head if you don’t have a caravan – a park cabin.  They have a mini-kitchen, a double bed and 2 bunks and use the common bath/toilet facilities in the yellow building you can see just behind it.

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This lovely little Crested Pigeon has some kind of injury.  He was hanging around one of the other cabins for our birding group.  I hope he’s OK, I always feel protective of birds like this.

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We walked down to the boat ramp area to see if there were any shorebirds about.  The restaurant wasn’t open so a good thing we brought our own food to BBQ!

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Sacred Kingfisher – I love the flash of blue when they fly!

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Masked Lapwings were everywhere.

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Woodswallows.

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Look closely to see the chicks of this Masked Lapwing.

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Walking back, here is the other side of the common building that houses the bathrooms & laundry room.

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The camp kitchen has 2 gas BBQs with flat cooking areas, not grills, a fridge, a pizza oven  and a couple burners.

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Bush Stone-Curlews hanging around the tent area.

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Parent Magpie teaches youngster how to steal chips from visitors!

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A bush turkey, confident with Thanksgiving being over forages very close to the kitchen.

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Showing the bush setting of the camp.  We also saw some Galahs, Sulphur Crested Cockatoos and a few birds I didn’t see clearly enough to id.

IMG_1432If you stay here, bring heavy duty mosquito repellent such as Bushman Plus 20% deet as the midges are a huge problem here.  They aren’t so active when there is a breeze about but the minute it dies down, they attack!  I advise bringing your own food – stock up in Gympie if you have to or better yet, Brisbane.  They don’t have wifi but you can get a reasonable cell phone signal, otherwise you have to drive to Rainbow Beach and visit a cafe.  It’s a good location if you want to bird in the general area of Cooloola Cove & Tin Can Bay.