A trip to the Ecuadorian Amazon will be one of the highlights of any birder’s trip to Ecuador! Since Ecuador is a relatively small country, it is especially easy to get to. Most package tourists will have flights from Quito to Coca built in to their Amazon package but you can save a couple hundred dollars if you use miles for this route. Avianca Lifemiles only charges 3000 Lifemiles each way which is a fantastic deal! You can also reach Coca by bus, its about a 6 hour journey straight through but there are interesting stops along the way. In the map below, Coca is in the middle, the purple line on the right indicates where the eco-lodges are in Yasuni National Park like Napo Wildlife Center. You can also see my recommended stops for the journey back – Wawa Sumaco for Wildsumaco, Cosanga for Cabanas San Isidro and that purple dot indicating Guango Lodge which is on the highway but not near a town.
The Aerogal plane which is what you will be on if you use Lifemiles is a small one but it’s only a 35-40 minute flight.
We didn’t have checked bags but if you do, they are brought to this window.
If you are being picked up by your tour operator, they will have a sign with your name on it. Otherwise, just get a $3 taxi to the La Mision Hotel.
Driving through the town of Coca. Not really much here to look at so we didn’t jump out anywhere.
Some nice bird art on a building.
This is the car park of La Mision Hotel and where you get the river boats that take you to your lodge.
If you are on the early flight, I suggest getting breakfast here and asking for the wifi password to kill time. Some lodges do have wifi but it isn’t cheap so be prepared to be unplugged for your adventure! Let the hotel staff know which lodge you are booked with, everyone knows everyone and they will tell your guide that you are waiting in the restaurant when he/she arrives. They start arriving around 9:30ish.
Typical river boat that the lodges use.
View of the La Mision Hotel as our boat pulled away from the pier.
When you are ready to leave Coca, get a taxi to the bus station on the outskirts of town. If you are going to Wildsumaco, you can use a bus that is headed to either Quito or Tena.
For Wildsumaco Lodge, have the driver let you out at the road to Pacto Sumaco and call them so they know when to pick you up. It’s a long walk up hill so you do need a ride. Details will be in my report on Wildsumaco Lodge. We didn’t have a phone but a kindly fellow passenger made the call for us to let them know which bus we were on.