Lima, Peru  |  Saturday, March 20, 2010 06:24  |  |  | 

Being a resident of Peru, how many times per year do you travel abroad?
 
1
2
3
4 or more?


Travel / archives for : Amazon



1 April, 2009 09:31:12

A different type of day out: Amazon GOLF, of course!

A different type of day out: Amazon GOLF, of course!By Gart van Gennip

I just spent the afternoon at a place I never thought I would find myself: The Amazon Golf Course. I am not a sportsman, or even a fan; I like to watch baseball, because hitting that ball with that bat somehow appeals to my imagination. But don’t ask me about innings and outings and what have you; I don’t have a clue! My dad used to play golf religiously, at a 6000 euro-a-year club back home, so I thought, “Good for him, but that’s not for me!” Unfortunately, my dad had to give up golf due to bad knees (no, his name is not Tiger Woods!).

read more »

2 Comments

25 March, 2009 09:40:35

New in Iquitos: The Amazon Explorers Club and Lounge

New in Iquitos: The Amazon Explorers Club and LoungeIn Iquitos, The Amazon Explorers Club and Lounge just opened its doors. It is a new club for travellers who are interested in what the Amazon Basin has to offer. The Amazon Explorers Club offers discounts, newsletters and special services to its members; not just online, but in their new lounge with spectacular views of the river.

read more »

2 Comments

16 March, 2009 18:14:52

Walking the Amazon

Walking the Amazon, PeruOn April 2nd 2008, Ed Stafford set out to become the first man to walk the entire 4000 mile length of the Amazon river. His trek is meant as an educational tool and to raise awareness for several charities including: ABC Trust, Project Peru, Cancer Research UK, The ME Association, and Rainforest Concern. However, the fact that Mr. Stafford anticipates that this undertaking will probably take him around 26 months, elevates this enterprise above other awareness events. Furthermore, the fact that the Amazon is one of the world's last great frontiers moves this unprecedented trek into a category of its own.

read more »

10 Comments

12 January, 2009 20:24:03

2 months with the Matses: Magic and Misery in the Amazon Jungle

By Anna Kovasna

2 months with the Matses: Magic and Misery in the Amazon Jungle of PeruThis must by far be the craziest thing I have ever done! I thought as I, after 8 hours in a dugout canoe, climbed up an impossibly slippery riverbank under the intense scrutiny of 40 Matses Indians. After waiting through two weeks of flooded landing strips and crashing planes, I had finally arrived to Estiron, a Matses settlement on a small tributary to the Yavarí. I was there to do fieldwork for two months, and I came alone. My host and interpreter had suddenly left me at a military base the day before. In addition, the goods I had bought in Iquitos to trade for food, lodging and information was on a boat still safely anchored in Iquitos, at least a week’s travel away from me.

read more »

2 Comments

29 December, 2008 13:20:18

Adventure in the jungle

Cesar Klauer Hidalgo

Adventure in the jungle of PeruOnce you come down the plane, you can feel a vapoury hand caress your face, go down your neck, get inside your shirt and suck out the fluids in your body. From your temples, a salty rain of sweat forms rivers destined to wet your clothes or dry out on the floor. You look around and through the wide windows you see the beautiful green. You are in the jungle. Welcome to Iquitos.

The first thing you need to do when booking a hotel room is make sure they have air conditioning. I found one on the internet and made the reservation for me and my colleague (we were sent by the company). I also recommended the place to my brother-in-law who coincidentally was going to be on business in the city too. A bad luck ghost had resolved to show me its power: I found that the A/C in my room did not work, to be exact it did work but made a clanking noise, like the engine of an old truck. If I turned the thing off, I became a soup. If I turned it on, I could not sleep. The next day, I was so tired that all I wanted was to sit down, pour a freezing beer down my dusty throat and let the steamy air wrap me up.

read more »

2 Comments

23 December, 2008 09:15:56

Dr. Linnea Smith found love in Peru

Wisconsin State Journal
Melanie Conklin

Dr. Linnea SmithDr. Linnea Smith left her family medical practice in Prairie du Sac to take her doctoring deep in the Amazon rainforest in Peru, in a spot so remote that patients arrive in dugout canoes. 

She blames this radical move on her house plants.

Before attending medical school at UW-Madison, she ran the Sunshine Store, an exotic plant shop in Cross Plains. So in 1990, after three years as a doctor, she ventured on vacation to the Peruvian rainforest to see where her plants came from.

After a week in the Yanamono rainforest, she did not want to leave.

read more »

11 Comments

28 October, 2008 14:59:29

When I almost became Indiana Jones

Revista Generacción
Cesar Klauer

When I almost became Indiana JonesThe ruins are up there, the child's head moved a little towards the top of the mountain. His little wide awake eyes looked at us from top to bottom while he chewed a twig and scratched his head under the hat which once long ago had been white but now had spots of dried mud; brown the freshest ones, yellow the oldest. His wooly dog walked around us with his long tongue doodling on our shoes, the duster of his tail scrubbed his happiness on our knees. Right in front of our tired breath, the slope projected into the blue cloak stained with faint cotton pieces, the bright green mass called us full of screams of birds, parrots and insects. But there was no path.

read more »

1 Comments

24 September, 2008 10:55:12

Americans Smash Amazon Raft Race Record

By Ed Hudson

Americans Smash Amazon Raft Race RecordThey came from every corner of the globe.They came from every continent. They came to compete in The Great River Amazon Raft Race  2008 .  The 46 teams from 18 countries arrived in Nauta to find that the river had risen by 2 metres in just a few days and the current was going to be faster.The teams arrived on 18th September for the civic reception in the Plaza de Armas which was well organised by the Regional Governmentt and Nauta officials. The real deal got going in the afternoon when all the crews crossed to the opposite bank of the Rio Marañon to build Rafts from the 8 balsa logs which were provided to each team.  Crews frantically worked on their crafts, sawing,chopping,hacking, hammering and tying. One team even recruited a local man with a chainsaw.  The work continued and the beach,was still busy even after nightfall.

read more »

4 Comments

27 August, 2008 12:26:25

Sedona area resident travels to Peru in search of psychotropic medicines

Sedona.biz
By John David Balla

Sedona area resident travels to Peru in search of psychotropic medicines Never seen before footage and an insight look into the enchanted world of psychotropic ritual and magic as performed by San Pedro shamans Edward and Otorongo, in Pisac, Peru, August 2-3, 2008.


Less known than its Amazonian counterpart, Ayahuasca, San Pedro (named after St. Peter, who is said to hold the keys to heaven) has been celebrated and ritualized for its medicinal and spiritual properties for over 3,000 years in the high Andes of Peru and Ecuador.

Now, with the blessings of San Pedro shamans Otorongo and Edwardo, who performed the all night ceremony, we show what a San Pedro ceremony is, how it is conducted, and investigate its truths and myths.

read more »

0 Comments

29 April, 2008 21:00:59

Peru: Splendour of a hotel with a heart

The Independent
By Rory Ross

One entrepreneur has set up a not-for-profit hotel chain in order to help preserve the wildlife and culture of Peru. Rory Ross is suitably impressed

Peru: Splendour of a hotel with a heart Jose "Joey" Koechlin von Stein, a Peruvian entrepreneur, waved a paperback at me. "This book," he says, "took 25 years to compile." The cover features a picture of a tropical plant. "It contains descriptions of 1,266 species." Silence fell, as he let this nugget sink in. "For 30 years," he continued, "we have been collecting information on what is out there in the Amazonian rainforest, in order to understand how it relates to each other... and not only to preserve it, but also to provide jobs."

We were dining at Joey's villa, a beautiful, candlelit museum of Peruvian art, silverware and pre-Columbian artefacts in Monterrico, an upmarket suburb of Lima. Running an eye over Joey's mounted collections of Incan huacos (clay funereal figurines), stone carvings from the pre-Incan Chavin cult and wooden doors salvaged from the old presidential palace in Lima, I was not surprised to learn that his glamorous wife, Denise, is an interior designer.

read more »

6 Comments



Categories

  1. Abancay (3)
  2. Amazon (44)
  3. Ancash (4)
  4. Andahuaylas (1)
  5. Arequipa (11)
  6. Ayacucho (4)
  7. Cajamarca (11)
  8. Chachapoyas (1)
  9. Chavín de Huantar (2)
  10. Cusco (34)
  11. Cycle Touring (3)
  12. Ecology (1)
  13. Huancavelica (2)
  14. Ica (4)
  15. Incas, history (1)
  16. Iquitos-Amazon (8)
  17. Junin (3)
  18. Lambayeque (4)
  19. Lima (26)
  20. Machu Picchu, Choquequirao (6)
  21. Nasca (2)
  22. Ollantaytambo (2)
  23. Oxapampa (1)
  24. Pampa Hermosa (1)
  25. Paracas (3)
  26. Peru (18)
  27. Peruvian beaches (6)
  28. Piura (4)
  29. Puerto Maldonado (2)
  30. Puno (4)
  31. San Martin (2)
  32. Tarma, Chanchamayo (3)
  33. Transportation (2)
  34. Trujillo (10)
  35. videos (1)

Last 5 posts

Last comments

See all comments

Travel web syndication [RSS]
what is "web syndication" ?