Anavilhanas Jungle Lodge
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"That first contact with the Rio Negro left us eager to see more. A short seaplane ride took us 125 miles upriver to Anavilhanas Jungle Lodge, which sits across the river from the national park of the same name. The park consists of more than 400 islands and 60 lakes, and in 2003 was established as a UNESCO World Heritage site. This protected status means that the area’s remaining tropical hardwood trees continue to anchor the forest and its climate, both of which are crucial to the health of the Rio Negro and its many threatened and at-risk species—the black caiman, the Amazonian manatee, two species of river dolphin, and several of the largest electric fish on the planet. We took a motorboat through the flooded forest the afternoon we arrived at the lodge. Another family with teenagers joined us, and all five kids fell into a stunned silence as we entered a narrow waterway called an igarapé. Barely wider than our boat, it delivered us into a shadowy chamber of mirrors, where reflections of the immense trunks of half-submerged trees doubled on the river’s black surface. Low branches poked at the roof of our boat and brushed our arms. The touch of so many ancient, life-sustaining trees was otherworldly, as though we were floating into the conjured waters of a fantasy novel. From left: The lodge’s floating deck at sundown; the screened-in balcony of one of the lodge’s bungalows. Carmen Campos/Travel + Leisure We were entering this blackwater-flooded forest several weeks before it would begin drying up. Each September, as the river recedes, the lake we were going to becomes unreachable by boat. The lake brought our first sightings of the Rio Negro’s famed pink dolphins: a couple and its baby arcing together out of the water. Locally known as botos, they have a dorsal ridge instead of a fin. "
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"Reco Arnaud para visitar el amazonas. Top top top"
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"Ale & JP recommendation, upscale but action-packed experience"
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