BajaNomad

Trekking in Brazilian rain forest

mtgoat666 - 3-28-2021 at 08:01 PM

Great ‘travel’ story!

His Plane Crashed in the Amazon. Then Came the Hard Part.

A Brazilian pilot working for wildcat miners escaped death when his plane went down in a remote area. He walked through the jungle for 36 days before being rescued.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/28/world/americas/brazil-ama...










JZ - 3-28-2021 at 08:46 PM

He lost 55 pounds in 36 days. Wow.


Non-Baja Vacation Trip Reports

AKgringo - 3-28-2021 at 09:06 PM

Well it is definitely not Baja, and an account of his survival could be considered a trip report, but vacation?

I don't think I will be following in his footsteps!

BajaBlanca - 3-29-2021 at 06:38 PM

What a story! It was his maiden voyage and what a shame that they continue ruining the rain forest.

I once went, by bus, from Rio to the city of Manaus, which is at the mouth of the Amazon River.

5 days of nothing more than trees trees trees.
In the middle of absolutely nowhere, there was a Coca Cola sign at a tiny soda snack kiosk.
At one point, a bridge across a tributary has been washed away. We had to get on a raft and cross the river. Then they crossed all our luggage. Then we got on the bus that had been headed south, the passengers from that bus got on our bus and it turned around to go back to Rio de Janeiro. Ingenious.
I took a canoe ride to a school way in the deep of the jungle - one room for all the grades and one teacher to teach all the grades!
It seemingly rained out of the blue sky every afternoon. I mean a soaking downpour that lasted 15 minutes and then blue sky returned with steam rising from the roads. Hotter than heck. Mosquitoes like car engines zooming at night.

Amazing that this pilot made it out alive! I do not envy his trekking.

caj13 - 3-30-2021 at 11:59 AM

Hey Blanca,
One of my favorite trips in brazil is to get to Manaus (but we fly in). from there we load up a chartered boat, My Brazilian friends do all the arranging - so the boat owners have no idea americanos are involved, that typically cuts the price in half!
we have about 10 of us on board, air conditioned 2 person staterooms. we chug up the Rio Negro (tannic acid in water means no mosquitoes) for a week or 10 days, stopping in tiny villages, or just at the homesteads of the river people. do alot of fishing and exploring. really fun when the pink dolphins come around to say hi! Crew on the boat cooks real Brazilian foods, resupplying at the small villages. great trip! as soon as brazil finds a way out of the covid mess they are in, we will be replicating that trip, a bunch of us from the graduate school days - 30 years ago!

BajaBlanca - 3-30-2021 at 02:06 PM

Now that is amazing. Way to go using Brazilians to set the trip up.

I remember Lauriboats once said she took a trip to the canopy of the rain forest for a week or 10 days. Two days were enough she said LOL