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Ecuadorian Amazon Eco Lodges
Book online at rei.com/adventures or call 1-800-622-2236
Highlights
Trip Dates:
Weekly departures
Price:
La Selva Lodge
4 days / 3 nights from $850 per person
5 days / 4 nights from $975 per person
(based on double occupancy)
Napo Wildlife Center
4 days / 3 nights from $795 per person
5 days / 4 nights from $925 per person
(based on double occupancy)
Total Days: 4-5 (or longer stays available)
Group Size: 5-6 guests per naturalist
Activity Level: 1 2 3 4 5
Levels explained 
- We have active trips for every skill level, novice to expert. These guidelines will help you select the level of adventure that's right for you.
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1 2 3 4 5 Relaxed: Adventure travel at its most relaxed pace.
Activity: 1-3 hours most days
Distances: walk less than 3 miles most days
Surfaces: flat terrain
Elevation change: little to none
Altitude: less than 3,000 ft
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1 2 3 4 5 Easy Active: Great for newcomers to active travel.
Activity: 2-5 hours most days
Distances: Hike up to 6 miles, cycle 10-30 miles most days
Surfaces: flat or rolling terrain with some possible steeps
Elevation change: up to 2,000 ft/day
Altitude: up to 6,000 ft
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1 2 3 4 5 Moderate: For outdoor novices and above.
Activity: 4-6 hours most days
Distances: Hike up to 10 miles most days, cycle 20-40 miles most days
Surfaces: rolling or mountainous terrain with some steep ascents/descents and uneven trails
Elevation change: up to 3,000 ft/day
Altitude: up to 10,000 ft
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1 2 3 4 5 Moderate Plus: Trips rated as Moderate Plus [3-4] are recommended for travelers seeking both moderate [3] and vigorous [4] activity levels. Please refer to daily trip itineraries for specifics.
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1 2 3 4 5 Vigorous: Recommended for fit travelers with basic skills.
Activity: 5-8 hours most days
Distances: Hike up to 12 miles most days, cycle 30-50 miles most days
Surfaces: mountainous, exposed terrain with steep ascents/descents and uneven trails
Elevation change: up to 4,000 ft/day
Altitude: up to 14,000 ft.
Experience and a doctors release may be required
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1 2 3 4 5 Strenuous: A trip for experienced and very fit travelers.
Activity: 10+ hours/day
Distances: Hike 12 or more miles most days, cycle 50 or more miles most days
Surfaces: remote mountainous, exposed terrain with steep ascents/descents, uneven trails with loose features.
Elevation change: up to 4,000 ft/day
Altitude: may well exceed 14,000 ft
Experience and a doctors release are required
Activity level for this trip 
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This trip is rated Easy Active [2] and includes a variety of activities ranging from easy day walks, moderate hikes in a warm, tropical climate and canoeing. Participants should be in good physical condition and consider beginning a regular exercise regimen 1-2 months prior to departure consisting of walking/hiking, running and/or swimming to prepare for this adventure. The better shape you’re in, the more you’ll be able to take advantage of the lodges’ nature trails and optional activities.
Accommodations:
La Selva Lodge
Jungle lodge with 17 bungalows with private bathrooms/showers.
Napo Wildlife Center
Jungle lodge with 10 cabanas with private bathrooms/showers.
Ecuadorian Amazon Eco Lodges
The Amazon basin of Ecuador covers an area of nearly 40% of the country. The rainforest is home to a wide range of species, many of whom are yet to be discovered and named. Toucans, parrots, caimans, freshwater dolphins and a hundred species of butterflies and insects exist within an incredible biodiversity of plants.
Our jungle experiences include accommodations at rustic, but comfortable eco-lodges. Each lodge offers a unique and unforgettable glimpse into this amazing tropical ecosystem. At La Selva lodge, we’ll follow trails near the lodge that is filled with wildlife no matter what hour of the day you hike it. Visit La Selva’s butterfly farm where over 20,000 butterflies are raised. At Napo Wildlife Center, you’ll see firsthand how the lodge and the local community work side by side to protect this precious reserve, all the while sharing its natural wonder and beauty with each guest. Professional guides, combined with the local knowledge of the community members, will tailor your wildlife experience to your expectations and desires.
Important Notice: Day 1 is the day you should plan to arrive at the meeting point for the trip. This may require departing your hometown one or more days in advance and traveling on an overnight flight.
Napo Wildlife Center Full Itinerary:
+ At-a-Glance Itinerary
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Napo Wildlife Center Description
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The Amazon Basin is famous for its wildlife, but not for its creature comforts. At the Napo Wildlife Center, you get the best of both worlds. An alternative luxury ecohotel in Amazonian Ecuador, the Napo Wildlife Center is the finest example of community-based ecotourism in the country. It actively protects 82 square miles of the most pristine Amazon Rain Forest within the Yasunì National Park, an important UNESCO Biosphere Reserve and the largest tract of tropical rain forest in Ecuador. The Napo Wildlife Center is located by Anangucocha Lake, surrounded by the unique ancestral territory of the Anangu Quichua community. Professional guides, combined with the local knowledge of community members, will tailor your wildlife experience to your expectations and desires.
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Day 1 Quito to Coca and the Rio Napo
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Your trip begins today in Quito, Ecuador. An early departure from Quito’s domestic terminal, our flight to Coca (our port of entry into the Amazon) will be approximately 35 minutes. The flight will take you over the Eastern Andes Mountain Range, crossing the equator and looking into snow capped volcanoes over 5,790 meters above sea level (18,991 feet) to reach the headwaters of the Amazon Basin near the Napo River. After landing in Coca, NWC staff will greet passengers and take them for a short 5-7 minute transfer to embark on our covered motorized canoe. Here a comfortable breeze will accompany guests on a 2 hour boat ride downstream the largest Ecuadorian tributary of the Amazon, the Napo river. During this trip, numerous birds can be spotted along the way and they include: herons, kingfishers, ospreys, and many others, as one travels away into a more pristine and remote area.
The boat will arrive to the northwest boundary of the Yasuni Biosphere Reserve where NWC is located by the Anangucocha lake. To access the lodge, guests may either start a guided 1.5 miles hike on rich forest wildlife or embark on a quiet and enjoyable paddle dugout canoe ride with our staff for about 1 1/2 hours along a creek with dense flooded palm forest. Following any route, as people get deeper into this preserved area, they will be surprised by the oftentimes seen monkeys of several species, colorful birds and other amazing potential wildlife encounters. At the end of the walk, and near the end of the paddle, people will reach the Anangu Lake and have a superb view of the lodge waiting for them on the other side. Lunch and dinner included.
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Day 2-4 Jungle Walks, Observation Tower, Parrot Clay Licks
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Visitors will be divided up into small groups, and lead by a native Anangu guide, who is also an official Yasuni Park Ranger and expert on the forest's secrets about medicinal plants and other useful items of the rain forest. Groups will also have an excellent bilingual naturalist guide who is knowledgable in tropical forest biology. Both guides using their unmatchable enthusiasm, will create informative enjoyable excursions every day. Groups and guides will tailor their excursions while taking advantage of the highest peaks of activity and weather conditions in the forest. They will schedule their outings before dawn or at sunrise. This will maximize wildlife observation and of course each group will decide with their guides how extreme and intense they take their Amazon excursion. This applies for afternoon excursions and night outings, when an overwhelming concert of natural sounds will flood the atmosphere.
One of the highlights at NWC is going out on a very early excursion to reach two of Ecuador's most accessible parrot clay licks along the Napo region. These parrot clay licks are an exclusive part of their reserve and lodge territory.
They have a history of being visited by naturalists and are mentioned in The Birds of Ecuador (Ridgely and Greenfield, 2001). These are just 2 of over a dozen clay licks found on the Anangu Community territory. The parrot clay licks can be reached by following the Giant Otter creek downstream on dugout canoe near the Napo river. The Napo Wildlife Center has exclusively constructed well established and comfortable blinds in each parrot lick in order to provide visitors best viewing and high quality photo/video opportunities.
Activity kicks off at the main lick between 7 to 8 in the morning and at second blind after midday. Species include: Mealy, blue headed, yellow crowned, orange winged and orange cheeked parrots, cobalt winged, dusky headed and white eyed parakeets, with the occasional rarities like scarlet shoulder parrotlet and scarlet macaws. In best weather conditions at least 800 individuals of most species can be spotted and on other days, despite the rain, one can still see a few dozen. This could be a full day excursion visiting both blinds equipped with a nice freshly made box lunch, or a half day visiting the main lick and returning for a served lunch at the lodge. All meals included.
120 Foot Observation Tower: The 120-ft. high canopy tower is a great way to experience the life above the forest floor. This is the second tower at the Napo Wildlife Center (the first is attached to the dining hall and allows great views of the lake). The canopy tower is located about 20 minutes from the lodge deep within the terra firme forest.
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Day 5 Morning Wildlife Viewing, Afternoon Return to Quito
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This morning we say good-bye to our jungle lodge and return to Quito. It’s an early wake-up call to prepare for the return trip. We go back the way we came, arriving back in Quito in the afternoon. Breakfast and lunch included.
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REI Adventures shares non-exclusive departures with Napo Wildlife Center.
Napo Wildlife Center At-a-Glance Itinerary:
+ Full Itinerary
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Napo Wildlife Center Description
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Day 1 Quito to Coca and the Rio Napo
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Day 2-4 Jungle Walks, Observation Tower, Parrot Clay Licks
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Day 5 Morning Wildlife Viewing, Afternoon Return to Quito
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La Selva Lodge Full Itinerary:
+ At-a-Glance Itinerary
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La Selva Lodge Description
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Join us for a unique, close-up view of rainforest flora and fauna on this special wildlife adventure in Ecuador. We make our home at famed La Selva Lodge, which in Spanish means “the jungle”. La Selva is nestled in a tropical garden setting of giant trees, brilliant blossoms and billowing ferns – the ideal sanctuary for rare, exotic wildlife and unique species of birds and butterflies. Our thatched-roof cabanas are built to blend into the rainforest environment, yet each has its own bathroom and hot shower. The bar and restaurant hug the lakeshore, ready for us to enjoy magical sunsets, tranquil views and glimpses of toucans and parrots.
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Day 1 Quito to Coca and the Rio Napo
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Your trip begins today in Quito, Ecuador. An early departure from Quito’s domestic terminal, our flight to Coca (our port of entry into the Amazon) will be approximately 35 minutes. Once we arrive into Coca, a representative will meet us at the airport and transfer us to the dock, where we board a private motorized canoe for a 2½-hour journey to La Selva Lodge. A box lunch is served during the boat ride. After reaching the river dock, we take a short walk to the shore of the Garzococha Lake, where we take a canoe ride (paddled by local guides) to the La Selva Lodge, located on the far side of the lake. After getting settled in, we embark on our first excursion, followed by dinner. Plane ride: ½ hour, Boat ride 2½ hours, canoe ride 15 minutes. All meals included at La Selva Jungle Lodge.
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Days 2-4 Jungle walks, Observation Tower, Parrot Clay Licks
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On these days, mornings begin with a 6:30 a.m. wake up. After breakfast, there’s a wildlife and birding walk through the forest to one of the sites listed below. Lunch is at 1 p.m. back at the lodge, followed by an afternoon excursion. Optional night birding excursions are also available on some nights.
The meals served at La Selva—a variety of Ecuadorian style food and local fruit juices—are known to be quite delicious. There is plenty of complimentary bottled water for each guest, as well as complimentary coffee and tea. The lodge has limited electricity for recharging batteries. Lighting is supplemented by kerosene lanterns and flashlights.
Mandicocha Trail: An easy trail close to the hotel, filled with wildlife any time of day.
Mandicocha-Mandiyacu: A 3- to 4-hour trip. Follow the Mandicocha trail until you reach Mandicocha Lake, which has a completely different ecosystem from Lake Garzacocha (where the hotel is located). Board paddle canoes for a 1 ½- hour glide down Mandiyacu stream. One easily sees the myriad of wildlife that presents itself along the shores of the stream. Arriving at the Napo River, board a motorized canoe for the trip back to La Selva.
El Salado: A two-hour excursion often combined with a picnic lunch and trips across the Napo River (see following). Visit a site where, with a little luck, you’ll see parrots, and parakeets by the thousands.
Night Excursions: Sample La Selva’s nightlife! Canoe or walking trips after dark to view nocturnal animals such as caiman, monkeys, insects and owls.
135 Foot Observation Tower: Not far from the lodge you can spend many hours observing birds flying at eye-level, wildlife of all kinds, and yes, a bird’s-eye view of it all.
Butterfly Farm: Available every afternoon. Close to the lodge, watch and photograph butterflies at close range. With some luck, witness the miracle of metamorphosis.
Birds: The lagoon and adjacent forest harbor such rarities as the zig zag heron, long tailed potoo, and harpy eagle along with over 450 other species of birds. Several species new to Ecuador have been found at La Selva Lodge including: Bartlett’s tinamou, stripe-backed bittern, tui parakeet, point-tailed palmcreeper, barred antshrike and little ground tyrant.
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Days 5 Wildlife viewing in the morning – return to Quito in the afternoon
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This morning we say good-bye to our jungle lodge and return to Quito. It’s an early wake-up call at 5 a.m. to prepare for the return trip. We retrace our route and arrive back in Quito in the afternoon.
Return travel to Quito: 6 hours. Breakfast and lunch included.
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REI Adventures shares non-exclusive departures with La Selva Lodge.
La Selva Lodge At-a-Glance Itinerary:
+ Full Itinerary
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La Selva Lodge Description
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Day 1 Quito to Coca and the Rio Napo
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Days 2-4 Jungle walks, Observation Tower, Parrot Clay Licks
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Days 5 Wildlife viewing in the morning – return to Quito in the afternoon
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Note on Itinerary:
The 5-day itinerary allows for one more days at the lodge. Although we do our very best to adhere to the schedules listed above, these itineraries are just samples and are subject to change for numerous reasons beyond our control, including weather and terrain conditions.
REI Adventures and our eco-lodge partners cannot assume responsibility for any problems arising from airlines, such as delays or lost luggage.
Qualifications:
This trip is rated Easy Active [2] and includes a variety of activities ranging from easy day walks, moderate hikes in a warm, tropical climate and canoeing. Participants should be in good physical condition and consider beginning a regular exercise regimen 1-2 months prior to departure consisting of walking/hiking, running and/or swimming to prepare for this adventure. The better shape you’re in, the more you’ll be able to take advantage of the lodges’ nature trails and optional activities.
Weather:
Although Ecuador lies on the equator, the country has a wide range of climates. The city of Quito, located at 9,350', has an average temperature of 55 to 75°F. In the tropical rainforest, it is best to be prepared for all kinds of weather. At times it can be hot and sunny, but a cool rainstorm may appear at a moment's notice during any time of the year and some guests are surprised at the need for a sweater.
General Information:
This trip is subject to the booking information set forth in the current REI Adventures Reservation Information. Please read this information carefully and call us if you have any questions. A full gear list and pre-departure information is sent upon sign-up. We highly recommend the purchase of travel insurance through REI Adventures. If coverage is purchased within 21 days of your initial trip deposit, the 'Pre-existing Conditions Exclusion' is waived (certain exclusions apply).
We look forward to having you join us for the trip of a lifetime! Why wait? Space is limited, reserve your adventure today.
Ecuadorian Amazon Eco Lodges
The key to staying comfortable while on an active trip is layering. To get maximum comfort with minimum weight, you need versatile layers that mix and match to create the right amount of insulation, ventilation and weather protection. This gear list has been created to help you in choosing your equipment for the trip. Try to bring only what is necessary, as this will help you and the field staff.
Weather
Although Ecuador lies on the equator, the country has a wide range of climates. The city of Quito, located at 9,350', has an average temperature of 55 to 75°F. In the tropical rainforest, it is best to be prepared for all kinds of weather. At times it can be hot and sunny, but a cool rainstorm may appear at a moment's notice during any time of the year and some guests are surprised at the need for a sweater.
Gear Checklist
Provided Gear
- Rubber boots (up to size 12)
Luggage
- Duffel bag (wheels and retractable handle are fine) sturdy and large enough to hold clothing and gear
- Passport security pouch or belt
- Daypack to carry raingear, camera, water and snacks
- Luggage tags and luggage locks
Casual Clothing
- Lightweight, easily washable items for evening wear or when traveling
Footwear
- Lightweight hiking boots or trail shoes, broken-in
- Comfortable walking shoes or sport sandals
Outerwear
- Rain jacket (or poncho), waterproof and breathable
Clothing
- Lightweight fleece jacket or sweater for cool evenings
- Lightweight, long-sleeve shirt(s) for sun/insect protection
- Hiking shorts - synthetic, quick-drying
- Hiking pants - synthetic, quick-drying
Travel Accessories
- Two water bottles (1-quart size) or hydration pack
- Sunglasses and retainer strap
- Watch with alarm or travel clock
- Headlamp/flashlight with extra batteries/bulb
Optional Field Gear
- Camera, film and spare batteries
- Reading and writing materials
- Ziploc bags for easy storage
- Favorite energy snacks and drink mixes
Things to Consider
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Please remember to always pack essential items such as your passport, money, eyewear, hiking boots, a pair of shorts/shirt/fleece top/sandals and medications in your carry-on baggage, in case your luggage is delayed.
- Cotton is wonderful in warm weather. However, once it becomes wet, it will drain your body heat. Bring quick-dry synthetics such as REI’s Sahara Convertible pants with Supplex® nylon.
- Bring clothing that is lightweight and protects you from the sun. Muted earthtone colors are best for wildlife viewing. It is always good to have a lightweight fleece jacket or sweater, especially for the evenings.
- Bring US dollars in small denominations ($1, $5) for bar bills and Artesania purchases.
- Rubber boots are best for visiting the jungle. The lodge provides them (up to size 12). Be sure to bring liner socks to wear with the rubber boots.
- Stuff sacks are great for sorting gear. Use different sizes/colors to differentiate contents.
- Plastic bags are great for keeping clothing and gear dry. Use Ziploc bags to keep wet clothes separate from dry clothes.
- If you wear prescription glasses, use a safety cord and bring an extra pair if possible. Contact lens wearers should also bring an extra set, or bring eyeglasses for a backup.
- Space for luggage is limited. Baggage allowance for the flight from Quito to Coca is a maximum of 20 kg / 44 lb.
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