And so after 10 hours in a canoe, one last night in Coca, and 9 hours in a bus, we got to Quito, only to leave Ecuador the day after!
We had just one day to spend in Quito, and what better way to visit a capital city than with a tour of its hospitals?
Remember that fall on the spikee branches a few days back? One of the splinters was still buried in my finger and it was getting infected, so I had to take care of this before we moved on.
We were recommended to a first clinic. We got there and they said they would charge 500USD to remove the splinter! Seeing our pale faces they suggested we try with another clinic !
Indeed the next clinic was charging 25USD for the same. The doctor was super nice and a few needle stings later I left with an open finger, a big bandaid and still enough time to visit some of the city 🙂
The doctor has suggested we try the cable car that leads to an amazing view of the city, so we went straight there. But by the time we reached it was starting to be cloudy and rainy. When we reached the top, we had an amazing view on white, blank, nothingness! And an hour long queue to get back down since everyone else felt the same way.
We only had a few hours left for an evening stroll in the historical center. The next morning we had to wake up early for our flights.
Ouch!Cloudy viewBest view of Quito we could get!Evening strollQuito by night Where is Leo?Early morning before the planesQuick view of the Cotopaxi from the plane window (photo and edit by Leo)
After the jungle adventure we decided to try and get to Cusco. I contacted a tourist company (recommended by a friend) that organises treks to Machu Picchu to understand the situation in Peru. She confirmed that things were slowly going back to normal. This sounded encouraging and we decided to fly from Quito to Cusco since we didn’t have much time. The Inca trail ends in January every year because of the rains.
So we headed from El coca to Quito by bus. We were in Quito only for a day. Arjun’s thorn related infection worsened. It began to be painful. Our Airbnb host recommended a clinic and we quickly went there. Once we reached the clinic, the nurse dissuaded us from getting treated there. Apparently, this minor intervention required a plastic surgeon and it was to cost us 500 USD! This was their procedure. Although the plastic surgeon might have done wonders to Arjun’s finger… who knows, Arjun may have become a finger model, we decided to go to another clinic recommended by the nurse. Everyone here were thoroughly professional and the doctor was really kind. He told us to take the cable car and have a bird’s eye view of Quito. We did just that. Except that the weather conditions worsened just when we reached and we couldn’t see beyond 2 meters. Thunder, lightning and a hailstorm! The wait to get back was loooooong. We walked around the historical centre in the evening and woke up very early to catch our flight. Unfortunately, our Airbnb host didn’t turn up to collect his keys as he thought we were leaving in the evening! We left the keys in an envelope near the doorstep before a few panic calls and jumped into a cab to catch our flight. We had 2 stopovers – Guayaquil and Lima. At the airport in Lima, Arjun was charged for his guitar as it wasn’t a standard size. This made us mad. Noone has ever charged us for taking a guitar with our cabin luggage. We reached Cusco after a series of unfortunate events. Cusco airport was empty near the exit. Noone holding placards, no taxis, not a bird in sight except for police personnel. Once we walked out of the airport we took a cab to our Airbnb.
Roast pig in QuitoBeforeThe embedded thorn Anesthesia The operation The stubborn thorn out at last!After
.. or how I ended up carrying a dead monkey on my shoulder in the middle of the rain forest.
And so we finally met Wareka, our guide with whom I had been exchanging WhatsApp messages. He’s a short, strong, young man in his early thirties with a friendly smile. He comes with « Mr Paharito » (named after his ability to imitate birds) who speaks some english, to help as a translator, and two cousins; Yatey and Raoul. They’ll be our escorts into the jungle.
Wareka and his cousins are from the Waorani tribe who live deep in the amazon forest and have been « contact people » for some 60 years now. Tomorrow they will take us to their family and show us their customs. But first we need gum boots! They take us to a store to buy rain ponchos and a pair of gum boots for Leo; with this we’re ready for the adventure.
In the evening, we all meet for a few beers, to break the ice and learn a few words of waorani.
At thirty, Wareka has 8 children, from 3 wifes, and started his own tourism agency. (Makes me wonder what I’ve done with my life 😂)
In the discussion, they explain something about a guy called Taga, who split from the tribe because he refused to be « contact people ». Taga and his followers, the « non contact people », have been in conflict with the waoranis. We’ll be passing through their territory, and if they see us, they kill us! … But don’t worry!
I’m not sure if they pulled this up to spice up their gig, but I must admit it made us all a bit nervous !
The last night in town was disturbed by a loud storm with heavy rain, and dreams of Tagas attacking our boat!
At 5:30am, it’s time to load our bags in the pickup truck and go. We cross the Napo river and head towards the Yasuni national park. For a couple of hours we follow an oil pipeline alimented by a series of extraction sites. The Ecuador jungle has been invaded -and heavily polluted- by American oil companies. (Chevron owes 80B$ to Ecuador for a case of pollution but they won’t pay a dime!)
We reach the San Francisco hotel, by the Shiripuni river, where a breakfast is awaiting us, then walk to the river; it’s 10am and the rest of the trip is by canoe.
For hours we keep our eyes wide open; admiring the jungle, looking for birds and monkeys and crocodiles… and potential attackers! We’re sitting on a small wooden bench, on the floor or on the baril of gasoline. Yatey drives the boat, standing by the engine, and Raoul sits on the front to help navigate. The others quickly fall asleep, they know it’s a long ride. For us it’s the adventure of a lifetime, for them, it’s just a ride back to the village!
We manage to spot big parrots of various kinds, often flying in pairs, and giant herons flying close to us. We pass by a big tapir swimming, that ducks in the water and escapes to the shore. After a few hours we also start dozing off. Eventually we even pull out the guitar and ukulele to kill some time.
We make a short break at a first settlement where we meet one of Wareka’s wives and child, and pick up some people in the boat.
We reach around 6pm, just before nightfall and the rain, after 10 hours of navigating inside the jungle, towards the Peru border.
Already, Yate and Raoul start cooking the evening meal, with vegetables brought from Coca, while a young pet monkey jumps all around the kitchen and makes Leo nervous.
I was a bit anxious before leaving, but when we went to bed in our wooden cabin, it felt strangely familiar. The smell of humid wood, the nocturnal sounds of the jungle, the voices of the bats under the roof, the mosquito net above my head, reminded me of Iquitos in Peru, of Belem in Brazil, or even Chang Mai in Thailand, where I had already slept in the jungle many years ago.
On the second day, after a breakfast of bread, butter, jam, coffee and eggs, Wareka and his father Guinto, took us for a walk in the « backyard », our first walk into the jungle, behind the settlement. They showed us some of the plants they use, out of the incredible biodiversity. Plants to cure fever or diarrhoea, plants to cure bites of venomous snakes, plants to imitate bird sounds, termites nests to make antiseptic, plants to use as soap and toothpaste, plants to drink fresh water from, tree ants that taste of lemon, plants to make razor sharp knives, plants to make strong threads that they use to make hamocs… and plants to make the darts that we’ll be using tomorrow and plants to make the poison that they put on the darts.
In the afternoon, we go meet Miniwa, a 75(ish) year old man chosen to become the next shaman. He lives with his wife in an isolated hut, further away from the main settlement, and welcomes us in the traditional outfit, which is no outfit at all. After greetings and some group photos, we enter his hut, where he demonstrates how he prepares the poisoned darts used for hunting.
After leaving Miniwa, we get back to the far end of the main settlement to meet with Kempere the present shaman, who lives with his wife Mehiemo. Kempere is said to be 120 years old! It seems vastly exagerated but he certainly looks from another era. Before the woaronis became contact people, Kempere was leading the rebels that chased the oil companies and the army away from these parts of the jungle, with spears and blowpipes! In spite of their old age, they are both radiant with smiles. After Kempere’s death, Miniwa will be the new shaman.
Wareka then introduces us to the handling of the blowpipe. Leo practices on a fruit and manages quite well but it’s very long and heavy so I have to hold the far end. Sensing the potential of a skilled hunter, one woman suggests Leo should marry her daughter!
Wareka tells me that before covid, Kempere could still walk properly. So the next morning I’m very surprised to find him walking alone, leaning on his walking stick, near our lodge. I walk up to him to help him go wherever he intends to go. He breathes heavily and sits to rest every few meters. Eventually I call a woman to help understand what he needs, but nobody is worried, he simply came for company, and he comes to sit with us for breakfast. Moments later, his wife comes running after him, always with the same radiant smile.
Today is the big day: we go hunting for monkeys. The team is comprised of Wareka, his father Guinto, his uncle Baiwa, his cousin Mauricio, Baiwa’s son who brought Dario, a german tourist, and Miniwa, the shaman to be. Two kids a bit younger than Leo come along. Raoul drives the boat, Paharito, Kipa and his wife have also come for fishing.
After a couple of hours deeper towards the Peru border, the boat stops and we wonder how they know where we are since nothing looks more like a jungle tree to us than the next jungle tree! But somehow they know, and indeed we are near the piranha lake where we’re supposed to be.
As soon as we debark, Baiwa and Miniwa remove their t-shirt and start running naked in the jungle, at an incredible pace, armed with their long spears and blowpipes! No path here, we’re just dashing through the thick forest and get entangled in vines. Soon we find open fruits on the ground, we hear the sounds and spot our first monkey perched high up on a tree. (They spot. We have the hardest time seeing anything, we’re too busy keeping up with the group and making sure we don’t get lost!)
Finding the monkey is one thing, killing it is another story! We make loud noises and shake branches to get the monkey to move and reveal its position, or move to a branch where we have better visibility. The monkey sees us and jumps away to another tree. We run after him, looking upwards for the monkey and downwards for the vines and holes on the ground. And we repeat the process. Every once in a while they see an opportunity, quickly load the blowpipe with a dart and blow it hard towards the canopy. (I can’t even see the damn monkey!)
We run like this for hours, the group splits in two and we follow whoever we can. It’s hot and wet and it’s starting to rain. At some point Baiwa shows up with a first prey, a young monkey. Dario tells us how the 70 year old man climbed to the top of the tree in seconds to fetch his prey perched high on a branch. They attach his tail to his head with a thin vine and pass it to Leo, to carry it like a sort of handbag!
After some more running, the rain intensifies and we’re about to give up when Wareka blows and hits his target. An adult monkey drops a hundred meters just in front of me. The dart only paralyses the prey, they have to strangle him to death right after. Again they attach the head to the tail and pass it to me. The warm body is still shaken with spasms in the arms and legs as I put it on my shoulder.
That’s enough meat for today, but before we return, we’ll stop to fish some piranhas! After all this running inside the thick vegetation I have no idea where we are or which way the river is, but somehow they know and we make it back to the lake. Wareka cuts fishing rods out of some tree and attaches a nylon thread and a hook with some meat on it.
The shore of the lake is extremely muddy and slippery, and surrounded by branches with thick long spikes, so of course I manage to slip and slam right into the spikes!
We try for a short while but I only get one small fish, not even a piranha. The piranhas are too smart for me; they just eat the meat off the hook! But the ones who stayed on the boat already caught some.
On the way out I slip again , my leg in the water and my hands on the spikes. Never did I feel so close to being Sandra Bullock!
Back at the camp, a woman prepares the monkey for diner. She starts by burning and scraping off the hair. Then she removes the insides and genitals. Finally she cuts off the arms and head and torso and puts everything in a big pot, a first one to wash, and a second one to boil everything in water. Of course the human like shape made the whole scene slightly disturbing!
In the evening, after our normal dinner (vegetables, rice and chicken cutlet) we get to try the grilled piranha and a piece of boiled monkey arm. The piranha was delicious but we were a bit more reluctant to try the monkey. At least we had an easy piece of muscle (and not the head!). It had the typical strong flavour of game meat and the smokey smell of the fire. Still, more tender than I expected.
The next morning, a woman was nibling on a monkey hand, asking cheerfully how we liked the meat, while her baby in the hamoc was sucking an arm bone.
It was the fourth day, the women demonstrated ceremonial dances and chants and presented handicrafts. This type of representation for tourists usually makes me uneasy, but this was different ; they were people we knew by now, one of them had cooked the monkey, another had just extracted the splinters out of my hands an hour before. They were very at ease with their traditional nudity, and cheerful.
Then we went to a pond where birds usually gather in the morning to drink water. But the rain was pouring and we only managed to see one big macao parrot, where they normally come by dozens when it’s sunny. Back on the boat, the rain got even stronger, we were soaked and had to abort the rest of the activities. Leo was happy to get back to the playground to play football with the kids, like he’s done every evening.
And there we are on the fifth day, sitting in the canoe for 12 hours to get back to Coca, so I write this post to kill time. By chance the rain has stopped and we can enjoy the ride. We just passed a line of turtles on a floating branch, a bunch of monkeys doing flips in the branches, and a few more parrots and herons.
This morning I asked Wareka if we could quickly stop by the giant sequoia that we couldn’t see yesterday. It’s a magnificent tree with roots that start over 3 meters above ground creating cave like spaces around the base of the trunk.
In the end we didn’t get to see any anaconda, jaguar or crocodile but to connect with these people and to share with them a « page of the jungle book » was an unforgettable experience, that cannot compare to any National Geographic documentary.
As I was writing my little « Woaroni dictionary » and the names and ages of the people we met, I couldn’t help thinking about how much of the history that we « know » that has been transliterated in this manner, by various people, in various languages.. so many accumulated errors and misinterpretations that end up as facts and dates in our history books.
Early morning; Mauricio, Raoul and Wareka are loaded with our bags at the back of the truck!Yatey is half asleep as we drive to the riverMr Paharito having a cigarette breakOff we go!Omnipresent from the crib to the tomb, the infamous cola bottle invades the deepest parts of the jungle 😦Ukulele on the canoeTime to test our rain ponchosWareka and family Traditional hutHouse petsNight falls and Raoul has been keeping his eyes on the river for 10 hours Yatey cooks diner with a torch lightGata (monkey in woarani) is jumping all over.. and playing with the candle!Sleeping under the mosquito netLet’s go walk in the backyard Guinto and the kidsTucan imitation with a leaf whistle Drinking fresh water from the vineCutting slices of palm trunk to make dartsSharpening the dartsKarue and ChristianSharpening more darts back homeLeo practicing the blowpipeMono loco keeps jumping on all the kids and pulling their hair !On the adults as well!Meet Miniwa, the next shamanPreparing the poison for the dartsLeo posing with a bunch of dartsMiniwa’s wifeKempere’s houseKempere and his wife MehiemoMehiemo Kempere resting during his morning walkTime to go hunting Miniwa and his blowpipeBaiwa loads a dartLeo gets a chance to shoot!Miniwa shootsLeo carries the first prey on his shoulder Miniwa hits a tree trunk that resonates to the top, to make the monkey moveBaiwa shoots Miniwa strangles the second preyOn the way back, Leo gets to ride the boatLeo and the baby tapirBurning the monkey’s hairChopping the monkeyThe monkey soupGrilled piranha Pieces of cooked monkeyMauricio’s baby munching on a monkey boneThe ceremonial presentation NiewerekaYewa EmopaGuintoMehiemo Mary is also being painted, the colour comes from a fruitKids in the rain Sharing smiles with the wise manLeo and friends JohnObeIn front of the giant sequoia