Exactly a year ago, myself, my paddling mate Erik and another friend Manny did
a canoe trip down the Rio Branco to the Rio Negro, in the northern part of Brazil's
Amazon jungle. It was a great trip, completely off the grid, paddling in a local hardwood
canoe from the town of Boa Vista to the mouth of the Negro. Along the way, we went
through rapids, stayed with local villagers, caught and ate many different fish, slept on
sandbars (crocs lurking at the water's edge), got pummelled by intense thunder storms,
saw monkeys,parrots, tapir, dolphins, hundreds of birds, got bite by a thousand mosquitos,
we ate turtle and wild boars hunted by locals, drank cachaça (Brazilian rum) by the nightly
campfire... In total it was over 500km of paddling, 4 weeks on the river, one week getting
ready in Boa Vista and one week winding down in Manaus. Our canoe was made by a local
boat builder. While we waited, I took out my watercolours and painted the local fish,
most of which we ended up catching and eating, day after day after day down the river.
Amazon jungle. It was a great trip, completely off the grid, paddling in a local hardwood
canoe from the town of Boa Vista to the mouth of the Negro. Along the way, we went
through rapids, stayed with local villagers, caught and ate many different fish, slept on
sandbars (crocs lurking at the water's edge), got pummelled by intense thunder storms,
saw monkeys,parrots, tapir, dolphins, hundreds of birds, got bite by a thousand mosquitos,
we ate turtle and wild boars hunted by locals, drank cachaça (Brazilian rum) by the nightly
campfire... In total it was over 500km of paddling, 4 weeks on the river, one week getting
ready in Boa Vista and one week winding down in Manaus. Our canoe was made by a local
boat builder. While we waited, I took out my watercolours and painted the local fish,
most of which we ended up catching and eating, day after day after day down the river.
Carlos the boat builder. It took about five days to build our canoe. All hardwood planks. 6.5 metres. Very solid but heavy. |
We got to know several locals during our preparatory week, they
gave us T-shirts and hats and I was interviewed by local tv and
newspaper journalists the morning we paddled off.
|
Marina. a riverside restaurant owner in Boa Vista, took us
under her wing while we waited for our canoe to be built. We
named our canoe after her.
|
A family we stayed with a couple of days at the head of the rapids. We slung
our hammocks under a tin roof and learned from them how to catch fish,
Amazon style.
|
It was the dry season so there were hundreds of island sand bars. Thats where we slept every night, either under the stars or in our tent during thunderstorm downpours. |
A tasty "tucunaré" (or peacock bass), that Erik caught using a Canadian buzz bomb lure. |
Hi Andre...your paintings in your sketch book? (was it a sketch book or diary) are beautiful....your blog is great and it is nice to read your writing with your images...
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