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This
Introtour offers a chance to visit one of
the most remote parts of the Amazon in
relative ease and comfort. The Serra dos
Carajás is a low mountain range blanketed
in some of the most beautiful primary
forest you will ever see and home to some
of the rarest birds on the continent.
Don’t let that scare you off; unlike
most Amazonian sites, almost all of the
birding is done from wide roads and
tracks, making it some of the easiest
rainforest birding anywhere. This really
is a great introduction to Amazonian
birding.
Day
1: Brasilia
After
arrival in Brazil’s capital,
you’ll be transferred to a hotel
for the night.
Day
2: Brasilia to Carajás
Before
taking a flight north to Carajás,
we’ll likely have some time to
bird in Brasilia NP. The cerrado
(savanna) here is excellent for a
variety of birds including the
endemic White-striped Warbler and
the rare Yellow-faced Parrot. Once
in Carajás, we’ll check into our
comfortable hotel, which will be our
base for five nights.
Days
3-6: Carajás National Forest
We
have four full days to bird a
variety of tracks through virgin
forest. The Salobo road has some of
the finest birding anywhere, and
it’s often so busy that a morning
can pass in the blink of an eye.
This is the best spot for the
beautiful and ultra-rare
Black-chested Tyrant, a bird nearly
unknown in life until it was found
here several years ago. Bamboo
patches nearby are great for
Black-and-white Tody-Tyrant,
Peruvian Recurvebill, and
Rose-breasted Chat, while farther
along we could find the big and
beautiful White-crested Guan,
the handsome White-tailed Cotinga,
or the endemic Carajás Woodcreeper.
We’ll listen for the distant
ringing of White Bellbirds, and
hopefully track one down. The Aguas
Claras road climbs to a ridge where
Hyacinth Macaws sometimes fly over,
and there always seems to be a large
mixed species flock here, often
containing Pará Gnatcatcher and
Blackish Pewee. A narrower forest
track nearby gives us a good chance
to see Black-bellied Gnateater, the
biggest member of the family, as
well as Opal-crowned Manakin, Pará
Foliage-gleaner, and the recently
described Cryptic Forest-Falcon. We
can’t pass up the chance to do
some nightbirding; along with
several owl species, we could find
Silky-tailed and Little Nightjars.
Day
7: Carajás to Brasilia
After
another full morning’s birding in
the forest, we’ll catch an
afternoon flight back to Brasilia,
where we spend our final night.
Day
8: Brasilia
The
tour ends this morning as we catch
flights out of Brasilia.
Tour
Info:
CLIMATE: Warm and humid, with some rain likely.
DIFFICULTY: Easy. Nearly all the birding is
from the road. Early starts are
required as it is necessary to drive
through an active iron mine before
reaching the best forest. Nearly all
lunches will be taken in the field.
ACCOMMODATION: Very good. While at Caraás, we'll stay in one of
several nice hotels in a company-run
mining town.
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