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We
currently only offer this as a custom tour. Keep in mind that Guyana is
one of the most expensive countries in South America in which to run a
birding tour, so a large group is recommended to keep per-person costs
down. While we can run it
year-round, it is best to avoid the rainiest months of May-July and
December-January.
Booking at least six months in advance is recommended.
The
small South American country of
Guyana is somewhat of an oddity in
South America. A former British
colony, it is the only nation on the
continent that is English-speaking.
However, the influences of the
Caribbean to the north, Brazil to
the South, and its Amerindian
population give it a truly unique
feel. Thanks to its mostly pristine
forests and steadily improving
tourism infrastructure, Guyana is
starting to gain a reputation on the
world birding scene as a great place
to see rare rainforest birds that
are otherwise hard to find
elsewhere. Cotingas are especially
well represented, from the tiny
Dusky Purpletuft to the magnificent
and sizable Crimson Fruitcrow, and
they will surely be a highlight of
this tour.
Day
1: Georgetown.
Most flights arrive in the evening,
and we’ll spend the night in the
capital city of Guyana.
Day
2: Georgetown and Karanambu.
We’ll start birding in the nearby
Georgetown Botanical Gardens, a
great place to see the Guianan
endemic Blood-colored Woodpecker as
well as Red-shouldered Macaw,
Black-crested Antshrike, and others.
Later we’ll take a short flight
south over vast rainforests to the
savanna of the Rupuruni, where we
spend two nights at Karanambu Ranch.
This is the home of Diane McTurk,
widely known for her work
rehabilitating orphaned Giant
Otters. She now runs the ranch as an
eco-lodge, and while staying here
we’ll be treated like part of the
family.
Day
3: Karanambu.
Karanumbu Ranch has an interesting
mix of rainforest and savanna.
We’ll spend the morning searching
especially for the rare Crestless
Curassow and the bizarre
Capuchinbird, but we’ll certainly
stop to look for anything else, like
Black-chinned Antbird and
Slate-headed Tody-Flycatcher. After
lunch, we’ll drive out to the
grasslands to look for the local
Bearded Tachuri among the more
common species like Bicolored Wren,
White-tailed Goldenthroat, and
Brown-throated Parakeet. At dusk we
have a great chance to see
White-tailed Nightjar and up to four
nighthawk species hawking insects at
dusk.
Day
4: Karanambu to Annai.
We have another morning here before
we board boats and head downriver
towards the village of Annai. The
river journey can be a lot of fun as
we may see a variety of kingfishers
darting upriver, and raptors like
the fish-eating Black-collared Hawk
plunge into the water. We have one
night in the pleasant Rockview
Lodge, where the surrounding
seasonally wet savanna is dotted
with huge Jabirus and wide-eyed
Double-striped Thick-knees.
Day
5: Annai to Surama.
This morning we’ll bird a
forest-clad hilltop that just might
be the best place in the world to
see the striking Spotted Puffbird.
The relatively open forest is also
great for noisy White-bellied
Antbirds, staring Pale-eyed
Pygmy-Tyrants, and cute Blue-backed
Manakins. After lunch we’ll drive
on to Surama, an indigenous village
now run as a lodge.
Day
6: Surama to Atta Lodge.
A wide trail first passes though
some open habitat before entering
fantastic tall rainforest. This is
the best place on the tour to see
some beautiful parrots like Red-fan,
Blue-cheeked, and Caica, but we’ll
also have our first go at some of
the most spectacular antbirds
around: White-plumed and
Ferruginous-backed. After lunch, we
move on to the huge wilderness area
of Iwokrama Forest. We hope to
stay here for three nights in
a brand new lodge being built
onsite, but if it isn’t ready we
can still bird here while based in
one of the other lodges in the area.
Days
7-8: Iwokrama Forest.
The star attraction here is the
superb metal canopy walkway built
out from the side of a hill. Nowhere
else is it easier to see canopy
specialists such as Todd’s and
Spot-tailed Antwrens, Dusky
Purpletuft, and Purple-throated and
Guianan Red-Cotingas. Even the
superb Crimson Fruitcrow, one of the
rarest and most sought-after of the
cotingas, is seen here regularly.
Along forest trails below the
walkway we’ll look for understory
birds like the beautiful
Black-and-red Grosbeak and Black
Curassow, as well as a variety of
woodcreepers and antbirds.
Elsewhere, patches of drier scrub
have different specialties like
Rufous-crowned Elaenia, Red-legged
Tinamou, and Guianan Antwren. One
morning we’ll hike to a lek of
Guianan Cock-of-the-rock, surely one
of the most spectacular birds on the
continent. Night drives may be a
highlight here, where White-winged
Potoo and even Jaguar are seen
fairly regularly.
Day
9: Iwokrama Field Station.
Today we’ll bird our way north
along a forested road to the
northern edge of the reserve. The
roadside birding is fairly easy and
we’ll keep a lookout for
Black-faced Hawk while we search for
some colorful birds like Waved
Woodpecker and Painted Parakeet. We
have one night at the superb
Iwokrama Field Station on the banks
of the Essequibo River.
Day
10: Iwokrama Field Station to
Georgetown.
We will have a full morning to bird
the trails here, looking for any
other rainforest specialties that we
may still need. This area is one of
the more reliable sites for the huge
Rufous-winged Ground-Cuckoo; if we
luck into an antswarm, we may have a
chance of seeing this near-mythical
bird. Other possibilities include
Amazonian Royal-Flycatcher and
Scale-backed Antbird. After lunch,
we fly back to Georgetown.
Day 11: Georgetown. The tour ends this
morning as we catch international
flights out of Georgetown.
TOUR
INFO:
CLIMATE:
Warm to hot and fairly humid.
February is in the dry season, but
some rain is still possible.
DIFFICULTY:
Easy to moderate. Most trails are
flat, but a few are fairly steep.
ACCOMMODATION: The
lure of Guyana is the wilderness experience and the wildlife, so you
should not expect luxury accommodation. Outside of Georgetown (where
there are excellent hotels), the lodging ranges from rather basic at
Surama to very good at Iwokrama. Atta has shared bathrooms, while all
the others have private bathrooms. At most lodges, electricity is only
available for a few hours in the evening by generator.
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