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Tags: Jungle Travel / Indigenous Tribes / Ecotourism / → All Tags
A Less-Than-Leisurely Stroll Through South America
A modern-day explorer named Ed Stafford needs your help to complete his latest mission: a walk from the source of the Amazon River in the Andes to the mouth of the river in Brazil. Stafford began the project on April 2, 2008 with a walking partner named Ed Collyer, but after three months, Collyer called it quits and headed back to England. Apparently the two didn't get along very well. Stafford is looking for another partner to complete the journey, and maybe that partner is you. Yes, gentle reader, if you're the adventurous sort, you don't mind poisonous snakes falling onto you from trees, and you can get along with a guy who may or may not be a jungle jerk, apply at Ed's website now for an opportunity to make history. After all, it's a feat that has never before been accomplished, and that many experts have said is impossible. But if you and Ed pull it off, you'll wind up in the record books and have helped indigenous people along the river's banks by studying their lifestyles and habits and preserving their traditions for prosperity. Sound good? Well, before you lace up your hiking boots and slather on the bug spray, read a little bit about what it's like to walk with Stafford in Saturday's Guardian travel section. I could handle the bugs, snakes, murky water, and general discomfort. But being accused of being a pelicara, literally, a "baby-eating monster that also steals the body fat of adults, sucks out their eyes and takes their organs," and looks just like a regular white guy? That would hurt my feelings.
[Photo: The Guardian]
Related Stories:
· Must Like Snakes ... [The Guardian]
· Walking the Amazon [Official Site]
· Jungle Travel Coverage [Jaunted]
Tags: Jungle Travel / Indigenous Tribes / Uncontacted People / ecotourism / → All Tags
Uncontacted South American Tribe Unknowingly Wins Big Legal Victory
It's hard to believe there are still tribes of indigenous people in the world who have never had contact with modern society. It's even harder to believe that one of them - the Totobiegosode tribe of Paraguay - recently won a major victory against two Brazilian companies without even being aware they were waging a battle. As CNN points out, lawsuits were filed on behalf of the natives by local environmental groups against the companies that were clearing jungle land to be used for cattle ranches. The companies have already cleared 6,000 hectares of forest in the Totobiegosode and Ayoreo people's (pictured) ancestral homelands, but the ruling puts a halt to further deforestation, at least for the moment.
Tags: Brazil Travel / Jungle Travel / The Natives Are Restless / → All Tags
Amazon Tribesmen Aim Arrows at Passing Plane
Experts with the Brazilian Indian Affairs department captured rare photos of a lost Amazon tribe while flying over one of the remotest corners of the South American jungle. The pictures show loincloth-clad warriors decked out in bright red body paint--waving bows and arrows at the photographers.
The experts who took the photographs say they arranged the flights in order to raise awareness about the more than 100 so-called uncontacted tribes living in the Amazon. These groups are currently in danger due to logging and the loss of their land.
Most of the isolated Amazonian tribes are spread throughout Brazil and Peru. Let the countdown for jungle vacation packages with mud massages and poison dart-making classes commence!
Related Stories:
· Rare Uncontacted Tribe Photographed in Amazon [Reuters]
· Jungle Paparazzo in Airplane Photographs "Uncontacted" Tribe [WorldHum]
· Brazil Travel coverage [Jaunted]
[Photo: Survival International]
