EXPEDITION HIGHLIGHTS:

NEW DATES! July 5-19, 2018

Explore by land and water Brazil’s Pantanal, the world’s most extensive freshwater wetland

  • View & photograph the largest American cat, the Jaguar, in the wild
  • World’s largest concentrations of Jabiru, biggest species of stork in the Americas
  • See and photograph the world’s largest parrot, the cobalt blue Hyacinth Macaw
  • Spectacular South American birding—usually encountering 300+ species in just two weeks
  • Visit Alta Floresta in the Brazilian Amazon, home to an amazing, seasonal Harpy Eagle eyrie & the most diverse primate assemblage in Amazonia
  • Up-close encounters with Giant Otters and good chances to see and photograph the Brazilian Tapir
  • Top end lodging makes traveling to remote parts of Brazil comfortable
  • Pouso Piuval, Pousada Porto Jofre, Hotel Pantanal Mato Grosso in the Pantanal & Cristalino Lodge and private reserve in Brazilian Amazonia and more
  • World Class Brazilian co-leaders and more

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Day 1 ARRIVE CUIABA from SAO PAULO:

OVERNIGHT HOTEL GRAN ODARA

Bem-vindo ao Brasil! Welcome to Brazil!

Upon arrival in Cuiaba, Capital City of Mato Grosso State, you will be transferred to the very fine Hotel Gran Odara, where views of the city and a nearby, well-vegetated natural park will dazzle, and the culinary delights will enliven your taste buds.

Early birds will have an opportunity to bird the grounds and have a lovely lunch at the Hotel Fazenda Mato Grosso and/ or Mirante das Aguas, Mato Grosso, which are perched above the meandering banks of the Rio Cuiaba (Cuiaba River), the same river we will be enjoying Jaguars and world class birding along in the Pantanal, farther down stream!

Some exciting birds typical of the hotel gardens and adjacent riverine floodplain of the Cuiaba River include Bare-faced Ibis; Lesser Yellow-headed Vulture; Snail Kite; Southern Lapwing; Wattled Jacana; Large-billed Tern; Tropical Screech-Owl; Black-fronted Nunbird; Rufous-tailed Jacamar; White-wedged Piculet & Yellow-tufted, Golden-green & Green-barred woodpeckers; Southern Caracara; Yellow-chevroned Parakeet and Red-shouldered Macaw; Straight-billed Woodcreeper and Red-billed Scythebill; Rufous Hornero, Brown Cachalote & Yellow-chinned Spinetail; Vermilion Flycatcher & Rusty-margined Spinetail; Thrush-like Wren; Pale-breasted & Rufous-bellied thrushes; Yellow-billed Cardinal; Sayaca Tanager; Yellow-rumped Cacique, Epaulet Oriole & Giant Cowbird, etc.

We return to the Hotel Gran Odara for dinner and a comfortable rest in anticipation of our exciting transfer to the world-renowned Pantanal, on day 2, following.

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Day 2 TRANSFER CUIABA TO POUSO PIUVAL:

OVERNIGHT POUSO PIUVAL LODGE

Following a delectable buffet and served breakfast at the impeccable Hotel Gran Odara, we will transfer to world-class Pouso Piuval Lodge, our first stop in the pantanal, birding en route.

Birds to watch for at roadside, especially once we reach the Pantanal, include but are not limited to Red-legged Seriema; Chaco Chachalaca; Jabiru & Wood Stork; Rufescent Tiger-Heron; Bare-faced & Buff-necked Ibis; Lesser Yellow-headed Vulture; Black-collared, Savannah & Roadside hawks; Picazuro Pigeon; Southern Caracara & Aplomado Falcon; Amazon & Ringed kingfishers; Turquoise-fronted & Orange-winged parrots; Rufous Hornero, Saffron Finch and more….

Upon arrival at Pouso Piuval we will check into our quite nice cabins then enjoy our first ranch-style lunch at this amazingly complete, family-run establishment that is transforming from ranching to ecotourism.

After a lunch siesta we’ll do some birding in the afternoon, followed by a nocturnal, truck-borne spotlighting excursion after dinner, before turning in for the night.

Some highlights to look forward to during the nocturnal spotlighting safaris are Great Potoo, Common Pauraque, Mottled and Black-and-White owls, and mammals such as the Crab-eating Fox. Even Jaguar is a possibility!

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Days 3-4 ONE AND A HALF ACTION-PACKED DAYS OF DIURNAL & NOCTURNAL OVERLAND SAFARIS, BOATING EXPEDITIONS ON BAHIA PIUVAL & LIMITED FOOT EXPEDITIONS:

OVERNIGHT POUSO PIUVAL LODGE

Pouso Piuval is a large landholder that, due to the advent of birding-based ecotourism, is transforming itself from cattle ranching to full-service ecotourism.

Over the years the lodge has added a quite complete gift shop—that includes birding guides and nature titles, in addition to sunscreen, artistry, and souvenirs—in addition to a refreshing view swimming pool, and upgraded cabins with air conditioning, superior showers and even satellite television, etc.

The expansive ranch also includes open-air, high-clearance safari vehicles and boats to explore its environs on both land and water. There are also boardwalks providing access to marshy environments and an observation tower overlooking a large, mixed nesting colony of Great Egrets, Snowy Egrets, Wood Storks, Roseate Spoonbills, and more!

We will make the most of our two night stay stay at Pouso Piuval by partaking in the following:

  1. At least one boating excursion on Piuval Bay—an extensive, shallow lake where our friendly water boatmen will bring us up close and personal with Southern Screamer; Black-bellied Whistling-Duck; Brazilian Teal; Jabiru & Wood Stork; Rufescent Tiger-Heron, Cocoi, Little Blue and Striated herons, Great and Snowy egrets; Boat-billed Heron; Roseate Spoonbill; Limpkin; Purple & Azure gallinules; Southern Lapwing; Wattled Jacana; Large-billed Tern; Black Skimmer and even Ringed, Amazon & Green kingfishers; with a chance to see Aplomado Falcon and more.

Bird photographers will be thrilled at the opportunity to photograph Black-collared Hawks in flight, as some have been conditioned to accept handouts of Orange-bellied Piranha that he will catch ahead of our arrival at the boat dock, where we can hear and sometimes see Gray-breasted, Ash-throated, Yellow-breasted and Rufous-sided crakes, in addition to other exciting birding delights.

  1. A walk on a half kilometer-long boardwalk leading to a well-built, remote observation tower overlooking the aforementioned heronry Great & Snowy egrets; Cocoi Herons; Wood Storks & Roseate Spoonbills, etc. There’s even a very approachable and photographable Hyacinth Macaw nest along the path between the boat landing and boardwalk.

Recent visits have revealed regular sites for such exciting birds as Hoatzin; Great Horned Owl (the orange-eyed South American form which might be recognized as a full species); White-wedged Piculet; Hyacinth Macaw; Orange-winged & Turquoise-fronted parrots; Great Antshrike & Mato Grosso Antbird; Great Rufous and Straight-billed woodcreepers; Pale-legged Hornero; Gray-crowned Cachalote; White-lored ; Masked Gnatcatcher; Black-capped Donacobius; and Solitary Black Cacique, among others. In the flooded savanna viewable from the top of the observation tower, our past groups have sometimes seen concentrations of over 150 Jabiru feeding together. An unforgettable vision, indeed!

  1. At least one crepuscular and nocturnal truck-borne spotlight safari to seek out Great and Common potoos; Common Pauraque & Band-tailed Nighthawk; Black-banded, Mottled& Great Horned owls; Tropical Screech-owl; and even Crab-eating Fox, with chances to see Greater Anteater, South American Coati, Marsh Deer and any of five species of tropical cats—Jaguar, Puma, Ocelot, Margay or Jaguarundi—that occur on the ranch.
  2. Of course we will make many excursions in our own, excellent excursion bus to reach the far-flung birding hotspots at Pouso Piuval.

Other exciting species of birds, mammals and reptiles that may be encountered during our stay at Pouso Piuval include Greater Rhea (largest American bird); Undulated tinamou; Muscovy; Chaco Chachalaca & Chestnut-bellied Guan; Whistling and Boat-billed herons; Green, Plumbeous & Buff-necked ibises; Snail Kite; Crane & Great Black hawks; Sunbittern; Maguari Stork; Red-legged Seriema; Guira Cuckoo; Smooth-billed Ani; Ferruginous Pygmy-Owl; Nacunda and Band-tailed nighthawks; Toco Toucan and Chestnut-eared Aracari; Little, Cream-colored, Pale-crested, Lineated and Crimson-crested woodpeckers; Red-billed Scythebill; White-rumped Monjita; Southern Caracara & Bat Falcon; Cattle Tyrant; Purplish Jay; Thrush-like Wren; Rufous-bellied Thrush; Yellow-billed Cardinal; Double-collared and Rusty-collared seedeaters; Crested Oropendola; Orange-backed Trupial, Chopi Blackbird and Rufous-bellied Euphonia, etc.

Common here is the Capybara, South American Coati and Crab-eating Fox, while Maned Wolf and Greater Anteater have been encountered.

Commonly-seen reptiles include the large Pantanal Black Caiman and occasionally even Yellow Anaconda!

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Day 4 (post-lunch): OVERLAND TRANSFER POUSO PIUVAL TO PORTO JOFRE, FOLLOWING TRANSPANTEIRA HIGHWAY (with strategic stops for birding and wildlife photography along the way when something exciting catches our eye… and it will!):

OVERNIGHT POUSADA PORTO JOFRE

Today, after enjoying our breakfast and last minute birding, we will begin our scenic, roughly 90 kilometer drive along the famous Transpanteria Highway, which is the only road to traverse the Pantanal between Pocone, the closest town to Pouso Piuval, and Porto Jofre on the Cuiaba River.

Along the unpaved route we will traverse more than 100 bridges, any one of which can reveal a wealth of life in the water body beneath—ranging form Pantanal Black Caiman; to Black-collared and Great Black hawks; Jabiru; Scarlet-hooded Blackbird; White-bellied Tyrannulet; and even Marsh Deer (the largest deer in South America); South American Coati; White-lipped and Collared peccaries, among other exciting birds, mammals and reptiles, etc.

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Days 5-8 FOUR FULL DAYS EXPLORING THE PANTANAL BY BOAT TO PHOTOGRAPH JAGUARS, BIRDS, CAPYBARA, CAIMAN & ANACONDAS:

OVERNIGHT POUSADA PORTO JOFRE

Four days of exciting, though relaxing, waterborne excursions from Porto Jofre, on the Cuiaba River, both morning and afternoon, into the early evening ahead of dinner!

Your four days of exploration on the Cuiaba River will earn you the envy of your traveling friends—and with a little luck (we’ve never missed them since the Jaguars living along the Cuiaba River have been protected and are no longer harassed) you will fulfill a wilderness aficionado’s dream: to see and photograph what is perhaps the most highly sought and fabled mammal in tropical America… the majestic Jaguar, in the wild and on a daily basis!

Of course, the region is rife with an abundance of birdlife, in addition to Jaguars. Common and notable birds usually encountered on the Cuiaba River and around Porto Jofre includes the potential to sight more than a hundred species daily, including Southern Screamer; Muscovy Duck; Bare-faced Curassow, Chaco Chachalaca, Chestnut-bellied and Blue-throated Piping guans; Jabiru and Wood storks; Capped and Boat-billed herons; up to five species of ibises, including Plumbeous and Buff-necked ibises; Black-collared Hawk, Snail Kite and Long-winged Harrier; Gray-cowled Wood-Rail; Sungrebe; Limpkin; Pied and Southern Lapwing, Collared Plover; Wattled Jacana; Yellow-billed and Large-billed terns; Black Skimmer; Pale-vented and Picazuro Pigeon; Greater and Smooth-billed anis; Striped, Little and Squirrel cuckoo; Band-tailed Nighthawk and Common Pauraque; Blue-crowned Trogon; Versicolored& Glittering-throated emeralds; Toco Toucan and Chestnut-eared Aracari; five species of kingfishers, including Ringed, Amazon, Green, American Pygmy and Green-and-rufous varieties; Black-fronted Nunbird; Great and Barred antshrikes; Mato Grosso Antbird; Thrush-like Wren; Red-billed Scythebill; Pale-legged and Rufous horneros; Rusty-backed, Chotoy and White-lored spinetails; Black-backed Water-Tyrant; Cattle Tyrant (often perched commensally on the backs and heads of the abundant Capybaras frequenting the river’s edge); Great and Lesser kiskadees; Rusty-margined Flycatcher; Rufous-browed Peppershrike; Ashy-headed Greenlet; Southern Rough-winged and White-winged Swallows; Gray-breasted and Brown-chested martins; Thrush-like and Fawn-breasted wrens; Black-capped Donacobius; Rufous-bellied and Pale-breasted thrushes; Yellow-billed Cardinal; Silver-beaked Tanager; Saffron Finch; Crested Oropendola, Solitary Black Cacique, Yellow-rumped Cacique, Orange-backed Trupial; Screaming, Bay-winged (Grayish Baywing) and Shining cowbirds; Unicolored Blackbird and more, etc.

Aside from it’s now famous Jaguars, other mammals commonly seen along the banks of the Cuiaba River are Capybara; Paca; White-tailed, Marsh and Brocket Deer; Silvery Marmoset; Brown Capuchin; Black Howler-Monkey; South American Coati and Crab-eating Raccoon; Giant and Neotropical otters and more.

 

Day 9 CUIABA RIVER BY BOAT, FOLLOWED BY AN AFTER LUNCH TRANSFER TO THE HOTEL PANTANAL MATO GROSSO FOR YET ANOTHER BOATING EXCURSION—THIS TIME ON THE PIXAIM RIVER—THEN AN OVERNIGHT STAY IN ADVANCE OF OUR FLIGHT TO ALTA FLORESTA THE FOLLOWING DAY:

OVERNIGHT HOTEL PANTANAL MATO GROSSO

This morning we’ll bid a fond farewell to Porto Jofre as we make it north about 50 kilometers to the Pixaim River and the welcoming Hotel Pantanal Mato Grosso, where we’ll spend the night. The hotel is about the half way point to Pocone, the first settlement reached after leaving the Pantanal, making it the perfect stopover point.

Besides, the Pixaim River is another wildlife-rich bastion, and we will definitely partake in an afternoon boating excursion to sight such top-end birds and mammals as Undulated Tinamou; Muscovy Duck; Blue-throated Piping-Guan; Anhinga; Rufescent Tiger-Heron; Agami and Boat-billed herons; Green Ibis; Black-collared Hawk and Great Black-Hawk (the latter two offering excellent photo ops as they are now habituated to taking Orange-bellied Piranha thrown to them by the boatmen!); Ringed, Green and Amazon kingfishers (the Ringed also been habituated to take fish offered them); Narrow-billed Woodcreeper; Rufous and Pale-legged horneros; Purplish Jay; Thrush-like Wren; White-winged and Southern Rough-winged swallows; Silver-beaked Tanager and more.

Additionally, the Hotel Pantanal Mato Grosso boasts a refreshing pool on site, recently renovated rooms, a delectable restaurant and a feeding station for birds in the front and Brazilian Tapirs in the back of the hotel. Capybara are common all along the Pixaim River and grounds of the Hotel Pantanal Mato Grosso, adding to the stimulation.

Frequent visitors to the bird feeders here are Chestnut-eared Aracari; Yellow-billed Cardinal (sometimes hundreds); Purplish Jay; Silver-beaked Tanager; Saffron Finch; Grayish Saltator; Screaming, Shiny, Bay-winged (Grayish Baywing) and Giant cowbirds to name a few.

Overhead, most of the vultures are Lesser Yellow-headed, Turkey or Black vultures, but the occasional King Vulture can also be sighted, which is a sight for sore eyes.

In 2017 a dead Crab-eating Fox on the Transpanteira attracted two King Vultures in for close viewing and photography, so you never quite know what surprises lie ahead when visiting the Hotel Pantanal Mato Grosso!

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Day 10 TRANSFER HOTEL PANTANAL MATO GROSSO TO CUIABA INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT FOR OUR 1 hour 30 minute FLIGHT TO ALTA FLORESTA, BRAZILIAN AMAZONIA:

OVERNIGHT CRISTALINO LODGE, CRISTALINO PRIVATE RESERVE

After breakfast, we bid a fond farewell to the Pantanal and begin an interesting, full-day of travel by road, air, then river to reach Cristalino Reserve in the Brazilian Amazon.

Transfer to Cuiaba Airport (3-4 hours) for our 1 hour 30-minute flight to Alta Floresta in the Brazilian Amazon! FLIGHT TO ALTA FLORESTA ON AZUL AIRLINES.

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Days 11, 12 & 13 THREE FULL DAYS EXPLORING THE WATERWAYS, OBSERVATION TOWERS & TRAILS AT CRISTALINO PRIVATE RESERVE WITHIN THE BRAZILIAN AMAZON RAINFOREST:

OVERNIGHT AT THE TOP-END CRISTALINO LODGE

The Private Cristalino Reserve is a birder-naturalist-photographer’s dream come true. Superlatives really won’t do it justice. You have to see it to believe it!

And we’ll be doing just that during our three full days and four nights at the Reserve, as we:

  1. Make several river-borne forays with our expert local guides and water boatmen.
  2. Visit two elevated birding and wildlife observation towers, allowing spectacular views (and photographic opportunities) above the rainforest canopy.
  3. Visit strategically-placed blinds at mineral licks, where birds and mammals come to forage.
  4. Limited walking along easy, well-maintained trails leading to the observation towers as well as strategic birding hotspots.
  5. If we desire we have the opportunity to make nocturnal forays for owls, nightjars and nocturnal mammals in the near vicinity of Cristalino Lodge.
  6. Enjoy the Lodge’s remarkably-comfortable facilities, including a nature library, outdoor patio, riverfront swimming platform and lounge chairs, and wonderful restaurant.
  7. Oh, and yes, we will be able to relax and enjoy the grounds, and even swim in the Cristalino River from a very inviting—and refreshing—floating platform.

 

Some birding highlights stratified according to the venues above:

Along the Cristalino and Teles Pires Rivers:

BIRDS: Red-throated Piping-Guan and Razor-billed Curassow; Anhinga; Rufescent Tiger-Heron; Cocoi and Capped herons; Green Ibis; Swallow-tailed and Plumbeous kites; Harpy Eagle (sometimes bathing at the river’s edge) and Great Black-Hawk; Sunbittern; Black-throated Mango; all five Amazonian kingfishers, including Green-and-Rufous and American Pygmy kingfishers; Hoatzin (far upstream at the adjacent Cristalino River State Park); Black-fronted Nunbird; Great Jacamar; Red-necked Aracari and Channel-billed Toucan; Black and Red-throated caracaras; Bat Falcon; Blue-headed and Yellow-crowned parrots; Blue-and-Yellow and Scarlet macaws; Spotted Tody-Flycatcher; Lesser Kiskadee and Rusty-margined flycatchers; Amazonian Umbrellabird (with a well-known lek where it’s possible to get great images along the Teles Pires River) and Spangled Cotinga; White-thighed, Southern Rough-winged, White-banded and Black-banded swallows; Silver-beaked and Palm tanagers; Yellow-rumped Cacique, etc.

MAMMALS: Greater Fishing and Long-nosed bats; Brown Capuchin Monkey; Southern Two-toed Sloth; Brown-throated Three-toed Sloth; Black-chested Mustached, Saddle-backed, Golden-handed and Silvery marmosets; Dusky Titi; Brown and White-fronted capuchin monkeys; Common Squirrel Monkey; Red Howler-Monkey; White-bellied, White-handed and Red-handed spider monkeys; Giant (common) and Neotropical otters; Ocelot (sometimes seen at the river’s edge) and Puma (rarely); Red-brocket Deer; Guianan Squirrel; Brazilian Tapir; Pink River Dolphin, etc.

From the Observation Towers either flying by or in the forest canopy at eye-level:

BIRDS: Greater Yellow-headed and King vultures; Harpy and Crested eagles (both rare but we have had very good looks at both this way); Rufous-thighed and Plumbeous kites; Plumbeous and Ruddy pigeons; Black-bellied Cuckoo; Crested Owl; Gray-rumped Swift; Black-eared Fairy, Fork-tailed Woodnymph and Versicolored Emerald; Black-tailed and Amazonian trogons; Curl-crested and Red-necked aracaris; Gould’s Toucanet; White-throated and Channel-billed toucans; Bar-breasted Piculet; Red-stained, Ringed, Cream-colored, Yellow-tufted and Red-necked woodpeckers; Red-throated Caracara; Cryptic Forest-Falcon (new to science); Scarlet-shouldered and Dusky-billed parrotlets; Orange-cheeked, Red-fan White-bellied and Blue-headed parrots; White-eyed, Golden-winged, Crimson-bellied and Satarem parakeets; Blue-and-Yellow, Scarlet, Red-bellied and Red-and-green macaws; Olivaceous, Strong-billed, White-necked and Swallow-winged puffbirds; Elegant and Buff-throated woodcreeper; Amazonian Tyrannulet; Helmeted Pygmy-Tyrant; Yellow-browed Tody-Flycatcher; Large-headed Flatbill; Bright-rumped Attila; Grayish Mourner; Spangled and Pompadour cotingas; Screaming Piha; Bare-necked Fruitcrow; Dwarf Tyrant-Manakin and Red-headed Manakin; Masked titer; Cinereous Mourner; Slaty-capped Shrike-Vireo; Chivi form of Red-eyed Vireo; Tooth-billed Wren; Black-faced, Palm, Flame-crested and Paradise tanagers; White-winged Shrike-Tanager; Black-faced and Blue dances; Purple Honeycreeper; Yellow-shouldered and Slate-colored grosbeaks; Olive Oropendola, Epaulet Oriole and Giant Cowbird, etc.

MAMMALS: Brown Capuchin Monkey; Silky Anteater; Southern Two-toed Sloth; Brown-throated Three-toed Sloth; Black-chested Mustached, Saddle-backed, Golden-handed and Silvery marmosets; Dusky Titi; Brown and White-fronted capuchin monkeys; Common Squirrel Monkey; Red Howler-Monkey; Common Wooly Monkey; White-bellied, White-handed and Red-handed spider monkeys; Monk and Brown-bearded saki monkeys; Black-headed Night-monkey; Kinkajou, etc.

Trails & Forests Surrounding Cristalino Lodge:

BIRDS: Harpy Eagle (in 2014 we had one bird perching just 5 minutes from the Cristalino Restaurant for more than an hours at less than 5m above the ground and at point blank range!) and Plumbeous Kite; Squirrel Cuckoo; Chestnut-bellied Screech-Owl; Blackish Nightjar; Crested and Spectacled owls; Swallow-winged Puffbird; Scarlet-bellied and Sataremm parakeets; Blue-headed Parrot; Dusky-billed Parrotlet; Rusty-margined Flycatcher; Palm Tanager and Yellow-rumped Cacique, etc.

MAMMALS: Greater Fishing and Long-nosed bats; Brown Capuchin Monkey; Southern Two-toed Sloth; Brown-throated Three-toed Sloth; Dusky Titi; Brown and White-fronted capuchin monkeys; Common Squirrel Monkey; Red Howler-Monkey; Black-faced Night-Monkey; Guianan Squirrel; Brazilian Tapir, etc.

At the Bird Blinds:

BIRDS: Various antbirds, mourners, parakeets and parrotlets. Occasionally, Long-tailed Potoo roosts near one or two of the blinds.

MAMMALS: Red Brocket Deer; White-lipped and Collared peccaries.

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Day 14 RETURN TO CIVILIZATION—CRISTALINO PRIVATE RESERVE/ ALTA FLORESTA/ CUIABA:

AIR TRANSFER ALTA FLORESTA TO CUIABA WHERE YOU WILL OVERNIGHT AT A THE NOW FAMILIAR HOTEL GRAN ODARA, NEAR THE CUIABA AIRPORT, VIA AZUL AIRLINES. WITH LUNCH AT A VERY NICE, OPEN AIR, BRAZILIAN CHURRASCARIA (BARBAQUE RESTAURANT) IN ALTA FLORESTA AHEAD OF OUR FLIGHT.

All good things must regrettably come to an end, but it is the hope of Greg Homel and Natural Encounters Birding & Wildlife Photography Tours is that you’ll be bringing home many happy memories, replete with excellent photographs, from this wonderful excursion as we make our way back to civilization and catch our flight from Alta Floresta to Cuiaba and beyond!

Day 15 FLIGHT CUIABA-SAO PAULO TO CONNECT WITH YOUR INTERNATIONAL FLIGHTS:

After a comfortable overnight stay at Hotel Gran Odara, we’ll transfer to the airport in Cuiaba for our flight to São Paulo (ON EITHER AZUL OR GOL AIRLINES) where you’ll connect with your homebound flight. End of services.

BON VOYAGE!

Thanks for Adventure Traveling with Natural Encounters Birding & Wildlife Photography Tours in WILD BRAZIL!

Optional Post-Extension may be offered for this excellent expedition.