The Amazon

Puerto Maldonado

Page not found. The page you are seeking may have been moved. You have been redirected to our destinations landing page.
printer iconPrintemail iconEmailfavorites iconSave to Favorites

Just a half-hour plane ride from Cusco, Puerto Maldonado is the place for people with a limited budget and time. In an action-packed stay of two or three nights, visitors are likely to see a few types of monkeys (there are seven species in the area), capybara and other jungle rodents, a wide variety of water and forest birds, caiman, and turtles. Large mammals such as tapir and jaguar are seldom seen, though chances become better farther into the jungle at the Tambopata Research Center, which is inside the Parque Nacional Bahuaja Sonene.

Though there are fewer species here than in Manu, getting to Puerto Maldonado’s jungle is a heck of a lot easier. Visitors arrive at the airport, where they are picked up by their lodge and taken up a river in motorboat. In as little as three hours after leaving Cusco, visitors can be in a comfortable jungle lodge surrounded by miles of Amazon rainforest.

Standard features of most trips include early-morning bird-watching followed by a nature walk, piraña fishing, and a visit to a local community and/or medicinal plant talk by a local shaman. If guests have energy, guides lead night jungle walks or boat rides to spot baby caiman, a close relative of the alligator, along the river bank. Prices include airport transfer, boat transport, lodging, and food.

For the quality of the lodging and the amount of wildlife that visitors see, the jungle lodges around Puerto Maldonado represent an excellent Amazon value. The jungle lodges are clustered in two areas on the edge of the Reserva Nacional Tambopata. The first group is an hour’s boat ride down the Río Madre de Dios. The lodges here include some of the most comfortable in the Amazon, including Reserva Amazónica and Lake Sandoval Lodge. There are also lower-budget options in this area as well.

The other main group is 3–4 hours up the Río Tambopata, on the way to the Parque Nacional Bahuaja Sonene. In general, wildlife-spotting opportunities are about equal between these two groups of lodges—all of them are near the reserve’s buffer zone and are mostly surrounded by secondary forest.

An exception is Explorer’s Inn, built in 1976, which is the only lodge inside the Reserva Nacional Tambopata and seems to have more bird and animal species than the other lodges—including frequent sightings of the giant otter and world-record levels of birds and butterflies. The reserve also includes areas of virgin forest, unlike the other lodges, whose large mahogany and cedar trees were cut down years ago.

The world’s largest macaw clay lick, which attracts nearly all the area’s species of macaws, parrots, and parakeets, is seven hours up the Río Tambopata near the Tambopata Research Center. Most Puerto Maldonado lodges offer two-day trips to the lick, which include a night of camping on a sandy beach, a guided hike through the forest, meals, and a morning visit to the lick.

Getting There

The road between Cusco and Puerto Maldonado is a bumpy, grueling two-day journey. During rainy season, trucks can take as long as seven days. From Cusco, those up to the challenge should head first to Urcos and catch a truck on from there.

Given the road, nearly all travelers arrive by plane. Puerto Maldonado’s airport (tel. 082/57-1531) is 8 km from town, or about US$2 by taxi. Airlines fly Lima–Cusco–Puerto. LAN (Lima tel. 01/213-8200, www.lan.com) has regular flights and a local office at León Velarde 503 (tel. 082/57-3677, 8 a.m.–8 p.m. Mon.–Sat.). The cheaper option is Aerocondor (Lima tel. 01/614-6014, www.aerocondor.com.pe) with flights from Lima and Cusco.

Buy Moon Travel Guides

Loading books
loading
For more Moon travel information, sign up for our monthly e-newsletter for updates on new travel guide releases, travel tips and trip ideas for those seeking adventure or relaxation, and expert advice from our on-the-go Moon travel authors.

Find Activities>>