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| MOGUE | |||
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Destination content © William Friar, used from Moon Handbooks Panama, 1st edition. |
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Mogue The Emberá village of Mogue (MOE-gay), up the river that gives it its name, welcomes visitors and in fact has become a tourist destination for the area. Its about midway between Punta Patiño and La Palma. It takes about a half hour by boat from either Patiño or La Palma to get to the mouth of Río Mogue. Its a potentially bumpy boat ride on the ocean. The Mogue is a beautiful river, in a slightly spooky, Conradian sense. Its swampy, still, and serpentine, with towering black mangroves on either side. Boats have to take it slow up this murky river to avoid damaging the engine. Its about a 25-minute cruise from the mouth of the river to Mogue village. On the river and the trails around the village birders might spot white ibises, willets, whimbrels, mangrove black-hawks, roseate spoonbills, red-throated caracaras, laughing falcons, black oropendolas, orange-crowned orioles, and other gorgeous birds. The village is near when the mangroves give way to plantain fields. Its a 15-minute walk from where the boat puts in to Paraíso Mogue (Mogue Paradise), as a welcome sign in the village puts it. The Emberá established Mogue in the late 1960s. Its a relatively pretty little village reminiscent of La Chunga in that it caters to tourists, putting on traditional dances and opening handicraft stalls when tour groups arrive. But it feels relatively more traditional, at least given that the Emberá do not traditionally live in villages at all. Its possible to spend the night in Mogue in relative comfort. Theres a huge version of a traditional Emberá open-sided thatched-roof hut raised on stilts about 15 feet off the ground, where visitors can pitch tents and relax in hammocks. Its breezy up there and has an eavesdroppers view of the surrounding village, as well as a vista of the forest-covered hills in the distance. If you stay here, drown yourself in insect repellent and be prepared to be awakened early by roosters and crying babies. Primary forest starts 15 minutes from the village. An hour hike from here leads to a harpy eagle nest. An hour hike in the opposite direction leads to the nest of a crested eagle. Youll need a guide to show the way in either case. A big festival in these parts is held on November 14, the anniversary of the building of the local school.
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