Kapawi Lodge, in the middle of the mosi extensive virgin
rainforest in Amazonian Ecuador, is located far from any
other ecotourism projects. There also are no cattle, no
oil exploration, no colonists — nothing but lush forest
that extends toward the hoi lion in all directions.
If Kapawi's natural beauty and extreme isolation weren't
enough, the company that built the lodge. Canodros. practices
a level of cultural and environ mental sensitivity that
sets the standard for all of Ecuador.
The land in this area of Ecuador belongs to the Achuar
Indian Federation, which has learned from the mistakes
made by indigenous groups north of the Rio Napo. The Achuar
want 10 conserve their culture and their environment by
learning to use them in a way that will be sustainable
long-term. Ecotourism is a major part of this plan, and
the development of Kapawi is a high priority.
Access to Kapawi is via a small plane over uncut Amazonian
forest to a dirt airstrip, where you step into a time long-past.
Achuar Indians help unload your baggage and supplies as
men, returning from the forest with blowguns or muzzle-loading
chiminea, stroll past with forest game over their shoulders.
The canoe trip from the airstrip down the Rio Pastaza to
Kapawi takes about an hour and a half in a motorized canoe.
Kapawi Lodge can accommodate forty tourists in fourteen
single and double cabins. All the buildings were built
following the Achuar architectural style; not a single
metal nail was used, and fast-growing forest products make
up the roof, floors and walls.
Which is not to say these are shanties. The construction,
although rustic, is elegant and luxurious. Each cabin has
lights, hot-water showers, a view of the lake through screened
windows, and an immense bathroom. Flush toilets drain into
an elaborate digester septic system. Dispensers in each
bathroom provide biodegradable soap.
Virtually no plastic is used at Kapawi. During a recent
visit, even our ''box" lunches were elegant, with
glassware, plates and silverware. Food is prepared by European-trained
chefs and is the best in any lodge in the Oriente of Ecuador.
Using Kapawi Lodge as your base, the number of day-lrip
options is overwhelming: canoe trips to a blackwater river
Rio Ispingo; day hiking down any number of trails; explorations
of diverse habitat ranging from marsh and flooded forest
to tierra firme forest. Because of Kapawi's isolation,
it has large populations of some species, like Pink River
Dolphins, that are very difficult or impossible to see
now in other parts of Ecuador.
Excerpted from The Nesi Key
to Ecuador and the (Jaleipagos, by David Pearson and David
Middle (or.. Berkeley: Ulysses
Press, 1997. |