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Site Logo
  • HOME
  • TRAVEL
    • BOOK HOTEL
    • BOOK INSURANCE
    • BOOK EXCURSIONS
    • BY LAND
    • BY SEA
    • BY RIVER
    • BY RAIL
    • ALL-INCLUSIVE
    • LUXURY VILLAS
  • GOLF
    • GOLF SCOTLAND
    • GOLF IRELAND
    • GOLF SPAIN
    • GOLF PORTUGAL
    • GOLF WALES
    • GOLF ENGLAND
    • American River Golf Classic
  • DESTINATIONS
  • BOOK NOW
  • RESOURCES
    • COVID-19 UPDATE
  • OUR STORY
  • CONTACT
    • WHY USE A TRAVEL AGENT?
    • IN THE NEWS

Tambopata

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 Photo Credit: Mark Kuiper
Photo Credit: Mark Kuiper
 Photo Credit: Mark Kuiper
 Photo Credit: Mark Kuiper
Photo Credit: Mark Kuiper
 Photo Credit: Mark Kuiper

Located in the Madre de Dios region of southeastern Peru, Tambopata is a protected area where visitors can experience the Amazon rainforest in its rawest form. The Tambopata National Reserve spans over 270,000 hectares and is home to an estimated 1,200 butterfly species, 600 bird species, and hundreds of tree varieties. One of its most famous residents is the jaguar, though sightings are rare. More common encounters include red howler monkeys, capybaras, and giant river otters. Guided river tours along the Tambopata and Madre de Dios rivers offer access to remote eco-lodges, each built to blend with the surrounding forest.

One of the most visited sites in the reserve is the clay lick at Colpa de Chuncho. Each morning, hundreds of macaws, parrots, and parakeets gather here to feed on the mineral-rich clay, creating a spectacle of color and sound. Scientists believe the clay helps neutralize toxins from their fruit-heavy diet. This daily gathering has made the area an important research site for biologists and birdwatchers alike. Early morning boat rides are typically the best time to witness the activity, with sunrise casting golden light over the treetops.

Tambopata also holds significance for Indigenous communities such as the Ese Ejja and the Infierno community, who continue to practice sustainable living within and around the reserve. Some lodges partner directly with these communities, offering guided forest walks where local guides identify medicinal plants, track animal signs, and share traditional stories. These experiences often reveal a deeper understanding of the forest both as a habitat and as a living archive of knowledge and belief systems.

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Skads Travel


Minneapolis, MN
952-927-7311
skads@skadstravel.com

Skads Travel acts only in the capacity of a sales agent for any airline, hotel, car-rental company, tour operator, cruise line, or other service provider named in your itinerary or confirmation.  Skads Travel does not own, operate, manage or control these independent suppliers of services and is not liable for their acts or omissions or their failures to adhere to their own schedules, provide services or refunds, financial default, or failure to honor future trip credits.  Your legal recourse is against the specific provider, not Skads Travel.  We have no special knowledge regarding financial condition of the suppliers and no liability for recommending a trip credit in lieu of a refund.