Harpy Eagle & Iwokrama Forest (trip)

Harpy Eagle & Iwokrama Forest

  • Georgetown Airport, Guyana
  • Active & Adventure
Guyana, South America

from $1,798* per person8 DaysYear-round
Comfort accommodations Exertion level: 3
Operator: Wilderness Explorers 16 people max
Venture into the wild, pristine and little known interior of Guyana for a birdwatchers dream. With over 800 species the country is full of birding opportunities, but this expedition is targeting two of Guyana’s specialties.

The Harpy Eagle or “flying wolf” is the largest eagle in the world. With limited distribution and now on the endangered list the eagle still has a refuge in Guyana. An active Harpy Eagle nest has been located in a relatively easily accessible location offering great views of Guyana’s "flying wolf".

You will also have the opportunity to trek into a lovely rainforest to visit a Guianan Cock-of-the-rock lek. The brilliant orange of the males is a sight to see, especially if you are lucky enough to experience their mating rituals.

You can also easily add additional days and visit Karanambu Ranch to Giant River Otters, Black Caiman and Giant Anteaters, the Iwokrama International Centre and the famous Kaieteur Falls.

This trip focuses on a newly found active Harpy Eagle nest.

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Locations visited/nearby

Guyana, South America

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Special information

  • This is a custom departure, meaning this trip is offered on dates that you arrange privately with the provider. Additionally, you need to form your own private group for this trip. The itinerary and price here is just a sample. Contact the provider for detailed pricing, minimum group size, and scheduling information. For most providers, the larger the group you are traveling with, the lower the per-person cost will be.

Itinerary

Day 1 - Arrive Guyana
Arrive in Guyana and transfer to Georgetown.
Overnight at Cara Lodge


Day 2 - Fly to Annai Village, visit Surama Village
0915hrs transfer to Ogle Airstrip for a flight over rain forest and savannah to Annai. Lunch at Rock View Lodge. Then transfer by 4x4 to the Amerindian community of Surama. The village is set in five square miles of savannah and surrounded by the densely forested Pakaraima Mountains. Surama’s inhabitants are mainly from the Macushi tribe and still observe many of the traditional practices of their forebears. On arrival in Surama receive a welcome from a village counsellor and settle into your accommodation. A local guide will escort you for a short walk on trails to observe the forest and bird life. As the afternoon cools your guide will take you on a tour of the village. Visit the local school, medical centre and church along with some of the village houses. Tonight enjoy an educational walk to observe wildlife and experience the mystique of the forest after dark. (B,L,D)
Overnight at Surama Eco-Lodge


Day 3 - Hike to active Harpy Eagle nest
After an early breakfast take a one and half hour hike to the site of the Harpy Eagle nest. Spend the day observing the nest for views of the adults and chick. This can be enjoyed with observations of other birds and wildlife and a stand of Green Heart trees and a picnic lunch in the forest. Return to the village in the late afternoon. (B,L,D)
Overnight at Surama Eco-Lodge


Day 4 - Breakfast on Surama Mountain, hike to Carahaa Landing at Burro Burro River
Rise before dawn for a walk across the savannah and then the gentle climb up Surama Mountain in the cool morning air. This is the best time to observe bird life along the trail. Breakfast will be served at a point overlooking the village, whilst looking for Pearl Kite, White-tailed and Savannah Hawk, and with a broad prospect of savannahs and the rounded peaks of the Pakaraima’s. Return to village for lunch and then in the cool of late afternoon take a three mile walk across the savannah and through the rain forest to the Burro Burro River. Tonight overnight in a hammock at Carahaa Landing Camp. BLD. (B,L,D)
Overnight at Carahaa Landing Hammock Camp


Day 5 - Dawn excursion on Burro Burro River, 4X4 jaguar spotting, visit Iwokrama Canopy Walkway
Soon after daybreak we’ll set out on the river for a quiet and skillfully guided paddle, hearing the voices of many birds singing in near darkness in the forest, and seeing many of them later when the light grows stronger. We’ll also search the banks for such mammals as Giant River Otter, Tapir, Tayra and Black Spider Monkey and many more species. Return to village for lunch before departing Surama by 4x4. Travel along the trail where there is a good chance to see the elusive Jaguar. The Iwokrama forest is rapidly gaining an international reputation for its healthy jaguar populations that seem not to be troubled by the appearance of curious humans. No promises, but many have been lucky! Eventually we reach the Iwokrama Canopy Walkway. Here you will be able to experience the rain forest from the vantage of 30 metres up in the canopy. The Iwokrama Canopy Walkway is a series of suspension bridges and decks of up to 30 metres in height and 154 metres in length, located in the Iwokrama Forest. It gives visitors a new view of the mid and upper canopy of the forest and allows wildlife to be relatively free from human intrusion. The forest around the walkway contains some important flora and fauna. Among these are endangered and protected species such as the jaguar, the bullet wood tree, greenheart and the waramadan (endemic in Guyana only to the Iwokrama Forest). (B,L,D)
Overnight at Atta Rainforest Lodge


Day 6 - Canopy Walkway at sunrise, enter the savanna for additional birdwatching and wildlife spotting
This morning welcome the dawn chorus from the tree-tops. After breakfast transfer by 4x4 to the Amerindian village of Wowetta and then trek along 5kms of well maintained trail through virgin rain forest to a Guianan Cock-of-the–rock lek with over 30 birds. It is an exciting experience to view Guianan Cock-of-the–rocks (Rupicola Rupicola) in their natural habitat. You have the opportunity to see them nesting in caves, performing their mating dance on the lek, bathing in pools and perched in trees for perfect viewing. The tour is a community based project managed by the Indigenous Community of Wowetta. In the late afternoon we’ll set out for the drive to the Rupununi and Rock View Lodge in Annai, its northernmost community. The Rupununi Savannah is to Guyana what the Gran Sabana is to Venezuela, an extensive area of grassland with termite mounds and scattered or riparian woodland. It differs in that much of it is devoted to cattle raising, though the large ranches are not very productive. Indeed, one can travel for hours without seeing a domestic animal of any sort. Needless to say, the birdlife here is markedly different from that of the rain forest . Rock View Lodge is located where the savannah meets the forest-covered foothills of the Pakaraima Mountains. With its tropical gardens and flowering trees, the lodge resembles an oasis in the savannah, and attracts many species of birds, particularly nectar feeders and frugivores. Nearby patches of light forest are home to certain ant birds and flycatchers, and of course the grasslands support an avifauna of their own. (B,L,D)
Overnight at Rock View Lodge


Day 7 - Morning at leisure at Rock View, fly to Georgetown, city tour, visit Botanical Gardens
This morning you can birdwatch in the magnificent gardens, join the vaqueros on horseback* as they round up the cattle, hike along the foothills of the Pakaraima Mountains or explore nearby Amerindian villages. After lunch take a flight back to Georgetown. Enjoy an afternoon Georgetown city tour (full description below) to see its extraordinary wooden architecture and to shop in its exciting markets and craft shops. We’ll conclude at the extensive and beautiful Botanic Garden, where, if we are lucky, the trip’s ornithological finale will be Blood-coloured Woodpecker, an astonishingly colourful Veniliornis found only in the Guiana’s and even there almost wholly limited to the narrow coastal plain. (B,L)
Overnight at Cara Lodge


Day 8 - Depart Guyana
Transfer to the airport for your departing flight. (B)

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