Known as
the largest swamp in the world, the Pantanal is great for wildlife – if you can
get there. Alex Bellos chartered a Cessna
Pantanal
Matogrossense national park in Brazil with giant Victoria Regia water lilies
and lily pads. Photograph: Theo Allofs/Corbis
There's an
awful lot of wildlife in Brazil.
Most of it lives in the Amazon rainforest, home to one in 10 of all the plant and animal species in the world. Yet trips to the Amazon can be frustrating since the animals there are hard to encounter, disappearing into the jungle as soon as they hear you approach. By far the best place to see wildlife in Brazil is the Pantanal, a flat wetland area near the Bolivian border where the animals will often parade in front of you as if auditioning for a nature documentary.
Most of it lives in the Amazon rainforest, home to one in 10 of all the plant and animal species in the world. Yet trips to the Amazon can be frustrating since the animals there are hard to encounter, disappearing into the jungle as soon as they hear you approach. By far the best place to see wildlife in Brazil is the Pantanal, a flat wetland area near the Bolivian border where the animals will often parade in front of you as if auditioning for a nature documentary.
At dusk on
the Rio Negro, for example, the daily commute of birds is a chirping carnival
of colour. As the sky turned lilac, I saw hundreds flutter past – red and blue
macaws in pairs, companies of green parrots, flotillas of ibis gliding in
elegant V-formation, as well as toucans, nightjars, lapwings and pauraques.
There are 652 bird species here.
The
Pantanal is the size of Portugal, and often described as the biggest swamp in
the world. In the centre of the South American continent, it is a flat basin
that drains water (and attracts fauna) from the surrounding plateaus. For more
than 100 years the only human activity has been low-level cattle ranching.
Raising cattle in the Pantanal, however, is so uncompetitive because of the
constantly shifting landscapes that in recent years many ranches have reopened
as tourist lodges.
The logistical problems remain, even for tourists. A week before I arrived I learned that floods had made land access to my hotel impossible and the only option was to charter a single-engine plane for the half-hour hop. It was certainly the most exciting way to arrive, but at about £500 each way not cheap, even when split between two people. The expense of visiting the Pantanal has meant that it remains underpopulated compared with other destinations in Brazil.
The
Brazilian government, however, is determined to attract international tourists,
which is one reason why the city of Cuiabá, the northern gateway to the
Pantanal, was chosen as a host city for the 2014 World Cup. It's seen as an
opportunity to promote the local wildlife to a TV audience of billions.
After a
flight with stunning views over an endless expanse of greens and blues, our
four-seater Cessna landed at Barra Mansa. The landing-strip was fenced off to
stop the horses, wild pigs and rheas eating the grass. Guilherme Rondon, the
owner, welcomed us and drove us to the lodge. The Rondons are a well-known
family of Brazilian pioneers, and have been in the Pantanal since the late 19th
century. Their most illustrious family member was the explorer and indigenous
campaigner Cândido Rondon, who in 1913 led a scientific expedition to the
Amazon with Theodore Roosevelt. "Our family has always been radically in
favour of conservation," Rondon said.
Barra Mansa
is situated on a bend in the Rio Negro (not to be confused with the much larger
Rio Negro that flows into the Amazon). The flood was so big that it came within
a few metres of the lodge. The eyes of two submerged caimans – South American
alligators – could be seen protruding above the surface at the edge of the
water. On the bank was a family of capybaras, the world's largest rodent,
dog-sized and shaggy-haired, with a funny rectangular-shaped head.
I had been
lured to the Pantanal on the premise of seeing a lot of wildlife, yet Rondon
quickly put me right. In the dry season, he said, when the rivers shrink to a
trickle, it is possible to see huge groups of animals congregating by the
isolated sources of water. But since the water was unexpectedly high, many
animals – tapirs, anteaters, deer, jaguars – had been pushed deeper into the
bush.
But I
should not be disappointed, he added, because what I had lost in fauna I had
gained in flora. The floods are the most spectacular time of the year to visit.
Indeed, the view from Barra Mansa was as beautiful as any that I have seen in
Brazil, the shiny black water of the Rio Negro pristinely reflecting the lush
vegetation surrounding it. "Visitors who see the animals always say they
want to return to see the floods," Rondon told me.
Still,
there were animals to be seen – and the best way to explore was on horse. Early
cattle ranchers introduced the Andalusian horse to the Pantanal, which over
generations has become a new breed, the Pantanal horse, with strong feet to
wade through water. They are small, docile and easy for beginners to ride.
We took a
short ride through small areas of forest to reach clearings containing huge
circular ponds, each about the size of a sports field. On the way we spotted an
armadillo, peccaries, a tarantula, more capybaras and tall, flightless rheas.
Our guide
was Luis Silva, a 51-year-old Pantanal cowboy, or pantaneiro. He stopped on the
sandy path to show us all evidence of the animals that were around. There were
tracks of deer, tapirs, anteaters and even the paw-print of a jaguar. The
jaguar – the largest cat of the Americas – is something of a symbol of the
Pantanal, although only the luckiest tourists ever spot one.
The best
spotting, however, was in looking up rather than looking down – especially at
the end of the day. The best vantage point to observe the birds' passage was in
a small boat in the middle of the Rio Negro. It was an unforgettable spectacle,
in a beautiful setting. On our last day, we were even joined by a pair of giant
otters, frolicking on the banks.
I was
unlucky that there had been unexpected floods shortly before I arrived at Barra
Mansa. Yet even so, I saw more wildlife in a few days in the Pantanal than I
have ever seen anywhere else in Brazil.
• The
Pantanal is served by the airports of either Cuiabá or Campo Grande, both of
which can be reached from London via São Paulo with TAM Airlines from around
£1,000 return.
Transfers
to Pantanal lodges via land cost around £300 and by single engine plane around
£1000, and are organised by travel agencies such as Original Travel.
The Barra
Mansa Lodge costs from £125 per person per night including all meals and
excursions.
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