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8 Day / 7 Night Package Itinerary |
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Day 1
Pick up at Panama's International Airport. It takes
only 45 minutes to drive to the Canopy Tower, located in the heart of
Soberanía National Park. You'll be birding within an hour of landing!
This evening we'll have an orientation meeting and will provide
instructions on the use of the installation. Please note that the
Program starts today with dinner and check-in begins at 5PM. If you
plan to arrive earlier, an "early-check-in" charge may apply.
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Day 2
AM: Canopy Tower and Semaphore Hill
The Canopy Tower is a prime location from which to observe the birds
and other wildlife of the forest canopy. Since they are right at eye
level it is usual to get fantastic views of birds you would hardly see
otherwise. You don't have to leave the Tower to find birds, you don't
even have to leave your bedroom! Tanagers, Toucans and Tityras can be
seen right from your window. The dining area and the roof of the tower
are better for finding elusive canopy birds, as well as Howler Monkeys,
Tamarins and other mammals. All this without having to venture away
from the Tower.
Some of the bird species that we are likely to see
from the observation deck are: Green and Red legged Honeycreepers,
Green-shrike Vireo, Blue Cotinga , Scaled Pigeon, Mealy and Red lored
Amazon, Keel-billed Toucan, Chestnut-mandibled Toucan, flycatchers and
many others.
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Birding on a Budget?

Green Season
Birding Package
reduced prices for the
budget minded birder
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At mid morning we'll start
exploring the forests of Central Panama and we'll walk down Semaphore
Hill Road. This paved road is a little more than a mile long and passes
through the forest of Soberanía National Park. Here you will get a
chance to see birds and mammals that spend their lives closer to the
forest floor, like antbirds and Agoutis.
The bird list of Semaphore Hill Road is extensive, and
includes birds from the forest interior as well as edge dwellers.
Olivaceous Flatbill and White-whiskered Puffbird are common, and
Slate-colored Grossbeak, Bay-headed Tanager, and Great Jacamar are seen
frequently. Great Tinamou and Marbled Wood-Quail are heard often, but
to see them takes a little more work. This road is also great for
raptors: White, Tiny and Bicolored Hawks have been seen, and during
migration it's easy to see more than 10 species of warblers and
migratory songbirds in one morning. Spring migration is especially
striking, as birds will be wearing their breeding plumages.
PM: Plantation Trail
Plantation Road, which starts right by the entrance to
the road to the Tower, is a good, easy graded dirt road that passes
through a mature forest for about four miles. The road follows a small
creek, Río Chico Masambi, where sometimes a Louisiana Waterthrush
spends the winter. We have also spotted Sunbitterns and Caimans in this
creek. In most places the forest is clear of undergrowth, which makes
it especially suited for observing shy, interior forest birds like
Tinamous and Leaftossers. Golden-crowned Spadebills are regular around
the creek, and White-breasted Wood-Wrens are very easy to find. When
visiting Plantation Road you also have a good chance to find an army
ant swarm and many of the birds that follow these swarms as they roam
the forest floor. Spotted, Bicolored and Ocellated Antbirds,
Gray-headed Tanagers, and Plain-brown, Northern Barred and (if you're
lucky) Ruddy Woodcreepers. And if you're really lucky you may even find
a Hook-billed Kite.
Day 3
AM: Summit Pond / PM: Old Gamboa Rd.
Old Gamboa Road is, you guessed it, the old road to
Gamboa. At the beginning of this bird-rich area, you'll find Summit
Ponds, where Boat-billed Herons nest and Capped Herons are seen
regularly. Both Kiskadees, and both Green and Striated Herons are seen
often, as well as the more common egrets. Going straight through the
two ponds you'll be on Old Gamboa Road South, one of the birdiest spots
around. This road passes through a variety of habitats, and has plenty
of specialties: Blue Ground-Dove, Great Antshrike, Jet Antbird,
Black-tailed and Royal Flycatchers, Lance-tailed and Golden-collared
Manakins and Rosy Thrush-Tanager are a few highlights. Going North of
the pond we will find species like, White-bellied Antbird,
Yellow-bellied Elaenia, Yellow-backed Oriole, Boat-billed Flycatcher,
Fork-tailed Flycatcher, Yellow-headed Caracara, plus more.
Day 4
AM: Pipeline Rd (first half)
Pipeline Road is the best place in Central Panama to
find forest birds, and plenty of them. Eight species of wrens, five
trogons, four puffbirds, three motmots, many antbirds and even more
flycatchers have been reported from the road. And if its 17 Km are not
enough, there's plenty of side trails plus eleven creeks and rivers
that can be followed into the forest. Army antswarms are found
frequently, attended sometimes by Rufous-vented Ground-Cuckoo, and
there are many Manakin leks right beside the road. Pipeline Road is
also a great place for raptors: all three Forest-Falcons are heard if
not seen with ease, and Tiny and Plumbeous Hawks and Ornate Hawk-Eagles
have been reported a few times. A Harpy Eagle was seen one time right
beside the road!
PM: Summit Garden and Harpy Eagle Exhibit
Summit Gardens is a park managed by the Mayor of
Panama City. There is a small zoo where you can get a better look at
King Vultures, Great Curassows and four species of macaws, as well as
Jaguar, Spider Monkeys, and a host of other mammals. The botanical
gardens are great for migratory warblers and other forest-edge species,
and Blue Cotingas are seen every once in a while.
The Harpy Eagle is Panama's national bird and this
park is the site of the Harpy Eagle Exhibit a "state of the art
exhibit" sponsored by SONY Corp. which shows films about this
magnificent bird, a full-size nest and several panels which trace the
importance of the Harpy Eagle in Panamanian history and culture dating
back to Pre-Columbian gold artifacts. There are also two live specimens
of this bird in a gigantic aviarium. These birds are used in the Raptor
Breeding Program of the Peregrine Fund which was recently moved to
Panama from Boise, Idaho.
Day 5
AM: Ammo Dump
The Ammo Dump Pond is located just north of Gamboa, on
the way to Pipeline Road. It is the best place to see the elusive
White-throated Crake, as well as a host of other waterbirds. Least
Grebes, Common Moorhens and Purple Gallinules are common, and Rufescent
Tiger-Heron and American Pygmy-Kingfishers are around, but are not as
easy to find. Sometimes you get a Limpkin and maybe even a Least
Bittern, and lately a few Snail Kites have been reported.
PM: Chagres River
It is located at the east side of Gatun Lake, we'll be
walking along the banks of the river to see other water birds, for
example, Amazon Kingfisher, Green Kingfisher, American
Pygmy-Kingfishers, as well as, Blue-Crowned Motmot and Cinnamon
Woodpecker. We could also see species like Gray-Necked Wood-rail, Green
Herons, and Anhinga. In this area we have also often spotted
alligators, turtles and capybaras.
Night Tour Owling
At night, the forest changes into a completely
different world. More than eight species of Owls and Potoos have been
seen on the roads around the Canopy Tower and many interesting mammals,
which are active mainly at night, could also be seen. For example:
Two-toed Sloth, Kinkajous and Rothschild's Porcupine. If we are really
lucky we could see one of the wildcats that inhabit this forest, a
Jaguarundi or even an Ocelot.
Day 6
Pipeline Rd (second half) / Full Day Trip
Back again to the Pipeline Rd., one of the premier
birding sites of the Americas. The second half of Pipeline Rd. offers
the possibility of new species because of its overlap with the Atlantic
Area. We will be on the lookout for ant swarms, White-necked and
Black-breasted Puffbirds, Antpittas, Great Jacamar, Black-tailed
Trogon, Crane Hawk, Black Hawk-Eagle, Cinnamon Woodpecker,
Black-striped Woodcreeper and even a Pheasant Cuckoo. We'll have picnic
somewhere in the forest.
Day 7
Wrap-up day
We'll revisit some of the birding spots depending on
what species we have missed or want to see again. This can also be the
day to study the behavior of certain species.
Miraflores Locks (optional)
We'll visit the Visitor Center of the Panama Canal,
one of the Eight Wonders of the Modern World. It is only 20 minutes
from the Tower! Or you can stay in the trails and see more birds, it is
up to you.
Day 8: Departure
After an early breakfast and a "good-bye" look of the
forest from the Observation Deck, we'll take you to the International
Airport for your flight home.
Buen Viaje!
Come back soon with all your friends, the more the merrier!!
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Extend your Trip! |
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Canopy Lodge
in El Valle de Antón:
Extension Itinerary
(4 nights / 5 days)
Day 8: El Valle de Antón (Western foothills) Cariguana Trail
No need to wake-up early today. After a leisurely
breakfast and a last look at the birds from the observation deck of the
Canopy Tower, we'll board a comfortable a/c bus for the 2 hour ride to
El Valle de Antón, also known as Crater Valley. We will spend three
nights in this lovely village, nestled in the crater of an extinct
volcano that exploded 5 million years ago. The resultant scenery is
quite unique- a steep valley surrounded by jagged peaks and filled with
flowers, streams and verdant forests. No wonder it is one of Panama's
most popular getaways. If today is a Sunday, we will arrive in time to
visit the "Sunday Market" when artisans come down from the surrounding
mountains to sell their goods. The El Valle Sunday Market is considered
one of the best supplied in the region. This will be an excellent
opportunity to buy local handicraft directly from the "manufacturer."
Prices are usually negotiable. There are ceramics, bateas (wooden
trays), weaved baskets, hats, carved and painted totumas (cups made
from squash) and trinkets made from acorn, as well as vegetables,
fruits, ornamental plants, flowers and orchids. Our home for the next
three days will be Canopy Lodge,
sister company of the Canopy Tower, a charming small hotel built next
to a lovely mountain stream and adjacent to the protected area of Cerro
Gaital Natural Monument. In the gardens surrounding the lodge we can
easily see species like the Crimson-backed, Blue-gray, Dusky-faced and
Plain-colored Tanagers, Social Flycatcher, Ruddy-ground Dove, Barred
Antshrike, Yellow-faced Grassquit, Rufous-tailed, Violet-capped
Hummingbirds and Clay Colored Robin. After lunch, we will start birding
the foothills by visiting the nearby Cariguana trail where we can
expect to see some of the specialties of this rich avian region, for
example: Lesser Elenia, Yellow-olive Flycatcher, Rosy Thrush Tanager,
Rufous and White Wren and the Lance-tailed Manakin. Canopy Tower (B), Canopy Lodge (LD)
Day 9: El Valle de Antón, Cerro Gaital Trail and The Canopy Adventure
Today we will wake up early and go birding around the
mountain trails surroun
ding the crater where it is possible to find one
of the most sought after species in neo-tropical birding: the
Rufous-vented Ground Cuckoo. This area also offers frequent sightings
of Emerald Toucanets, Orange-bellied Trogon, Spotted Barbtail, Common
Bush Tanager, Black-faced Grosbeak, Rufous-capped Warbler, Gray-headed
Kite, Tawny-capped Euphonia, White-tailed Emerald, Violet-headed
Hummingbird and if we are lucky we might see a Scaled Antpitta and a
Black-headed Antthrush.
After lunch, those who wish will also have the opportunity to experience The Canopy Adventure.
A series of zip lines high in the canopy by which travelers can explore
the rain forest using safe and modern climbing techniques. After an
invigorating short climb to the top of the ridge through bird-rich
forest, you strap in and soar through the treetops, where you see a
wealth of unexpected natural beauty and activity. Swooping from
platform to platform high among the sturdy cloud forest trees, you pass
over the stream and waterfall not once, but twice.
The Canopy Adventure
is located in a private refuge in the foothills above El Valle. The
main attraction of this refuge is a beautiful 150 feet high waterfall
called Chorro Macho; the birdlife and the flora are especially rich and
diverse because the area has been a wildlife refuge for several years.
The principle purpose of this refuge, apart from the obvious task of
keeping the area free from poachers and loggers, has been to provide
sustainable, nature-based employment to 10 young men who would
otherwise be cutting down the forest through slash and burn
agricultural methods in order to survive and raise their families. The
refuge is a way to keep the forest ecosystem whole while providing much
needed employment. Those who prefer not to do the Canopy Adventure
can explore the trail around the waterfall where it is possible to see
the Dull-mantled Antbird, Tawny-crested and Dusky-faced tanagers,
Bananaquits, Green and Little Hermits as well as trogons and mot mots. Canopy Lodge (BLD)
Day 10: El Valle de Antón, Chorro Mach
o Trails and bird feeders
Another day of birding in the foothills will take us
early in the morning to the northern rim of the crater to explore the
trails of the Chorro Macho private reserve. Some very special birds
have been sighted here: the majestic White Hawk, the tiny Tody Motmot,
the melodious Stripped Cuckoo and the elegant Sunbittern will be high
in our list of target species as well as some colorful tanagers and
honeycreepers like the Silver-throated, Golden-hooded and Bay-headed
Tanagers, Blue Dacnis and Scarlet-thighed Dacnis. This trail will also
offer good possibilities of seeing Brown-hooded and Blue-headed
Parrots, Squirrel Cuckoo, Wedge-billed Woodcreeper, Black-chested Jay
and Crimson-crested Woodpecker.
In the
afternoon we will visit the private gardens of a local birder who
maintains well-attended feeders attracting certain foothill specialties
difficult to see otherwise; like the striking Flame-rumped Tanager and
the rare White-lined Tanager. Other foothill species coming to the
feeders are: Buff-throated Saltator, Black-striped Sparrow,
Blue-crowned Motmot and Red-crowned Woodpecker. Perhaps the biggest
highlight of this amazing birding spot is the huge colony of
Chestnut-headed Oropendolas located in a group of Eucaliptus trees
right next to the feeders. These magnificent birds come down to the
feeders and dwarf the other participants of the feast. This is a great
opportunity to take close-up pictures of a bird normally seen high in
the trees. It is also fascinating to see the parasitic Giant Cowbirds
sneaking in the long nests of the oropendolas to lay their eggs. Canopy Lodge (BLD)
Day 11: El Valle de Antón, El Chiru forest and La Zamia Trail
Today we will have an early breakfast and travel
outside El Valle to visit a patch of dry forest just one hour away near
the small village of El Chiru. The contrast with the lush and wet
foothi
lls o
f El Valle is dramatic. This habitat consists of relatively
permanent growth of low and often straggly bushes and small trees with
grass interspersed. It is a distinctive habitat of the Pacific lowlands
and there is little of it left because most of the population in Panama
has settled in the Pacific Coast. We will search for Pale-eyed
Pygmy-Tyrant, Crested Bobwhite, Rufous-browed Pepper Shrike,
Brown-throated Parakeet, Blue Ground Dove, Fork-tailed Flycatcher and
Pearl Kite among other feathered residents of this scarce scrubby area.
Bird activity is high during the first few hours then it gets hot and
it will be time to return to the much cooler foothills. We will have
lunch back in the Canopy Lodge and afterwards we will bird the La Zamia
Trail at the base of the Cerro Gaital Natural Monument. This is an
easy, level trail in which the rare Rufous-vented Ground Cuckoo has
been seen occasionally. We will also look for the Blue-crowned Mot Mot,
Common Potoo, Sepia-capped Flycatcher, Little Tinamou and Gray-headed
Chachalaca.
For those interested in Botany,
it is worth noting that La Zamia trail is named after the rare and
primitive genus of palm-like plants called Zamia of the order Cycadales. Some of these unusual and ancient fern-like dioecious plants with aerial or subterranean stems are found in this trail. Canopy Lodge (BLD)
Day 12: Panama City
After a leisurely breakfast and some
last-minute-birding in the gardens surrounding the lodge, we will drive
back to Panama City and catch our return flights home. Canopy Lodge (B)
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Mammal Trip (9 Nights, 10 Days) |
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Canopy Tower/Canopy Lodge Mammal Trip (9 nights, 10 days)
DAY ONE: Arrival
Today you will be picked up at Tocumen International Airport, and then you will be transferred to Canopy Tower.
DAY TWO:
AM: Canopy Tower Observation Deck
We will start the day at 6:00 am on the observation deck, on the top floor. The Canopy Tower’s observation deck offers a great opportunity to look over the tree tops, where we can often see Geoffroy’s Tamarin, Mantled Howler Monkey, Three and Two-toed Sloths, Red-tailed Squirrel and a variety of colorful birds that come to feed on the Cecropia trees. Then we come down to have breakfast about 7:30 am.
After a delicious breakfast, we will start walking down the Semaphore Hill Rd, to continue our search for Tamarins, Monkeys, Sloths and Squirrels. On this road there is a great chance to find Brown-throated Three-toed Sloth and Hoffmann’s Two-toed Sloth, as well as a Northern Tamandua. This paved road is a little more than a mile long, and passes through some of the forest protected by Soberanía National Park. Here you will get a chance to see mammals as well as birds and interesting plants, wildflowers and butterflies. The rare Silky Ant Eater as well as the secretive Tayra, have been spotted occasionally in this road. (See the Guardian article, March 29/03)
At the end of this walk we will get pick up by one of our modified opened vehicles, and driven up to the Tower.
PM: Summit Botanical Garden and the Ammo Dump Ponds.
After lunch and a “siesta”, we head up to the Summit Botanical garden. Summit Gardens is a park managed by the Office of the Mayor of Panama City. Our main focus at this place will be to find a roosting place for Common Tent-making Bat.
After a short visit to the Gardens, we will drive about 5 miles north to Ammo Dump Pond, which is located on the small town of Gamboa on the way to Pipeline Road. This is a great place to look for the World’s largest rodent…the Capybara, which can be found eating, swimming or just sitting like a dog, single or in groups. Depending on time, we will make a quick stop at the marina on the Chagres River, main source of water of the Panama Canal. With a little bit of luck we could have the chance to see a Neotropical River Otter and Variegated Squirrels (S.v. malania and S. v. helveous).
Dinner at 7 pm
DAY THREE:
AM: Dawn Ride down Semaphore Hill and Pipeline Rd.
Nocturnal creatures are more active right before dawn and right after dusk. So today we are going to wake up early, take a cup of coffee and slowly ride down Semaphore Hill Rd, at 5:30 am, on one of our modified vehicles, to look for some of Panama’s most interesting nocturnal creatures. Allen’s Olingo, Kinkajou, Western Night Monkey, Common and Central American Woolly Opossum, Nine-banded and Northern Naked-tailed Armadillo, the endemic Rothschild´s Porcupine and the two species of Sloth among some species of bats and Nocturnal birds such as Owls and Potoos.
This ride will take about an hour. At 6:30 am we will have a full breakfast to get ready to visit the world famous Pipeline Rd. This 17 km gravel road with eleven creeks is most famous for its four hundred plus bird species is also a great place for mammals, including White-faced Capuchin, Howlers, Central American Aguiti, White-nosed Coati, Tayra and Collared Peccary. There have also been sightings of three species of wildcats: Jaguarundi, Ocelot and Jaguar.
We head back to Canopy Tower on time for lunch at 12:30pm
PM: Plantation Rd.
At about 3 pm, we will drive down to the bottom of Semaphore Hill to the Plantation Road, which starts right by the entrance to the tower, is a good, easy graded dirt road that passes through a mature forest for about four miles. The road follows a small creek, named Chico Masambi River.
This trail, once a black topped road, has some incredible forest, including gigantic Wild Cashew, Ceibas, and Cuipo Trees that reach heights of more than 100 feet.
During this walk there is the chance to find more Howlers, Tamarins and Capuchin Monkeys. There is also the probability of encountering a Northern Tamandua (Anteater).
Then we come back to the Tower to enjoy the sunset and wait until nightfall to see the Great False Vampire Bat, the largest bat in the new world, foraging around the Tower.
DAY FOUR:
Barro Colorado Island (BCI)
On our fourth day, after having breakfast at 6 am, we will be driven to the town of Gamboa, located at about 7 miles from Canopy Tower. There we will take a boat that will take us to Barro Colorado Island.
This is a 1,500 hectares Island that includes five adjacent peninsulas which together form a 5,400 hectares Natural Monument that has been administrated by the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute since 1923.
This Natural Monument located in the middle of the Panama Canal is home to more than 200 Researchers from all around the world. This island is considered the most studied area in the whole new tropics. The place is equipped with a field station and modern labs. This place is only open to researches and tourist with previous reservation.
Barro Colorado offers a great opportunity to see many mammals in a short period of time. Some of these mammals include Brown-headed Spider Monkey, Tayra, Central American Agouti, Northern Tamandua, Howler, Sloths, Tamarins, Coatis, etc.
We leave the island around 3 pm and we will be back to Canopy Tower by 4 pm. This will give us some time to take a rest to enjoy a delightful BBQ at 6:30 pm. As we mentioned before, nocturnal creatures are most active right before dusk, we will take this opportunity of an early dinner to do another ride down the Semaphore Hill at about 7:30 to try again to find any extra mammal that we could have missed on our first ride down the road.
DAY FIVE:
AM: Boat Trip in the Gatun Lake.
This morning at 7:30 AM we board a 20 ft. boat with a 75 hp outboard motor, for a spectacular tour on the Panama Canal.
Most of the Panama Canal is actually an artificial lake, Lake Gatun, and this tour will depart from Gamboa, just 15 minutes from the Canopy Tower. Along the way we will pass huge cargo ships and ocean liners and will also visit hidden coves and beautiful inlets with fascinating fauna and flora.
We will also stop in one of the islands that were used by the now defunct Primate Research Center for a look at several species of monkeys, namely: Spider and Howler monkeys and White-faced Capuchins that remained on the island after the center closed.
There is also a chance to see some interesting reptiles including: American crocodile (some reach 14 or more feet in length and its smaller relative, the Spectacle Cayman, Basilisk Lizard (Jesus Lizard) and Black River Turtle.
A little scarcer, but not impossible are the Neotropical River Otter and if we are really lucky, a Manatee. This specie was introduced to the Panama Canal in the 1960’s to control the growth of an algae and they have adjusted very well to this habitat. There is also “secret” “ Tiny Proboscis Bat roost.
We are scheduled to be back in the Canopy Tower by noon.
PM: Panama Rain Forest Discovery Center.
The Panama Rainforest Discovery Center is an ecotourism and environmental education facility created and administrated by Fundacion Avifauna Eugene Eisenmann-on Pipeline Road. It is located in the tropical forests surrounding the Panama Canal, adjacent to Soberania National Park. About 70% of all materials used on the construction of this place are recycled from old Canal Zone houses.
At only 200 yards from the main building there is an observation tower reaching a height of 100 feet from the forest floor This Center is located at about 25 minutes from Canopy Tower.
This afternoon there will be a longer break after lunch, because we leave to the Discovery Center at about 4 PM. Our plan for this evening is to bring a Picnic Dinner, so we can stay until nightfall to have another opportunity to look for nocturnal creature as we work our way back to Canopy Tower on Pipeline Rd. This road is well known for the sightings of Ocelot, Jaguarundi, Collared Peccaries, Gray Fox, Paca, Western Night Monkey, White-tailed Deer, Silky Anteater and Capybara.
DAY SIX:
AM: Metropolitan Natural Park.
Located right next to Panama City, only 25 minutes from the Canopy Tower, the forests of the Metropolitan Natural Park are much drier than those around Pipeline or Plantation Roads. This park is also a great place for bird migration (September through October).
There is a wonderful look out at the summit of a hill which will give you an incredible perspective of the whole Panama City and some of it closer islands.
One of the most common residents are the Geoffroy´s Tamarin and Variegated and Red-tailed Squirrel. Northern Tamandua is also a possibility.
PM: Panama Canal Locks.
On the last afternoon at Canopy tower, after lunch at about 2:30pm, as part of the things you most see when you visit Panama, today we will visit the eighth wonder of the engineering history, the world famous Panama Canal.
There are four exhibition halls which include historic artifacts used in the construction of the Canal, interactive modules, video presentations, models of the Panama Canal, and objects used in Canal operations.
Then at 5 PM we head back to the Tower for the Happy Hour!
DAY SEVEN:
Today we will drive very early in the morning to the Caribbean side of Panama, only 1 ½ hours from Panama City over a newly constructed four-lane highway. The purpose of this day tour will be to look for mammals in the San Lorenzo Forest Preserve. This area was the site of the US Army Jungle Training School, also known as Fort Sherman.
San Lorenzo National Park is known for the abundance of Howlers, White-faced Capuchins and Sloths. Some other elusive animals such as Jaguarundi and Night Monkeys are often seen. Occasionally visitors are surprise by a herb of Collared Peccaries crossing the road. A White-tailed Deer may jump out of the woods and across the road.
There is also the added benefit of visiting the old Spanish fortress of San Lorenzo, a World Heritage Site, built on a promontory at the entrance of the Chagres River. This fort was the last bastion of the Spanish Empire in mainland America and was abandoned by the Spanish in 1821. In addition, to get to this area we have to cross the Panama Canal which gives us a unique view of the locks from below.
CANOPY LODGE, VALLE DE ANTON
DAY EIGHT
This morning, after a relaxed breakfast and a last look from the Observation Deck, we will be transferred to the Canopy Lodge, in El Valle de Anton, in the foothills of Central Panama, about 2 hours west of the Canopy Tower. El Valle is located in the crater of a gigantic volcano that erupted 3.5 million years ago. It is the largest inhabited caldera in the world. The volcano is has been extinct for many, many years, but there are mud baths in thermal pools in certain areas of the caldera. Both, the Canopy Lodge and the town where it is located at are just delightful. When you arrive to the Lodge, it is usually hard to get to your room since visitors are hypnotized by the several colorful tanagers that come to the feeders. Not to mention the very pleasant temperature. The altitude here is about 700 meters above sea level.
After having lunch and looking at the bird feeders or after our recommended siesta, we will take a walk in some of the trails near the Lodge and this will include a visit to a 120 ft high waterfall. Then we come back to the lodge on time for “happy hour” and supper.
So what a great place to catch up with some of the mammals we may had missed at the Tower and some others that foothill specialties. Some of the animals often seen on this area are: Gray Four-eyed, Virginia and Water Opossum, Western Pygmy Squirrel, Rothschild´s Porcupine, Orange Nectar Bat (They come to the hummingbird feeders at night), Night Monkeys, Tayra, Neotropical River Otter, Striped Hog-nosed Skunk, Ocelot, Jaguarundi, Greater Grison, Collared Peccary and White-tailed Deer
DAY NINE
After been woke up by the bird´s morning chorus and having breakfast we will go out again on search of any other animal that is still missing on our list. This time we will visit two places, the first one is Cerro Gaital, within the protected area of Cerro Gaital Natural Monument, located at about 5 miles from the Lodge on a dirt road. From the top of this mountain you will be able to appreciate the caldera very well and the Pacific Ocean, beyond the rim of the crater. We will have lunch back in the Canopy Lodge and afterwards we will visit La Zamia Trail at the base of the Cerro Gaital Natural Monument. This is an easy, level trail in which the rare Rufous-vented Ground Cuckoo has been seen occasionally.
For those interested in botany, it is worth noting that La Zamia trail is named after the rare and primitive genus of palm-like plants called Zamia of the order Cycadales. Some of these unusual and ancient fern-like dioecious plants with aerial or subterranean stems are found on this trail. We will also visit the El Valle Amphibian Rescue Center,
This installation is an effort of the Houston Zoo and local conservationists. Half of the Center is devoted to quarantine, treatment and captive breeding efforts, the other half of the facility is open to the public and exhibits native Panamanian amphibian species. The central exhibit showcases the golden frog, a cultural icon and a national symbol for wildlife conservation in Panama.
DAY TEN
After breakfast we depart to the International Airport. |
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