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Home > Your Stories > Rafting the Amazon Part 5 "Pink Dolphins" |
Intro / Pucallpa / Building the raft / Getting permission / Mosquitoes / Pink Dolphins / Whirlpools / Indigenous Village / Final Stretch / End of the Journey
The sun finally came up. We untied the ropes,
pushed off, and continued our adventure down the river. It took a
while to get away from the cloud of mosquitoes. They followed us for
most of the early morning. As the day warmed, other bugs came to
enjoy the foreign food that was floating down their river. A small
black bug, about the size of a head of a pin, was prevalent. It
would not puncture the skin to suck your blood like a mosquito, it
would chew at the skin to create a bleeding wound. These bites were
10 times more irritating than a mosquito bite. Another pest was a
green, metallic fly-like bug that would land on my back and take big
bites of my skin. I did not mind the heat, or the fruitless
paddling, but the bugs drove me crazy. As we floated down the river we saw small villages along the
rivershore. Villages were not as common as I hoped. My expectation
was we would easily find villages for supplies and maybe lodging. We
would see maybe two or three a day.
The river did not flow along one straight channel. It constantly
curved and split into networks of smaller channels. We did not have
maps so we had no idea which channel to take. At midday we took one
of the smaller channels and the water current slowed to a
frustrating pace. Abruptly, I heard a whoosh of air and turned to
see where it came from but saw nothing. I heard it again and out of
the corner of my eye I saw a pinkish, white hump arch out of the
water and then disappear. It was large and my first thought was that
I had witnessed some type of strange, Amazon River creature. Two
more of the creatures breached the water and I got a better look.
They were pink, freshwater dolphins. Their size was impressive and
the sound they made when they let out air was very distinct from the
typical buzzing and chirping I usually heard. The dolphins did not
follow us for long, only a few minutes. I would later see a stuffed,
pink dolphin at a museum. They are the strangest looking animals
that I have ever seen, an apparent remnant of the dinosaur ages.
That evening we found a low shore along the
river where we decided to camp. We tied the raft and I entered the
forest to look for firewood. I was surprised that the forest was so
open. There was little undergrowth and the trees were far apart. I'm
sure that the tree canopy allowed only the hardiest plants to
survive. I saw trees with spines, red trees and a tree with dark,
black bark. I wanted to spend more time exploring the forest.
However, the mosquitoes began swarming around my head and forced me
back to the raft. I tried to make my bed more mosquito proof. I hung a sheet on
lines over my bed in hopes that it would serve as a mosquito net.
The thick sheet was hot, I felt like I was suffocating. I made the
mistake of trying to let some fresh air in and the mosquitoes took
advantage of the opportunity. They zoomed in underneath the sheet
and found their victim. My homemade mosquito net was useless.
To escape the mosquitoes, I once again got into my sleeping bag.
I also put on a sweater, pants and covered my face with clothes.
Only my mouth was exposed. I was hot and sweaty but I slept a little
better that night, probably because I was so tired.
Next >>
Whirlpools...

Pali
reading inside the
raft

Super Oar
Man!
Charles Brennick
http://nvmundo.com/raft/ Copyright
Charles Brennick. All rights reserved. Story reproduced with kind permission.
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