Project Peru 2: Amazon Adventure 2006
Use our Expedition Updates, which we will post to our website from the rainforest via satellite phone from March 27 to May 5, to take your class on a virtual field trip through the Amazon's flooded forest! Photos, videos, journals, scientific data, and direct communication with expedition members will bring the plants, animals, and people of the Rain Forest into your classroom in a whole new way. Plus, Project Peru 2's leader, Dave Freeman, can visit your school for an engaging, interactive presentation.
Registration is free, and it gives users access to dozens of lesson plans, activities, and other educational resources. Plus, registering helps us gain support from foundations, corporations, and individuals who allow us to provide our programming to students and teachers at no cost.
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Use our Expedition Updates, which we will post to our website from the rainforest via satellite phone from March 25 to May 5, to take your class on a virtual field trip through the Amazon's flooded forest! Photos, videos, journals, scientific data, and direct communication with expedition members will bring the plants, animals, and people of the Rain Forest into your classroom in a whole new way. This school year, the Wilderness Classroom will study the flooded forest of the Peruvian Amazon. Staff members from the Wilderness Classroom will paddle dugout canoes through Peru's most remote section of flooded forest in April and May of 2005. During the six week learning adventure, we will update our website with videos, photos, scientific data, journals, and much more. A complete multidisciplinary curriculum, correlated to 3rd through 8th grade Illinois state standards, will accompany the adventure. Before and after the adventure, The Wilderness Classroom can visit your school to excite your students about the people, plants, and animals who call the flooded forest home. We will be adding loads of additional information that pertains to Peru over the next few months. Please check back often, or contact us so we can keep you informed as the adventure unfolds. For further information, please contact Eric Frost at 630-204-0420 or e-mail us at info@wildernessclassroom.com. |





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We finished paddling yesterday, bringing to a close our exploration of the flooded forest. As we began celebrating our mutual accomplishment in Nauta, we couldn't help but think back on our favorite moments from Project Peru.
I hope you've enjoyed coming along on this learning adventure, and I hope you've enjoyed the videos! See you next year.

I am a small part of a much larger organizm .
Many local people like to eat me.
I am not a fruit, but I come from a tree!
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So we end our adventure in the city of Iquitos, where we began. What we have seen and done is overwhelming, but some clear themes have emerged. The Pacaya-Samiria National Reserve is an amazing resource--home to a vast number of animal, plant and insect species, as well a number of people--all of which can and should be able to continue living together in sustainable harmony. Most of the people are living in relative harmony with their environment, but there are some who are involved with destructive behaviors and working with others outside the park who only want to make a profit from the park's resources.
The people who do illegal logging in the park are inflicting harsh wounds on the environment.
We once again visited with Javier del Aguila Chavez, head of the Pacaya- Samiria National Reserve. Javier has been a huge help to us as we planned our trip made our way through the park. He asked us about the illegal loggers that we saw and we described the area where we saw the most. We began discussing ways we might be able to try and help them stop this activity. It is very expensive for the park to get help from the Navy and police. Sometimes they get assistance from outside organizations and nonprofits that work internationally, but they don't get the money all the time and lately there hasn't been a lot of support.
The illegal logging activities get worse each year and are a big threat to the park. Javier and his crew struggle to do as much as they can, but it is a huge challenge for them. The raids on loggers that they have been able to organize have only been a small and temporary fix to the situation. The loggers are dangerous, aggressive and often armed. In order to wipe out the illegal logging practices, a great deal of money, resources and support will be needed.
It is important to keep in mind that there is also so much positive work being done in the park, and as a result, there are many areas that have hardly any logging activity. Due to the organization and work of Javier's crew and the people living in the park, they have been able to develop sustainable ways to manage resources as well as support themselves economically. The organizations to manage the fish populations, like we saw at Lake El Dorado and other checkpoints, give the people in the park incentive to protect the environment, as it is also a way for them to make money. This is a much better alternative than making money by working for illegal loggers!
Many of the villages we visited had official buildings for their organizations to hold meetings and plan for their resource management. The school in Veinte de Enero was also giving classes on palm reforestation, and Javier gives villagers detailed instructions on how to make rope and board devices to climb palms, rather than cutting them down for the fruits. The people I spoke with have great pride in their involvement with these organizations to help protect their home: the park.
Developing resource management organizations and managing the park checkpoints is a huge help, but it also takes time and resources to build and grow these organizations. We discussed ways we might be able to help Javier find volunteer rangers who might like to come down and work in the park. We also had ideas on how to raise money to fund raids on the loggers, and ways we might be able to get necessary items donated to the rangers--such as flashlights, raincoats, rubber boots, knives, etc. Of course, if we could eliminate the demand for wood from the rainforest, we could make it unprofitable for the loggers and they would stop. This is another great idea that will take quite a bit of work and international cooperation to achieve.
We are hoping that by being able to expose these illegal logging operations in the park, we can find people and organizations who want to get involved and help in the fight. Do you have any ideas or ways you can help out? We'd love to hear from you.
The time we have spent here in Peru and visiting the Pacaya-Samiria National Reserve has really made an impact on all of us. The awe and respect we feel for the animals and people in this rich, unique environment have made it clear to us how important it is to preserve this area for all the living things that depend on it. We hope that our experiences have inspired you to learn more about the rainforests and also to do whatever you can to help us protect the Pacaya-Samiria National Reserve.
-Jennifer

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Javier del Aguila Chavez, the head of Pacaya-Samiria National Reserve

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Javier meets with the team to discuss the adventure and to talk about
the logging in the park.

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The Pacaya Samiria National Reserve Rangers work hard to protect the park.

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Many local people work as volunteer rangers to protect the flooded
forest around their community.

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Future protectors of Pacaya Samiria? We sure hope so.
Since we are currently on an airplane heading for the United States, our new dilemma is yours! Do you think it is important to preserve the rainforests? Why? In what ways are the rainforests of the world threatened? What can you do in your daily life to help protect these important natural treasures?
Save the Planet Trivia #2
Question:
How do trees save energy and reduce pollution?
Answer:
-Planted so as to cast their shade on strategic parts of a building, trees reduce the need to run air conditioners. Thus a tree can reduce energy use, and diminished electricity generation means fewer air pollutants and greenhouse gases from power plants.
-Trees trap and absorb numerous airborne pollutants, such as dust, ash, pollen, and smoke.
-Trees remove the carbon from carbon dioxide and store it in their trunks while releasing oxygen back into the air.
-A single tree can trap and hold up to 50 gallons of water, lessening stormwater or snowmelt runoff that causes flooding and pollution.
-Trees increase the amount of water filtered back into the ground, counteracting the effects of large areas of pavement.
-Trees reduce soil erosion and sedimentation in streams.
(Sierra Club)
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Wow, I can't believe we have reached the final Project Peru update. It seems like we are just getting started and I could easily spend another month down here looking for wild animals! The biodiversity of plant and animal life is truly amazing.
I think we have been very fortunate to see lots of interesting creatures while in the jungle. Instead of trying to pick just one animal for this final update, I want to give a list of all the animals we have seen. I have only been able to highlight 17 animals in our updates but we have seen so many more! There are many animals we still need to identify, but here is what we have so far.
Also, here are some of the great photos Dave took on the trip. These are all shots of animals we didn't put in the updates. Enjoy!
Jesse
Fish:
Shuyo
Black Piranaha
Red Piranaha
White Piranaha
Chambria
Arapaima
Palometa
Tarashqua
Mammals:
Squirrel Monkey
Red Howler Monkey
Saki Monk Monkey
Pink Dolphin
Gray Dolphin
Saddleback Tamarin
White Lipped Peccaries
Collared Peccarie
Brown Capuchin Monkey
White Capuchin Monkey
Three Toed Sloth
Many bats (there are about 88 species and it is hard to tell them apart,
especially at night.)
Giant Anteater
Woolly Monkey
Giant River Otter
Paca
Birds:
(We saw many more birds than we were able to identify!)
Yellow Hooded Blackbird
Canary Winged Parakeet
Oriole Blackbird
Ringed Kingfisher
Amazon Kingfisher
Green Kingfisher
Green & Rufuos Kingfisher
Roadside Hawk
Black Skimmer
Yellow Headed Caracara
Black Caracara
Red Throated Caracara
Eastern Kingbird
Brown Chested Martin
Horned Screamer
Black Collared Hawk
Striated Heron
Capped Heron
Cocoi or White Necked Heron
Plumbeous Kite
Greater Yellow Headed Vulture
Turkey Vulture
Large Billed Tern
Yellow Billed Tern
Blue Headed Parrot
Red Bellied Macaw
Chestnut Fronted Macaw
Blue and Gold Macaw
Scarlet Macaw
Red & Green Macaw
Wattled Jacana
Cuviers or White Throated Toucan
Hoatzin
Snowy Egret
Cattle Egret
Great Egret
Green Ibis
Black Vulture
Many hummingbirds
Yellow Tufted Woodpecker
Crimson Crested Woodpecker
Black Capped Donacobius
Masked Crimson Tanager
Red Capped Cardinal
Blue & Gray Tanager
Palm Tanager
Fork Tailed Palm Tanager
White Winged Swallow
Banded Swallow
Southern Rough Winged Swallow
Social Flycatcher
Pale Legged Hornero
Greater Ani
Smooth Billed Ani
Cobalt Winged Parakeet
White Eyed Parakeet
Dusky Headed Parakeet
Short Tailed Parrot
Mealy Parrot
Festive Parrot
Yellow Crowned Parrot
Sungrebe
Muscovy Duck
Snail Kite
Swallow Winged Puffbird
White Eared Jacamar
Reptiles and bugs:
Black Caiman
Pygmy Caiman
Side Neck Turtle
Anaconda
Wandering Spider
Pink Toed Tarantula
Wolf Spider
Bullet, Fire, and Leafcutter ants
Grasshoppers
Bees
Mosquitoes
Wasps
Beetles
Dragonflies

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Here's a snake eating a frog in Veinte de Enero.

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Leaf
cutter ants are hard at work. It was amazing to watch these insects.

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We saw this unique tree frog deep in the flooded forest.

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We saw a number of toucans flying overhead as we paddled through the
jungle.

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Great Egrets were also a common sight along the Yanayacu River.

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Short Nosed Bats were often seen hanging from tree trunks during the
day. They would become quite active in the evening hours when the mosquitoes
came out.

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Horned Screamers were also relatively common along the rivers.

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We found this Three-Toed
Sloth just hanging out!

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A Yellow Headed Caracara flies overhead.

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Warren holds one of the many types of catfish we saw on this journey.
After spending six weeks winding our way from river to river and town to town in the flooded Peruvian Amazon, I will leave this place far more amazed than I ever anticipated at the way plants, animals, and people flourish--not just survive--in this environment.
Think hard about what the challenge of living here amounts to. Has your basement ever been flooded? Have you ever turned on the evening news and seen people frantically wading next to their submerged cars, or clinging to a telephone pole in the middle of a raging current?
In our part of the world, floods are catastrophes. They are unexpected, dangerous, often deadly. Floods can destroy vast amounts of property--cars, homes, roads--and wipe out plants, animals and unsuspecting people when they strike.
So how is it possible that anything or anyone can live in an area that floods every single year, sometimes by as much as 15 feet? Easy--strategy.
Plant species here have adapted remarkably well to live with the regular flooding cycle.
We've already talked about how some plants, such as epiphytes, survive the floods. Instead of dealing with the hassle of rising and receding water every year, epiphytes simply attach themselves high up in trees, gathering water and nutrients from other plant matter and rain. How do epiphytes handle potentially catastrophic floods? They avoid.
We've also seen many capoc trees, with their massive systems of buttress roots shooting out hundreds of feet from the tree trunk. Is a little water going to knock over a tree with roots as tall as houses and as wide as a football field? Don't think so. Capoc trees survive the floods by bracing themselves.
Finally, we've learned down here that local fishermen use the bark of the punga tree as a medicine to prevent rheumatism, a disease afflicting people who spend large amounts of time in the water. The fishermen figured that since the tree survived in a flooded environment so well, maybe there was something in its bark protecting it. And the fishermen were right! The punga tree does just fine in the flooded forest because it makes its own medicine!
The animals of the flooded forest, like the plants, have consistently impressed me with their clever and ingenious ways of making do in the floods.
Some animals, like the white-lipped peccaries we've seen, or the tapir, know to congregate on high ground during the flood season.
Other animals are at home on land or in the water. Anacondas, black caimans and side neck turtles are all examples of animals we've seen that are content whether the ground is flooded or not--they're versatile.
As we've paddled through the forest, arboreal animals, such as the howler monkeys, squirrel monkeys, and blue and gold macaws have kept us company constantly, and often noisily, happily oblivious to the flooding far beneath them. So, too, have fire ants, who survive the floods by patrolling the branches of specific trees and attacking whomever dares to disturb the trees (usually us).
We know from our fishing excursions that some smaller fish, the piranha and shuyo, for example, prefer the flood season because they can hide from larger predators among the roots and vines in the flooded forest. The larger species of fish, like the arapaima, know to gorge themselves on small fry during the dry season because food will be more scarce during the floods. It seems like both large and small fish try to use the flooding cycle to their advantage!
As impressed as I've been by these and other plant and animal adaptations, it is the people who call the flooded forest home who have most inspired me with their unique ability to thrive in such a demanding environment.
The skills the people here take for granted as necessary for living a lifetime in the flooded forest are phenomenal.
Remember the guy we found in the forest building three dugout canoes? His only tools were a machete, an axe, and a large jug of river water. Or how about the art of building a house on stilts, spear fishing in the dry season or hunting with a blowgun during the rainy season?
Perhaps the single most impressive tool the riberenos possess is knowledge--knowledge of medicinal plants, geography, seasonal flooding patterns, edible wild plants and animals (and their poisonous kin), raising crops and livestock in both dry and flooded environments, and much more.
With this great body of knowledge comes an even greater sense of appreciation and respect for the plants, animals, people--the whole flooded forest as an ecosystem, beating and pulsing like a giant living organism--not just surviving, but living and thriving together.
I hope you've enjoyed Project Peru! We certainly appreciated having you all along for the adventure. See you next year.
Adam
High Temperature 82
Humidity 76%
There's a flood down there? Animals like the howler monkey are content to live life in the canopy and avoid the surging waters.
Dugout canoes are essential tools for those living in a place like Pacaya Samiria--potentially 90 percent covered by water.
Understanding the flood cycles is extremely important for those who cultivate crops like yuca, as seen above.
Fire ants take to the trees by the millions (billions?) when the water covers the bare earth. The ants are quite aggressive toward anyone who disturbs the tree.
The punga tree (background) has chemical compounds in its bark which protect it from rotting. The bark is also used in a tonic for the prevention of rheumatism.
Smaller fish love to hide in the forest during the floods. Unfortunately for the fish, Warren took advantage of this fact quite often in the course of preparing his specialty--fried fish and bananas for dinner.
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When the bell rings, punctuating the end of the school day in Arequipa, the stampede begins. The students body runs, paddles in hand, down to the town boat launch for an afternoon of some work but mostly fun in the water. Until it's time to return home for dinner, the kids occupy themselves with spear fishing, swimming, playing King of the Canoe, washing clothes, splashing each other, taunting one another and canoe racing, among other things.

I am not very common in the flooded forest.
Sure, I eat insects. But, I eat other things too.
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It was a fun, short paddle from Arequipa to Veinte de Enero, but it resulted in a whole new world for us. I think we are all in love with this super friendly village. One of the first people we met was Lizardo Linares Rios. Not only is he one of the six teachers here, he also runs the tiny general store where people can get some basic supplies.
I went over to Lizardo's store/home which is right across the soccer field from our beautiful porch accommodations. We communicated a little as I was purchasing a large, warm bottle of Peru Cola for the team. He indicated he would like to learn a little more English from me. I promised I would come back with a copy of my vocabulary sheet I've been using to remember some new words in Spanish.
On Sunday morning, I had the opportunity to visit with Lizardo and his wife Rosa. I munched on some "Tarzan" animal cookies and they shared a soda with Ruben (my faithful interpreter) and me. Rosa and Lizardo both teach secondary classes at the small school here. In Peru, there is Kindergarten, Primary classes (ages 6 - 11) and Secondary (ages 12 - 16). There area total of 80 students here and many paddle in each morning from smaller villages such as Buenas Aires or Arequipa. Many students are responsible for setting the family fishing nets each day, so school starts a bit later here--8:00 a.m. Classes go until 12:30 p.m., although some students are taking special classes to learn about reforestation of the palms and aguaje until 1:30 p.m.
Lizardo and Rosa have university degrees in teaching and are on annual contracts from the government. Like teachers in the US, they need to take professional development seminars (usually in Nauta) and they belong to a national association of teachers. Their biggest challenge is having the supplies they need to teach. Sometimes it takes quite a while to get the necessary textbooks and often there is only one book for all students!
Rosa clued me in as to why this town is named Veinte de Enero, and unfortunately it's not very exciting or surprising. This town was founded on the 20th of January in 1972. I chatted for a while longer with my new friends, then I headed across the way to see what was going on at the communal clay oven building, where Dave and Jesse had convinced some of the women to fire it up and make us tasty baked treats with yuca flour (as well as bake the second chicken we bought here!).
The way these small villages live and work together communally is amazing. It's hard to tell which children belong to whom or who lives where. People are always hanging out at each other's houses, caring for each other's children and helping each other out---kind of like one giant family! We have enjoyed being part of this amazing group of people in Veinte de Enero and I think we will all be a little sad when we have to leave.
Jennifer

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Lizardo shows off a young tree which his students have replanted in the
forest as part of a reforestation project.

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Lizardo cuts out a heart of palm, which we ate for dinner last night.

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Standing in her parents' store, Lizardo's daughter supervises our meeting.

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Dave helps locals bake bread in their community oven.
This is our chance to let the head of the reserve know what you all thought about Pacaya-Samiria. What should we tell him? Do you have any specific questions you would like us to ask? Javier may also be the best person to ask about the illegal logging we saw in the rainforest. What questions should we ask him about this?
Save the Planet Trivia
Question: Are dishwashers energy efficient? Isn't it more responsible to wash dishes by hand?
Answer:
New, energy-efficient dishwashers can use about half as much water as washing by hand - and they can save time. They use about 7 to 10 gallons of water per load (compared to 8 to 14 gallons) and use about half the electricity of 25-year-old models.
To maximize a dishwasher's efficiency, don't wash small loads. To reduce the amount of water needed to clean the dishes, choose a dishwasher that provides several different wash cycle selections as well as heat- and air-drying options: an air-drying circulation fan uses very little electricity; heat drying uses a lot.
(Sierra Club)
]]>It has been interesting to paddle our way out of the depths of Pacaya-Samiria. The closer we get to larger groups of people the less wildlife we encounter. This is due to a variety of factors, including hunting, disturbed habitat and general activity from which many animals tend to shy away. I will certainly miss the abundance of wildlife we have seen on this journey.
One animal, which has been a nearly constant companion on this expedition is the howler monkey. You have probably seen some of the cool pictures in the Notes From the Trail earlier in the trip. These monkeys are relatively common in Pacaya-Samiria.
While we would see them every once in a while, we would often hear these monkeys howling in the distance. It sounds like a deep roar more than an actual howl and it can be quite impressive to hear many of them in one area. Supposedly these howls can be heard up to four miles through the jungle. Scientists believe that the dominant male of the group uses his loud voice to keep the group spaced out enough so they don't have to compete for food.
We were hoping to see one of these monkeys while they were howling, but we only saw them when they were eating. One day, we were very lucky and got to see four howler monkeys eating in one cecropia tree. This was quite a treat! Dave took a bunch of cool pictures and the rest of us watched in awe as they made their way from limb to limb. It is truly amazing how they can reach, balance, and swing their way to food. We really enjoyed seeing one hang from its tail as its outstretched arm reached for some leaves!
Howlers live in small groups of about 12 individuals. They can grow to be about two feet in length, not including the 30-inch tail. Howlers weigh about 15 pounds when they reach adulthood and can live about 20 years. These monkeys eat mainly leaves, fruit and flowers.
Compared to other monkeys, howlers don't travel very much. They prefer to stay within their small communities. The spend their whole lives in the tree tops, making it difficult to spot them. The howler monkey is an endangered species throughout its entire range. Some scientists estimate that the howler monkey could become extinct in our lifetime. Hopefully, Pacaya Samiria will continue to have a healthy population of these creatures.
Jesse

The last week of Project Peru has been different because we have spent a lot of our time in communities learning how people survive in the flooded forest. When we were in Chicago visiting schools in March, we told students we would have the chance to meet people from the Cocama Tribe, who speak a different language, called Cocama.
This week we learned that the Cocama people in villages like Yarina and Veinte de Enero no longer speak Cocama.
Often times when a culture looses its language--its means of description--traditions, customs, and local knowledge are inherently lost as well.
Now local people speak Spanish and they have adopted some aspects of modern Peruvian culture, such as pop music, name-brand clothing, and prepackaged food.
The change in traditions following a change in language happens slowly, maybe over the course of several generations. Right now, the Cocama who live in Pacaya Samiria seem to be in a state of cultural transformation.
They still rely heavily on the flooded forest for their survival. The annual floods rejuvenate the soil in their gardens, men still travel the rivers and flooded forest in search of fish and game, and a variety of eatable fruits and other plants are gathered from the forest.
However, some cultural changes are evident. People supplement medicinal plants gathered from the forest with modern drugs, and they cultivate significantly larger patches of bananas and other crops in order buy clothing, medicine and other goods their ancestors simply obtained from the forest.
During Project Peru, we have put a great deal of emphasis on protecting the plants and animals of the rain forest. However, we have to remember that it is the delicate relationship between a local people's culture and their environment which hold the key to future preservation.
Keep Exploring!
Dave
Please Join us for our last online chat from 1:30 PM to 2:30 PM Thursday, May 5. The last few chats have gone very well, and we hope that many of you will be able to join us for this final chat of the adventure!
High Temperature 81
Humidity 74%
Miles Paddled 26
Number of fish Jesse speared today 3
Monday's High Temperature 87
Monday's Humidity 71%

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A crowd gathers to watch videos of dogsledding in "Adam's Land."

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Jesse, Adam, Dave, and Warren joined local kids for a swim.

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The gang paddles down the mighty Maranon River towards Nauta.