Brazil
Poconé

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    • Day 20

      Days 20 & 21: the Pantanal

      September 2, 2018 in Brazil

      Although we have a 6 o'clock start, the hotel staff kindly lay on breakfast for us. "Go to work on Brazilian coffee" was never more appropriate. And cakes, and pastries, and scrambled eggs. Our driver takes us southwards and the tarmac rapidly fades to a road of characteristic reddish earth. The heat has temporarily left us, with a misty rain and chilly breeze which perhaps is blowing down from the Andes.

      The Pantanal is an extraordinary wetland, mostly in Mato Grosso state but some of it spills over into Bolivia and Paraguay. It becomes almost a lake up to the end of March but in early September the swamps have drained and it becomes a dryland. This is the best time of year to see the wildlife, and better than Amazonia as well because there is less vegetation. The National Park covers about 1,350 sq. km. (520 sq. mi.) but is threatened by cattle ranching, commercial fishing, poaching and road kill among other things. We are glad to get there while there is still time.

      At the Pousada Rio Claro we pick up a boat for our first taste of river life. And taste there is, for the jacare (a.k.a. caiman or alligator) snapping up a dead piranha which our boatman dangles out from the gunwale. Jacares are believed to number 10 million, which makes them as populous here as humans are in Rio de Janeiro. Other abundant creatures include the jabiru stork whose distinctive red collar makes it the official emblem of the Pantanal, and the capybara, famously the world's largest rodent about the size of pigs. Unlike the jabiru but like pigs, they don't fly.

      It's worth noting that I am not the first member of my family to pass this way. My great-uncle Cyril was once in the Mato Grosso, gathering butterflies for a private collector. This practice would be frowned on now but back in 1927 it provided him with a living and much interest. At the time, the great news topic was Colonel Fawcett whose expedition had vanished just 2 years before and people clung to the hope that he would be found.

      No trace of Fawcett but we have had a satisfying day.

      The following day is a rest day which we use going to the rodoviaria for tickets for our return journey in 2 days time. As we walk there, a couple of women warn us that this is a dodgy area and kindly give us a lift there and back. We celebrate a safe return with a kilo lunch and ice creams at the Italianissima. We also get our photos taken; my Brazil-coloured shirt actually represents the SPBW (Society for Preservation of Beers from the Wood) and a suspicious bulge underneath which is my shoulder pouch (in some quarters called a "bra"). Is that a passport inside or am I just pleased to see them?

      In the evening we find that piranha is a diet not just for jacares but for people, apparently with the added bonus that it's an aphrodisiac.

      Chaste thoughts however await us back at the hotel, where the manageress encourages us "dorme com Deus" (sleep with God).
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    • Day 22

      Days 22 & 23: the Pantanal

      September 4, 2018 in Brazil

      I normally hate getting up early but this is a must. Our guide for the day, Domingas, is waiting at 4 a.m. in her 4 x 4 and we set off on the same round south as on Sunday. This time it's a 3 1/2 hour drive, easily passing Rio Claro and finishing at Porto Jofre, with the essential inky black coffee as the morning fix.

      This wetland is not Amazonia but part of the Parana system, which ultimately drains into the River Plate at Buenos Aires. But the land of tango feels very distant as we cruise these swampy rivers. We spot families of capybara hooting nervously to warn of the jacares which patrol these waters, only their eyes showing above their surface.

      But the king of the predators awaits in the bushes. After an hour of searching. Domingas locates a spot where jaguars are likely to roam ans sure enough, we see one lurking on the river bank. It's a thrilling sight. I'm not sure who is the more cautious, ourselves in the canoe or the big feline; anyway after 10 minutes, it jumps into the water and we follow its course as it swims briskly. The jaguar finally halts at a clump of bushes and emerges with a jacare, lying face upwards and very dead. It seems that the crocodilian has been killed earlier and none of the other local creatures has dared to deny the jaguar of its prey. Domingas, having been the first to spot this, helpfully calls over two other boat parties to witness the scene. Meanwhile the jaguar tries to haul the jacare up the bank from the water's edge but it's too much for him alone and he starts to lunch on it, before perhaps getting help from his mate. It's an unforgettable sight. The thought that anybody would want to poach them for body parts or any other reason is appalling.

      Nothing much can top this but the drive back to Pocone is enjoyable as the sun sets, leaving increasingly lengthy shadows. The termite mounds rise like hillocks amongst the browsing white cattle. Domingas (pictured above) has been an excellent guide---she has, after all, had to stay focused from 4 a.m. to 7 p.m.---and I wish her every success.

      After a final breakfast in Pocone, we board the bus back to Cuiaba. This is sadly where Doree and I are to go separate ways but I am grateful for our very enjoyable week. Cuiaba is pleasant enough but as a state capital seems undistinguished. The cracks in the pavements are more like chasms and could easily cause an accident to the unwary; there is a general shabbiness about the buildings that I wouldn't expect to find in a Spanish-speaking city of the same size (about a million). Oh well, the little restaurant across from my hotel does a bargain prato executivo (business person's dish) for about US$3 and beers at US$1 each.
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    • Day 18

      Porto Jofre - Poconé - Transpantaneira

      September 5, 2018 in Brazil ⋅ 🌙 27 °C

      Depois do café preparamos um lanche para viagem (com autorização) e arrumamos a mala para o check-out.
      Pegamos estrada as 8:30 da manhã e fomos bem devagar para procurar os animais, num safari pela Transpantaneira.
      Percorremos os 145km em 5 horas e 20 minutos (o lanche foi fundamental!).
      No percursos avistamos vários pássaros, veados, tatu, capivaras e centenas de jacarés!
      O carro está que é só terra! Vamos ter que pagar a lavagem na localiza.
      Fizemos o check in novamente no hotel e churrascaria pantaneira (esse quarto está melhor do que o anterior, na ida para o Jofre).
      Fomos ao centro comprar lembrancinhas e tomar um açaí.
      De noite jantamos no Tradição, restaurante na praça central da cidade. Pedimos um Pintado grelhado..

      Despesas

      Etanol 71,00
      Lembrancinhas 102,00
      Açaí 21,90
      Água 5,00
      Jantar no Tradição 122,00
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    • Day 15

      Bom Jardim - Poconé

      September 2, 2018 in Brazil ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

      No último dia em Bom Jardim fomos ao Recanto Encantado, onde fica a nascente do rio Salobra.
      O local é bem interessante, pois podemos observar a nascente do rio escorrendo das rochas e no local onde entramos na água vemos os fervedouros com água saindo só solo arenoso.
      Depois de mandarmos por essa área fizemos a flutuação de 800 metros descendo o rio, ainda bem preservado.
      Voltamos ao hotel, tomamos banho e fizemos o check-out para pegar 250km de estrada e chegar em Poconé, onde passaremos a noite para fazer a Transpantaneira amanhã.
      Não sei se é por causa do dia que chegamos (domingo), mas a cidade está meio morta (tudo fechado).
      Fomos almoçar/jantar as 17:30 na padaria na praça da igreja e voltamos ao quarto para descansar.
      O hotel é bem simples e as paredes são tão finas que você ouve tudo que seu vizinho faz (até o ronco)!

      Despesas do dia

      Etanol 123,00
      Café 5,00
      Pacote hotel Bom Jardim 1.370,00 (250 de sinal)
      Jantar padaria 53,00
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Poconé, Pocone

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