What is the best country to visit the Amazon from?
July 9, 2009 - 7:31 pm
I am travelling up South America next year and would love to go into the amazon for a few nights.
Venezuela of course!!! the airplane ticket is the most chipest at all (comparate with Brazil and Colombia). Once you come to Caracas you have 2 options, buses and planes to travel to the Venezuelan-Brazilian border. You can visit the Amazon from Santa Elena de Uairen and from Manaus in Brazil. Santa Elena to Manaus is the easiest way to travel to real heart of the Amazon. But if you travel by the Brazilian way is most expensive because international flies goes only to São Paulo and Rio, then you have to take another plane to Manaus.
July 10th, 2009 at 12:52 am
brazil
References :
July 10th, 2009 at 1:21 am
Bolivia
The Republic of Bolivia is a continental country. While failing to ocean coasts, has access to the sea through the Paraguay river. It offers a landscape that varies from western highlands of the Andes to the eastern lowlands, sprinkled with the Amazon rainforests. The border with Peru is to visit the beautiful Lake Titicaca, while south-west are the arid salt flats of Salar de Uyuni, the largest in the world. Bolivia is the country where most are found the ancient traditions of American Indians.
Brazil
The Federal Republic of Brazil covers a third of the South American continent, with 7367 kilometers of beautiful coastline and numerous islands. This great country borders every country in South America except Chile and Ecuador with, and extends the Equator to the Tropic of Capricorn. With this, its microclimate gives rise to a splendid array of flora and fauna, with orchids in the Amazon jungle, with its enormous anaconda and small, voracissimi piranhas. But even with the splendid traditional costumes that women still dressed in Salvador de Bahia, with the magnificence of the Rio carnival and the quiet beauty that is observed in the Brazilian side of the famous waterfalls of Iguazu.
Colombia
Colombia is well known worldwide as exports a wide variety of coffee beans - the pride and joy of Juan Valdez! However, the Colombiaha much more to offer that a good cup of coffee. It has the advantage of confining many countries: Panama, Venezuela, Brazil, Peru and Ecuador. So easy to navigate and also visit neighboring countries. It is crossed from north to south by three Andean chains. The lower part is made of a plain inextricable jungle and crossed by rivers Orinoco and the Amazon. In this area, the residents are mostly Indian tribes in the forest. With coasts on both the Caribbean Sea to east over the Atlantic, the Pacific with the West, Colombia offers a vast coastline where you can admire the magnificent sunsets, but also the opportunity to have desirable properties directly on the sea. From the coasts and mountains medium - low of Serranía de Baud, with rolling hills, the Amazon jungle and the highest peaks of the Andes, Colombia presents a plethora of diversity of landscapes.
References :
http://www.ezcashier.com/it/index.html
http://www.prontohotel.com/bra/
http://www.prontohotel.com/col/
http://www.prontohotel.com/bol/
July 10th, 2009 at 2:11 am
venezuela
References :
July 10th, 2009 at 2:39 am
http://www.amazonecopark.com.br/en-us/Default.asp
This is Amazonia state Brazil.
http://www.ariautowers.com.br/contato.php
Escritório Miami - EUA
Endereço: 905 Brickell Bay Drive Suíte 1930, Miami – FL 33131
Fone: 1 305 371-7871
Fax: 1 305 371-7872
e-mail:info@ariautowers.com
References :
July 10th, 2009 at 3:15 am
Venezuela of course!!! the airplane ticket is the most chipest at all (comparate with Brazil and Colombia). Once you come to Caracas you have 2 options, buses and planes to travel to the Venezuelan-Brazilian border. You can visit the Amazon from Santa Elena de Uairen and from Manaus in Brazil. Santa Elena to Manaus is the easiest way to travel to real heart of the Amazon. But if you travel by the Brazilian way is most expensive because international flies goes only to São Paulo and Rio, then you have to take another plane to Manaus.
References :
Just me…