@@CalypturaExpeditions Pia. I saw that Spinetail long distance along Okinawa Rd and Lomas de Arena in Santa Cruz, Bolivia in August 2009. So, already a long time ago 🙂
00:32 Ha ha, that reminds me of our trip to Sirinhaém for the White-collared Kite! We got it, but also very VERY clay-clumped shoes! I like the look and sound of this Jardim da Amazõnia! Some nice species I haven't seen, but also species that would be a welcome repeat!
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I am very impressed with your videos and appreciate that you have started this channel since 2007 and are still uploading continuous videos with great patience. If your videos have very few views and your videos do not have any SEO keywords then your videos must be SEO and complete then I can say for sure that your channel will improve and I can share some tips for this improvement. If you allow me or inbox me, I can share your development ideas with you
I went to the Pantanal in the early 1990s during a month-long visit to Brazil. The tourism was fairly light at the time. One of the most memorable things were the wooden bridges of the dirt road (Transpanteria I think it is called). Multiple bridges were missing planks and impassable. So my friend and I took two wooden planks from a bridge and put them in the back of our rental car. Multiple times, we had to supplement a bridge with our planks to make them passable. We did not take part in any kind of tour but got to see the immense diversity of birds in the wetlands of the region, which are basically adjacent to the dirt road for most of the trip. You are, more or less, driving through a wetlands. We relied on the Lonely Planet guide to plan the trip and arrive at lodging in the Pantanal. It was the first time in my life that I was mesmerized by birds. Years later, I now live on the edge of 2000 acre park In Philadelphia and love the variety of birds that are right outside my windows. I don't feel a need to travel to engage the natural world. I think this is perhaps best now, as jet travel is a huge contributor to global warming.