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LORETO IQUITOS
Trip
to Jungle Peru. Loreto is the
largest yet least
populated department in
Peru. It is covered by
dense vegetation and by
primary and secondary
jungle with low hills
and slightly rolling
landscape, crisscrossed
by the many rivers of
the Amazon River basin,
which is born at the
confluence of the
Marañon and Ucayali
Rivers.
Iquitos, the capital of
Loreto, is the main port
city on the Amazon River
and the largest city in
the Peruvian jungle.
Different indigenous
people groups like the
Cocama, Huitoto, and
Bora first inhabited the
area. Then there came
the Jesuit missionaries
who founded the city. At
the end of the
nineteenth century was
when Iquitos experienced
its greatest economic
glory due to the rubber
industry. The economic
bonanza meant that
luxurious buildings like
the art noveau Palace
Hotel and the Iron House,
designed by the famous
French architect Gustave
Eiffel, were constructed
there.
In contrast to these
buildings, you find the
homes in the Belen
neighborhood that are
constructed on top of
rafts and pylons to
protect them from the
flooding of the river.
One of the best
attractions in Loreto is
navigating on the rivers
and lakes and enjoying
the beautiful beaches.
The Pacaya-Samiria
National Reserve
(2,080,000 hectares),
the largest reserve in
Peru, is located 183
kilometers from the city
and is home to numerous
plant and animal species,
many of them in danger
of extinction like the
charapa river turtle,
the giant river otter,
the black caiman, and
the river dolphin.
Likewise, the Allpahuayo-Mishana
National Reserve (58,000
hectares) protects the
largest concentration of
white sand forests, or
varillales as they are
known in the Peruvian
Amazon rainforest. This
happens to be one of the
best areas to go for
bird-watching. //In
addition to these
national reserves, there
are also numerous
private reserves, which
have been created to
satisfy all tastes. |