The Amazon

Things to do in the Ecuadorian Amazon.

Skip the choreographed dances in staged villages and the hollow spectacle of the cultural encounter. Instead, hire a long-tail boat to navigate the Napo River, where the primary rainforest canopy actually meets the water. It is a place for the stillness of the morning mist and the sudden, cacophonous argument of macaws overhead

Yasuní

A squirrel monkey sits in a tree in Yasuní, Ecuador.

The most biodiverse place on Earth

Cuyabeno

The sun sets over a lake in the Amazon rainforest. The huge trees are silhouettes and everything is bathed in orange light in Cuyabeno, Ecuador.

The flooded forest

Puyo

The Rio Negro flows through the mountainous forests near Baños, Ecuador.

The gateway to the Amazon

More things to do in the Ecuadorian Amazon.

Night walks reveal a different architecture altogether, one built of bioluminescent fungi and the rhythmic clicking of insects. Kayaking through flooded forests offers a perspective usually reserved for the local caiman population, moving silently through the submerged trunks. It is a slow, humid immersion that rewards those who can sit still for more than five minutes.

Where to stay in the Ecuadorian Amazon.

Look for lodges that prioritise conservation and ecosystem integration over thread counts and infinity pools. The most rewarding spots are often tucked away in the Yasuní or Cuyabeno, where the walls are screen mesh and the soundtrack is strictly organic. You want a place that respects the humidity rather than trying to air-condition it into submission

Where to eat and drink in the Ecuadorian Amazon.

Seek out maito—river fish seasoned with jungle salt, wrapped in bijao leaves, and grilled over coals until it achieves a smoky perfection. Wash it down with a bowl of guayusa tea, a local stimulant that provides a cleaner, more sustainable buzz than your third espresso of the morning. For the social, fermented chicha remains the regional glue, often shared from a communal bowl in a gesture of local hospitality

When to visit the Ecuadorian Amazon.

Rain is a constant companion here, so choosing between the wet and the slightly-less-wet season is a matter of personal dampness preference. High water levels in June and July allow boats to drift deeper into the flooded forest, while the drier months from December to March expose the muddy banks where turtles bask. Pack a decent mac and embrace the inevitable soak

Is the Ecuadorian Amazon safe?

The jungle is largely indifferent to your presence, which is its own kind of safety. Stick to reputable guides who know which spiders to admire from a distance and which river currents are best avoided after a heavy downpour. In the frontier towns like Coca or Tena, a bit of common sense goes further than any expensive anti-theft gadget

The history of the Ecuadorian Amazon.

The region’s past is etched in the struggle between ancestral land rights and the encroaching thirst for rubber, gold, and oil. From the fierce independence of the people to the remnants of colonial outposts, the history here is a layered narrative of resilience and extraction. It is a landscape that has survived many attempts at taming, yet remains defiantly its own

Ecuadorian cycling culture.

Cycling in Ecuador is not for the faint-hearted or the flat-land specialist. The shadow of Richard Carapaz looms large over every steep Andean pass, and that gritty competitive spirit spills down into the humid lowland trails. Expect local riders on vintage frames to overtake you on gravel paths while effortlessly carrying a week’s worth of produce

Driving culture and road safety

An old red road bike leans against a red brick wall in Guayaquil, Ecuador.

Driver attitudes, road traffic statistics, and road safety laws for cyclists

Cycling laws in Ecuador

A woman rides an upright bike. She's in a dress and a helmet, and looks like she is checking the way is clear. Wheely Tyred Bohemia

Everything you need to know about cycling laws and regulations in Ecuador

Ecuador’s cycling history

Mountain bikes lie in front of a Toyota pickup. There's on on e the roof too. The foothills of Cotopaxi surround the truck

A guide to the cycling history, bicycle culture, and bike routes

Everything we’ve written about Ecuador.

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Ecuador.

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