my hotel in Cuiaba |
A duck. No, just kidding, but there are plenty of ducks coming. |
This was a pay phone booth, shaped like the favorite bird of the region, a Jaboru (totally spelled that wrong) |
and here´s the real thing! better pics to come |
tropical dry forest looks like this |
flooded bits/mud puddles |
See the termite mounds over there? They are different colors in different areas, depending on the composition of the soil. Also, all of these in a field would be for one big colony. |
Here´s a termite nest... IN A TREE. |
Something called Monk´s Stair, a neat vine |
a (dead) lizard |
The transpantaneira was going to be a cattle route that went from Mato Grosso to the state above it, and it never got finished. |
There is an ovum bird´s nest on that sign |
There are 126 wooden bridges like this one on the road. Some of them are old. |
totally forgot most of the names of the birds that Edilson told me, but this is some type of ibis |
CAIMANS! lounging in the mud |
The first capybara! |
Just taking a swim by the caiman, no big deal. The Caiman are not like american alligators that go after big prey, just fish and occasionally wounded birds |
wild emus |
keeping out of the hot sun |
this plant has very stinky leaves |
idk why I took this picture |
a vulture, flying |
freaking monk parakeets!!! |
vines growing on the ground |
This is a tiger heron. |
look at all them boids! |
surprisingly they all get along fairly well |
a Savannah hawk, I believe |
its butt |
the dead capybara that was attracting vultures |
san francisco, the ... patron saint of the pantanal? okay, whatever you want. |
A duck. |
This type of tree apparently has seeds that birds love, and so bird watchers love these trees. There were a bunch of them planted at the lodge |
A small one of those trees, and to the right a mango tree sapling |
mangoes! |
I think this was the picture of me trying to get a pciture of the howler monkeys. |
Marsh deer. there were a bunch of these. |
a very cute cow. The lodge is also a farm, so there are herds of cattle and horses just wandering around the place. |
normal domestic pigs, in a puddle. I also saw a peccary, wich is the wild pig, but it was too fast for a picture |
? |
I believe that this is the fruit that has seeds that the natives used to make black paint |
lots of palm trees |
BIG leaves |
Ant-lion trap! Unfortunately we didn´t see any, but what would happen is that an insect would go in, then as they´re leaving the sand would be shifting and the ant lion would eat it. |
some kind of animal hole |
a fig tree and a palm tree |
TURTLE |
bye turtle |
MARMOSET! |
aw look at that face! |
more landscape |
This is cool, the fig tree is planted when birds that ate their fruit poop on a palm tree, and it germinates. Eventually, it gets so big that it overwhelms and eventually kills the palm tree. |
giant mosquito. No, just kidding, it´s some kind of wasp. Oh, what a relief, right? |
a bit blurry, but these are giant black ants climbing up and down the hanging vines |
a neat red ant I saw |
This is some sort of tree parasite on the leaf |
some of the moss and stuff here made it look like the trees had been burned |
These are africanized honey bees |
This is really neat: a fig tree that obviously outgrew its palm tree host, killed it, and it decomposed, but the fig tree grew around the trunk, so now it has one of these. |
Cappuccine monkeys! |
There were about 3 of them, and they were very curious |
my favorite pic of them |
although in this one you can see the face a bit |
The three of them sat in this palm tree and ate some of the fruit. |
I thought those leaves were birds or something going after termites. I was wrong |
a cool sapling, the pods of these fruits were everywhere in the forest |
setting sun |
bathroom frog! These little tree frogs appear at night, and two were in my bathroom |
protip: you cannot camouflage as a tree on a white tile wall. |