Ecuador: Paradise for Birders

Posted on December 13, 2017 • Filed under: Ecuador, Ecuador Travel, Latin America Travel

Ecuador Travel

Doug Hansen / San Diego Tribune

In 1998, a small group of bird-watchers in Ecuador stared intently as a diminutive bird darted along the ground. They soon realized they had discovered a Jocotoco antipitta, which was thought to be extinct. The fact that this species was alive and well in Tapichalaca’s cloud forest in southwest Ecuador galvanized them into action. Within a short time, the group founded one of Ecuador’s leading nonprofit conservation groups, the Jocotoco Conservation Foundation, and raised enough money to buy more than 12,000 acres of the steamy forest.

Soon after, they built a lodge at Tapichalaca and hired a local staff to maintain the reserve. From this humble beginning, the Jocotoco Foundation has steadily expanded to 11 reserves scattered around the country, conserving some of the planet’s most endangered birds and accompanying biodiversity. Read Article

SAFETY, HEALTH, SECURITY IN ECUADOR – THIS BOOK IS A MUST READ

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