Discover Madre de Dios
Travel Types
3–5 day fixed-base lodge stays on the Tambopata River (1.5–8 h from Puerto Maldonado) — guided forest walks, canopy platforms, night canoe, caiman spotting, and oxbow lake wildlife including giant river otters and macaws.
Multi-day program to the Tambopata Research Center (100 km upriver, 8 h) — the world's most visited macaw clay lick, with 600+ macaws of multiple species descending at dawn in peak season.
5–8 day UNESCO World Heritage programs via the Manu Road descent from Cusco — the most biodiverse accessible area on earth, with 1,000+ bird species, giant otters, tapirs, and remote oxbow lakes.
Lake Sandoval (1 h from Puerto Maldonado, giant river otters, caimans, hoatzins) and Lake Sachavacayoc — accessible wildlife-watching destinations without multi-day lodge commitment.
Cusco–Puerto Maldonado bus route (500 km, 8–10 h) on the Interoceanic Highway — an Andes-to-Amazon descent connecting Peru's Andean highland circuit to the Amazon lowlands and the Bolivia–Brazil border corridor.
- •Manu National Park Reserved Zone requires a SERNANP permit and a licensed guide contracted through a registered Cusco operator — independent access is not permitted; available lodge circuits in the buffer zone (Manu Cultural Zone) are easier to book and still offer outstanding wildlife.
- •Chuncho macaw clay lick timing: macaws descend at dawn (approximately 05:30–10:00) and are visible most reliably from May–October dry season when the clay face is dry; wet-season visits (November–April) sometimes see no macaws at the clay lick due to saturated clay conditions.
- •Giant river otter sightings at Lake Sandoval: morning visits (07:00–09:00) are substantially more productive than afternoon; the otter family group's territory is in the middle of the lake — bring binoculars; boats maintain a mandatory minimum distance.
- •LAD Airport taxi: PEN 15–20 to the city center, 15 min; no metered taxis or major ride-apps in Puerto Maldonado; use lodge-arranged transfers or negotiate with airport taxis.
- •Vaccination: Yellow fever vaccination is required for entry into Manu Reserved Zone and recommended for all visitors to Madre de Dios; malaria prophylaxis is recommended for multi-day jungle stays — consult a travel health clinic before departure.
- •Tambopata lodge advance booking: dry season (May–October) fills up for the better lodges 2–4 months ahead; the Tambopata Research Center (TRC, clay-lick access) often books out 6+ months ahead in peak season.
- •Interoceanic Highway road quality: the paved highway between Cusco and Puerto Maldonado is good, but the 8–10 h bus journey involves mountain sections before the descent; overnight buses depart Cusco ~18:00–21:00 and arrive Puerto Maldonado ~05:00–07:00.
- •Mercury contamination: the Madre de Dios river water and fish near the La Pampa mining corridor are contaminated with mercury from artisanal gold mining; lodges in the Tambopata Reserve source their water and fish from uncontaminated tributaries — ask your operator.
- •Manu Road weather: the cloud-forest section of the Manu Road (Wayqecha to San Pedro, 2,900–1,450 m) is frequently foggy and rainy year-round; dry season (May–October) gives the best birdwatching visibility but the road is never dry — carry rain gear regardless.
- •Climate in Puerto Maldonado: year-round hot and humid (28–35°C, 85–95% humidity); the dry season (May–October) brings cooler nights (~18°C) and less rain; no cool period — pack lightweight, quick-dry clothing for the entire year.
Tourism & destination guides
Official government sites
Official Peru protected-areas authority page for the Tambopata National Reserve — entry permits, lodge operator registry, guide certification, and reserve regulations.
Official Madre de Dios regional government portal — regional administration, conservation programs, and public services for the department.