• 4-Day Cuyabeno Amazon Tour

    Four days is the one most guests choose. You get the full sweep of Cuyabeno, the river and the wildlife and a day with the Siona community, with enough room between it all to slow down and take it in, led by local guides who grew up here.

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★ 5.0 Google · 750+ reviews | 4 days, 3 nights | Departs Mon, Tue, Thu & Fri | From $360 per person

Experience at a Glance


4 days, 3 nights

Departs Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday, starting at the Cuyabeno River Bridge at 11:30 am.

From $360 per person

Full prices and room options live on the Plan Your Trip page.

Small groups

A maximum of 10 guests per guide, so the days stay flexible and close.

Wildlife, forest, and community

Canoe trips, forest walks, and wildlife by day and night, plus a day with the Siona community.

Who Experience Is For


Experience is the one most guests choose, and it tends to be the favorite. Four days gives you enough time to go deep without feeling rushed, so the days stay full but never crowded, with room to be active and curious and also to slow down and let the place sink in.

You want the full Amazon without feeling rushed

You like active days balanced with time to slow down

You care about wildlife and the people who live here

You enjoy connecting with people, guides, and place

If you’re short on time, Explore (3 days) covers the essentials at a quicker pace. If you’d rather go slower still, Enjoy (5 days) adds a full day of silent canoeing and more unhurried hours on the river. Experience sits in the middle, which is exactly why it’s the one most people land on.

Your Four Days, Day by Day


Every day bends to the wildlife, the weather, and the group, so think of this as the shape of things rather than a fixed schedule.

Day 1 — Into the Reserve

Your trip begins at the Cuyabeno River Bridge around 11:30 in the morning, where you meet your guide and climb into the canoe for the ride to the lodge. The journey takes about three hours along the river, and you’re already watching for monkeys and birds long before you arrive.

After lunch and time to settle in, you head back out to explore the river and the lagoon, swim if you feel like it, and watch the sun go down. Once it’s dark, you go out again by canoe to look for caimans along the banks, and after dinner your guide shares the stories behind the place, the culture, the wildlife, and the work of keeping the reserve the way it is.

Black tamarin monkey resting on a tree branch in the Amazon rainforest.
Small group hiking along a fallen tree during a guided trek in the Amazon rainforest.

Day 2 — Forest, River, and the Things You Make

After breakfast you set out on a walk of around four hours through the primary forest, where your guide reads the jungle for you, the medicinal plants, the frogs and insects, the birds you would never spot on your own. You come back for lunch and a little downtime, then learn to roast and grind cacao and coffee the way the local families do.

In the afternoon you take a traditional rowing canoe into the quieter creeks, drift toward the sunset, and if the river is kind, watch for pink dolphins. After dark there’s a night walk, and later, over dinner, a tasting of traditional Amazonian drinks.

Day 3 — A Day with the Siona Community

After breakfast you head to the Siona community, where a local woman welcomes you and shares her way of life, the language, the food, and the everyday of living in the forest, and together you prepare lunch. In the afternoon you spend time with the community’s shaman, who passes on what he knows about the medicinal plants and the rituals of the Amazon.

Back at the lodge there are talks after dinner, or, if you’re up for it, a spot out in the forest where you can sit for a few hours or stay the whole night, listening to the jungle do its thing.

Amazonian community members cooking traditional food in a jungle lodge setting
arriving tucan cuyabeno lodge by boat

Day 4 — Sunrise, and the Way Out

You head out early one last time to look for birds and watch the sunrise come up over the river, then return to the lodge for breakfast and to pack.

The way out is the way you came in, by canoe down the Cuyabeno, with a couple more hours to spot whatever the forest feels like showing you, until you reach the reserve entrance late morning and your transport on toward home.

What Every Tucán Tour Shares


Whichever tour you choose, some things stay the same. The guides grew up on this river. The chef is, by common agreement, undefeated. The evenings run long over a cold Happy Gringo, our own homebrewed beer, and there’s no wifi to pull you out of the conversation. You can read more about the moments guests tend to remember on our Tours page.

If four days sounds about right

Head to Plan Your Trip to pick your room, see the full price, and check the dates, and we’ll be here whenever you’re ready to make it real.

→ Plan Your Trip