ADDITIONAL
COMMENTS AND/OR OUTFITTER/BOOKING
AGENT REBUTTAL
(Editor
Note: Ever wondered what
fishing the Amazon basin
is really like? Well, subscriber
Christopher Gill has filed
a report that
captures the experience
of a remote jungle trip
so vividly, you can almost
hear the howler monkeys
overhead. We're putting
Gill
on our subscriber Honor
Roll and sending him an
Angling Report cap for
sharing his experience.
Thanks, Christopher Gil!
Why
don't you try to get on
our subscriber Honor Roll?
See page 2 of the Angling
Report newsletter for details.)
I recently enjoyed a family
reunion in Brazil, fly
fishing for peacock bass with River
Plate Outfitters.
Seventeen guests fished
from
three of River Plate's
four camps at the end of
the season. My family began
its expedition with a flight
from the United States
to
Manaus, where we were met
by River Plate staff members,
who took us to their river
yacht, the Amazon Angel.
We spent three
nights and two days aboard
this ship making our way
up the Rio Negro, fishing
during the day out of flats
boats. There were two
anglers and one guide per
outboard powered boat.
We would fish upstream,
ahead of the yacht, which
would work its way upriver throughout the
day.
The Amazon
Angel is a modernized,
50-year-old Amazonian river
transport, an unusual craft,
with a high superstructure
on a
long, narrow displacement
hull. The interior is done
in tropical hardwoods and
reminded us of a Victorian
saloon. The lower deck
stores the fishing boats
and is where the crew quarters,
galley and dining cabin
are located. The middle
deck contains airconditioned
cabins, baths and a saloon.
And the upper deck has
a master cabin and spacious
outdoor lounging areas,
forward
and aft. This boat functions
as a self-contained fishing
camp during the regular
season, and it's hard to
imagine a more beautiful
experience than moving
up this incredible river
in such a craft.
On the
third morning of our trip
we awoke in a channel that
was too narrow for the
boat to proceed or even
turn around in, but we
continued our travel up
the river in a fleet of
fishing boats. We fished
our way up to the second
of River
Plate's four floating fish
camps. These camps are
actually groupings of fiberglass
barges. For accommodations,
individual barges are each
equipped
with a two-person Weatherport™ canvas
shelter that is much like
a small canvas, bungalow.
These were custom-built
structures,
each featuring a private
bath, shower and toilet.
The toilets are chemical
toilets, which function
very well. The showers
use
battery-powered pumps and
the very clean river water.
Showering in Amazonian
water is a great treat,
and for some reason it
makes the ladies' hair
look and feel great. The
interiors of the canvas
structures are stylishly
decorated, and there are
comfortable beds with fresh
daily linens, electric
fans and mosquito netting.
For the next several days
our routine was the same.
We left the camp in the
morning, and fished until
we broke for a shore lunch.
The
guides set up hammocks
in the jungle for a mid-day
siesta. In the afternoons,
we fished as long as we
liked, normally
quitting by 5:30 pm and
then going back downriver
to a new beach where the
barge camp had been towed.
We enjoyed a fresh
beach area every day. Fishing
was followed by a refreshing
swim in the river or by
water-skiing. The staff
also served us
delicious drinks and an
elaborate meal prepared
on the barge that served
as a kitchen. The Weatherport(TM) building
that served as the kitchen
features industrial stoves,
refrigerators and all the
necessities of any restaurant
kitchen. Meals were served
in another canvas building
that functioned as the
dining room.
We caught lots of fish
during our trip. Sight-fishing
to peacock
bass is both
exciting and tiring. One
morning my wife and I caught
and released 50 fish before
lunch. We then took a long
lunch and siesta, resumed
fishing and quit at 4 pm
with 75 fish caught
and released for the day.
The biggest fish taken
during the week was 16
pounds, but we were there
during the last week of
the
season, and the river was
rising, causing the fish
to spread out. Bigger fish
are regularly taken earlier
in the season when the
river is low and the fish
are concentrated in pools.
In addition to a great
fishing
trip, the Amazon also makes for a remarkable
nature visit. It's hard
to imagine a better way
to see
the jungle environment
than from a river aboard
a floating camp that moves
every day. Imagine being
awakened at 6 am in the
morning by a chorus of
howler monkeys, seeing
jaguar prints on the beach
where you're camped, finding
tapir droppings on the
shore and spotting caimans
by the dozens. There were
also toucans flying overhead
along with river eagles,
parrots and
macaws.
The food is hardy and delicious.
We enjoyed caipirinhas,
the Brazilian version of
a margarita, which washed
down our deep fried
piranha, beef, beans and
rice. There were also excellent
Brazilian wines, lots of
local fresh fruit and fresh
bread. We explored the
jungle, visited villages
and fished until we were
tired of it.
At the end of the trip,
the owner of River Plate
Outfitters, Luis
Brown,
flew us back to Manaus
aboard his company plane,
a turbo
Cessna Caravan. Brown is
an interesting guy. His
grandfather was a Texas
industrialist who moved
his businesses to South
America. Brown was born
in Uruguay but is a Brazilian
citizen. He graduated from
the Wharton School and
speaks perfect
Portuguese, Spanish and
English. He has a 23-million-acre
concession here and has
set his business up in
a series of
partnerships with locals
who are, in general, Baptist
Amazonian Brazilians. A
harder working, more honest,
accommodatinggroup of people
would be hard to find anywhere.
Brown knows how to put
on a good party. This was a great
trip, a great fishing value and
a wonderful experience
for my entire family.
While this is a great fly
fishing trip,
anglers can also bait cast
and troll, which is an
effective way to fish here
and probably a better
way to get the very big
fish. For less enthusiastic
fishermen, there are jungle
exploration trips and village
visits in this incredible,
untouched wilderness. Manaus
is easy to get in and out
of and is a major city
with interesting sites.
Shots, including yellow
fever, are recommended,
although I found the exceptionally
high tannin levels in the
river all but
eliminated mosquito hatches.
During our visit, we were
unmolested by mosquitoes
or other biting insects.
You can book this trip
through Rod & Gun Resources
in Kerrville, Texas
Postscript: In
a follow up call to David
Gregory at Rod & Gun Resources,
we learned that Gill's
trip was a customized affair
that
combined their fishing
yacht package with
their barge
camp fishing package.
This trip usually involves
clients being flown directly
to the fishing
yacht or the barge camps.
The regular package does
not include the ride up
the Rio Negro aboard the
yacht to reach the remote
fishing camps. The cost
of a seven-day trip is
$2,650 per person from
September through December
and $3,650 during prime
time, which runs from January
to March. |