Jungle Bushcraft Survival CourseSouth America : GuyanaTour name: Survival 24/7This bushcraft survival course will take you to the jungles of Amazonia, sat upon some of the oldest geological formations in the world.Duration: 9 Days Grading: CHALLENGING Max Group Size: 12 Type: SMALL GROUP Prices from: £800Tour Summary:
Tour name: Survival 24/7
Prices from: £800 Duration: 9 Days Kind points from: 60 N&K Reference: NKT0002493 (Type this into the "Jump to" form at www.NatureAndKind.com to find this tour again) Type: SMALL GROUP Grading: CHALLENGING Suitable for: OVER 50s, COUPLES, SMALL GROUPS, SOLO TRAVELLERS, ONCE IN A LIFETIME Experiences: ACTIVE, LEARNING, WILDLIFE, ONCE IN A LIFETIME Environments: RAINFOREST Activities: Wilderness Adventures, LEARNING - Bushcraft Max Group Size: 12
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Tour Overview
This is where Sir Walter Raleigh searched for El Dorado, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle dreamt up the stories of “The Lost World.” In some of the most pristine and untouched primary jungle in the world, you will learn how to survive from just what is around you and then you will have the chance to put your skills to the test!
Initial jungle training and acclimatisation will take place in a local Makushi Amerindian village. Here we get you comfortable with the jungle. After just a few days we will move deeper into the jungle by boat, where we will begin the real fun work of survival training. Within the stunning Pakaraima Mountains, covered in jungle and criss-crossed by rivers, the Bushmasters ex UK Special Forces Survival Instructor and local Amerindian hunters from the Makushi tribe will take you through all you will need to know to survive. We concentrate on things that work, not that look fancy. This is the real stuff, the way the Makushi Amerindians have done it for thousands of years. You will learn how to find water, make traps, hunt with bow and arrow, set a fire without a match or lighter, build a shelter, leave signs for rescuers and if all else fails, find your own way and own transport out of the jungle! LocationThe following guides will lead the tourCharlo Melville Charlo Melville is a legend within the Rupununi. His family arrived from Europe generations ago and built the largest cattle ranch on earth, Dadanawa. Charlo now owns a number of smaller ranches and keeps the spirit of the Rupununi ranch alive today at Konaiki-kizai; his 60 square mile ranch in the south savannahs of Guyana. Charlo is an amazing artist and handcrafts beautiful products from leather, including the machete sheaths used on our survival courses and the saddles used on our horseback trips. He does the whole thing, from culling the cow to curing the leather to engraving the artwork into the finished article.
Harold Captain Harold Captain is an absolute star. There is nothing Harold does not know. He is the senior jungle man in his area and commands the respect of everyone. All ask for Harold's advice if they have any sense. He's known as 'The Jaguar' within the village because of the time he's spent in the jungle (over half a century now). Not that these few years have slowed him any! He's tougher, stronger, fitter and better than anyone at pretty much everything, from living in the jungle to drinking ale!
Ian Craddock Ian Craddock was a British Army officer who served in the Infantry and Special Forces for 10 years. He first moved to Guyana in 2002 organising jungle expeditions for a British conservation charity. Ian has completed a variety of specialist courses from Combat Survival Instructor to Military Mountaineering and Climbing instructor. He has taken part in exercises and operations in a host of countries around the world from the Gulf to the Falkland Islands, from North America to the Indian Himalayas - where he jointly led a joint Anglo-Indian team on the first successful ascent of Mt Tingchen Khan. He did spend a couple of years trying to do the city life in London, but got dragged back to the outdoors quite easily! Each year Ian spends about 50% of his time in the jungle. The other 50% is spent planning how to get back in.
Lionel James Lionel James is from Surama and one of our more experienced guides in the jungle. Amongst a host of other huge trips he's also undertaken expeditions from Guyana crossing over into Brazil and Venezuela. Get a map and see for yourself how far that is, especially on foot through dense jungle! He is a great character and has lots of stories, which he's happy to tell you!
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Bushcraft survival with the experts.
ItinerarySaturday Meet up day. Bushmasters staff will be on hand to take you to a local hotel.
Accommodation will be in a basic hotel with en-suite shared rooms. Whilst in Georgetown meals are not included, but we’ll suggest some good places to try.
Sunday Today you have chance for a lie in and to get over your long flight. In the afternoon we will meet up and go through some basic lessons and briefings for the coming survival adventure.
In the evening we board a classic south American bus for a 12 hour + ride deep into the interior. Accommodation is provided in shared en-suite hotel rooms and once again meals are not included – giving you the freedom to explore Georgetown.
Monday We reach the interior about 9am.
Here we load into 4x4 vehicles for the short drive to an Amerindian village. Here you’ll stay in the village eco-lodge and we’ll spend the day organizing all our gear for the coming jungle adventure. On arrival in the village we’ll check you have all the right equipment for the jungle, plus show you how to use most of it and more importantly pack it so it stays dry. We’ll also go through some basic lessons about the jungle, the type of things to expect and even introduce you to some of the local inhabitants – not the human kind either. The Savannah is an amazing place, more like the plains of Africa with great mountains in the distance. Every rainy season it becomes flooded with waters from the Amazon and other great rivers. This is where Sir Walter Raleigh searched for El Dorado and home to some amazing creatures like Puma, Giant Anteater, Jabiru Stork and Capybara, the largest rodent in the World. Accommodation is in the community eco- lodge, in shared benabs with basic facilities. All meals cooked by local staff at the lodge and served in the central benab.
Tuesday - Friday Over the coming days we will go through all the main skills of survival in the jungle. These fall into a series of main headings:
- Psychological - Water - Shelter - Food - Fire You’ll get the chance to practice all these skills, for you’ll need them. The last day and night you’ll spend alone with your shelter in isolation, with just your machete and survival kit for company. Throughout accommodation is a hammock in the jungle, with meals cooked by you.
Saturday Today we leave the forest behind and head to the local eco-lodge of Rockview where we meet a light aircraft, which takes us to Georgetown.
We should be in town by about 3pm weather permitting, leaving you one final night in town to get cleaned up before your flight home on Sunday. Lunch at Rockview is the last meal provided on the course.
Sunday Departure day. Please arrange your return flight for any time from Sunday morning.
Accepted Payment Types
Nature & Kind FactorOur Trusted Partner's Responsible and Sustainable Travel Policy
Bushmasters also aims to provide a rewarding future for young Guyanese people in the guiding industry. Many young people go off to the mines or to work in Brazil as there is little to offer them at home. Bushmasters aims to run training courses for these young people every year and also to finance young guides on our trips. On a trip you may see the two senior guides, but also an additional younger guide who is being mentored by the others and funded by Bushmasters to take part in these trips and learn all the weird, strange things that us foreigners bring to the party. It is very much a fair partnership between the local people and Bushmasters.
Bushmasters is also keen to support conservation and community development within Guyana. Man is destroying many of the world's amazing places and it is only man that can save them. Unfortunately in this day and age that means giving everything a financial value. Rarely do people do the right thing just because it is the right thing, especially big companies. To them the jungle is a commodity; the lumber, medicinal products, animals, clearing the land for soya crops and so on, all have a massive value. Each year something like $26 billion is made from the jungle in the private sector. Conservation projects have only a few hundred million dollars to protect it each year; there is no way they are going to win in the long run with those odds. Therefore, the jungle needs a value, which will keep the profit seekers happy without chopping it down. It needs to be sustainable. There are sustainable logging practices, animal extraction, fishing projects and so on around the world. They are not the norm as yet and their effectiveness is open to debate, however Bushmasters is interested in one aspect, the benefits from sound eco-tourism. Without the jungle there will be no tourism of this kind, so we have to keep it intact, and help the local people develop in the manner they want to. Too many areas have far too many tourists, where local ways of life have been destroyed, and an amazing array of social ills imported and often the wildlife scared into hiding or worse. We are very keen to protect the environment where we work whilst at the same time assisting the local communities. We adhere to best practice in this area. There is a great deal of pressure to log, mine for gold or diamonds or export wild animals from the rainforest and with Guyana becoming better known, these pressures are increasing. There are a number of logging operations and a fair amount of illegal hunting and wildlife capture. A Scarlet Macaw is worth thousands of Dollars in the US, but will be bought for just a few dollars from the local guy who captures it here in the wild. This is inevitable as Western influences encroach in these environments; it is often the only way the local people can improve their lot, get better health care, better education and everything else that we take for granted. It is then a little hypocritical to ask them not to exploit their lands, just as we have for hundreds of years, and to give no alternative to allow their lifestyles to improve. Tourism like Bushmasters is a way to allow the local people to gain an additional income from their lands without destroying them. We use local guides and the resources of the local communities, from their eco lodges, to boats to the mosquito nets that are made by women from the Amerindian villages. In all, Bushmasters works with local communities, adheres to and believes in, sound environmental and sustainable tourism practices. About our Trusted Partner
The idea behind Bushmasters was many years in the planning, most of those spent in the jungles of Central or South America. The rainforest environment is so amazing and yet so few people really get the chance to see the jungle up close outside the normal tourist traps. Very few people also get the opportunity to take part in challenging and exciting trips to places that few, if any, westerners have ever been before. No matter how amazing 'Machu Picchu' is for example, you are not really going to get that sense of exploration with the other thousand or so people there. Success of a hunting trip : Survival 24/7 at www.NatureandKind.com (THE.NATURAL.CHOICE)Success of a hunting trip
Bamboo cooking pot : Survival 24/7 at www.NatureandKind.com (THE.NATURAL.CHOICE)Bamboo cooking pot
Friction fire techniques : Survival 24/7 at www.NatureandKind.com (THE.NATURAL.CHOICE)Friction fire techniques
View from Surama community eco lodge : Survival 24/7 at www.NatureandKind.com (THE.NATURAL.CHOICE)View from Surama community eco lodge
Hunting arrows : Survival 24/7 at www.NatureandKind.com (THE.NATURAL.CHOICE)Hunting arrows
Poison dart frog : Survival 24/7 at www.NatureandKind.com (THE.NATURAL.CHOICE)Poison dart frog
Smoke signals : Survival 24/7 at www.NatureandKind.com (THE.NATURAL.CHOICE)Smoke signals
Roasting piranha for dinner : Survival 24/7 at www.NatureandKind.com (THE.NATURAL.CHOICE)Roasting piranha for dinner
Basha set up: your sleeping system whislt in the jungle : Survival 24/7 at www.NatureandKind.com (THE.NATURAL.CHOICE)Basha set up: your sleeping system whislt in the jungle
Electric eel caught on fishing trip : Survival 24/7 at www.NatureandKind.com (THE.NATURAL.CHOICE)Electric eel caught on fishing trip
Drinking water from a vine : Survival 24/7 at www.NatureandKind.com (THE.NATURAL.CHOICE)Drinking water from a vine
Traditional mode of transport: dugout canoe : Survival 24/7 at www.NatureandKind.com (THE.NATURAL.CHOICE)Traditional mode of transport: dugout canoe
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Tour Summary:
Tour name: Survival 24/7
Prices from: £800 Duration: 9 Days Kind points from: 60 N&K Reference: NKT0002493 (Type this into the "Jump to" form at www.NatureAndKind.com to find this tour again) Type: SMALL GROUP Grading: CHALLENGING Suitable for: OVER 50s, COUPLES, SMALL GROUPS, SOLO TRAVELLERS, ONCE IN A LIFETIME Experiences: ACTIVE, LEARNING, WILDLIFE, ONCE IN A LIFETIME Environments: RAINFOREST Activities: Wilderness Adventures, LEARNING - Bushcraft Max Group Size: 12
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