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Best Price Guarantee
Best Price Guarantee
Length
8 Days
Ship category
Premium
Ship type
Small Ships
Capacity
28 Passengers
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Manatee Explorer is the Ecuadorian Amazon ship we would choose when you want real forest access with more cabin comfort than most riverboats can offer. She carries up to 28 guests in 14 river-facing suites: 10 Standard Suites of about 20 square meters and 4 Deluxe Suites of about 24 square meters. Every suite has air conditioning, floor-to-ceiling windows, a private balcony, hot-water bathroom and 24-hour electricity; Deluxe Suites add a whirlpool tub. Public spaces are practical and generous for a small Napo River vessel: indoor dining room, bar-lounge, reading room, al fresco lounge, boutiqu … Read more about Manatee Explorer
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Transfers to and from ship
Bar
Private Balcony
Observation Deck
Eco friendly
Room Safe
-50% for children ≤ 12
Hot water
Kayaks on board
Observation Lounge
Hot Tub
Conference Room
All meals
Air conditioning & private bathroom
Interconnecting cabins
Rubber Boots
Triple cabins
Library
English guides
Internet/Wifi
Sundeck with jacuzzi
Restaurant
The food on board Manatee Explorer is one of the pleasures of the route: fresh juices, Ecuadorian dishes, Amazon ingredients, fish when available, and international staples for balance. Meals are served in the first-deck dining room or al fresco lounge, and some itineraries include a cooking class with the chef.
When booking online, you can choose the option to "Upgrade to single occupancy". This will guarantee you the whole cabin to yourself, for an additional fee. If you don't select this option, then another traveler of the same sex might be placed into the same cabin with you. Exceptions may apply.
Accommodation aboard the Manatee Explorer in the selected suite category.
Meals on board as listed in the itinerary.
Guided excursions with local naturalist guides.
Use of motorized canoes, canoes or kayaks for included excursions when conditions allow.
Onboard lectures, briefings and selected cultural activities.
Rubber boots and rain poncho for use during excursions, subject to onboard availability.
Welcome and farewell moments on board.
Coffee, tea and water during regular onboard service.
International and domestic flights, including Quito to Coca unless explicitly quoted.
Pre- and post-cruise hotel nights in Quito or elsewhere.
Transfers not listed as included in the final offer.
Travel insurance and cancellation insurance.
Premium alcoholic beverages, bar purchases and personal expenses.
Optional excursions or activities not included in the confirmed itinerary.
Gratuities.
Vaccinations, medical consultations or personal medication.
Laundry and boutique purchases on board.
Arrive in Quito at least one day before the cruise to reduce the risk of missed embarkation due to flight or weather delays.
This trip is best for travelers who enjoy active nature days: small boats, forest walks, humid weather, uneven ground and flexible daily timing.
Wildlife sightings are never guaranteed, but early starts, quiet movement and patient guides create the best chances.
Cabins are comfortable for a small Amazon ship, but the real reason to choose this journey is river access, forest time and community context.
Long-haul flights and the on-the-ground program generate 2.4 t CO₂e on this trip. Rivertours regularly measures and monitors the carbon footprint of its journeys and actively reduces emissions through sustainable travel design: no unnecessary flights, fewer feeder flights, integration of rail and public transport, and promoting longer stays for a more balanced relationship between travel distance and impact.
From 2018 to 2024, we supported carbon reduction projects equivalent to the emissions generated. Recognizing the limits of traditional offsetting, we now focus on active environmental protection through our own rainforest project, Forest Guardians.
More information on our climate and environmental responsibility: https://www.venturatravel.org/impact
No, we do not own or run the boats. Rivertours is an independent platform. We scout the market to find, compare, and vet smaller, independent boat operators (such as local boutique vessels, traditional wooden ships, or hotel barges). We act as your single point of contact to make sure you book a high-quality, authentic trip at the operator's direct price, with none of the usual booking fees.
Every single boat listed on Rivertours—whether Standard or Luxury—must meet our strict quality charter. This means that regardless of the price, all our trips guarantee small passenger capacities (8 to 40 guests), direct booking with vetted local operators, authentic regional stops, and zero mass-tourism compromises.
The difference between the two tiers lies strictly in the onboard amenities and level of physical comfort: Rivertours Standard: These vessels focus on comfort and simplicity. Cabins are clean, functional, and compact, featuring everything you need for a comfortable night’s sleep. The onboard atmosphere is active and down-to-earth. It is the perfect choice for travelers who prioritize the destination, want to spend their days exploring or on the sun deck, and appreciate a rustic, highly authentic travel style at an accessible price.
Rivertours Luxury / Premium: While keeping our signature casual, small-scale atmosphere (with absolutely no heavy corporate dress codes or pompous treatment), these boats offer a higher level of material refinement. Cabins are more spacious (often featuring larger windows or private balconies), the linen and bedding are premium, the crew-to-guest ratio is higher, and the onboard meals feature upscale regional gastronomy. Choose this option if you want a deeper sense of relaxation and refined amenities between your daily shore excursions.
Every single boat listed on Rivertours—whether Standard or Luxury—must meet our strict quality charter. This means that regardless of the price, all our trips guarantee small passenger capacities (8 to 40 guests), direct booking with vetted local operators, authentic regional stops, and zero mass-tourism compromises.
The difference between the two tiers lies strictly in the onboard amenities and level of physical comfort:
Rivertours Standard: These vessels focus on comfort and simplicity. Cabins are clean, functional, and compact, featuring everything you need for a comfortable night’s sleep. The onboard atmosphere is active and down-to-earth. It is the perfect choice for travelers who prioritize the destination, want to spend their days exploring or on the sun deck, and appreciate a rustic, highly authentic travel style at an accessible price.
Rivertours Luxury / Premium: While keeping our signature casual, small-scale atmosphere (with absolutely no heavy corporate dress codes or pompous treatment), these boats offer a higher level of material refinement. Cabins are more spacious (often featuring larger windows or private balconies), the linen and bedding are premium, the crew-to-guest ratio is higher, and the onboard meals feature upscale regional gastronomy. Choose this option if you want a deeper sense of relaxation and refined amenities between your daily shore excursions.
It depends on the river, but natural seasons dictate river navigation:
Water Levels: Rivers rely on rain and mountain runoff. High water can sometimes prevent boats from passing under low bridges, while low water can prevent navigation in shallower sections. Lock Maintenance: Many rivers close entirely at specific times of the year for scheduled infrastructure repairs (for example, the Douro closes from mid-December to early March). Our Advice: We list clear sailing seasons for each destination (usually Spring and Autumn) and give you honest updates on water conditions before you book.
When booking a river cruise, understanding cabin layouts is crucial. Unlike massive ocean ships, river vessels have absolute physical limits: they must fit through narrow locks, cruise under low bridges, and navigate tight river bends. Because of these constraints, cabins on river boats are generally compact (usually ranging from 11 to 22 square meters / 120 to 240 sq ft).
To help you configure your booking, here is a factual breakdown of the three main cabin types you will find on small-ship river cruises.
Standard Cabins (Lower Deck / Porthole or Fixed Windows) These cabins are located on the lowest passenger deck of the boat, which sits partially below the river's water level.
The Window Setup: They feature small, rectangular windows or circular portholes located high up on the cabin wall. For obvious safety reasons, these windows cannot be opened. The Reality: Standard cabins are the most budget-friendly option. While they receive less natural light than upper decks, they have the exact same footprint, beds, and private bathrooms. They are highly quiet, stable, and generally remain cooler in the hot summer months. Our Advice: If you plan to spend your day on the sun deck or exploring villages on shore, standard cabins offer the best value-for-money, as you will essentially only use the room to sleep.
French Balcony Cabins (Middle / Upper Decks) This is the most common cabin type featured on modern European boutique river boats.
The Window Setup: A French balcony is not a walk-out balcony. It consists of floor-to-ceiling glass doors that slide open horizontally. A safety railing is fixed directly behind the open glass. The Reality: While you cannot step outside, sliding the doors open turns your entire cabin into an open-air viewing area. It provides excellent ventilation, plenty of natural light, and unobstructed views of the riverbank. The Space Trap: Because a French balcony does not extend outside the hull of the boat, it does not use up any of your interior cabin space, leaving you with more room inside to move around.
Suite / Private Walk-Out Balcony Cabins True step-out balconies are rare on smaller river ships and classic hotel barges because the physical width of a river boat is strictly limited.
The Window Setup: These premier cabins feature a small, private outdoor veranda with space for two chairs and a drinks table. The Reality: Because the boat’s exterior width is fixed, any space allocated to an outdoor balcony is space taken away from the interior of your cabin. As a result, standard walk-out balcony cabins on rivers can sometimes feel narrower inside than French balcony cabins. When to book: Choose a suite or a walk-out balcony only if you highly value private, quiet outdoor time or if you are booking a high-end ship where the master suites are specifically engineered with a wider footprint.
Price
Upon Request
Pañacocha blackwater and the Pañayacu River delta early in the route
Parrot clay licks and Kichwa Cultural Center beside the Napo
Indillama River kayaking into the quieter side of Yasuní
Yasuní wildlife habitat, Secoya and Kichwa visits, and canopy views
Best Price Guarantee: Find a better price elsewhere, and we’ll match it.
River Cruise Specialists: We focus exclusively on river expeditions, with recommendations grounded in first-hand expertise.
Travel that gives back: Every booking supports conservation and community projects connected to the places we travel.
This journey goes into the Ecuadorian Amazon by the only route that really makes sense here: the Napo River. From Coca, a motorized canoe carries you toward the Manatee Explorer and into a river world of whitewater and blackwater, flooded forest, bird calls, night sounds, and the constant possibility of wildlife: pink river dolphins, caimans, piranhas, primates, manatees, and hundreds of native bird species.
The Friday-to-Friday route brings Pañacocha early. That matters. By the second day you are already moving through the Pañayacu River delta into a blackwater lake whose Kichwa name means Piranha Lake. The surrounding protected rainforest is known for nine primate species, around 500 bird species, and more than 100 fish species. It is exactly the kind of place where the Manatee Explorer feels useful: comfortable enough between outings, small enough to keep the river and forest at the center.
The week keeps opening from there. Canoes take you to mineral-rich parrot clay licks. A Kichwa Cultural Center brings food, craft, traditions, and community life into the journey. The Indillama River is made for quiet kayak or canoe exploration. In Yasuní, you look for river dolphins, turtles, primates, anacondas, and hoatzins before visiting a Secoya community. Later, a Kichwa family visit and onboard cooking or handicraft activities connect the route to daily life along the Napo.
Choose this trip if you want the full Manatee Explorer week with real variety: canoe rides, kayaking, forest walks, clay licks, community encounters, canopy views, warm rain, mud, and flexible days shaped by weather and river conditions. The ship is comfortable, with proper cabins, social spaces, and good places to watch the forest pass by. But the reason to come is outside: on the water, on the trails, and with the people who know this river system.
Keep in mind this is an expedition-style river journey, so the exact itinerary can change with weather, river levels, wildlife activity, and local safety conditions.
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Begin in Quito with the short flight to Coca, in Orellana Province, then transfer to the dock and board a motorized canoe for the roughly 90-minute ride down the Napo River. This first river journey is part of the experience: the first sights and sounds of the Amazon, forested banks sliding past, and the feeling that the road has been replaced by water. On reaching the Manatee Explorer, settle in and meet the local naturalist guides, who give an introduction to the Ecuadorian Amazon and the route ahead. There is also time to get a first sense of the ship: the observation deck, social areas, suites, and the places from which you will watch the rainforest change as the vessel moves along the Napo. After dinner, conditions permitting, step into the forest for an optional night walk and listen for the vivid noises, scents, insects, frogs, and nocturnal activity that make the Amazon feel immediately alive.
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Set out by canoe to the parrot clay licks, one of the great natural spectacles on this side of the western Amazon when the timing is right. The clay is rich in minerals, which can draw parrots, parakeets, and other Amazon birds to the riverbank in a rush of color and sound. Later, visit a Kichwa Cultural Center, where community members share ancestral culture, traditions, food, craft, and the practical knowledge of living along the Napo River. This is also a chance to support the community directly by purchasing handicrafts or local products if you wish. The day gives the route a human layer: the Amazon as home, kitchen, workplace, classroom, and forest all at once.
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Begin the day kayaking along the Indillama River, one of the Napo's tributaries leading toward the northern side of Yasuní National Park. Kayaks are smooth and quiet here, which makes them one of the best ways to watch for wildlife without turning the river into a noisy corridor. Canoes can also be used when the guides judge them better for conditions or wildlife search. Expect lush green banks, close forest edges, and the kind of water where patience matters. After an active day, return to the Manatee Explorer and use the observation deck for the evening river view. If energy and conditions allow, a night walk through the forest may offer another look at nocturnal creatures and the Amazon after dark.
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After breakfast, go out by motorized canoe to explore one of the large river islands, where guides may look for eagles, oropendolas, woodpeckers, and other birds. Return to the Manatee Explorer for lunch and time to enjoy the changing scenery from the observation deck, lounge, or outdoor spaces. In the afternoon, enter the Yasuní region, one of Ecuador's most important rainforest areas and habitat for the pink river dolphin. This landscape can also hold anacondas, river turtles, primates, and the hoatzin, the curious bird known locally as the stinky turkey. Near Yasuní live the Secoya people, and the community visit offers a chance to learn about their traditions, lifestyle, and relationship with the forest.
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Start with a visit to a Kichwa family on the banks of the Napo River, learning directly from local hosts about daily life, food, plants, and traditions. Back on board, the Manatee Explorer continues upstream and the day shifts into a different kind of Amazon immersion. Join a cooking lesson with the chef using fresh local ingredients and traditional Ecuadorian recipes you can try again at home. After lunch, you may be invited to make traditional handicrafts or attend a talk on ancestral cultures with one of the local guides. Active travelers may choose kayaking if conditions allow. There may also be an optional camping program on this day for guests who want a deeper, more adventurous night in the destination.
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Enjoy a slower morning on board before visiting an observation tower in the rainforest canopy. From the top, the view opens in every direction: treetops, river distance, bird movement, and the scale of the Amazon Basin spread out below. It is one of the best photo opportunities of the journey and a particularly rewarding outing for birdwatchers. In the afternoon, explore the nearby forest on foot with the guides, looking for the animals and plant species that make this ecosystem so specific. A kayak activity may also be available in the area when timing and conditions allow. Back on board, the final evening is marked with a farewell dinner.
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Enjoy the last part of the journey on board, then disembark the Manatee Explorer and return by motorized canoe to Coca, a ride of roughly 90 minutes. It is the practical end of the route, but it also gives the week a final river frame: Pañacocha's blackwater, the clay licks, Indillama, Yasuní, Secoya and Kichwa encounters, canopy views, forest walks, and quiet canoe moments all connected by the Napo. From Coca, continue with onward travel knowing that the Amazon has been more than scenery on this trip. It has been the route itself.