Day 1: Arrival Bogotá
Arrive at Bogotá International Airport - El Dorado International Airport (BOG). First you will go through Immigrations, pick up your luggage, then proceed through Customs. Exiting Customs, you’ll exit and proceed to the glass door where your driver directs you to. You will meet your driver and he will transfer you to the Hilton Garden Inn Bogota Airport. The transfer driver will deliver you to the hotel, your bags will be moved inside, and an English-speaking receptionist will check you in.
Afloat provides two nights in double accommodations, the night before the flight to Puerto Inírida and the night you arrive from camp back to Bogotá. Single occupancy rooms are available for an extra USD $90 per night. Bogotá is a First World city with good restaurants, music, and culture, including the famed “Oro Museum.” Afloat has partners in Bogota to arrange some awesome and authentic day tours.
Day 2: Travel to Puerto Inirida and the Mataveni Camp
During breakfast at the Hilton Garden Inn Bogota Airport., you’ll be met by your Bogotá host, who will ride in the shuttle with you and your group of anglers to the domestic airport, assist in all luggage transfers, and be certain that you are ready to board the commercial flight to Puerto Inírida, a 90-minute flight.
Once you arrive, another Afloat representative will be waiting for you at the airport. He will drive you in a Tuk Tuk (a three-wheeled open-air vehicle) for a stop for any alcohol you want to buy and then for a 10-minute drive to the river, where your captain will be waiting to load your bags into the comfortable, covered power boat that will take you down the Rio Inírida and then the Guaviere River to the Rio Orinoco, down to the confluence of the Mataveni River. The transfer boat has padded bench seats with backs, a sun cover, windshield, your lunch, and a cooler filled with cold drinks for the ride, approximately two to two and a half hours. During your voyage you’ll see ranches and farms with banana trees and coconut palms along the high banks of the river. It’s the dry season, with the river at a low level, and huge dark rocks exposed. During the rainy season the Orinoco can be 20’ higher, as noted by the tree trunks and branches left high and dry as the river receded. You’ll see shoreline openings of various sizes leading into adjoining black water lagoons, the perfect habitat for giant peacock bass. Herons, egrets, ducks, and parrots all fly and feed along the waterway. Freshwater dolphin surface to breathe, rolling effortlessly before disappearing into the river’s depths.
At the mouth of the Mataveni river, you will be met by the guides for the week and your gear will be transferred into their stable 14-foot long boats, which will already be supplied with chairs and a cooler filled with iced drinks. After your trip down the mighty Orinoco, you’ll immediately notice the much smaller and intimate feeling of the Mataveni. The river slowly diminishes in size as you motor upstream, and you’ll begin to feel much more “in the jungle” as the bankside foliage becomes increasingly more impenetrable. After 3-4 hours traveling upriver in the smaller boats, you arrive at the camp on a big sand beach, you'll enjoy drinks and snacks, get in your tent and relax before dinner.
The rest of the staff will greet you there with a cold drink and a smile. You’ll be shown to your single tent, which are placed in a line and facing the water. Your luggage will be delivered while you gather at the dining area for cold drinks and appetizers. Your host will answer all your questions, discuss the recent fishing, introduce guides, and staff and talk about your schedule for the upcoming week. After a tour of the camp and its facilities, you will have an opportunity to unpack your gear, settle into your tent, and rig your rods and reels for the next day’s fishing. Dinner is typically served at 7:00 PM, and the evening is yours to watch the fireflies dart through the trees, listen to the jungle sounds soften for the night, and get some well-deserved rest after your day’s travel.
Day 3-8: Fishing Days
Each evening your host will meet with you for appetizers and dinner, and discuss the fishing plan for the following day. Anglers typically take turns fishing upstream or down each day, leapfrogging the other boats to fish new lagoons.
Morning coffee will be ready at 6:00 AM in the dining tent, with breakfast served at 6:30. Your river guides will be waiting in their boats with your lunch and a cooler filled with ice and drinks. You will finish breakfast, load two anglers per boat, and depart for your day. Lunch is taken in the shade of the jungle canopy, along with a short break from the fishing. Your fishing boat will be the same wide-bodied, 14-foot boats that brought you upriver to camp, powered by 40 h.p. Yamaha outboard motors. You will ride in comfortable plastic chairs to the lagoon openings, where the guide will switch from power to paddle, silently propelling the boat while you cast. The boats are long enough to allow both anglers to fish at once, and the fishing is a mixture of blind-casting to structure, and sight-casting to “floaters” suspended just beneath the water’s surface.
Day 9: Departure from Rio Mataveni to Puerto Inirida to Bogotá
In the morning, you’ll have breakfast, load your gear into the boats, and the guides will take you downriver to the confluence of the Mataveni and Orinoco River where the big boat will be waiting. You will head up river to Puerto Inírida, and then, a domestic flight from Puerto Inírida to Bogotá. An Afloat representative will drive you from the domestic airport to the Hilton Garden Inn Bogota Airport.
Day 10: Depart Bogotá for home
Depending on your scheduled international flight, an Afloat representative will pick you up at the hotel and drive you to El Dorado International Airport (BOG) for your return flight back home.