Close Menu
Sunshine News Network
  • Home
  • Daily
    • Entertainment
  • Florida
  • Latest News
    • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Trending
  • USA
  • Business
  • Crime

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

What's Hot

Royal Caribbeans unveils fourth Icon-class cruise ship

March 31, 2026

Florida CEOs signal strong investment confidence as economic outlook remains resilient

March 31, 2026

Keizer University rebuilds reputation after past controversy, aims to stabilize enrollment and refocus on student performance

March 31, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Home
  • Daily
    • Entertainment
  • Florida
  • Latest News
    • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Trending
  • USA
  • Business
  • Crime
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
Sunshine News Network
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Crime
Sunshine News Network
Home » Exploring wild Ecuador at Mashpi Lodge
Entertainment

Exploring wild Ecuador at Mashpi Lodge

adminBy adminMarch 30, 2026No Comments13 Mins Read3 Views
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


The experience of hummingbirds soaring past your head at what seems like caffeine-induced, time-altering speed is like hovering in the median of a bumblebee superhighway.

Vvvvvmmmm!

Vvvvmmm!

It is fast. And surprisingly loud.

In the Mashpi cloud forest of Ecuador, there are more than 30 species of hummingbirds. And the breathlessness I experience when first beheld reminds me of the first time I saw a tropical reef, teeming with color and life that I’d seen a zillion times on the nature programs I have loved my entire life, but this time in person.

I smiled reflexively then … and my mask filled entirely with water. That’s not a concern here.

In this moment, as dozens of them soar, like brilliant beads in a high-speed kaleidoscope amid the feeders placed before me and the other guests of the Mashpi Lodge, 70 miles northwest of Quito, the nation’s capital. They dart and hover and land within a foot of my face.

Hummingbirds here alight on guests' hands as they feed. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)
At Ecuador’s Mashpi Lodge, hummingbirds alight on the hands of guests as they feed. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)

They are like faeries. Territorial little war faeries, bullying one another away from the flower-shaped openings, fueling what has been documented by scientists as the highest metabolism of any animal, consuming up to half their body weight in sugar daily to power wings that beat 50 to 80 times per second.

Vvvvmmm!

Blink and you'll miss it: hummingbird at a feed at Mashpi Lodge. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)
Blink, and you’ll miss it — a hummingbird rests on a feeder at Mashpi Lodge in Ecuador. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)

There are four at this feeder, with lots of sharing room, but aggression still reigns. No one is harmed in this war dance. The aerial scuffles are charming.

In the moments they are still, which still seem like odd visual effects where the turn of a small head appears as a video with a second of frame removed, they land on my hands. I feel their tiny talons, but their weight is imperceptible.

The tayra is an omnivorous native to Mashpi. Related to weasels, they're more formidable in size, kind of like a sleek wolverine. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)
The tayra is an omnivorous native to the Americas. Related to weasels, they’re larger and more formidable in size, kind of like a sleek wolverine. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)

There is a purple-bibbed white tip, the tiniest of the lot, with a dominant color of deep green; two velvet purple coronets, so vivid in emerald and sapphire they seem unreal — until you gaze at the violet tailed sylph, which in the moment I have deemed “the blue mohawk bird,” with its delicate crest, its green and blue and purple hues, blinding in the sun, its extra-long tail that stretches out behind it like a narrow train on a tiny monarch’s cloak.

A crimson rumped toucanet enjoys a banana in Ecuador's Mashpi cloud forest. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)
A crimson-rumped toucanet enjoys a banana in Ecuador’s Mashpi cloud forest. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)

I sit rapt for minutes amid this little avian scrum when a crimson-rumped toucanet and a tayra (a beefy relative of the weasel) show up to feast on bananas left up on a nearby post.

This is the Mashpi Lodge experience.

There are four brilliant hummingbirds sitting and feeding and fighting with one another ON MY HANDS, yet there is still — impossibly —something else for me to look at.

Minute Mashpi Lodge, with space for roughly 50 guests, glows from its perch on a mountainside amid Ecuador's cloud forest. (Photo courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Jorge Vinueza G.)
Mashpi Lodge, with space for roughly 50 guests, glows from its perch on a mountainside amid Ecuador’s cloud forest. (Courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Jorge Vinueza G.)

Built in 2012, Mashpi Lodge, in Ecuador’s Chocó cloud forest, was conceived by former Quito mayor Roque Sevilla in 2001, when he purchased the property to protect 1,730 acres of threatened forest from logging.

For years, he used the area as a place to camp with his children, but a side interest in tourism (and a nighttime “bathroom” encounter with a very large snake) resulted in a project that became one of the most decorated eco-lodges in the world — one that fully funds the on-site research that in a few short years has helped identify 25 brand-new species unique to Mashpi.

The wilds of the cloud forest are literally at the door at Mashpi, but inside the lodge, there is luxury. (Photo courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Jorge Vinueza G.)
The wilds of the cloud forest are literally at the door of Mashpi Lodge, but inside, there is luxury. (Courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Jorge Vinueza G.)

Its staggering biodiversity is a magnet for international scientists of all stripes, and so the intimate resort, with 22 rooms and three suites, was envisioned as both a living laboratory (an actual working space that guests can visit) and something I’d call an ambassador factory.

You cannot visit this place, which offers the highest-end sustainable tourism experience imaginable, without going home a zealot, primed to proselytize about the importance of protecting such places.

Waterfalls abound here. Depending on your length of stay (and the intensity of the rain, which falls often) you might get to see all of them on your hikes. (Photo courtesy Mashpi Lodge)
Waterfalls abound here. Depending on your length of stay (and the intensity of the rain, which falls often), you might get to see all of them on your hikes. (Courtesy Mashpi Lodge)

“There was another manager who used to say that people should arrive as tourists but leave as naturalists. It sounds nice in Spanish — como turista, vete como naturalista — but yours is actually better,” chuckles Alex Veintimilla, hotel manager at Mashpi Lodge.

I don’t know about that.

I only know that there have been dozens of assignments standing in the way of this pulpit. Now that I’m here, I’m ready to testify.

The Sky Bike allows guests to fly solo above the forest. Views are spectacular. (Photo courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Jorge Vinueza G.)
The Sky Bike allows guests to fly solo above Mashpi’s massive Reserve. The views are spectacular. (Courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Jorge Vinueza G.)

Since 2012, Mashpi has hosted thousands of guests and has expanded from its original 1,730 acres to more than 7,400. Lush trails, some quite challenging, wind up and down through the forest, from waterfalls to outcroppings to observation towers and contraptions, including The Sky Bike and something they call “The Dragonfly.”

More on these later.

A dwarf iguana surveys one of Mashpi's many flowing streams and rivers. Guests here, donning rubber boots, hike right through the water, observing incredible flora and fauna unique to the region. (Photo courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Lucas Bustamante, Tropical Herping)
A dwarf iguana surveys one of Mashpi Reserve’s many flowing streams and rivers. Guests here, donning rubber boots, hike right through the water, observing incredible flora and fauna unique to the region. (Courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Lucas Bustamante, Tropical Herping)

Built into the mountainsides, thousands of Coca-Cola crates serve as durable pavers helping hikers navigate the wet terrain and lush foliage that, in some places, closes in on either side. The scope of this project, I think, as my boots move from one to the next, miles in just two or so days of exploration, is astronomical. When replacement time comes, it will be another massive undertaking.

The three-hour drive from Quito to Mashpi is mostly smooth, growing excessively bumpier as you get closer. This is the cloud forest, yes, but its elevation is actually lower, so those whose adjustment in the city was sketchy tend to find relief. The cost of it, however, is boots and bug repellent.

Have some seriously smoky fun on a Gulf Coast fish-dip crawl

A pittance, for when you enter the lodge, you are handed a cooling beverage and gaze out the back wall of glass.

The vastness, the green, the clouds, the wild.

I blinked back tears and sipped hibiscus tea.

I went outside and stood on the observation deck, which stretches out over a dropoff to the forest floor. I saw a spider wrapping a meal on an orchid. Savage nature.

My lunch, post-orientation, was served inside. Vibrant sauces and edible flowers on stoneware. The dichotomy of the Mashpi experience.

Local ingredients are part of the philosophy at Mashpi where vegan offerings are available alongside those with meat. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)
Local ingredients are part of the philosophy at Mashpi Lodge, where vegan offerings are available alongside those with meat. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)

Guest rooms here, like the central hub of the property, have floor-to-ceiling glass walls. The forest comes right to the pane.

In my first five minutes after settling in, standing rapt at my window, I checked several birds off the guide I was given upon check-in: the golden olive woodpecker, the bay wren, the palm tanager.

Truly a birder's paradise is Mashpi. These are golden tanagers. (Photo courtesy Mashpi Lodge)
Truly, a birder’s paradise is Mashpi. These are golden tanagers. (Courtesy Mashpi Lodge)

It is total cloud forest immersion — tree frogs to tarantulas to those aforementioned tayras and expert guides to lead you — but with a spa, a bar and an all-inclusive, top-shelf dining program when you’re ready to pry off the wellies and shower up.

After the welcome and the meal, our group gathers outside to fit ourselves for the heavy rubber boots we’ll need to explore the terrain. It’s here that we meet our naturalist guide, Anderson Fernando Medina Armijos (Anderson Medina in its simplest form), whom we call Fernando.

Our group's guide, Fernando, grabs a photo on our hike through the river. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)
Our group’s guide, Anderson Fernando Medina Armijos, grabs a photo on our hike through the river. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)

“There is already another Anderson here,” he explains, laughing.

Medina, like many who work here, comes from a village not far away. His is Pachijal, where his father worked the land as a farmer and where he was on track for a similar path when a severe hand injury involving a machete — he shows us the scar — knocked him happily off course.

Now a Mashpi Lodge guide credited with the discovery of a brand-new species, Anderson Fernando Medina Armijos was raised in a farming village not too far from Mashpi and began his work there in the butterfly conservatory. (Photo courtesy Mashpi Lodge)
Now a Mashpi Lodge guide credited with the discovery of a brand-new species, Anderson Fernando Medina Armijos was raised in a farming village not too far from Mashpi and began his work there in the butterfly conservatory. (Courtesy Mashpi Lodge)

He joined the team here in his teens, working with the researchers as often as possible and starting out with a lower-level job in the butterfly conservatory.

“He comes from humble origins,” Veintimilla tells me. “He taught himself English, he learned all the species, he’s earned several certificates related to biology, he became a guide.”

Lucky guests might spot the famous Mashpi glass frog on a guided night walk. Our guide for the stay was the young biologist credited with its discovery. (Photo courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Lucas Bustamante, Tropical Herping)
Lucky guests might spot the famous Mashpi glass frog on a guided night walk. Our guide for the stay was the young biologist credited with its discovery. (Courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Lucas Bustamante, Tropical Herping)

He became more, in fact, than that.

In 2018, Medina became a co-author in the description of the Mashpi glass frog, an achievement any young biologist could scarcely hope for. And a species I could scarcely hope we might find on our first night walk, but we did, and heard the story of an even younger Medina climbing 11 feet into a tree to get a glimpse of a tiny frog, nearly impossible to spot in a place such as this, and noticing minuscule differences between this and another, similar amphibian.

“I am living my dream here,” he says of the Mashpi life, which requires workers to stay in the on-site dormitory for shifts: 14 days on, seven off. Rinse, repeat. They play futbol on a cement slab in between shifts. We walk through a game. It is fun to see our servers and attendants in civilian clothes, relaxing.

Atop the observation tower, which sits adjacent to the Sky Bike at Mashpi. This hike was something of a "test" as guides gauge guests' endurance and fitness level to determine the best ways for them to see the area. The view is absolutely spectacular ... if you don't mind stairs, or heights. (Photo courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Jorge Vinueza G.)
The view from atop the observation tower, which sits adjacent to the Sky Bike at Mashpi. This hike was something of a “test” as guides gauge guests’ endurance and fitness level to determine the best ways for them to see the area. The view is absolutely spectacular … if you don’t mind stairs or heights. (Courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Jorge Vinueza G.)

“This is the only flat place in all of Mashpi,” Medina jokes, kicking the ball back in play.

Science is only one of the pillars of Mashpi. Another is hospitality.

My Sky Bike experience, nearly thwarted by a combination of my companion’s fear of heights (the bike dangles from a cable that rocks precariously above the forest floor as riders pedal) and my vertically challenged stature (even at the closest seat setting, I could not effectively pedal), Medina hopped on and with help from another pedaler at the platform, powered us across the divide and back.

Known for huge, yellow-rimmed eyespots on its wings, the giant owl butterfly uses this camouflage to deter predators. Mashpi guests will see many species in various stages of growth in its butterfly conservatory, but we spotted wild ones on our hikes every day, including the breathtaking Transandean blue morpho. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)
Known for huge, yellow-rimmed eyespots on its wings, the giant owl butterfly uses this camouflage to deter predators. Mashpi guests will see many species in various stages of growth in its butterfly conservatory, but we spotted wild ones on our hikes every day, including the breathtaking Transandean blue morpho. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)

On hikes, he’d mimic bird calls flawlessly and pull up sightings on binoculars and through telescopes. While others in our pack hung back, discussing everything from real estate prices to the effects of social media on teenagers (Really? We’re in the cloud forest, people.), I followed Medina like a puppy, navigating terrain that demands watching one’s step, waiting for him to stop, look and listen.

The Glasswing butterfly: its transparent wings are caused by a lack of colored scales, which aid in its camouflage. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)
The Glasswing butterfly: Its transparent wings are caused by a lack of colored scales, which aid in its camouflage. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)

At the butterfly conservatory, he darted out to the deck, and I followed.

“Did you hear that?” he said, excitement palpable.

“No,” I laughed.

He grabbed his binoculars, pointing off into the trees. Faintly, I heard a squeak. A cabinet in need of WD-40.

“That’s a toucan,” he said.

By now, the rest of the group had followed. Medina was setting up a telescope.

Guests strip down mid-hike for a waterfall pool plunge in the Mashpi cloud forest. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)
Guests strip down mid-hike for a waterfall pool plunge in the Mashpi cloud forest. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)

Two or three chirps later, there it was in the circle of the lens. A real, live Chocó toucan. It was at least a quarter-mile away. Perhaps more. The farmboy from Pachijal is now the Beastmaster.

“There are very limited futures for the local young people around this region,” Veintimilla explains, “so right from the start, a key for the Mashpi project was to integrate as many people as possible from the local communities. It was challenging because most did not have any of the skills required to work in a high-level hospitality environment, but they’ve been trained, they take courses.”

The Dragonfly takes visitors on a slow, steady tour of the region, high above the lush canopy. It was here I was able to check the rare umbrella bird off my birding list. (Photo courtesy Mashpi Lodge)
The Dragonfly takes visitors on a slow, steady tour of the region, high above the lush canopy. It was here that I was able to check the rare umbrella bird off my birding list. (Courtesy Mashpi Lodge)

Some, like our bartender or our server, Darwin (there are many, many Darwins in Ecuador, I learned; stay tuned for my Galapagos adventure), come from Quito or elsewhere.

Others, like Nestor, now the Expedition Leader, are from the forest itself.

“He’s a wonderful example,” Veintimilla says,” a local guy who literally walked up one day looking for work.”

Prawns on the table: Mashpi's meal choices are all-inclusive and quite spectacular. (Photo courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Yolanda Escobar Jimenez)
Prawns on the table: Mashpi Lodge’s meal choices are all-inclusive and quite spectacular. (Courtesy Mashpi Lodge/Yolanda Escobar Jimenez)

To watch him greet new guests upon arrival, to discuss the day’s outings as groups coordinate, coming and going, you would think he had a luxury hotel pedigree. Which, eight years into his Mashpi Lodge tenure, I suppose, is exactly what he has.

As I hover in The Dragonfly (which my companion, despite his acrophobia, has settled into), Medina discusses binoculars with a guest from Connecticut, and the difficulty of getting good equipment to this remote location.

View from the Dragonfly at Mashpi Lodge. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)
View from the Dragonfly at Mashpi Lodge. (Amy Drew Thompson/Orlando Sentinel)

I lean over and see before me the terrain I’d hiked that morning: the winding trail, the 114-foot Magnolia Waterfall where some in my group (the ones not from Florida) chose to take an icy plunge, the riverbed we’d walked, deep enough to fill a boot in places if you’re not careful, the rocky place where a green-fronted lancebilled hovered, defending his territory from others that might exploit his hunting ground.

As we approached some trees high enough to hit eye level, Medina found his treasure for the day, one that might make it onto the blackboard where guides announced their best sightings — equal parts boast and breadcrumb for colleagues to follow with their own groups.

“That’s an umbrellabird,” he tells us, pointing out a large black bird with a dashing, hat-like crest and black, feathery wattle. “This is so rare, you guys!” he whisper-shouts.

“It’s so rare!”

His delight, so genuine, is now mine.

Forever.

Find me on Facebook, TikTok, Twitter or Instagram @amydroo or on the OSFoodie Instagram account @orlando.foodie. Email: amthompson@orlandosentinel.com, For more foodie fun, join the Let’s Eat, Orlando Facebook group.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
admin
  • Website

Related Posts

Entertainment

Royal Caribbeans unveils fourth Icon-class cruise ship

March 31, 2026
Entertainment

Dahlias, popular among northerners, are difficult to grow locally.

March 29, 2026
Entertainment

Pet Alliance opens new $15 million, 25,000 square foot shelter

March 28, 2026
Entertainment

Ripley buys rhino prop from Jim Carrey movie ‘Ace Ventura’

March 27, 2026
Entertainment

Volusia Valor Days brings World War II history to Central Florida

March 27, 2026
Entertainment

Stardust Racers roller coaster reopens

March 26, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Subscribe to News

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

Editor's Picks

Royal Caribbeans unveils fourth Icon-class cruise ship

March 31, 2026

Florida CEOs signal strong investment confidence as economic outlook remains resilient

March 31, 2026

Keizer University rebuilds reputation after past controversy, aims to stabilize enrollment and refocus on student performance

March 31, 2026

Liberty Partners of Tallahassee President and CEO Recognized by Florida State University

March 31, 2026
Latest Posts

Florida is growing to affordable prices. Do politicians notice?

July 10, 2025

Donald Trump, Paramount Global and the ’60 Minutes’ travesty

July 10, 2025

Record-breaking state funding updates hopes for Florida citrus crops

July 9, 2025

Welcome to Sunshine News Network – your trusted source for the latest and most reliable news in Florida.

At Sunshine News Network, our mission is to provide up-to-date, in-depth coverage of everything that matters to Floridians. From breaking news and local events to lifestyle trends and weather updates, we are here to keep you informed, engaged, and connected with the Sunshine State.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Crime
© 2026 sunshinenewsnetwork. Designed by sunshinenewsnetwork.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.