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All I see looking out the window of the plane is a carpet of green and the broad snake of a river twisting, turning back on itself.  It’s drizzling when we land in Iquitos – its been raining here for five days.  Hmmm.  Nifty Delphin ll vans pulling luggage trailers are waiting for us and we’re soon on our way into town, eating tiny, super sweet bananas – our first taste of the Amazon.

Iquitos glory days (1880-1914) are long gone, a few expat mansions the only traces left of the booming rubber exports that made some people very rich on the backs of local slave labor.  (The oddest of these is the Iron House, built in France by Gustave Eiffel – of the Tower –  and moved to Iquitos in pieces.)   A Brit smuggled out seeds of the precious rubber plants,  introduced them to South East Asia, and that was it for Iquitos.

It’s an odd place – a cut off island of 600,000 souls –  surrounded by jungle.  Everything coming in or leaving goes by boat or air.  The only road – 62km – links it with the village of Nauta, but that road washed out a few weeks ago.  The rain and the general down-at-the-heels nature of Iquitos are making me a little apprehensive.  We unload and are directed down a narrow passageway to a steep flight of stairs – at the bottom is the river, the opposite bank barely visible in the dusk.  Three skiffs wait, and we clamber clumsily on board with ample help from crew members, their uniforms starched, pants creases razor sharp.  The engines rev, and we leave Iquitos behind – but the Delfin ll is nowhere in site as we head across the river.

delphinII_DP_SITEWe round a bend, and there it is – lights shining on rippling water.  We hardly have time to take it in before our skiffs tie up and the crew helps us on board.

There was no need to be apprehensive.  The Delfin ll is more DSCN1058beautiful than its pictures.  125′ long, 70′ wide, it carries 28 passengers in 14 cabins and a crew of 22.  Its owners/designers are a Lima couple – he’s a naval architect and she’s an interior designer.  The care they’ve taken with every detail has us oohing and aahing as we explore the ship.

 

 

One wall of our wood-paneled cabin is a window looking out on the river.  We IMG_0678can lie in bed and watch the passing jungle.

 

 

 

 

DSCN0783  On the top deck  is an open air lounge full of comfy seating and the bar manned by Aldo.DSCN0792

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DSCN1288 At the back of the boat is an air-conditioned lounge.

 

 

We hear the Delfin ll’s powerful engines and our home on the water pulls away from the bank.  We can hardly believe we are actually on board.  On the Amazon!