Street Address:
Calle Elvira Mendez, Edif. El Dorado #3, Bella Vista, Panamá. Mailing Address:
P.O.Box 0832-1509 WTC
Panamá, Rep. de Panamá e-mail:
info@anconexpeditions.com Tels:
011(507) 269-9415 Fax:
011(507) 264-3713
Expedition
Panama
Programs
Ancon
Expeditions of Panama has designed for
you a variety of programs offered on a fixed departure
datebasis. Each itinerary has been thoroughly researched to
maximize the results of your experience in Panama. Whether you are interested
in a natural history tour, a bird watching trip, a family adventure or a jungle
expedition, we have the right option for you. All our programs are led
by the best naturalist guides.
8
days/7 nights
A
country so small yet filled with exuberant rainforests,
wildlife and a rich cultural heritage. Discovering Panama
includes traversing on Panama Canal waters looking for
Red-napped tamarins, riding on historic trains, hiking
in cloud forests searching for the elusive Resplendent
Quetzal and exploring the underwater world of the Caribbean
Sea.
Explore
the Panama Canal with its natural and historic legacy,
enjoy cloud forest environments filled with life, and
learn about extinct and thriving indigenous cultures.
The best of Panama!
9
days/8 nightsExperience with your family the best places
in Panama from the
Pacific coast and
the Panama Canal to the western highlands to the Caribbean coast.
Birdwatching in Panama is a truly rewarding
experience. With over 960 species of birds found
in an area of less than 50,000 square miles that
are easily reached, avid and the beginner birders
alike will enjoy a unique avian adventure.
An
in-depth exploration of avian diversity across the
isthmus.
Bird watching in Panama is very easy and rewarding. Its geographical position
allows contact with two great mother lodes of avian diversity. You can see
Resplendent Quetzals and Umbrella birds in the West as well as four types of
Macaws and Harpy Eagles in the East.
"Centuries
before construction began on the Panama Railroad and
Canal, the 'path between the seas' was just that: a
Spanish-built cobblestone thoroughfare winding 50 miles
across the Central American isthmus. Beginning in the
1500s, mule trains laden with Inca gold followed the
Camino Real (King's Road) from the Pacific to the Caribbean
to meet galleons bound for Spain; buccaneers --Francis
Drake and Henry Morgan among them-- conspired to relieve
them of their cargo.