Manaus

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Introducing Manaus

Manaus is the Amazon’s largest city, an incongruous pocket of urbanity in the middle of the jungle, a major port for ocean vessels that’s 1500km from the ocean. The rain forest has a population density half that of Mongolia’s, but the journey there invariably begins in (or passes through) this bustling city of two million souls. Don’t be surprised if you feel a little out of whack.

The city itself has some genuinely rewarding sights, including a leafy zoo with as many animals out of the cages as in them, and a beach-and-museum combo that gets you out of the city center. It’s a place to stock up on anything you forgot to pack, or to refill your tank with beer and internet after a week in the forest.

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The largest water lily in the world, the aptly named Giant Water Lily (Victoria amazonica) in the Janauary Ecological Park- Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil
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The largest water lily in the world, the aptly named Giant Water Lily (Victoria amazonica) in the Janauary Ecological Park- Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Jane Sweeney
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Manaos Theatre.
  • Cumulonimbus cloud formation over river.
  • A gathering of small boats at Porto Flutuante.
  • Close-up of macaw, near Manaus.
  • Ferry on Rio Negro with black water in wake.
  • Woman in headdress, Curua da Una.
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