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Rupununi River 99’er Canoe Expedition

A fully supported 99-mile canoe expedition down the Rupununi River, travelling from open savannah into rainforest over 10 days. Paddle by day, arrive to prepared riverside camps, and experience Guyana’s wildlife at water level.

5 Rating (20 Reviews)

10 Days / 9 Nights

Duration

6-10

Group Size

Moderate

Difficulty

Dry season

Best Season

Georgetown

Start Point

99 miles of river between you and the person you were when you launched the canoe.

The Rupununi 99’er is a supported canoe expedition covering 99 miles, roughly 160 kilometres, down one of Guyana’s most iconic waterways. The journey begins in Georgetown before flying south into the Rupununi Savannah and travelling overland to Yupukari Village and Caiman House Eco-Lodge. From there, the expedition launches onto the river.

The route follows the Rupununi River from open savannah into increasingly forested country. Early days are gentle and wide: lily ponds, open sky, quiet water, and broad riverbanks. As the expedition progresses, the landscape begins to shift. Savannah gives way to rainforest corridors, the banks close in, and wildlife becomes part of the daily rhythm.

This is not an unsupported wilderness paddle. A logistics crew moves ahead each day to prepare camp, manage heavy equipment, cook meals, and keep the canoes light. You still paddle the river, feel the distance, and earn the journey, but you arrive each evening to hammocks strung, fire lit, and food being prepared.

The expedition finishes near Awarmie Mountain, where the group celebrates completing the full 99-mile river journey with a sunset hike overlooking the Rupununi Savannah. After days at river level, the view from above gives the whole journey a sense of scale.

This is the trip for travellers who want an active but supported river expedition: enough effort to feel real, enough comfort to recover properly, and enough wildlife to remind you why slow travel is often the best way to see Guyana.

“The Rupununi 99’er is one of those journeys that works because it is simple. You put the canoe on the river, settle into the rhythm, and let the landscape change around you. At first it is open savannah, wide skies, and calm water. Then the river narrows, the forest comes closer, and suddenly you are seeing Guyana from the level where the wildlife lives. The support crew keeps the expedition comfortable, but the miles are still yours. By the time you reach Awarmie Mountain, you have not just visited the Rupununi, you have moved through it, one paddle stroke at a time.”

Anders Andersen

Expedition Leader and Owner

What sets this apart

Six reasons this expedition earns its name.

99 Miles, One River

This is a full linear crossing of the Rupununi River, not a short sampler or loop. You travel 99 miles from savannah into rainforest and finish with Awarmie Mountain on the horizon.

Fully Supported Camps

A support team moves ahead each day to prepare camp, manage heavy equipment, cook meals, and keep the expedition flowing. You paddle hard, but recover properly.

Savannah-To-Rainforest

Watch the landscape change from open savannah and lily ponds into forested river corridors, with the shift happening slowly from your canoe seat.

Wildlife At Water Level

Canoes move quietly and low on the river. This gives excellent chances of seeing black caiman, giant otters, monkeys, macaws, capybaras, snakes, and rich birdlife.

No Paddling Experience Needed

The Rupununi is not technical whitewater. Basic canoe handling is introduced before departure, and the journey is suitable for active travellers with a steady mindset.

Community Partnership

The expedition operates with Yupukari Village, Rewa, and regional Indigenous partners, supporting local employment, conservation, and community-led tourism.

Highlights

A glimpse into the river, wildlife, and journey moments that define this expedition.

Victoria Amazonica at Dusk

Drift through lily pond ecosystems where giant Victoria amazonica pads stretch across still water and the sounds of frogs, birds, and night wildlife rise around you.

The 36-Mile Day

The longest river day becomes the milestone. By then, the rhythm is in your body, the group has found its pace, and Awarmie Mountain begins to feel close.

Night Drifts on the River

Optional after-dark canoe drifts offer a completely different river experience, with caiman eyes reflecting in the torchlight and the forest alive along the banks.

Awarmie Summit at Sunset

After completing the 99-mile journey, hike to Awarmie Mountain for views across the Rupununi Savannah and the river country you have just travelled through.

What's included

From first inquiry to first night in the jungle, we prepare you for everything so the wild can teach you the rest.

Included

  • Hotel accommodation in Georgetown (single rooms)
  • Caiman House Eco-Lodge stay
  • Rewa Eco-Lodge final night
  • All river camping (hammocks provided)
  • Domestic flights (Georgetown–Lethem return)
  • Overland transfers
  • All meals during expedition
  • Engine boat support crew
  • Indigenous guides and instructors
  • Pre-prepared camp logistics
  • Awarmie Mountain sunset hike
  • Wildlife night walks and river drifts
  • Canoe and paddling equipment

Not IncludeD

  • International flights to Georgetown
  • Travel insurance (required)
  • Personal spending money
  • Alcoholic beverages
  • Visa fees (if applicable)
  • Gratuities for guides

What to Bring

  • Lightweight quick-dry clothing
  • Sun protection (hat, sunscreen, long sleeves)
  • Lightweight rain jacket
  • Work gloves
  • Insect repellent (DEET-based recommended)
  • Personal medications and prescriptions
  • Full packing list sent on booking

Views from the river

See how the Rupununi 99 canoe expedition unfolds
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Book this trip

$3,999

Price (USD)

50%

Deposit

Bank Transfer

Payment Method

Upcoming departures

Mar 8 – Mar 17, 2026
Available
$4750

Secure Booking

Contact Us For Group Rates

DETAILS

Everything you need to know 
before booking your adventure
Day 1

Georgetown

Arrival in Georgetown. Meet the expedition team and fellow participants at the hotel for introductions, safety briefing, equipment overview, and preparation for the journey into the interior.

Day 2

Into the Rupununi and travel to Caiman House

Fly from Georgetown to Lethem, then travel overland across the Rupununi Savannah to Yupukari Village and Caiman House Eco-Lodge. The afternoon is used for equipment preparation, canoe familiarisation, and final expedition briefing.

Day 3

First day in the canoes

Launch onto the Rupununi River and begin the first paddling stage. The day is designed to ease the group into the rhythm of canoe travel, finishing near lily pond habitats where evening wildlife exploration may be possible.

Day 4

Gineb Landing

Continue downstream toward Gineb Landing. Paddling distance increases as confidence grows, with opportunities for wildlife sightings, fishing, and optional night river activity.

Day 5

Caiman spotting and Pakaraima inn

A gentler river day with wildlife focus and recovery built into the rhythm. Depending on logistics, the group may connect with the Annai area and Pakaraima Inn before continuing toward the next camp.

Day 6

Savannah to Rainforest

The expedition begins to feel more remote as the riverbanks gradually shift from savannah into denser forest. Expect a longer day on the water, more wildlife activity, and a stronger sense of moving into the interior.

Day 7

The long haul

The longest paddling stretch of the journey. The group covers the final major distance toward Awarmie, completing the 99-mile river objective and reaching camp near the mountain.

Day 8

Awarmie Mountain

Rest, recovery, and exploration around Awarmie. In the evening, hike to Awarmie Mountain summit for sunset views across the Rupununi Savannah. Overnight at Rewa Eco-Lodge.

 

Day 9

Travel back out

Travel overland to Lethem and return by domestic flight to Georgetown. Final evening in the capital.

Day 10

International Departure

Departure from Guyana or onwards travel.

This is not a formal training course, but guests will gain practical experience in canoe handling, river rhythm, camp routines, basic paddling efficiency, wildlife observation, hammock camping, and travelling as part of a supported expedition team. No advanced paddling experience is required. The river is generally calm, and the canoes are kept light by the support boats. Guests should still be prepared for long days, heat, sun exposure, repetitive paddling, and the mental focus required to keep moving steadily.
The expedition starts and ends in Georgetown, Guyana. Domestic flights connect Georgetown with Lethem, followed by overland travel to Yupukari and Caiman House. The Rupununi is hot, open, and exposed in sections, so sun protection is important. Quick-dry clothing, long sleeves, a hat, sunglasses, hydration, and lightweight rain protection are strongly recommended. This expedition is supported, but still active. Guests should be comfortable paddling for several hours per day, sleeping in hammocks, living in riverside camps, and being outdoors in changing tropical conditions. A full packing list is provided after booking.

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Frequently asked questions

Everything you need to know 
before booking your adventure

Everything you need to know 
before booking your adventure

Everything you need to know 
before booking your adventure

Everything you need to know 
before booking your adventure

Everything you need to know 
before booking your adventure

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