Ecuador is best known for the Galapagos Islands but this tiny country is also a prime departure point to explore the Amazon. As part of our 3-week long trip in the South American state, we made sure to include a multi-day stay in the Ecuadorian Amazon.

That one morning we left our ecolodge located on the Rio Cuyabeno and boarded our wooden canoes. Our destination was a traditional Siona village, deep in the Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve. The Sionas are one of the numerous indigenous Amazon people, that also include the Secoya, Cofan, Shuar, Zaparo, Huaorani, and Kichwa.

Traditional Siona Village

We went along the river for about two hours, slowing at every curve to absorb the scenery and checking for the elusive wildlife. We did spot some monkeys from afar, high above in the lianas, and numerous egrets and herons.

Traditional Siona Village

Traditional Siona Village

Soon we landed in the tiny village made of a couple of thatched houses on stilts, small garden patches and kids running around.

Yucca Plants

Yucca Plants

Our guide, a native of the same indigenous group, led us to one of the families. We met them working their field as the women pulled yucca out of the ground. It was impressive to see how big the yucca roots were, and how relatively easy it was to extract using a machete or a stick.

Unearthing yucca roots

Unearthing yucca roots

After retrieving the roots, the trunk of the plant was set aside for later replanting. Also called manioc, this plant grew wild and was easily cultivated, making it a key staple of the indigenous population of the Amazon.

Chicken roaming freely

Chicken roaming freely

Heavy with several large yuccas in hand, we accompanied the women towards their house. Up a few steps and onto a large open area that constituted their living quarters, more children and elders welcomed us.

Siona Kid

Siona Kid

Making Yucca Bread

Our guest showed us out to clean and peel the roots. She then took a long wooden bowl, well a rather a canoe-shaped bowl. Using a makeshift shredder – a rectangular metal plate punched with multiple tiny holes – we proceeded to shred the yucca roots and get a rough wet paste.

Shredding the Yucca Roots

Shredding the Yucca Roots

This was hard work as the shape of the utensils were unfamiliar and the volume of yuccas to prepare quite large. But on we went, and we managed to go through the load. Our arms were sour and painful at that stage! The difficult part was over.

Camp fire

Campfire

We now needed to extract as much liquid as we could from the wet paste. This was achieved by putting it into mats made of palm leaves, which we rolled and wrung several times. A milky water poured out the mat, and we kept at it until only drops would come down. The juice could be reused for preparing Chicha, a drink made of fermented yucca.

Bread ready for firing

Bread ready for firing

The left-over mass was still tightly packed and our guest showed us how to sift it through a bamboo mat, to help break it down even further into a rough flour. We pushed and pushed it through until we finally had enough of this flour.

Bread cooking over the firepit

Bread cooking over the fire pit

This moist dough-like flour was then spread over a plate made of leaves, to give it a round shape like a crepe. No other ingredient was added, the starchy component helped keep the dough together.

Collecting rainwater

Collecting rainwater

A metal pan had been heating over a hearth fire and was pretty hot. We were ready to cook and toast the crepe-like yucca bread. A few minutes on one side, a few more minutes on the other. Our yucca bread was ready!

Kid grabbing a banana

Kid grabbing a banana

The traditional way to eat it is by tearing small pieces and dipping it in sauce or jam or anything else available. Since there is no salt or any other element, the taste was rather bland but dipping or mixing with another food was the way to eat it, served with vegetables or fish.

Washing clothes in the river

Washing clothes in the river

After tasting our traditional homemade yucca bread, we walked through the rest of the village and by the river. Several kids were washing themselves and playing.

Bath time

Bath time

Soon it was time to get aboard our canoes again and back to our camp for the evening. What a great experience this had been! Learning first hand from the Sionas how to use the local production and how to turn it into something edible, deep in the Amazon, was truly memorable. A must-do while in Ecuador!

Garden squash

Garden squash

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The Siona People

Today the Siona population is estimated at about 1,000 people, with about 500 spread around different communities in the Sucumbios, especially in upper Cuyabeno lakes, and another 500 across into Colombia.

The word Siona is said to mean “Toward the Garden” (from sio = orchard, na = to in the Tucanoan language), possibly because the tribe was known to cultivate gardens. Their daily routine also includes traditional hunting and fishing. The Sionas in Ecuador refer themselves as the “Sa’niwi Bã” (Upriver people) as they do live in the upper sections of the Napo, Cuyabeno, Putumayo, and Aguarico rivers. Sometimes called the Siona-Secoya culture as they share many cultural similarities with the Secoya such as language and ancestry, the two groups are actually independent and live in different parts of the park.

Historically, the Siona people, like the Cofán, lived in remote areas of the forest and survived based on the local subsistence of gardening, hunting, and fishing. The rubber boom of the late 19th- early 20th-century (1885-1945) led to the enslavement of many of the tribes, wiping out large numbers of indigenous people while the European settlements expanded. Further modern development that impacted the Sionas include oil drilling, water contamination, and deforestation of the rainforest. The deterioration of their environment, especially the rainforest, was a terrible part given how important lianas are for the Sionas, from medicine, food, poisons, ropes, rituals, baskets, etc. The affluence of the Spanish also reduced the practice of the native religion which was seen as diabolic by the Catholic Church. Today, the shamans are few apart, no longer wear the traditional Chusma or practice the Yage ceremony.

Ecuador is, of course, home to several indigenous communities like the Sionas. Indeed, over a dozen different indigenous communities live in the country, including the Tsáchila, Chachi, Epera, Awa, Quichua, Shuar, Achuar, Shiwiar, Cofán, Secoya, Zápara, Andoa, and Waorani, as well as Afro-Ecuadorians, are considered minority and indigenous groups. One of the well-known groups is the Otavalo group, who live in the area of the same name northeast of Quito and which are famous for their handicrafts featured in the popular Otavalo market.

Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve

The second largest reserve of the 45 national parks in Ecuador, the Reserve abounds with wildlife and biodiversity and is home to five indigenous groups. Several relatively big animals live there, from dolphins, manatees, capibaras, caymans, herons, monkeys, sloths, and more.

The Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve is relatively easy to reach, only a 30-minute flight from Quito to Lago Agrio, the entry point into the Amazon. The river can be accessed barely one hour and a half drive later, and within a few hours, one stands within the tall trees of the rainforest, relaxing by the river and taking in the fact that one is in the Amazon!

If you are looking for more traditional culture experiences, or Ecuador trip ideas, check out our other Ecuador travel blog posts on:

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Yucca Bread Making with the Siona in the Amazon // Ecuador is a great destination to discover the Amazon. Head to the Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve, & learn about traditional yucca bread-making with the Sionas

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