Rainforests are the oldest living ecosystems on Earth, and the most diverse. They cover only 2% of the Earth’s surface but up to 50% of the world’s plants and animals live within them. A quarter of ingredients for modern medicines are found in rainforest plants and rainforests play an essential role in maintaining the Earth’s limited supply of freshwater and controlling the climate.
The sights and sounds of the rainforest are truly unique. From the cacophony of insects, birds and frogs in the evenings, to colourful birds and agile monkeys leaping from tree to tree, to the endless green layers of dense vegetation, you won’t be stuck for things to hear, see and smell.
The rainforest climate can be intense (hot, humid and plenty of insects!), but the experience is well worth any discomforts.
We’ve put together a list of our top five rainforest holidays from all around the world. These are:
Great Bear Rainforest, Canada
Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda
Sinharaja Forest Reserve, Sri Lanka
Rainforests of the Atsinanana, Madagascar
Amazon Rainforest, Brazil, Peru & Colombia
The Great Bear Rainforest
As you may have guessed from the name, this rainforest is home to bears – and lots of them! The rainforest makes up 25% of the world’s remaining coastal temperate rainforests and is the only place in the world where you will find Kermode “Spirit” bears, considered sacred by the local T’simshian people.
Grizzly bears also populate the area, as well as grey wolves, Sitka deer, cougars, eagles, sea lions, sea otters and humpback whales. Visit between late August and mid-October, when returning salmon draw wildlife towards the rivers, to see the bears hunt the plentiful fish.
Bountiful plant life exists within the rainforest, including 1000-year-old Western Red cedar trees and underwater kelp forests in the rivers and surrounding waters. Activities for travellers take full advantage of this abundance of wild- and plant-life with kayaking and fishing trips, wildlife and marine life spotting, boat rides, hiking and heli-hiking.
Bwindi Impenetrable National Park
Half of the world’s population of mountain gorillas, around 400, roam the rainforest in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park and the main activity on any travellers list is a trek into the dense vegetation in search of these magnificent creatures. It can take anything from a few hours to a full day to find a group of gorillas, but once you do, you can watch them interact in their natural environment for up to an hour.
Hiking, birding, cycling, mountain biking and cultural community tours are also popular activities within the park and visitors are often treated to sightings of baboons, chimpanzees, elephants, antelope, golden monkeys and 350 species of bird including African goshawks, Augur buzzards and Equatorial akalats.
With 400 species of plants, the park features an abundance of flora, including the rare brown mahogany.
Sinharaja Forest Reserve
The reserve is the last remnant of Sri Lanka’s tropical lowland rainforest and is the home of many rare endemic flora and fauna including the purple-faced langur, dusky-striped jungle squirrel, loxococcus rupicola (a type of palm tree) and atalantia rotundifolia (a flowering plant from the citrus family).
Other wildlife found in the reserve include jaguars, Indian elephants, torque macaques, giant squirrels, reptiles and butterflies.
Visitors can go trekking and on boat tours and from November to March and in April and August, birdwatching trips are available. The rainforest has many indigenous birds and 19 of Sri Lanka’s 20 endemic bird species can be found here. Look out for Ceylon Hanging Parrots, Ceylon Wood Pigeons, Ceylon Grey Hornbills, Layard’s parakeet and the Red-faced Malkoha.
Rainforests of the Atsinanana
Comprised of six national parks, the rainforest stretches along almost the entirety of the east coast of Madagascar. Over half of the islands endemic wildlife call these rainforests home and a staggering 70-90% of the life in the rainforest exists in the tree canopy.
There are over 100 species of lemur within the rainforest, including bamboo lemurs, black lemurs, red-ruffed lemurs, Indri and the nocturnal aye-ayes. Other wildlife such as leaf-tailed geckos, tenrecs and leaf chameleons can also be found. Over 1000 species of orchid and over 1000 species of jasmine grow in the area.
Top activities in these rainforests are hiking and trekking deep into the vegetation to spot the abundant wildlife and plant life.
Amazon Rainforest
The Amazon is the world’s largest tropical rainforest, inhabited by one in ten of the known species on earth including jaguars, amazon river dolphins, emperor tamarins, black spider monkeys, black caiman, poison dart frogs, anacondas, howler monkeys and many more.
Flora include the heliconia flower, orchids, giant water lilies, passion fruit flowers and monkey brush vines. With over 16,000 species of tree, the health of the Amazon rainforest has a direct impact on the health of the whole planet and the control of local and global climates, as well as the protection of many species of plants and animals.
A rainforest of this scale has plenty of available activities. Visitors can take river cruises, go on canopy tours, hike through the tropical woods and visit local tribes.
I hope this list of rainforests have whetted your appetite and you are ready to explore everything that a rainforest has to offer.
Matt Rushbrooke is Director of Touring & Tailormade at Rainbow Tours.If you would like to be a guest blogger on A Luxury Travel Blog in order to raise your profile, please contact us.
Matt Rushbrooke is the Director of Touring & Tailormade at Rainbow Tours. Rainbow Tours offers quality tailor-made holidays and group travel throughout Africa and Latin America. They work closely with charities and non-governmental organisations to ensure that each bespoke holiday is as sustainable as possible. Matt has worked in the travel industry for 25 years after his management degree in Tourism at Plymouth University. He has worked in a variety of roles and recently moved to the Director of Touring and Tailor-made to focus on the specialisms that Rainbow Tours provides. His favourite destination is currently Vietnam due to the combination of beaches and culture.
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10 Comments
A few years ago I didn’t even know that rain forest holidays existed. Then I started talking to a few friends – or rather listening to them whilst they told me how great their rain forest resorts had been. Slowly but surely I’ve heard a lot more about travel to rainforests.
My wife always says that I’m reluctant to try new things or go anywhere new but after reading this piece and putting together with my friend’s enthusiasm I definitely think that I could be on for a rain forest stay. It looks to me as if rain forest lodges could be the big new trend in luxury travel for the 2020s.
You should absolutely try a rainforest holiday – they’ll take you out of your comfort zone and leave you with memories that will last for a lifetime!
When you read that there are only 500 mountain gorillas and that their habitat in Bwindi is called The Impenetrable National Park you get the idea that finding some of them is going to be some achievement.
I think that 500 must be a typo. The passage says that there are only 400 mountain gorillas in Bwindi.
There are actually a little over 1000 mountain gorilla’s left, which are spread across Rwanda, Uganda and DRC. Most of them live actually in DRC (a little over 400), the rest is equally spread between Rwanda and Uganda. Due to immense efforts from all these countries, the mountain gorilla population is on a rise again. But there are still many challenges that threaten these beautiful creatures.
They can be difficult to find but with the right guide (I know Rainbow Tours are accompanying Dr Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka on a tour) you can immerse yourself in the lives of these fascinating animals.
So cool! I love reading all the different names of animals. Sri Lanka and Madagascar seem like such foreign and distant places to me. If I could ever visit there one day, it would truly be a magical experience especially to see the wildlife.
You should definitely try and visit – they will take your breath away and leave you with memories that will last a lifetime.
I find rainforests fascinating. There’s something quite magical about them. I think the expression of the Amazon being the “world’s lungs” is so spot on, and it reminds you just how important it is that it’s protected. You’ve made some great suggestions for different rainforests to check out. I’d love to go to Canada one day but I’ll admit I hadn’t even thought about the rainforest there, such a good idea. The Kermode Bears are a really interesting one because they’re technically black bears, but it’s a recessive gene that gives them white fur. Gorillas in their natural environment is something I’d really like to see. I’d probably want a guide book before going somewhere to see what the specific creatures, animals, flora and other vegetation all is so I could learn more about it. That’s probably pretty important too just in case there are any poisonous things out there. And a camera with plenty of back up batteries!
A few years ago I didn’t even know that rain forest holidays existed. Then I started talking to a few friends – or rather listening to them whilst they told me how great their rain forest resorts had been. Slowly but surely I’ve heard a lot more about travel to rainforests.
My wife always says that I’m reluctant to try new things or go anywhere new but after reading this piece and putting together with my friend’s enthusiasm I definitely think that I could be on for a rain forest stay. It looks to me as if rain forest lodges could be the big new trend in luxury travel for the 2020s.
You should absolutely try a rainforest holiday – they’ll take you out of your comfort zone and leave you with memories that will last for a lifetime!
When you read that there are only 500 mountain gorillas and that their habitat in Bwindi is called The Impenetrable National Park you get the idea that finding some of them is going to be some achievement.
I think that 500 must be a typo. The passage says that there are only 400 mountain gorillas in Bwindi.
There are actually a little over 1000 mountain gorilla’s left, which are spread across Rwanda, Uganda and DRC. Most of them live actually in DRC (a little over 400), the rest is equally spread between Rwanda and Uganda. Due to immense efforts from all these countries, the mountain gorilla population is on a rise again. But there are still many challenges that threaten these beautiful creatures.
They can be difficult to find but with the right guide (I know Rainbow Tours are accompanying Dr Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka on a tour) you can immerse yourself in the lives of these fascinating animals.
So cool! I love reading all the different names of animals. Sri Lanka and Madagascar seem like such foreign and distant places to me. If I could ever visit there one day, it would truly be a magical experience especially to see the wildlife.
You should definitely try and visit – they will take your breath away and leave you with memories that will last a lifetime.
I find rainforests fascinating. There’s something quite magical about them. I think the expression of the Amazon being the “world’s lungs” is so spot on, and it reminds you just how important it is that it’s protected. You’ve made some great suggestions for different rainforests to check out. I’d love to go to Canada one day but I’ll admit I hadn’t even thought about the rainforest there, such a good idea. The Kermode Bears are a really interesting one because they’re technically black bears, but it’s a recessive gene that gives them white fur. Gorillas in their natural environment is something I’d really like to see. I’d probably want a guide book before going somewhere to see what the specific creatures, animals, flora and other vegetation all is so I could learn more about it. That’s probably pretty important too just in case there are any poisonous things out there. And a camera with plenty of back up batteries!
Hi Rachael,
So pleased you found the other suggestions for rainforests useful.
And yes, definitely take a spare battery for your camera, the flora and fauna will keep you snapping for hours on end.