The Piha Stays in the Picture
The Mapari Creek is a cacophony of life. A tributary of the wide and muddy Rupununi River, the creek’s mouth marks a stark border between Guyana’s southern Savannah and the densely forested Kanuku Mountains, home to 60 percent of the nation’s bird and 80 percent of its mammal species. That sudden shift from parched and rustling tall grass to sweating green and ubiquitous life makes the wall of sound common to all jungles—the “harmony of overwhelming and collective murder...
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