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00:00 Where is the Parguaza River? 00:42 Bathrooms in indigenous camps. 01:55 How is casabe made? 02:51 Pozo Blanco in the Parguaza sector. 03:58 What is the Tierra Blanca community like? 04:31 What was kaolin used for? 05:32 Sailing along the Parguaza River. 06:35 How do the Piaroas live? 07:32 How do the Piaroas make casabe? 09:12 How does a Shaman begin? 10:51 Maraca river community. 11:56 Preparing the Moroco fish to fry. 12:36 What is Valentina Quintero's favorite place? 13:15 How do the Piaroas have fun? 14:56 Permission to reach Cucurital. 16:08 Cross the Maraca stream. 17:16 Cucurital Community. 18:30 How do you dance joropo in the plains? 20:07 Road to Duruhuäya Falls. 22:41 What is the macaw flower like? 23:02 Tarantulas on the way to Duruhuäya Falls. 25:18 Arriving at Duruhuäya Falls. 26:08 Valentina Quintero at the Duruhuäya Falls. The most recurring question I get asked… Ok, what place haven’t you been in Venezuela? Well, look, there is always something new and this time it is the Parguaza River, in the Bolívar state, but it is easier to enter through Amazonas and it is full of Piaroa communities, which I was unaware of, because I thought that this ethnic group only inhabited the Amazon. . In total, to Parguaza I traveled 714 kilometers from Caracas, I crossed the Orinoco on the Burro boat and we drove about an hour and a half to Pozo Blanco, the first attraction of Tierra Blanca, as this community is called. Surprising transparency and emerald blue tone. The waterfall. The churuatas are tidy and neat for camping and even a latrine for the visit, as it should be. Later we arrived at the community of Tierra Blanca itself where we launched our boat into the Parguaza River, imposing, large, navigable, until we reached some rapids where we had to take the boat out and cross by land. Here there were many Piaroa women washing clothes by beating them in the river. A crazy thing. They hit him with fists and also with sticks. They say that's the only way the dirt comes out. Sailing up Parguaza we arrived at the Barranco de Cucurito community, where the family was very active making casabe and the shaman told of all the tigers he had seen and how a tiger appeared to him in the form of a man that allowed him to now be the shaman. of the community. He also taught us how to make roofs with the cucurite palm. Finally we managed to arrive at the Salto Maraca community, so called because of this waterfall that is rather rapid and prevents continuing navigation. A beautiful afternoon, a glorious dinner. A boat converted into a home, dining room and transportation. Camping in hammocks. Very tasty river baths. At dawn any mother would scream and warn of panic with those little children jumping from the highest branches of a tree, but the Piaroa mothers wash with sticks and don't even flinch. After crossing the rapids, we managed to embark again along the Parguaza River until we settled in the community of Cucurital. Here everything is called cucurite because of the palm that serves as their home. Shocked with the number of children in all these communities. There is not the slightest anguish over the lack of a replacement generation. Of all ages. And the minimum piaroas. First time I feel like a giant and I even hit the ceilings. This whole odyssey was the preamble to discovering the most magnificent waterfall in Venezuela. But you still have to walk two and a half hours through the tropical jungle, with 90% humidity that makes you feel bathed in condensed milk. And as always, they swear on a handful of crossings that it is an hour and a half and it ended up being two and a half hours there and two and a quarter hours the return, always in the rain. But yes... when you stand in front of the Duruhuäyä waterfall, nothing matters. Just let the energy of that fall enter your soul and inhabit it forever. I swear it is the most incredible waterfall I have seen in 30 years traveling through Venezuela. And also in the middle of winter. God!!! You are big. SUBSCRIBE: / @valendeviaje Instagram: / valendeviaje 📌Director/Dp: Branimir Caleta - @caletadp 📌Journalist/General Production: Valentina Quintero - @valendeviaje 📌Sound Edward Nogales - @nogalesrob 📌Post production Gustavo Mendoza - @el.tasto Alexander Ramirez @damianjr23 📌Graphic design Stephanye Cuellar - @stephanye._ 📌Motion Graphics Andrés Ungaro - @gazoo69 📌YouTube Optimization Team: Barbara Mongou - @barbaramongou Ricardo Miranda - @popinteractivo