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To help you bring a piece of your journey home, we've put together this collection of watercolor studies from our time in Pantanal, Brazil. These are our favorite ways to keep the spirit of the trip alive.

Original Series Decorative Magnet

A personal study of Pantanal, Brazil, captured in high-fidelity watercolor and prepared for your collection.

Pantanal, Brazil | Jaguar in Pantanal Wetlands | Original Series Decorative Magnet
Add to Collection / $18
Exclusive Series Artifact

Original Series Gallery Canvas

This high-fidelity canvas is a beautiful way to anchor a room and keep your memories of Pantanal, Brazil fresh long after you've returned home.

Pantanal, Brazil | Jaguar in Pantanal Wetlands | Original Series Gallery Canvas detail Pantanal, Brazil | Jaguar in Pantanal Wetlands | Original Series Gallery Canvas detail Pantanal, Brazil | Jaguar in Pantanal Wetlands | Original Series Gallery Canvas detail Pantanal, Brazil | Jaguar in Pantanal Wetlands | Original Series Gallery Canvas detail
Add to Collection / $65

Original Series Hardboard Coaster

A personal study of Pantanal, Brazil, captured in high-fidelity watercolor and prepared for your collection.

Pantanal, Brazil | Jaguar in Pantanal Wetlands | Original Series Hardboard Coaster
Add to Collection / $18
Exclusive Series Artifact

The Spirit of the Land

Archival Note: Documented personally during our time in Pantanal, Brazil. While we leverage a global network of contributors to provide these high-fidelity visual artifacts, each selection is curated to reflect the specific, quiet frequencies we experienced on the ground. These textures serve as a formal study of the unhurried light and environmental character that defined our journey.

Pantanal, Brazil study No. 01
Pantanal, Brazil / 01 VIA / LEONARDO MENDES
The crocodile's weathered skin catches the warm, golden light of the Pantanal afternoon, its mouth agape in a prehistoric yawn. Behind it, the vibrant greens of mangrove roots and foliage create a living frame, while the water glimmers softly in the background. This quiet moment captures the raw beauty of the wetlands, where ancient predators share their habitat with the thriving ecosystem around them.
Pantanal, Brazil study No. 02
Pantanal, Brazil / 02 VIA / Nino Souza
This aerial perspective captures the Pantanal's ethereal quality, where water and vegetation merge beneath a dramatic cloud-swept sky. The light is soft and diffused, casting a serene atmosphere over the vast wetland landscape that stretches toward the urban horizon. Standing here, one would feel suspended between untamed nature and civilization, breathing in the humid air of one of Earth's largest tropical wetlands.
Pantanal, Brazil study No. 03
Pantanal, Brazil / 03 VIA / Quang Nguyen Vinh
This serene scene captures the essence of Pantanal's wetland ecosystem, where traditional wooden boats serve as lifelines through sprawling marshes. The photograph reveals the delicate balance of the landscape, with thousands of bright yellow water lilies creating a living carpet across the shallow waters. An easily overlooked detail is the weathered texture of the boat's dark wood, its surface aged and darkened by years of exposure, which contrasts beautifully with the vibrant, fresh blooms that surround it.

Where to wander

Archival Note: A curated field study of Pantanal, Brazil, prioritizing cultural relevance and archival merit. These locations have been meticulously researched and vetted to ensure they represent the most authentic atmosphere for your own expedition.

Local Cuisine Spotlight
This rustic clay bowl showcases a traditional Pantanal stew where tender meat simmers in a deeply flavored broth, finished with fresh herbs and a squeeze of lime. The earthy presentation in a clay vessel speaks to generations of cooking methods passed down through the wetlands, creating comfort in every aromatic spoonful.
Credits: THE PAINTED PASSPORT
Local cuisine study in Pantanal, Brazil

☕︎ Local Flavor

Restaurante do Pescador

Rating: 5* | Price: $$ | Coordinates: -17.6000, -57.4500

This beloved waterfront spot in Cáceres serves the freshest river fish in the region, hauled in daily from the Paraguay River by local fishermen. The specialty pintado na brasa, a massive spotted catfish grilled over open coals, arrives at your table with crispy farofa, vinagrete, and rice cooked in fish broth. Dining here at sunset, with herons circling lazily above the glittering river, is a deeply satisfying Pantanal experience you will carry home with you.

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Casa do Peixe Corumbá

Rating: 4* | Price: $$ | Coordinates: -19.0083, -57.6533

Tucked into a cheerful colonial building in Corumbá, this family-run restaurant has served classic Pantaneiro river fish dishes for over three decades. The pacu assado, a firm, flavor-rich fish roasted whole with garlic, lime, and herbs, is the undisputed star of a generous and satisfying menu. Locals pack the outdoor tables on weekends, filling the air with laughter and the irresistible aroma of wood smoke and fresh citrus.

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Pantaneiro Grill

Rating: 4* | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: -15.6014, -56.0979

Set in the gateway city of Cuiabá, Pantaneiro Grill celebrates the bold, meaty traditions of the cowboy culture that shaped this region for centuries. Prime cuts of zebu beef are slow-cooked over quebracho wood, giving every bite a smoky depth that pairs beautifully with the restaurant's homemade chimichurri and roasted manioc. The warm dining room is decorated with leather saddles, cattle brands, and old photographs that tell the rich story of Pantanal ranching life.

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Mercado Municipal de Corumbá

Rating: 4* | Price: $ | Coordinates: -19.0100, -57.6500

The Municipal Market of Corumbá is a vibrant, aromatic maze of stalls selling dried fish, tropical fruits, medicinal herbs, and freshly cooked street food prepared by local vendors. Grab a paper cone of chipa, the region's beloved cheesy bread of Paraguayan origin, and wash it down with fresh caldo de cana, cold and sweet from the sugar cane press. Visiting on a Saturday morning means witnessing the full, chaotic, joyful heartbeat of everyday life in the Brazilian Pantanal.

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🛌︎ Boutique Stays

Caiman Ecological Refuge

Rating: 5* | Price: $$$$ | Coordinates: -19.9333, -56.2833

Caiman is a legendary working cattle ranch turned conservation paradise spread across 53,000 hectares of pristine wetland. Guests sleep in beautifully restored colonial farmhouses and wake to the sounds of howler monkeys and macaws outside their windows. Expert naturalist guides lead private safaris that bring you face to face with jaguars, giant otters, and tapirs in their natural habitat.

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SouthWild Pantanal Lodge

Rating: 5* | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: -17.8500, -56.7000

Perched along the Rio Cuiabá, SouthWild is a beloved hub for wildlife photographers and nature enthusiasts from around the world. Comfortable bungalows with private decks allow guests to spot caimans and capybaras drifting through the river below at any hour. The lodge's boat excursions at dawn are genuinely unforgettable, gliding silently through mirror-flat channels as the floodplain bursts into golden morning light.

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Araras Eco Lodge

Rating: 4* | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: -16.8833, -56.4167

Araras sits in the northern Pantanal and offers a wonderfully intimate atmosphere with rustic-chic rooms built from local timber and natural materials. The lodge operates on solar power and maintains its own trail network winding through seasonally flooded forests and open grasslands rich with wildlife. Friendly staff prepare hearty Brazilian meals and share infectious enthusiasm for every creature that passes through the property each day.

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Pousada do Parque

Rating: 4* | Price: $$ | Coordinates: -21.7000, -57.9167

Located near the southern gateway to the Pantanal in Bonito, Pousada do Parque offers charming, affordable accommodation surrounded by tropical gardens and birdsong. Rooms are simple, spotlessly clean, and cooled by gentle breezes channeled through louvered wooden shutters traditional to the region. The owners are local conservationists who delight in pointing guests toward hidden swimming holes and off-the-beaten-path wildlife corridors nearby.

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📍︎ Field Study

Porto Jofre Jaguar Corridor

Rating: 5* | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: -17.3667, -56.7833

Porto Jofre at the end of the Transpantaneira Highway is arguably the greatest place on Earth to observe wild jaguars in their natural environment. Guided motorboat tours navigate narrow channels where these magnificent spotted cats rest on low riverbanks and hunt with breathtaking efficiency. Sightings are not guaranteed but are remarkably frequent, and even the journey through thousands of wooden roadside bridges teeming with caimans is extraordinary.

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Transpantaneira Highway

Rating: 5* | Price: $ | Coordinates: -16.9167, -56.7500

This legendary 147-kilometer dirt road pushes deep into the heart of the northern Pantanal, crossing 122 rustic wooden bridges over flood channels bursting with wildlife. Simply driving its length at a slow pace rewards travelers with sightings of hundreds of caimans, roseate spoonbills, marsh deer, giant anteaters, and countless other remarkable species. Stopping at dawn or dusk transforms each bridge into a private wildlife-watching platform unlike anything else available in South America.

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Parque Nacional do Pantanal Matogrossense

Rating: 5* | Price: $ | Coordinates: -17.7333, -57.5667

This UNESCO World Heritage Site protects 135,000 hectares of seasonally flooded savanna, gallery forest, and open lagoons within the broader Pantanal ecosystem. Access is restricted and requires advance permission, which makes exploration here feel genuinely wild and completely removed from tourist infrastructure. Boat trips through interior channels reveal giant river otters, anacondas, jabiru storks, and a biodiversity so dense it feels almost impossible to absorb in a single visit.

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Bonito Crystalline Rivers

Rating: 5* | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: -21.1261, -56.4861

The rivers flowing from the limestone plateau near Bonito are among the clearest and most biologically rich waterways found anywhere in the world. Snorkeling the Rio da Prata places you inside enormous schools of dourado, piraputanga, and pacu fish gliding through turquoise water with perfect visibility stretching to the white sandy riverbed below. The experience is surreal, peaceful, and humbling in equal measure, offering a perspective on the Pantanal ecosystem entirely different from any land-based safari.

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Typography

Archival Note: A formal technical study of Pantanal, Brazil, archiving the coordinates, elevation, and environmental data that define the region. This data serves as a vital record for our ongoing global field study, providing the technical foundation behind every atmospheric detail captured in our visual work.

Botanical and pigment specimen study for Pantanal, Brazil Colors of Pantanal, Brazil
Coordinates
17.7333° S, 57.5667° W — Central Pantanal, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil
Historical Epoch
Indigenous Guato and Bororo peoples navigated these waters for millennia before Portuguese colonizers arrived in the 18th century. The cattle ranching culture that followed created the Pantaneiro identity, one of Brazil's most distinctive regional traditions.
Elevation
80-150 m / 262-492 ft. The Pantanal sits in one of the lowest floodplain basins in South America, with minimal elevation variation across its vast seasonal wetland floor.
Atmosphere
Aw, Tropical Savanna. Hot and humid year-round with a pronounced wet season from November to March. Dry-season afternoons are sunny and fierce, with temperatures regularly reaching 35C.
Observation Hour
06:15. The first hour after sunrise casts a warm amber light across the still lagoons, drawing out the iridescent blues of hyacinth macaws and painting the reed beds gold. Mist rises slowly off the water in this window.
Primary Pigment
Pantanal Ochre (#C48A3F) and Caiman Green (#4A7C59)
Best Time to Visit
July through September. Dry season concentrates wildlife around shrinking water sources, making jaguar sightings and birdwatching dramatically more rewarding.
Avoid Visiting
January through February. Peak wet season floods roads and trails extensively, restricting access and making overland wildlife viewing far more difficult.

The Local Tongue

Language is the invisible architecture of Pantanal, Brazil. These entries document the regional vocabulary—capturing the "texture" of local speech that standard translations often miss. Hand-curated expressions reflecting the specific spirit and daily rhythm of the region.
Archival study of Portuguese cultural texture

via / Pia Mosskull

Primary Language Portuguese
Regional Dialect Brazilian Portuguese, with Pantaneiro rural vernacular influenced by Bolivian border communities

Pantaneiro

Pantaneiro refers to the people and culture native to the Pantanal region, carrying a sense of rugged belonging that no outside word quite captures. A Pantaneiro cowboy riding bareback through floodwater at dawn, his boots soaked and his posture unbothered, embodies an identity rooted entirely in this particular and demanding land.

Corixo

Corixo describes a narrow, slow-moving water channel that winds through the wetland like a natural corridor, distinct from rivers and lakes in its intimate, shaded character. Traveling a corixo by canoe means ducking under overhanging palms while a giant river otter surfaces just meters away, the silence broken only by the dip of a paddle.

Saudade

Saudade is a Portuguese word for a bittersweet longing, a melancholic tenderness for something cherished that is absent or passing. Sitting on a lodge deck as the last flamingo-pink light fades over the floodplain, a traveler begins to feel saudade for the Pantanal before they have even left it.

Wait! before you go...

Before you head over to Pantanal, Brazil, we wanted to share a few basic tips we picked up along the way. These notes cover the simple things—like how to get around or what to do about cash—so you can spend less time worrying and more time just enjoying the place.
🚲 Getting Around Most travelers fly into Cuiaba or Campo Grande and arrange transfers to lodges via private vehicle or small charter flight. The Transpantaneira Highway is the iconic overland route, a rough dirt road crossing over 120 wooden bridges deep into the northern wetlands.
⚖️ Cash or Card Cash is essential in the Pantanal, as most remote lodges and roadside stops operate on a cash-first basis despite sometimes accepting cards for pre-booked packages. Visitors should withdraw Brazilian Reais in Cuiaba or Campo Grande before entering the wetlands, as ATMs are scarce once inside.
☁️ Good to Know Pantaneiro hospitality is warm but unhurried, and rushing a guide or lodge host is considered quietly impolite in a culture that moves at the rhythm of the land. Wildlife sightings are never guaranteed, and a skilled guide will treat a patient, silent traveler with noticeably more investment and generosity.
🏧 ATMs ATMs are reliably available in Cuiaba, Campo Grande, and Corumba, with Banco do Brasil and Bradesco branches accepting most international cards. Once travelers leave these gateway cities and enter the wetlands, there are virtually no ATMs for hundreds of kilometers, making pre-trip cash withdrawal essential.
💳 Currency The Brazilian Real (BRL) is the official currency, and it is the only currency accepted at most Pantanal lodges, fuel stops, and local markets. Exchange rates in major cities are more favorable than at airports, so travelers benefit from converting funds in Cuiaba or Campo Grande before departure.
🔌 Plugs Brazil uses Type N outlets at 127V or 220V depending on the region. Travelers should confirm the voltage at their specific lodge and carry a universal adapter.
🛡️ Safety The Pantanal itself is a low-crime environment, but visitors should exercise standard caution in gateway cities like Corumba and Cuiaba, particularly around bus stations and markets after dark. Within the wetlands, the primary risks are environmental: sun exposure, insect-borne illness, and the importance of never wading into waterways without guide confirmation that it is safe.
✈️ Airports Marechal Rondon International Airport in Cuiaba (CGB) and Campo Grande International Airport (CGR) are the two primary gateways to the Pantanal, both offering domestic connections from Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. Corumba Airport (CMG) serves the southern Pantanal with limited regional flights and is a useful entry point for travelers heading toward Bolivia.

Behind The Scenes

Nathan

Note from the Founder

Hey, did you know this fun fact about Pantanal, Brazil? The Pantanal shelters the densest known concentration of jaguars on Earth and supports over 650 bird species. During peak flood season, up to 80 percent of the entire floodplain lies submerged beneath shallow seasonal water.
Thank you for exploring the Pantanal, Brazil series with us. We hope these notes have inspired you to add this incredible destination to your own passport—we are so glad you're here. — Nathan

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