Small-group journeys into ancestral territories — held in reciprocity with the Awajún, Asháninka, Matsigenka, and Quechua communities we work with year-round.
Enquire about an immersionAyni immersions are not eco-tourism. They are slow, intentional visits to indigenous territories, designed in collaboration with community leaders and held within the protocols of each nation.
You will sit in cacao ceremony with elders, walk the agroforestry plots where our cacao grows, share meals prepared from the chacra, and learn from those whose knowledge has shaped these forests for generations. Numbers are small. Reciprocity is the structure. Time moves at the pace of the land.
Each immersion is led in partnership with a specific community. Dates open seasonally and are limited to small groups (6–10 people).
Travel by river into Awajún territory. Witness the cacao harvest and post-processing within community land, learn from elders, and share in the ceremony of a people who never submitted to conquest.
Walk the agroforestry plots where Qori Inti and ancient Chuncho cacao populations grow. Sit with the Asháninka and Matsigenka guardians of one of the original cradles of cacao genetics on Earth.
Traverse the territory where the High-Altitude and Wild Chuncho cacaos meet — from Quillabamba's mineral soils beneath the Vilcanota glacier into the Matsigenka cloud forests of the Upper Urubamba.
Each immersion begins with the protocols of the host nation — introductions, blessings, and the giving of intention before any walking is done.
Walk the agroforestry plots where cacao grows alongside medicinal plants, banana, pacae, and rainforest trees. Learn the rhythms of harvest and forest care.
Sit in cacao ceremony with elders. Hear the stories that shape the territory — what the rivers, mountains, and trees mean to those who live among them.
A meaningful portion of each immersion fee flows back to the community for territorial, ecological, and cultural projects of their choosing.
Immersions are scheduled with the seasons and the host communities, not by industrial calendar. Tell us which territory speaks to you, when you might travel, and how many people are with you. We'll be in touch.