Inkaterra Hacienda Concepción is located within a protected ecological reserve in the Peruvian Amazon near Tambopata National Reserve. Surrounded by dense rainforest and wildlife habitats, the lodge offers an authentic Amazon exploration experience with the comfort of sustainable luxury hospitality. Guests explore jungle trails, river ecosystems, and indigenous culture while supporting biodiversity conservation programs.
The Madre de Dios River basin in southeastern Peru contains one of the highest concentrations of biodiversity on Earth — a consequence of the river's drainage of the Andean foothills into the Amazon lowlands, creating habitat gradients that support an extraordinary range of species. Inkaterra's ecological reserve at Hacienda Concepción sits within this basin, on land that the company has protected and managed for conservation since the 1990s. The reserve is part of a biodiversity corridor connecting to Tambopata National Reserve — a continuous expanse of protected forest that provides the undisturbed habitat that the Amazon's most sensitive species require.
Inkaterra Hacienda Concepción has recorded over 600 bird species, 1,000 butterfly species, and 90 mammal species within its reserve — numbers that reflect the reserve's biological integrity rather than curated wildlife. The Amazon Suite overlooks the Madre de Dios rainforest from a cabaña elevated above the forest floor, with views into the canopy and the river visible through the trees. Richseen's four-night package layers the canopy walkway experience, pink river dolphin observation, night jungle wildlife walks, and an indigenous community visit across the stay.
The Amazon Suite at Inkaterra Hacienda Concepción is a cabaña elevated above the rainforest floor, designed to allow the Amazon's sounds, light, and air to define the interior experience rather than insulate guests from it. The suite's open design — screened rather than sealed, with natural ventilation provided by the canopy's airflow — places guests within the forest rather than beside it. The Madre de Dios rainforest is visible from every opening of the suite, the canopy's layers visible from the private terrace, and the river audible in the mornings from the deck.
Inkaterra's approach to sustainable construction at Hacienda Concepción uses materials sourced from the reserve and surrounding region — local timber, thatch, and natural fibre — and avoids the introduction of materials that would create a visual and material contrast with the forest setting. The lodge's cabaña design is modelled on the vernacular architecture of the Amazon basin, where elevated structures have historically provided shelter while maintaining connection with the forest environment. The Amazon Suite's elevated position provides views into the forest's middle canopy — the most species-rich zone of the rainforest, where the majority of the reserve's bird and butterfly species are found.
Inkaterra's conservation programme at Hacienda Concepción is among the most scientifically rigorous in the Amazon lodge sector. The company has maintained biological inventories of the reserve since the 1990s, contributing to scientific publications on Amazonian biodiversity and training the naturalist guides who lead every excursion from the lodge. The canopy walkway — a system of bridges connecting platforms in the forest's upper canopy — was designed in collaboration with researchers and provides access to the canopy at heights that would otherwise be inaccessible to non-climbing visitors. Richseen's package includes a guided walkway session with one of Inkaterra's senior naturalists.
The rainforest dining pavilion at Inkaterra Hacienda Concepción is an open-sided structure positioned within the forest, the canopy visible above the dining tables and the sounds of the Amazon audible throughout every meal. The menu draws on the Amazon basin's extraordinary botanical diversity — Amazonian fish from the Madre de Dios River system, tropical fruits and vegetables from the lodge's own garden, and indigenous ingredients sourced from local communities. The kitchen's approach to Amazonian cuisine treats the rainforest's pantry — the river's arapaima and paiche fish, the jungle's aguaje and camu camu fruits, the cacao and vanilla grown on the reserve — as the basis for a dining programme that is unavailable anywhere outside the Amazon.
Breakfast is served early on trekking and canopy walkway mornings — a substantial meal designed for guests who will be active in the forest for several hours. Lunch is typically served at the lodge on return from morning excursions, and dinner is the day's social occasion — the guides and naturalists who led the day's activities join guests at the dining pavilion, and the day's sightings and ecological observations become the evening's conversation. The river fishing experience on the fourth day is followed by a sunset dinner that incorporates whatever the afternoon on the river produced.
Inkaterra's commitment to supporting indigenous and local food systems is embedded in the dining programme: the lodge works with Amazonian community cooperatives for cacao, Brazil nuts, and medicinal plants, and the kitchen's indigenous culture emphasis is reflected in menus that draw on centuries of Amazonian culinary knowledge. The welcome dinner — guests' first meal on arrival after the boat transfer — is designed to introduce the flavours and ingredients of the Madre de Dios region through a sequence of small courses that reflects the reserve's biodiversity in edible form.
Four nights deep within the Peruvian Amazon — each day shaped by a different layer of the rainforest ecosystem: the canopy above, the river below, the forest floor after dark, and the human culture that has inhabited this landscape for millennia.
Private transfers and boat logistics are arranged by Richseen prior to arrival. The canopy walkway, dolphin observation, and night jungle walks are coordinated by Inkaterra's naturalist team from check-in.
Inkaterra's ecological reserve at Hacienda Concepción is distinguished from most Amazon lodge settings by the depth and continuity of its scientific programme. The company has maintained biological inventories of this reserve since the 1990s — recording over 600 bird species, 1,000 butterfly species, and 90 mammal species in a continuous scientific catalogue that documents the reserve's biodiversity over three decades. The naturalist guides who lead every excursion are trained by Inkaterra's conservation scientists, and the experiences they provide — the canopy walkway, the night jungle walk, the dolphin observation on the river — are constructed around scientific knowledge of the reserve's ecology rather than a general Amazon experience.
Richseen's four-night package is built around the four experiences that most fully express what the Madre de Dios basin uniquely offers: the canopy walkway session at dawn when the bird activity peaks; the pink river dolphin observation on the oxbow lakes; the night jungle walk when the forest floor's nocturnal species emerge; and the indigenous community visit that connects the ecological programme to the human culture that has inhabited this landscape for millennia. Each is arranged before arrival, so the Amazon Suite's full potential — the canopy, the river, the forest after dark — is immediately accessible from the first morning on the reserve.
Inkaterra Hacienda Concepción is located within a protected ecological reserve in the Peruvian Amazon near Tambopata National Reserve. Surrounded by dense rainforest and wildlife habitats, the lodge offers an authentic Amazon exploration experience with the comfort of sustainable luxury hospitality. Guests explore jungle trails, river ecosystems, and indigenous culture while supporting biodiversity conservation programs.
The Madre de Dios River basin in southeastern Peru contains one of the highest concentrations of biodiversity on Earth — a consequence of the river's drainage of the Andean foothills into the Amazon lowlands, creating habitat gradients that support an extraordinary range of species. Inkaterra's ecological reserve at Hacienda Concepción sits within this basin, on land that the company has protected and managed for conservation since the 1990s. The reserve is part of a biodiversity corridor connecting to Tambopata National Reserve — a continuous expanse of protected forest that provides the undisturbed habitat that the Amazon's most sensitive species require.
Inkaterra Hacienda Concepción has recorded over 600 bird species, 1,000 butterfly species, and 90 mammal species within its reserve — numbers that reflect the reserve's biological integrity rather than curated wildlife. The Amazon Suite overlooks the Madre de Dios rainforest from a cabaña elevated above the forest floor, with views into the canopy and the river visible through the trees. Richseen's four-night package layers the canopy walkway experience, pink river dolphin observation, night jungle wildlife walks, and an indigenous community visit across the stay.
All components are fully flexible — this is a curated starting point, refined with your Richseen specialist prior to confirmation.