Indian Village, Panama
The Chocó, or Embera, people live in small villages of 5 to 20 houses
along the banks of the rivers throughout the Chucunaque/Tuira/Balsas
River watersheds in the Darien Province of Panama. There are generally
three villages on each tributary that branches off from the main river
system. Each village is about a half day's walk apart. The villages are
built on a small rise, set approximately 100 feet in from the river. The
houses of the village are set about 20–50 feet apart atop the rise on
posts, with no walls, but tall thatched roofs. Around each village, the
jungle is partly cleared and replaced by banana and plantain
plantations, a commercial crop for the Embera, who sell them to get
cash for their outboard motors, mosquito nets, and the like. The hills
leading down to the river from the villages are usually hard packed
reddish clay. There are sometimes large boulders being played on by
naked children. Dugout canoes are usually seen pulled up on the
riverbanks.
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