I traveled through the Amazon jungle on a cargo ship for three days to the largest city in the world that is inaccessible by road. Here's what I saw...

Mykolas Juodele wanted to experience 'the power' of the Amazon River Photojournalist embarked on 435-mile journey through Peruvian rainforest READ MORE: Abandoned Cyprus – an ancient resort frozen in time

'The landscape was an endless lush jungle all around us for three days straight.< /p>

'I think what stuck in my mind the most was how peaceful and serene life is in the Amazon. People are humble and shy.'

These are the words of Mykolas Juodele, describing his three-day journey on a cargo ship through the depths of the forest Amazonian of Peru. . The goal? To reach the world's largest city inaccessible by road.

Extraordinary images show part of the 435-mile (700 km) journey along the river Amazon - the second longest in the world after the Nile - from the town of Yurimaguas to the town of Iquitos.

On board the cargo ship, Mykolas was sleeping among goods and livestock, including several hundred pigs. .

Mykolas Juodele embarked on a three-day journey on a cargo ship (photo) through the depths of Peru's Amazon rainforest to reach Iquitos, the largest city ​​in the world inaccessible by road

I traveled through the Amazon jungle on a cargo ship for three days to the largest city in the world that is inaccessible by road. Here's what I saw...
Mykolas Juodele wanted to experience 'the power' of the Amazon River Photojournalist embarked on 435-mile journey through Peruvian rainforest READ MORE: Abandoned Cyprus – an ancient resort frozen in time

'The landscape was an endless lush jungle all around us for three days straight.< /p>

'I think what stuck in my mind the most was how peaceful and serene life is in the Amazon. People are humble and shy.'

These are the words of Mykolas Juodele, describing his three-day journey on a cargo ship through the depths of the forest Amazonian of Peru. . The goal? To reach the world's largest city inaccessible by road.

Extraordinary images show part of the 435-mile (700 km) journey along the river Amazon - the second longest in the world after the Nile - from the town of Yurimaguas to the town of Iquitos.

On board the cargo ship, Mykolas was sleeping among goods and livestock, including several hundred pigs. .

Mykolas Juodele embarked on a three-day journey on a cargo ship (photo) through the depths of Peru's Amazon rainforest to reach Iquitos, the largest city ​​in the world inaccessible by road

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