Kavanayén is a Pemón mission town surrounded by rolling savanna and waterfalls. The trails here are gentle — no cloud forest scrambles or technical terrain — and the reward is swimming beneath falls that few visitors make the effort to reach.
The town sits at a crossroads of several waterfall circuits that can be done as half-day or full-day walks. Wet season (June–October) is actually the best time: the falls are at their most dramatic, mornings are reliably clear, and the savanna is green instead of scorched.
Gear
Trail shoes are fine — the terrain is gentle but can be muddy in wet season
Carry 2L minimum — no shade on the savanna
Open grassland with intense sun exposure
The whole point is swimming at the falls
Worse near water and in the late afternoon
Afternoon showers are routine in wet season
When to Go
Counter-intuitive: wet season is the best time here. Waterfalls are at full force, the savanna is green, and mornings are clear enough for hiking. Start early to finish before afternoon rains. Dry season waterfalls can be underwhelming trickles.
Practical Tips
Pemón families in Kavanayén offer guided walks to waterfalls that aren't on any map. This isn't required but supports the community directly and you'll see falls that independent visitors miss. Ask at the mission or any posada.
The savanna has no shade. Start hikes before 8am, carry more water than you think you need, and plan to be back or at a waterfall swimming hole by midday. Afternoon heat plus sun exposure is the main hazard here, not terrain.
Getting There
From Santa Elena de Uairén · ~120km, 3–4 hours by road
Kavanayén is reached via a turnoff from the Troncal 10, followed by a rough road that requires 4WD in wet season. Some sections are unpaved and deteriorate after heavy rain. Arrange transport through a posada in Santa Elena or hire a 4WD with driver.
There is no regular public transport to Kavanayén. Some travelers combine the trip with a visit to the Pemón communities further west.