The flagship Gran Sabana trek. Five to seven days through progressively more dramatic terrain: open savanna, river fords, a grueling cloud forest ascent, and then the otherworldly summit plateau where two billion years of erosion have carved quartzite into formations that look like nothing else on Earth.
The route starts in Paraitepuy and crosses flat savanna for the first day before reaching the base of the tepui. The cloud forest ascent is the crux — steep, muddy, and physically demanding. Above the forest line the trail disappears entirely, which is why Pemón guides are not optional. The summit is a different world: cold, perpetually wet, and scattered with natural rock pools, crystal formations, and endemic plants found nowhere else.
Gear
Footwear
Waterproof with ankle support — river crossings and slick rock on the ascent
Clothing
Summit is perpetually wet — you will get rained on every day up top
Summit is 25–30°C colder than the savanna base
Shelter
Summit camping under rock overhangs — guides provide group tents but verify
Rated to 0°C minimum — summit drops to 2–4°C at night with wind
Safety
Gear
60–70L for personal gear; porters carry group equipment
Essential for the steep descent — saves your knees
Everything on the summit gets wet — protect sleeping bag and electronics
Lighting
Early morning starts and summit camp has no lighting
Hydration
3L capacity — refill from streams on the approach
Protection
No shade on the savanna approach — intense UV at this latitude
Provisions
Guides arrange meals but bring personal snacks for summit days
When to Go
The summit is wet regardless of season — plan for rain every day. The difference is the approach: drier months mean safer river crossings and less slippery trails through the cloud forest. June–August rains can make river fords dangerous or impassable.
Practical Tips
All Roraima treks require licensed Pemón guides — this is a legal requirement and a practical necessity. Routes above the cloud forest line are completely unmarked. Weather changes fast, the terrain is genuinely hazardous, and the Pemón have navigated this mountain for generations. Guides are arranged through operators in San Francisco de Yuruaní or Paraitepuy.
The summit (2,810m) is not extreme altitude, but the combination of cold (2–12°C), persistent moisture, wind exposure, and multi-day exertion catches people off guard. You'll go from 30°C savanna to sleeping in near-freezing wet conditions within two days. Bring proper cold-weather and waterproof gear even though the trailhead feels tropical.
The neighboring tepui Kukenan (Matawí) is sometimes offered as an alternative or combined trek. It sees far fewer visitors and the summit is more exposed. Discuss options with your guide operator — Kukenan requires more technical comfort and the approach is less established.
Getting There
From Santa Elena de Uairén · ~70km to Paraitepuy trailhead
Most trekkers arrange transport through their guide operator from Santa Elena or San Francisco de Yuruaní. The road to Paraitepuy requires 4WD — your operator handles this.
Getting to Santa Elena: Daily buses from Ciudad Bolívar (10–12 hours). Flights to Santa Elena are infrequent — most travelers fly to Ciudad Bolívar or Puerto Ordaz and take the bus south through the Gran Sabana.