Dreamglade

Peru

Dreamglade is a beautiful, lake-side Shamanic healing center in the heart of the Peruvian Amazon rainforest, just one hour’s drive from Iquitos. We offer safe, supportive Ayahuasca ceremonies and plant dietas under the guidance of our resident Shipibo curanderos, Raul Buanapico and Lidia Huayta, as well as free yoga classes and a natural sauna.

Come to DreamGlade for as long as you like, whether for just a week or even for a month or two…

We charge an ‘all inclusive’ and very reasonable daily rate for your stay which includes….

* Free, comfortable 4×4 transportation to and from the healing center
* Ayahuasca ceremonies 3 times per week with a maximum of 9-10 guests per ceremony
* Plant/flower baths
* Individual healing sessions with our shamanic healers
* Natural Sauna/Sweatlodge (2 -3 times per week)
* All meals
* Comfortable, lake-side, accommodation and rest areas
* Modern bathrooms and showers
* Free Yoga classes (2 – 3 times a week)
* Spanish/English translations
* Free laundry service
* Lake for swimming and jungle walks
* Extensive library on-site
* Complimentary ‘Mapachos’ (natural jungle tobacco)
* Counseling to better help you understand the process you are going through

*Traditional ‘master-plant dietas’ under the supervision of our resident Shipibo Curanderos and also traditional ‘Kambo’ (frog poison) treatments (there is a small additional charge for either of these*)

Reviews (95)

4.9 out of 5
Overall 4.9
  • shadowself
    shadowself
    December 21, 2023 at 5:35 pm

    I’m utterly torn on how to approach this review, but I’ve ultimately been moved to post here to try to help my fellow seekers. If anyone does a search for reviews of Dreamglade, you currently won’t find a single bad or even mediocre review. Nothing but glowing perfection. But since I read every one of those glowing reviews and then had an experience that didn’t match up, I feel like I owe it to the community to be the first to say something.

    First, let me point out that the place was operated for well over a decade by other folks (both in terms of ownership and long-term, well-beloved staff). So most reviews you are seeing (particularly on this site) are referring to a different experience. New owners Wade and Clarissa took over the place this summer. And a month or so after they did, the long-term well-beloved staff that had intended to stay on departed as well–which should tell you something. (I note here that I have zero issues with the current staff. They seem like lovely people, particularly the yoga/breathwork person. But they’re both super new and it honestly won’t surprise me to see them move on fairly quickly as well. I predict with Wade’s temperament that there is going to be frequent staff turnover.)

    In my opinion, Wade, the current owner (and main facilitator of the ceremonies) is well-intentioned. I think he believes that he is acting in people’s best interests. However the way in which he goes about his work is really in need of improvement. The signs were subtle at first, like disparaging comments made about the former retreat owner. Then it was insults about the former retreat staff. Then I noticed rude comments made about former retreat participants. Then came judgey comments made about a current retreat participant or a current staff member’s behavior. All within easy earshot of several other guests. Highly unprofessional to say the least. For some reason this didn’t seem to bother some people–I think some of the guests felt like Wade was treating them like an insider by openly bad-mouthing others. Or maybe they were just relieved they weren’t the subject of the comments. But it really turned me off from what is supposed to be a loving, healing environment.

    Then, during “share circle” (which occurs the morning after each ceremony in which each participant is encouraged to share aloud what happened the night before–a conversation that frequently involves providing very intimate details about one’s life), I noticed how Wade could be really rough on some people. It wasn’t clear at all what would set him off, but most days, someone would step on one of his emotional landmines. Maybe they would mention a diagnosis or medical/emotional condition they are dealing with–to which Wade would ridicule the person and their condition, telling them that it doesn’t exist and explaining that the person’s challenges were just consequences of someone’s weakness or cowardly approach to life or uncontrolled ego. While I’m guessing a large number of people who sit with Aya are people who have a pretty integrative view on mental/emotional/physical health issues and understand there definitely is a mind-body-connection, Wade’s insistence that microbes and viruses and cancer “absolutely don’t exist”–particularly when hurled at you in an insulting tone hours after a mind-altering experience–really go beyond his expertise and frankly needs to stop immediately.

    Sometimes Wade would get pissy because he didn’t think someone was “trying hard enough” to “get real.” Or sometimes he’d seem angry because people weren’t “healing” enough for his liking. Sometimes he decided to tell someone (aggressively) that they were completely wrong in their interpretations of their own visual or emotional experiences. It honestly didn’t seem to make sense who got what treatment but more times than not, at least one person every day would get the heavy stick of Wade’s disfavor. There were multiple times where I couldn’t believe people weren’t just walking out on him with the way he was treating them. I’m guessing if it weren’t for the fact that people are stuck in the absolute middle of nowhere with no practical way of leaving, they would. When I raised this behavior with some of my fellow guests some folks just said “well maybe that person really needs some tough love.” I guess I’m an outlier than I don’t feel that yelling at someone or demeaning them should be equated with love, but even if “tough love” is somehow a legitimate thing, I don’t believe anyone should be subjected to it without first consenting to be treated that way.

    Also, if for some reason you do not wish to participate in an ayahuasca ceremony during your stay, it doesn’t appear that you are allowed to sit it out. While I was there I witnessed someone who felt called not to drink one night and honestly they were harassed/emotionally coerced by Wade and the rest of the retreat staff until they agreed to do it. And there didn’t seem to be any kind of practical reason for it (the person wasn’t asking for their money back and they were willing to sit in the ceremony with the others or sit out–whatever the facilitators wanted). Wade just thought that person “needed the medicine” and set out on a campaign to emotionally coerce the person into not exercising their own free will. That’s just not ok. Sadly, in my opinion, Dreamglade just isn’t a place that seems to value a person’s own intuition or own decision-making while they embark on a deeply personal spiritual journey. Instead, Wade is there to tell you what to do, what to think, how to feel, and to be the ultimate judge of your soul’s journey.

    Anyway, in sum, I’m willing to say that I do believe Wade really wants to help people, but his approach is overly controlling and seems very tied in to his own ego and his way of dealing with guests can be, at times, rude, demeaning, and aggressive. Quite the opposite of how I believe someone in his position who is dealing with highly vulnerable people in a heightened emotional setting should be behaving. So buyer beware–if you’re into the so-called “tough love” approach than this retreat will totally be your cup of tea. If you don’t like that approach (hello C-PTSD and/or trauma survivors), you might seriously want to avoid Wade. I think he’d actively agree with the statement that he isn’t trying to “create a safe space” at his retreat center. For me, I found that the medicine itself was enough of a disrupting energy that could bring people to places of deep emotional unrest or discomfort. I wasn’t looking for other humans to pile on to that. And I really wasn’t ok with watching people be … well, frankly, kind of emotionally abused. And let me say in my own defense before you make assumptions of me: I have never ever in my life been called a “snowflake” or had people accuse me of being overly sensitive. I work in a very tough environment professionally. And I’ve been through some really harrowing shit personally with a square jaw. So I hope you don’t discount my comments as being from someone who is “fragile” who needs an overly soft-handed approach. Being in the hot-assed jungle with essentially no electricity and barely eating while you work on shifting years of spiritual gunk isn’t for the weak. And I didn’t show up there expecting to be coddled or comfortable.

    So how am I giving it a 2 star review when so far it’s a 0 star review? Well first I recognize that we are all very different. And I saw some of my fellow guests not be bothered by Wade’s approach. (And let’s be honest, the guy isn’t always behaving inappropriately. Sometimes he’s funny, personable, and caring!) I witnessed some of my fellow participants receive real legitimate healing while they were there and that matters to me. Also, Dreamglade is one of the most economically priced options out there. So if an occasionally abrasive egotistical facilitator isn’t going to bother you, then this place is pretty good.

    But mostly I couldn’t give a zero star review because Dreamglade has two incredible healers/shaman/curanderos. These people are truly special. Their guidance and protection during the ayahuasca ceremonies, and their attention to you outside of ceremonies, is incredible. Anyone who is lucky enough to spend time in their presence is blessed. They are the reason why I have agonized writing this review because I don’t want to say anything that might have negative consequences to them. But ultimately after a period of reflection, I also felt like I needed to break the odd digital silence on what’s going on at Dreamglade under the new owner. I know for a fact I’m not the only one who was concerned about Wade’s behavior. I can only hope that some of my fellow concerned attendees will start posting about their experiences as well. If enough people speak up, it might help encourage him to rethink his approach. And even if not, at least you can be warned in advance so you can be emotionally prepared for it.

    In case it’s helpful, here are a few other quick notes about the retreat’s offerings…

    KAMBO: Wade dispenses kambo on the weekends in a truly reckless manner that’s going to end him up in trouble some day. He doesn’t ask anyone any pertinent medical questions nor gives much by way of info that people should have about medical contraindications. Kambo is a beautiful medicine for many but it really should be given by someone who is paying attention to the details. And he’s definitely not ensuring that people are properly hydrated and/or not over-hydrated so some people were having rough reactions to it because of poor prep. So if you are interested in that, please do yourself a favor and thoroughly educate yourself before you come as to 1.) whether you should be doing it and 2.) what the appropriate prep for the ceremony is.

    PLANT BATHS: What they have is nice but it’s just one type–stored in a large garbage can so you can self-serve near the algae-filled pond (which I’m not entirely convinced is safe to swim in).

    INTEGRATION: Eh… other than the “share circle” after each ceremony, during which you may or may not be ridiculed or told how wrong you are about your reflections on your own experience, there is no integration. Other retreats offer follow-up integration services. They do put everyone who visits Dreamglade each month in a What’s App group (which frankly is kind of annoying since that means you’re stuck getting messages from dozens and dozens of people you never met) and I suppose they’d say you could reach out in that forum for integration that way but um… that’s not integration work. It’s just a venue to share vacation pics with fellow participants.

    LAUNDRY SERVICE: I honestly have zero idea why they include this on the website. They have a water pump, a bucket, and a clothes line to offer you. There is no “service.” I mean that’s fine, I can certainly hand-wash my own laundry. It’s just from the way it was described, I was expecting something else. And depending on the weather, your clothes might not dry–either because it’s raining or because it’s too humid. I wish I hadn’t relied on the idea of a “laundry service” and just brought enough clothes to get through my time there.

    ACCOMMODATIONS: The nicest tambo is honestly the newest one, which is the shared one. The private ones are mostly falling into disrepair, overrun with outdoor pests, and can only be accessed by walking longer distances over rickety wood paths that shift under your feet and are highways for bullet ants (yikes!) So honestly I’d recommend the shared tambo, which is closest to the ceremonial space. (I actually recommend sleeping in the ceremonial space above all else but you can’t leave your personal items in there.) Look, you get what you pay for. Do not expect anything but the barest accommodations and expect items like mattresses, pillows, mosquito netting, etc to be … um…. not nice (old, stained, stinky, and very uncomfortable). So if you care about sleeping well and have the space, you might actually want to bring your own pillow at least. But hey, that’s why they aren’t charging you more so no complaints here. You get one set of sheets and one towel. Thankfully there are a few flushing toilets on the property (near the dining hall and the ceremony space). And the staff did a terrific job at ensuring that the 2 outdoor showers the guests shared were cleaned multiple times a day, for which I was deeply appreciative. (Just be prepared to have the plastic sheet open with the wind and have you flash whoever is hanging around.) FYI: Most people brought eyeshades (to help them sleep past sunrise) and ear plugs (to help block out the cacophony of jungle frogs). You definitely want to bring sunscreen and you might want to bring some natural bug repellent although the bugs aren’t completely awful there.

    PLANT DIETAS: The plant dietas are legitimate and are a great offering here for a very modest reasonable extra fee. You should definitely partake!

    SAUNA: It’s ridiculously hot. And I’m not sure a Western medical doctor would encourage you to do given the physical conditions you’re already under in already hot/humid conditions while you’re likely already dehydrated from purging from every orifice of your body, but it was pretty great. 🙂

    JUNGLE WALKS: Skip ’em and don’t bother bringing rubber boots or hiking shoes for it. You won’t see anything interesting and if you’re already struggling from heat and humidity there’s no point in making it worse. You’ll see more wildlife if you pack a pair of binoculars (or borrow the pair from the library) and sit at the pond and look in the trees surrounding the trees. Cute little monkeys, toucans and lots of other birds, stunning butterflies, tons of frogs. And yes, plenty of snakes. But there isn’t much point in going on the one semi-lame jungle walk that is offered, although it is likely the only exercise you’ll get there.

    COMMUNICATION: The person who responds to their emails, Paul, is a great resource. If you’re planning on going on other adventures while in Peru (esp. if you’re looking for other types of shamanic ceremonies in particular), just ask him. He’s great.

    HANDICRAFTS: The two Shipibo healers have embroidered stunning tapestries and mantas, hand-made jewelry, and some clothing for sale at the retreat so try not to buy too much of that stuff in Iquitos before you arrive.

    Note: This review was edited for over-capitalization, but has otherwise been left in its original form.

  • Pinja
    Pinja
    October 31, 2023 at 2:05 pm

    I really enjoyed my stay at Dreamglade. Wade and Clarisa do a great job running the centre. And Paul the email guy is awesome! Thanks for hanging out with us:)

  • Colderweather
    Colderweather
    June 26, 2023 at 11:29 pm

    Absolutely incredible! This was my first ayahuasca experience and I arrived with a hardened heart and decades of psychological armor in place. I left 11 days later with a softened heart, a lightness I have never felt before, and a completely new perspective on life. The staff of Dream Glade is wonderful — supportive, kind, wise, and friendly. An incredible collection of people with the biggest hearts I’ve ever encountered. Stace has built a magical healing center. The food is great, the dieta was a cool experience, the malloca is a perfect space for the ceremonies, and the tambos are perfect places for recuperation. Thank you Stace. Thank you Brittany and Ben and everyone else at Dream Glade. Thank you!

  • Sarah S.
    Sarah S.
    April 11, 2023 at 11:54 am

    I put a lot of work looking for the place I wanted to go for my second experience with Ayahuasca. I wanted a place where I could have an extended stay to go deeper, a place that had traditional Shipibo experienced ayahuascaros, potent ayahuasca, and was clean and safe for a 68 year old female traveling solo. Dreamglade gave all of this to me and much more. It was one of the few places where the ayahuascaros lived on site and made themselves available for questions and discussions throughout the stay. Additional effective plant medicine healing was given for my deep and long term smokers cough. This was a HUGE benefit to me. Don Raul and Dona Lidia are powerful healers in their Iqcaros with the spirit energy unmistakably felt and sometimes seen in the beautiful maloca during ceremonies. Dreamglade was also one of the few retreats to offer plant dietas so one could forge a deeper relationship with the plant world. I found this interesting and beneficial to my whole experience. I did seven ceremonies in 15 days with rest days in between each. Dreamglade limits the number of people to 10 people and those (mostly) young people were from all over the world and were really really lovely. Paul, Stacy, Drew and Brittany put their whole hearts and souls to helping guests heal and expand consciousness. It matters to them. YOU matter to them. Some positive changes that ayahuasca produced were readily apparent to me and some are still being revealed. She is a Powerful, Loving and Thorough Plant Spirit which reached places inside I could not on my own and I am grateful for Dreamglade and all involved for providing the opportunity in such a safe and beautiful surrounding. God Bless you all!

  • nfcarbone
    nfcarbone
    January 21, 2023 at 5:09 pm

    I attended Dreamglade for 2 weeks, 6 ceremonies, in July 2022.

    Stace, Drew, and Britt provided a standard of care I had never experienced before. It was humbling to watch them serve their guests. It was my first time working with Aya and I was afraid. The team helped me every step of the way. I can say with confidence they know what they’re doing.

    The location is clean and comfortable. It would not be a stretch to call it a simple paradise. For me, DG was the perfect place to disconnect, relax, and “work on my stuff”.

    I was hesitant to post a review so I could keep this place a hidden gem, but that would be a sin 🙂

    P.s. from my perspective, and in general, the guests who came to do work on themselves benefitted greatly, and those who came for a wild ride got very little.

  • benGrock8
    benGrock8
    September 6, 2021 at 11:48 am

    A beautiful setting, powerful medicine, curanderos as skilled as they are caring—Dreamglade’s got all of the core pillars that a retreat center would need in order to be considered an excellent place to spend some time with Ayahuasca.

    But Dreamglade also has something much more important going for it. In my opinion, when you’re looking for somewhere to work with Aya, finding a place that’s run by people you can really trust should be the most crucial factor in your search. You want to be able to trust that you’ll be fully supported in and out of ceremony, to trust that both your safety and personal growth are going to be cultivated at all times, and to trust that everything about the center you choose is geared towards promoting healing first and foremost.

    After a total of nine weeks spent there, I can’t possibly fathom trusting anyone with my healing journey more than I trust Dreamglade’s incredible team.

    From the first contact I made with them, emailing back and forth with their scheduling-guru, Paul, I felt like I was being treated with nothing but the upmost integrity and care. Paul went above and beyond in his correspondence with me before I’d even booked a single ceremony. And from there, my experience with everything Dreamglade has to offer only got better and better.

    I’ve spent a good chunk of time at Dreamglade. For my first visit three years ago, I stayed for three weeks and then earlier this year I went back for another six weeks of working with the medicine. Even though Dreamglade is affordable relative to many centers, six weeks there was a big, scary investment to make. But I was really struggling and felt like they could help me, just like they had in the past. I was right. Both of my stays directly resulted in a different physical issue that had been plaguing me for many terrible months being cured completely. And along the way, my respect, admiration, and love for every member of the Dreamglade team—from the curanderos to the facilitators to the cooks, maintenance workers, and groundskeeper—has only grown and grown.

    The ceremonies feel every bit as powerful and intense as they do safe and supported. The work that Dreamglade’s curanderos do in the maloka is truly amazing—mind-blowing enough that it’s challenged and expanded my perceptions of reality in the best possible ways. But I’ve also seen Stace, Drew, and Jess—the owner and facilitators—be every bit as amazing (albeit in ways more familiar to this dimension) in how skillfully and compassionately they guide guests through their experiences. No matter how deep I went, no matter what came up for me or the other participants, there was never a moment where I didn’t feel like we all were totally supported, safe, and held. I truly believe that it was because of that feeling of complete safety and trust that I was able to allow myself to really let go and let the medicine do its thing.

    Everything that happens outside of ceremony is pretty amazing too. When I was first looking for a place to work with Aya, I didn’t want to go somewhere to have a fun and trippy experience in the jungle; I wanted a center that was built expressly for the purpose of providing real healing—basically a jungle-style hospital that practiced Traditional Amazonian Plant Medicine. And that’s what I found at Dreamglade…although the healing “work” can be plenty fun and plenty trippy in its own right.

    There aren’t many activities at Dreamglade, and I think this is one of its many strong points. The few that are provided (gentle yoga, healing breathwork, and a wonderful sauna) are each there to help you get the most out of your time at the center rather than distract you from anything that comes up. The sparse day-to-day itinerary affords lots of time to process your experiences, read fascinating and often extremely helpful books from the library, get one-on-one healing work done on you by the curanderos, and, best of all, to discusses whatever came up in ceremony or whatever’s going on in your life with the facilitators—whose guidance and support are absolutely top-notch. I’ve had many talks with Drew that put any therapy session I’ve ever had in my life to shame.

    In my experience, working with Ayahuasca is beautiful, challenging, powerfully healing, literally awesome, and one of the few things I’ve encountered so far in my life that I’d go as far as to call sacred. It’s not something that I do lightly. I truly believe that to get the best out of something like Aya, you need to be working with people who know how to cultivate every aspect of that experience in an unimpeachably safe environment.

    I feel incredibly lucky, blessed even, to have found exactly that at Dreamglade. It has become my healing home. I find it hard to imagine that I’d ever want to drink Ayahuasca anywhere else.

  • zebhastings
    zebhastings
    July 26, 2021 at 8:31 pm

    5 stars. Stacy and the crew really care about helping others and believe in the work they are doing. After spending 5 days there, I believe in the work they’re doing too. Down to earth, personal. This is the place you want to go.

  • goinghome
    goinghome
    March 17, 2021 at 2:11 pm

    I had my first ayahuasca experience here early last year, and I’m so glad I did. Stacy, Drew, Jess, and the ayahuasqueros Raúl and Lydia are all great people – very understanding and generous. It was bare-bones in some ways, but that’s what I wanted. I wasn’t looking for a spa experience or guided daily activities; I wanted to hang out in the Amazon and learn. You can borrow boots and hike walk the trails around the compound (the dogs will come with you), or you can just swim in the lake, take plant baths, and write/think/talk. There was also yoga if we wanted it, and breathwork. Raúl and Lydia are really special to work with. I had prepared a lot for my trip, doing lots of kundalini and meditation and avoiding alcohol, caffeine, and sugar, and going on the recommended dieta for the week or two beforehand. I had a rough last night (good for me ultimately, but rough) and they took good care of me – everyone there went over and above in a way that I found almost hard to accept, because culturally I’m not used to that. I would recommend Dreamglade in a heartbeat.

  • Mikail
    Mikail
    November 14, 2020 at 5:03 am

    preface: I didn’t actually end up going because my travel plans changed, but I would like to talk about the quality of their online (customer?) service because it definitely deserves a mention.

    I have been engaged in discussion with Stacy since mid-october and have been consistently surprised by the care, attention and selflessness he has shown.

    For example, when travel restrictions were uncertain in October he went out of his way to clarify the travel situations and other plans information to the government’s policies, well above the call of duty for an aya resort.

    Furthermore, all communication was immensely prompt and hospitable. All emails were personalized and gave very transparent information about costs and procedures. If you want to know exactly what you’re getting into I would highly recommend this place.

    I knew that Stacy and the team had their client’s best interests in mind when they actually went so far as to recommend ANOTHER aya retreat (and give their private email) when it became apparent that I might not be able to make it on the available timings.

    i regret not being able to go but thought the least I could do was commend their customer service!

  • BiancaS
    BiancaS
    April 17, 2020 at 10:10 am

    I am truly so grateful for Dreamglade and its entire team. I spent 10 days at the center and participated in 4 ceremonies. This was my first Ayahuasca experience and while I had been feeling called to experience Aya for 2 years it wasn’t until an acquaintance recommended DG that I finally felt compelled to commit. It was imperative to me that I find a place that was safe and reputable.

    Stace, Drew, Jess, and the curanderos Raoul and Lydia are all experts at their work. Every single one of them not only has experience and passion in what they do but they are also people of integrity. With Aya being trendy these days, there is an inundation of retreats and individuals facilitating ceremonies – many of which are questionable. Dreamglade is the real deal. The curanderos know what they are doing and the facilitators are always alert and checking in on everyone both inside and outside of the ceremonies. They ensure that everyone is supported and they are always available for questions and conversations regarding your aya experiences or even just life in general.

    The space itself is such an oasis and I find myself missing it quite often. There is something to say about doing it in the Amazonian jungle. You can really feel the energy of this magical place. I felt like I was truly able to disconnect from the outside world and give myself the time and space to really be with myself and look inside. I also connected well with the other guests – people from all walks of life who you could learn something from each one of them.

    I feel so incredibly lucky for having had this experience. If you are feeling called to experience Aya, especially in Peru go to Dreamglade! I have no doubt that I will be returning in the future. Thank you DG team!

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