Having seen several different types of rainforests, Anil and I decided to head to Costa Rica for this year’s Spring Break so that we could see more. I’ve been here a couple times, but my trips to CR rainforests have been quick visits and I wanted the chance to spend quality time here. We decided to focus on Corcovado (on the recommendation from several people), but I also wanted to see Allan, a guide at Manuel Antonio who did the Earthwatch Sea Turtle fellowship with me several years ago. And our timing also allowed for a few extra days in the cloudforest, so that’s where we started our trip.
We met first in Mexico City and flew together into San Jose. After picking up our rental car, we immediately headed out of the city. On first impression, San Jose is a big city (complete with the accompanying traffic) but it feels like the suburbs (with small, narrow streets and very few stoplights). It took over an hour just to get out of the city, and we were often stuck behind slow-moving trucks and school busses that belched out noxious clouds of black smoke.
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We were headed further north, where Anil had booked us at a sustainable ecolodge up in the San Luis Valley. We had 3 days here, at a great jumping off point to Monteverde and the surrounding mountains.
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| The rough roads to Monteverde |
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| The best tilapia we’ve ever had – YUM! |
The next morning we had breakfast at the lodge (a delicious gallo pinto and fried eggs), then drove up another bumpy road to Santa Elena. Since we hadn’t made any reservations, we stopped at a coffee plantation but couldn’t get a tour, so we went into town for a quick coffee (and to the grocery store for random snacks and water), then drove up to the Sky Tour for lunch before our bridge tour.
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| I spy with my little eye… a walking stick! Do you? |
We saw a rather large anole, an orange kneed tarantula, several sleeping hummingbirds and a hummingbird nest (complete with baby hummingbirds), a toucan, and two of the coolest insects – a gold jewel scarab beetle and a walking stick that was perfectly camouflaged to look like lichen.
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| Side-striped Palm Pit Viper |
We also spotted two different snakes – a Side-striped Palm Pitviper and an Eyelash Palm Pitviper. They are called pit vipers because of their heat-sensing pits, which are located between their nostrils and eyes. These pits allow the snakes to detect the body heat of their prey, making them highly effective hunters. The venom of pit vipers is also highly potent and can cause serious injury or death in humans.
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| Coppery-headed Emerald |
Right at the start of the hike, we stopped to watch hummingbirds that were feeding off the purple flowers that had been planted at the reserve entrance. Costa Rica has over 50 species of colibris, or hummingbirds, and the Monteverde area is home to around 14 of them. It was fun to watch them buzz around, but so hard to photograph since they dart around so quickly and rarely stop to perch.
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| Keel-billed Toucan |
We saw two toucans in the distance (which we got a good look at through the spotting scope), as well as crested guan (turkey-like birds) and golden-browed chlorophonia (both of which shared an avocado tree).
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| Blue-crowned motmot, with its pendulum-like tail feather |
We also saw a blue-crowned motmot (with his twin bell-shaped tail feathers), a slate-throated redstart (with a crown of red on top of his head), several violet sabrewings (the largest colibri in Costa Rica), purple-throated mountaingem (another vibrant hummingbird) and a yellow throated Euphonia in a hanging nest.
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| Female Resplendent Quetzal |
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| Male Resplendent Quetzal |
The male that we spotted was partially hidden behind some trees, but his twin tail feathers were easy to see (since they were almost three feet long and fluttering in the wind!) The female, which lacked the red highlights and long tailfeathers, was much easier to spot. It was a good time to see them since it was nesting season, and their favorite food is the wild avocado so they were in the same tree as the guan and the chlorophonia. Such a thrill to see them!
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| Our table, in our private glass box |
The day before, Anil had seen a sign for the San Luis treetop dining experience, and since the ecolodge was closed for dinner that night, we decided to try it out. It turns out, this was truly a unique fine dining experience. We were up on the hillside in our own little glass cabin, with a great view of the town below us and the Pacific Ocean in the distance. We got reservations for 5PM, which meant we also got a lovely view of the sunset! And dinner was a “tour of Costa Rica” – a fun culinary experience!


















