Archive | Costa Rica National Parks

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The votes are in – Most popular vacation spot in Costa Rica

Posted on 13 February 2012 by puravida

most popular costa rica location

 

The Tico Times recently posted a survey asking readers for their favorite vacation destination in Costa Rica.  Keep in mind this is “vacation spot” which is not necessarily the same as “best place to live” in Costa Rica. Here are the results when I last checked the website:

25%  Central Pacific – which includes Jaco and Manuel Antonio
24%  Guanacaste Beaches (northwest Pacific coast)
14%  Osa Peninsula (southwest Pacific coast – more remote)
12%  Arenal
11%  Caribbean coast (including Puerto Viejo and Tortuguero)
10% Nicoya Peninsula
3%  Monteverde  (Cloud Forest)

 

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Airlines Offer Private Charters over Costa Rica

Posted on 10 February 2012 by CarlosO

For those wishing to view the spectacular and varying landscapes from a higher vantage point, a number of airlines offer private charters over the region. Each of the following reputable companies include the latest aircraft maintained to the highest safety standards with pilots who have logged in more flightairlines to and in Costa Rica hours than the busiest commercial pilots.

Nature Air

Nature Air, the country’s largest private charter company, also includes the only twin-engine aircraft fleet in Costa Rica. In addition, it is also the world’s first carbon-neutral airline dedicated toward a sustainable environment. It offers 74 daily charter flights on three types of aircraft: the DeHavilland DHC-6 Twin Otter Series 300 with a maximum seating of 19 passengers, the seven-passenger Beechcraft King Air E90, and the Cessna 208-B Grand Caravan, which can accommodate up to 12 passengers. The destinations include all of the major tourist areas from Arenal to Tortuguero as well as flights to Managua in Nicaragua, and Bocas del Toro in Panama. In regard to safety, the company is the only certified Part 121 airlines in the country, which is the highest certification level for both commercial and charter flights. The company also operates its own aviation-training school where each pilot is trained to these high aviation standards. The private charter rates vary by the type of aircraft, number of passengers, and final destination.

Macaw Air

Macaw Air, based at the Liberia International Airport in northwest Costa Rica, has offered private charter flights for sightseeing over a number of major destinations since 2004. It includes a single-engine Cessna 206 that seats up to five passengers with a cruising range of up to approximately 700 miles. The flights depart from either Liberia or Tamarindo to a variety of destinations such as Tortuguero, Arenal, Drake Bay, and the beautiful Quepos region on the Pacific Coast. It also includes flights to Bocas del Toro and Panama City in Panama, and the beautiful colonial city of Granada in Nicaragua. Rates vary by the overall length of the flight, the number of passengers, and the amount of luggage.

Aerotec Costa Rica Airplane Charters

Aerotec Costa Rica Airplane Charters provides both business and private charters to 34 different public and private airports throughout the country. Its large fleet of aircraft range from single-engine Cessnas that seat up to five passengers to the latest 12-passenger turboprops. The company also maintains a business partnership with several jet charter operators, which offers flights on additional aircraft such as a four-passenger Cessna Citation and a 15-passenger Global Express. Through this network, flights can be arranged to any destination in North and South America. Each of the aircraft are regularly maintained to the highest FAA safety standards at the employee-owned COOPESA company located just outside of San José.

HeliJet

HeliJet offers a variety of charter flights for everything from business touring, private sightseeing, and aerial photography. Its fleet of four, single- and twin-engine aircraft include a Cessna Caravan, Piper Seneca, Cessna 206, and a King Air E90. The climate-controlled aircraft includes seating for up to 12 passengers and travels anywhere in Costa Rica. The company was established by Juan Carlos Arguedas, who was a former commerical pilot for TACA Airlines, and each pilot is FAA licensed and trained to the highest international safety standards. The rates vary by the type of aircraft, number of passengers, length of the flight, and the amount of luggage.

These four, air charter companies provide a wide variety of destinations for your next trip to the exciting and beautiful country of Costa Rica. With some of the highest safety standards in the region, all you have to do is sit back, enjoy the view in the climate-controlled cabin, and see why the country is the top tourist destination in Central America.

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Conserving Turtles and Our Sanity

Posted on 08 January 2012 by peterbuilt

Costa Rica: Conserving Turtles and Our Sanity

Travelling is not always for the faint hearted. I found this out the hard way during my four month trip around the world last year with my friend Rachel. What follows is the first of my honest, not-found-in-Lonely-Planet accounts of travelling, detailing all we experienced on a single day as we journeyed through Costa Rica, from a hostel in the capital, to a sea turtle-conservation project deep in the Caribbean jungle…

After an early start one morning, Rach and I found ourselves hanging out in the hostel kitchen, packing up a highly nutritious breakfast/brunch/lunch/general daily food-ration of Pringles and Mediterranean herb crackers, in order to fuel us as we cracked on with our day of intense travelling.costa rica leatherback turtle

The first part of our journey was a coach to Sixaola, a small village on the East Coast of Costa Rica which would take six delightful hours. For the most part this drive was fairly pleasant, interspersed only with a small and gratuitously angry man demanding to see our tickets literally about once every 10 minutes, as if we could somehow have leapt off the bus and swapped places with a ticketless hooligan in between times.

As the journey wore on, we began to pass through some highly questionable living arrangements, otherwise referred to as ‘towns’. This sowed a seed of panic in my mind, as we had been told to get a taxi from Sixaola to the beach itself – a mode of transportation which appeared very much absent from the ramshackle, rustic scenery that whizzed by. When we eventually arrived in Sixaola, my fears were proved vaild. We alighted next to a highly suspicious looking Panama border, standing in a dusty dirt track surrounded by bags, and a cellophane-encased pillow that Rachel had for some reason insisted on buying. Seeing nothing vaguely resembling a taxi in the surrounding area, we decided the best thing to do in the circumstances would be to stand still and argue. Presently, a kindly man cruised over and asked if we were looking for a taxi. Despite every morsel of information I had ever read about taxi caution and safety, we gladly confirmed that a taxi was indeed exactly what we desperately wanted. He seemed to acknowledge this, but then just wandered off, leaving us alone and confused by the roadside.

What felt like an eternity later, he returned with some highly jovial individual driving a pick-up truck. As much as this seemed like a well-seasoned recipe for mugging/general advantage taking, we slung our bags in the back, and clambered into the sweltering cabin. A few minutes of stunted Spanish conversation followed, which consisted mainly of the driver continually yelping ‘vamos Gandoca!’

Happily trundling along the track over hearty potholes and string bridges, the heat from the sun slowly melting the plastic covering on Rachel’s pillow onto my leg, we spied a large family waiting outside a dilapidated house by the roadside, waving the truck over. After an indiscernible conversation between them and the driver, they proceeded to clamber into the back of the truck with our bags and settle themselves down. The rest of the journey to Gandoca was spent in a concerned manner, constantly checking out the old rear-view mirror for any signs of bag-rummaging or valuable-stealing. Once they were dropped off we only had to stop for a large Iguana sunning itself in the middle of the path, which had to be forcibly shooed away by the driver with an angry yell.

After about a thousand hours, we arrived at what looked like a beach, but could see literally nowhere that vaguely resembled a conservation centre. Tired, hungry and overheated, we aggressively asked the man why he had not taken us to the address provided. He insisted that he had. This argument went on for several fractious minutes, interrupted only by me threatening to ring the language school who had organised the trip, and then realising there was no signal available whatsoever, until he sighed, flopped his considerable bulk back into the cab, and drove us about five minutes further down the road to some kind of deserted bar. Presently, a portly man in a G-Unit t-shirt bowled out, and informed us that the station was but 50 metres from where we had just pulled up. We then found ourselves jolted suddenly backwards by our jovial driver reversing at high speed back down the path.

Once we had eventually located the station and been met by Christine, one of the staff members, we were given some more amazing news by her – ‘Er, we didn’t actually know you guys were coming… you can share a room with Abby?’ And lo and behold, we were shoved unceremoniously into what can only be described as two bunk-shelves in the corner of someone else’s shed. After being left alone, we settled down on our bags, and wondered what on earth would become of us next.

After an angry and panicked conversation, Rach and I decided to make the best of a bad situation and headed cautiously over to dinner in the vain hope that we would not have to sit, surrounded by a fog of anxiety, on a lonely table. Dinner was rice and beans, something that would become pretty much the main feature of our lives as the days of turtle conservation passed by. Luckily, a sprightly young Dutch boy by the name of Elias decided to take pity on us at the dinner table and so our time was spent generally chatting to him and comparing English and Dutch culture.

Soon after this, Rach and I received our turtle-saving training and were then sent on our merry way to our first night patrol. Night patrol, a hellish ordeal disguised as a worthwhile, animal conservation exercise, comes in 4 hour shifts at either 8pm or 12 midnight. It consists of a group of volunteers/staff/locals ploughing up and down the beach in the wet, fly-infested sand mounds, until that hallowed moment when a turtle is spotted, flippering its cumbersome way up the beach to lay some eggs. I was put on patrol with our unwitting roommate Abby, and Jairo, one of the locals. After about a million silent years of trudging through silty textured sand dunes, Jairo spotted a tortuga. Costa Rica beach baby turtlesHe instantly handed me a pair of latex gloves and a plastic bag and shoved me towards the nest with an encouraging grunt of ‘venga!’ At first, the task of bag-holder, watching as the turtle deposited her future offspring into my plastic sack, seemed like the most magical experience possible. However, as time wore by and the eggs kept coming thick and fast and my arms became less and less alive by the second, the awe was very much bleeding, slowly but surely, into intense pain. Only Jairo’s spindly weight leaning across me to grab the full bag caused me to snap back to reality from a pain-induced stupor, and soon we were back on the beach again.

By the time I returned, blistered, exhausted, aching and covered in sand at 4am, a nice clean bed was the only thing that could heal the pain. I then remembered that I had no such thing, and instead was forced to clamber in the dark under my shoddily erected mosquito net, on to a damp mattress that had become all the more uncomfortable due to the fact that the middle slat of the bed had fallen out, causing a dip in the mattress line for a delightful pile of sand to collect in. What tomorrow would bring, lord only knew.

By Emily Frost, WessexScene.co.uk
The complete versions of all my travel blogs can be found on http://idiotsgotravelling.blog.com

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Costa Rica is All About Canyoneering Next to a Volcano

Posted on 02 January 2012 by krich

Canopying goes hand-in-hand with Costa Rica. Maybe it’s the allure of the seven volcanoes and the lush flora and fauna they support or the desire to get down and dirty, but visitors to the country often have communing with nature on their minds and we’re no different.

Instead of ziplining through the trees and crossing swing bridges on the Caribbean/rainforesty side of the country, however, we were able to go whole hog on the Pacific/dry forest side in the Rincón de la Vieja Volcano National Park of the Guanacaste region, where canopying combines with ziplining, rappeling, rock climbing, canyoneering and—yes, swing bridges—to make an experience simultaneously exhilarating and exhausting. There’s no one word to describe it, but for now “adventure” will just have to do.

Canyon in Costa Rica

It begins easily enough. The lower half of your body is jimmied into harnesses and a helmet buckled onto your head, where nervous sweat is already starting to bead. From base at the Hacienda Guachipelin’s Adventure Tours HQ, it’s only a 2-minute walk to the first platform, from which you will take the plunge to zoom the longest of 12 ziplines.

All in all, there’s those 12 ziplines, 24 platforms, 2 climbing walls, a stop to rappel (upside-down or rightside-up) above the rushing river, Tarzan moments, a swing bridge and some light hiking. It feels awesome while you’re getting the grit under your nails and some air time, but bring Icy Hot for the next day, trust us.

Pricing for the Hacienda Guachipelin Adventure tour is $50 per adult/$40 per student/$30 per child, and your hotel can typically arrange the transfers and tours. You don’t need to be in American Gladiator shape to go for it, by the way. Every platform has one or two guides to hook you up, answers questions, help out or just calm you down before doing that spider rappel only feet from Class IV rapids.

Pro-tip: While strapping your camera around you works on most parts of the course, don’t try to keep your iPhone in your pocket or even bring a bag. Minimal or nothing is the rule here, which is why we don’t have any videos of the action. Come prepared with more than a wriststrap, and a plastic baggie in case of rain would be advisable.

Gallery: Ziplining and Canopying in Costa Rica

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Costa Rica – Cocos Island

Posted on 24 December 2011 by peterbuilt

Costa Rica-based Undersea Hunter Group, one of the world’s preeminent adventure dive operators, is supplying its DeepSee submersible and her mothership Argo for the voyage, making two dives a day to depths of up to 1,800 feet. The subs will allow OWOO to provide its audiences with an unprecedented look into the biodiversity of Cocos Island.

Following a 36-hour trip from San Jose, Costa Rica to Cocos Island, the OWOO team successfully completed three days of diving. They are joined by filmmaker Howard Hall and ichthyologist Dr. Richard Pyle aka the “fish expert.”

Shaun MacGillivray, producer at MacGillivray Freeman Films and managing director of One World One Ocean, provided insight into the beauty of Cocos Island and the first day of diving at the Everest wall, a unique seamount teeming with marine life.

“Cocos Island feels and looks like the setting of Jurassic Park. Uninhabitable. Prehistoric. Natural. Lush. While the island itself is beautiful, its underwater world is even more stunning,” said MacGillivray. “As filmmakers, we’ve been amazed at the process of launching a sub, which is a mammoth structure weighing more than 15,000 pounds. It’s definitely given us a whole new appreciation for scientists who do this on a routine basis.”

Check out the wonderful photos here

Costa Rica Cocos Island

 

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Nectandra Institute, Monteverde Cloud Forest Biological Reserve, Arenal Volcano National Park

Posted on 18 November 2011 by Paul Clayton

You’ll be following in Richard’s footsteps as you visit the Nectandra Institute, Monteverde Cloud Forest Biological Reserve, Arenal Volcano National Park, and Tortuguero National Park. And you’ll do so with Costa Rica Expedition’s legendary master naturalist-guide, Carlos Gómez, and with Felipe Arias, the uncanny wildlife trackers featured in Richard’s PBS special.

Fourteen departures are scheduled for the coming year, beginning with Dec 17-25, 2011.

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Caño Island Biological Reserve is forbidden to visitors

Posted on 12 November 2011 by peterbuilt

Forbidden islands have long captivated, especially ones shrouded in mists, forests and legends of treasure, pirates and Indians. Add world-class diving and snorkeling along with a world hot spot for lightning strikes, and you get one of the most fantastic and unique islands on the planet. Caño Island is all this, plus you can visit it without going on an extended cruise.

While most of the world’s most famous wild islands are reached by heading out to sea for days at a time, Caño Island lies less than an hour’s boat ride off Costa Rica’s southern Pacific coast. Lodges from Drake Bay on the Osa Peninsula to Manuel Antonio on the Central Pacific take visitors to the island daily.

Most of Caño Island Biological Reserve is forbidden to visitors; one small section of beaches and two short trails on the northwest side of the island are all most people are allowed to see. Six dive sites and two snorkel areas, again on the northwest side of the island, make up the meager portion of the marine protected area that is not forbidden.

Allowing only a small part of the island to be used seems to be working well. With hundreds of hotels and operators from all over Costa Rica offering tours to the island, it seems that limiting the number of visitors just makes everyone want to go to the island more – and pay more.

Thousands of boats a year visit the island, many paying for people to swim in the waters and hang out on the beach. Sportfishing and superyachts invariably motor around for better chances of catching fish just outside the protected waters, and for the views of thick forests and waterfalls cascading into the sea. The fact that a great part of the island is sure to be untouched seems to be its greatest attraction.

The competition for the island’s next greatest attraction is fierce. Some of the healthiest coral reefs left in the world, or birthing and mating waters for two hemispheres of humpback whales? The accounts of Sir Francis Drake dumping Spanish silver to load more gold, or pre-Columbian mystery stone spheres? Costa Rica’s best mainland dive sites, or the best Pacific coast snorkeling? Lots of whitetip sharks, or lots of giant stingrays? Vast fish schools the size of clouds, or the resident spotted dolphin clan? That Caño gets more lightning strikes than anywhere in the world part of the year, or that the island is named for its ring of singing streams cascading to the sea?

One thing Caño Island does not have much of is wildlife. The ancient forests of thick, giant trees towering overhead are strangely and peacefully quiet. The cacophony concerts of the mainland Osa Peninsula rain forests are absent on Caño. Here, the breeze through the trees, the crashing surf, the running waters and the haunting call of the Inca dove predominate.

You will see no macaws or jaguars at Caño Island. There are so few birds, insects, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, freshwater fish and plant species for one reason: the island effect. Small islands do not have the space needed to produce the necessary diversity for groups big enough to prevent inbreeding. For this same reason, the small ring of marine protected area around the island is not big enough to protect whales and dolphins, sharks and billfish and turtles into the future. Only big protected areas protect big animals.

The island does have some endemic stream fish species and amphibians found nowhere else in the world, although tourists do not get to see them. To save the unique and fragile animals that do live on the island, only two trails were made for visitors, and these may soon shut down to minimize the effects of sedimentation in the island’s streams. Treasure and Indian artifacts are hidden, except for a rather lame pile of artifacts set up so people can see something and that gives them less reason to hike about. Hiking is best left… read more from original resource

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New wind park at the end of 2012

Posted on 09 November 2011 by CarlosO

The 49.5 MW wind facility will be made up of 33 ACCIONA Windpower wind turbine generators (1.5 MW each).

ACCIONA Energía has won a tender called by the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad (ICE) for the purchase of electricity from a 50 MW wind park in Costa Rica. ACCIONA will design, construct and operate the Chiripa wind park (capacity 49.5 MW) following an investment of 125 million US dollars (90 million euros at the current exchange rate). The award enables the Company to incorporate another country into its renewable energy program worldwide.

costa rica newsACCIONA presented its bid together with the local company Grupo Ecoenergía, which holds a 35% stake in the development company; ACCIONA holds the remaining 65%. The wind park is planned for the municipality of Tilarán (Guanacaste province) in north-western Costa Rica, and will consist of thirty-three 1.5 MW wind turbines using ACCIONA Windpower technology.

The award involves the signature of a 20-yearPower Purchase Agreement and the materialization of the wind park through the BOT (build, operate and transfer) formula. Under the agreement, the developer will design, build and operate the wind park for the 20 years of its duration. Once this period is over, the ownership of the facility will be transferred to the ICE.

ACCIONA expects to start construction work on the wind park at the end of 2012 and put it into service in around one year, i.e. towards the end of 2013. Once grid connected, the Chiripa wind park -located on a site with a strong wind resource- will produce over 200 million kilowatt-hours in an average year.

The materialization of the Chiripa wind park will drive the incipient wind power development of Costa Rica -with an installed capacity of 179 MW at the end of 2010- and will contribute to the government’s strategic objective of reducing the country’s carbon footprint.

The wind park will enable ACCIONA Energía to include a new country in its process of internationalization. At the end of the first semester of the year, the wind power capacity owned by the company outside Spain was around 2,000 MW, 30% of the total; this figure will increase significantly at the end of the year.

ACCIONA now owns and operates wind parks in Europe (Spain, Germany, Portugal, Italy, Hungary and Greece); America (USA, Canada and Mexico), Asia (India and South Korea) and Oceania (Australia). It is currently building a wind park in Poland and has installed others for customers in France and Morocco.

In Latin America, ACCIONA leads thewind power sector in Mexico, with 556 MW owned and installed in that country (all in the state of Oaxaca). In 2009 it put the Eurus (250.50 MW) wind park into service, a self-sufficient project developed in collaboration with the cement company Cemex. In 2011 it has built another three wind parks, which will enter service in December this year.

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PRECOCIOUS PRIMATES IN THE LAND OF PURA VIDA

Posted on 22 October 2011 by krich

Tourists have come to associate Costa Rica with breathtaking views of the likes of Arenal, Irazu, Poas and Turrialba; lush rainforests, beautiful, exotic beaches, great surfing, and a love of nature that is embodied in both the land and its people. The diverse collection of avians-both those that visit during their migrations north and south and those that call Costa Rica “homenest” have attracted observers from the world over to view and experience these feathered explorers up close and personal.

red back squirrel monkeys in a treeYet there is another group of unique and compelling creatures that may not come to mind at first blush but which are as essential and important to the essence of Pura Vida as the land itself-the four groups of monkeys who call the rainforests home and whose diversity, antics and abilities underscore just how special these simian spectators are to Ticos, tourists, and ex-pats alike.

You can find monkeys in the many national parks throughout Costa Rica as well in many unusual places-such as in the trees of resorts near Tamarindo, off-road trails in the Nicoya Peninsula, and near the restaurants and roadways around Quepos and Manuel Antonio. To see all four groups at the same time, visit the Corcovado National Park located on the Osa Peninsula.

Found in abundance near Manuel Antonio National Park (among other places) is the most interactive and, perhaps, intelligent of the four monkey groups-the white-faced capuchin (named because the white face and black “hood” resembled the Capuchin Friars) monkey. Called cara Blanca in Spanish because of it’s white face, this lithe and inquisitive creature will think nothing of “visiting” backpacks and other bags or containers to see what goodies its human relatives may have left for the taking. The capuchin is also part handyman-using sticks or other convenient items to assist them in navigating the curious containers of humanity.

The most colorful of the four is the orange and gold squirrel monkey. Known to Ticos and non-Ticos alike as “titi” these small, active beings live in the lower, scrub woodlands and will come to visit (at least at a safe distance) if you happen to be close to their territory. From personal experience, I can tell you that they are not camera shy and are eager to “pose” for photographs. (See picture attached).

The most elusive and one of the largest of the four types is the Spider Monkey. With the official name of Geoffroy’s Spider Monkey (a name almost as long as the arms and legs of this furry acrobat), called mono colorado in Spanish, it can be seen navigating the treetops of the rainforest canopy almost as if suspended with wires from some invisible source. The fact that the spider is large -males coming in at a “robust” 18 lbs-doesn’t seem to have affect its aerial skills or mobility.

Last, but by no means least, is the Howler. Known as congo to the those who live here in this lush paradise (and to many who want to make the land of Pura Vida their home), the Howler’s impressive vocal abilities can carry several kilometers at dawn or dusk. Being woken up by “Howler Alarm Clock” –while jolting at first, soon becomes a welcome part of the start of another day in the land of Pura Vida. It is a toss-up as to whether the Howler or the Spider is the largest-different authorities credit one or the other as being “top monkey”. Regardless, both are impressive in different and wonderful ways.

These special simians have also made homes with their human cousins as pets. The spider, squirrel and capuchin can all be found throughout Costa Rica with those who care for them. The howler, although the least numbered in captivity is, ironically, the greatest numbered in the wild and is most likely the first of the monkey clan that will be encountered.

Four types of monkeys-different sizes, traits, colors and, yes personalities. Whether you are a first time visitor, a returning traveler, ex-pat, or Tico, keep your eyes open and enjoy observing these Pura Vida primates as they open their world to any and all who wish to be a part of a very special piece of Costa Rica.

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Costa Rican Rainforest

Posted on 19 October 2011 by Paul Clayton

Although activities that mess with local ecosystems to let humans experience nature usually seem intrusive, looking at the canopy face to face while slowly traveling in an aerial tram in the Costa Rican rainforest is a fairly respectful experience that’s great to understand the richness and importance of this habitat.

 

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