Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Costa Rica Day 5



Day 5 in Costa Rica was our pineapple tour then off to the cloud forest!
The bird for Day 5 is the hummingbird. What a magnificent creature. My guide book tells me this is the only bird that can fly backwards. We saw tons of them at all locations throughout our trip. I circled nine different species in my book, though there could have been more! I won’t try to identify them all here, these are just the best shots. Thank you Bob, for sharing your wonderful pictures.





 
The day’s activities started with our pineapple tour at the Collin Street Bakery in Corsicana. The tour guide for our drive through the pineapple fields was hysterical. His skit about how to select a good pineapple at the grocery store had us rolling. Squeeze it? Smell it? Pluck a few leaves from the top? NO!!! What a riot. 






After the pineapple tour, we got ourselves settled onto the bus for a long of driving to our next stop, San Gerardo de Dota, which was in the cloud forest. That meant more scary driving in the mountains! Lunch on the way was in the city somewhere near San José. The contrast from the city to the country was amazing. I could not believe how congested San José was, and how much garbage was strewn about on the streets. Carlos said that it was actually much cleaner today then years ago. Yikes! When we saw a few “for sale” signs on houses (shacks, really) someone asked how much a place in the city would go for.  I was shocked to learn that what I considered a very run down, cramp, ugly cement home was listed in the upper 100’s. Sounded as though cost of living was comparable to my spacious, beautifully clean, expertly manicured neighborhood in Northern Kentucky. 


I was very happy once we were back in the country, even though that meant gravel roads and no railings to stop the bus from toppling over the side. Once again, I was praising Harrison when we arrived safely at our destination. Hard to tell from the pictures, but we were up at cloud level. It was quite chilly up there, not at all what I expected form Costa Rica!




Here is our cabin at Suria Lodge. The place would have been perfect if not for one little flaw… no hot water!!! 

Monday, April 28, 2014

Costa Rica Day 4



Day 4 of my Costa Rica trip brought some wonderful birding opportunities. We started the day with a drive up some very steep inclines to a beautiful farm, then another drive up some even steeper inclines and on some seriously scary mountain roads to a fabulous overlook, then a drive back down to safer elevations for our next resort and a visit to a biological reserve.

The signature bird for Day 4 is the Toucan. We saw a few different species that I will lump together here. We really saw quite a few but most times they were perched in the upper most branches of the trees and getting a clear picture of them was difficult. 
Chestnut Mandibles Toucan. This is the Toucan we saw on our very first morning in Costa Rica and several more times throughout our trip. Fabulous looking bird!

Collared Aracari.  This guy has to take the cake for craziest looking paint job on a bird bill. The colors and markings were absolutely vibrant.

 

Emerald Toucanet.  This is the smaller cousin of the Toucan. He was more social than the other Toucans as well, happily visiting the bird feeders (aka fruit on a nail) so we were able to get a close look at his beautiful colors.
Red-headed Barbet. This little guy is in the same family as the Toucan. Our guide, Carlos, told us that this was a very rare bird and that we were lucky to get such a wonderful glimpse at him; it had been years since he had seen one. When he landed at the feeder, the crowd went wild snapping pictures.

Now, for a few highlights of Day 4.
We started with breakfast and a walk through the jungle at Albergue El Socorro, which is a family run farm that welcomes tourists and guided bird walks as a method of supporting the family and local community. 
Jose, the property owner.


This is where we ate breakfast. Again, no screens and no bugs. The flowers were gorgeous!


These are Jose’s cows. Not sure why they are in the road, exactly, but they seemed content and nobody was rushing them off. A leisurely stroll from one pasture to another, I guess.


The rain forest was amazing… and humid.


That’s Jen down there, way ahead of me on the hike, as usual. 
I must have been doing more gawking than walking, 
I am a very slow hiker!


On our drive away from the farm, I snapped this picture from the bus window to capture the living fence. Everywhere in Costa Rica, property owners used live trees as their fence posts. What a terrific idea! Rather than chopping down trees and cutting them up into ugly posts, they plant live trees and string barb wire around them. The trees provide habitats for birds and shade for the pasture, not to mention the carbon load they are storing by simply being alive. How can we get this practice adopted in the US?

I wasn’t kidding about the scary mountain roads. Our bus was super close to edge… and the drop offs were massive. Thank goodness for Harrison, our driver extraordinaire!


After eating lunch and getting ourselves settled into our next resort, we visited the Tirimbina Biological Reserve where Carlos found a cute little Strawberry Poison-dart frog.The hanging bridge leading us into the reserve was impressive, and a bit bouncing toward the middle. For those leery of heights, it was not a pleasant crossing, but actually, I was okay. I only get scared when there is no railing… like the miles of mountain roads we had just traveled over! Compared to that, the bridge crossing was fun.


All in all, I wonderful day in Costa Rica. Once we were back at the resort we had free time for a drink at the bar or a walk around the property to look at their resident gators. The story was the gators were there first, so when the owners developed the resort they kept an area natural for them to survive. Thankfully, there was a chain link fence separating us.