It's truly remarkable how much this small Central American country packs in, from shimmering beaches to live volcanoes to mysterious cloud forests. Despite pockets of overdevelopment, it's still an eco-tourism wonder. As they say in CR, "¡pura vida!"


Cover photo: rob Stoeltje

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Jawdropping ecotourism on the Osa Peninsula

Hugh Lansdown The sun had set and the stars above seemed brighter than I’ve ever seen them before. Floating in the warm waters of the Golfo Dulce, in Costa Rica‘s remote Osa Peninsula. tiny, bright green balls of light swirled around me – bioluminescent algae. Grinning uncontrollably and feeling like a twelve-year-old, I finally ran from the water and through the warm sprinklers of a nearby beach resort just off shore. It was my third time in two weeks visiting this hidden strip of beach in…

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A trip to Tortuguero, Costa Rica's watery eco-enclave

Keith Kellett A 2½-hour drive from capital San José, this a 769-square-kilometre (297-sq.-mile) national park on the country´s Caribbean coast boasts a variety of ecosystems, including rainforest, mangrove forest, swamps, beaches, and lagoons. The main way to get around (and reach its is by boat along its many waterways - including reaching its more than one dozen eco lodges and wildlife spotting.read post  

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12 Terrific Eco/Adventure Experiences in Costa Rica

  Matthew Paulsen   Beginning in the 1990s, this small Central American country essentially pioneered the ecotourism boom that has spread across the globe. Besides its vaunted Pacific and Caribbean beaches, packed into just 19,730 square miles -  a good bit smaller than West Virginia and a bit over twice the size of Wales - Costa Rica boasts 29 national parks, 19 wildlife refuges, eight biological reserves, and an additional slew of protected areas. And here are a dozen of its most prized eco…

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Monteverde Cloud Forest: a magical tourist attraction which doesn't encourage tourists?

Florent MECHAIN/Travelmag.com   The last 18 miles of the road leading to the Monteverde is full of ruts and potholes by design, and takes over an hour and a half to bump your way in. The locals like it that way, and they choose not to fix it because then it would be a little too easy then for tourists to visit. That may not sound all that hospitable, but it illustrates the emphasis Costa Ricans place on conservation. And the cloud forest, which I visited prior to Covid as part of an Overseas…

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  • Can someone help answer a member's question about the southern Pacific part of Costa Rica?
  • Oh David that's grea! Have you ever been to Cuba? I am looking for a feature on Cuba and all of the ends and outs of traveling there. If not, what would you like to submit.
    Also, I am ready to post the African diaspora Tourism page from your site as a link on our site. When we click on that link we go straight to that page. We will also put your graphics on our web as a link to click on to your entire site. Go ahead and send your graphics to me. Looking forward.
  • Kitty, I've written up the Caribbean coast several times, including material about the Afro-Caribbean culture there, maybe I could help with something if it's not too late.
  • Has anyone done an African Diaspora Heritage tour of Costa Rica? Is so, let me know. I need information about it.
  • If you are interested in Condos under 100K in Playas del Coco..Call us or check the website www.costaricalosangelesrealty.com we are members as rental agenta and we are Regestered Realtors here in Costa Rica...Ed
  • Arenas del Mar is #1 hotel in Manuel Antonio on Tripadvisor. Tripadvisor users voted best beaches in Central and South America. 1. Santa Teresa, 3. Manuel Antonio, 4. Puerto Viejo... I am happy to live in Costa Rica...
  • Please visit AfricanDiasporaTourism.com, a web journal about culture and heritage tourism in places of the African Diaspora worldwide. Let me know what you think and sign up for the mailing list to stay in the loop. We could use some travel pieces on Costa Rica.
    Thanks,
    Kitty
  • Mr. Balido, I used to have a Venus Fly Trap, which behaves in a very unplant-like manner, but this tree is even more improbable. I cannot think of any other plants besides these two whose behaviors are so much like those of animals. Can you?
  • A walking palm tree in the Costa Rican rain forest??
  • The biggest arribadas are at Playa Ostional and up by Witchs Rock in the Santa Rosa National Park. But the leatherback turtles primarily nest at Playa Grande, it is one of the three most important nesting sites in the Pacific!
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