Costa Rica

  • Lake Arenal
    Here are just a few photos to give you an idea of the beauty of the area and why I love it here so much.


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A Tropical Adventure For All Our Staff

Ta_trip_142_1024x639_2What a week it has been!  Last week the whole Tropical Adventures team (Scott, Isaac, Ricardo, Mauro, Roberto, Susan and Sarah) went on a wonderful trip to visit some of our projects in the North West of Costa Rica.  We first took a visit to the Arenal volcano area to meet with some of our trusted tour providers and were lucky enough to get to sample 'canyoneering'.  This is a Costa Rican past-time which involves abseiling up to 200 meters down waterfalls and jumping through rock pools in the rainforest – well done to Susan for getting over her fear of heights!!   What excitement it was to lie in bed at night looking up at a smoking volcano!

Turtle We spent the last three days in Guanacaste region where Ricardo, our project co-coordinator for that area, took us to the sea-turtle conservation project at Camaronal where we got to do as the volunteers do and did a beach patrol in the night where we made sure that turtle eggs were buried above the high-tide mark to maximize their chance of survival and watched out for the many turtle egg poachers 'hueveros' there are (eggs are illegally sold in Costa Rica as a specialty food and to bars as an appetizer drink).  We came across an egg poacher and some of his family waiting in the sand dunes for turtles coming in to lay their eggs.

The eggs are sold at a high price and for people in the community who barely earn Img_0570_2 enough to survive it felt unnerving to have to turn them away.  They have probably been taking and selling turtle eggs for many years and may have little understanding of their effect on the population of turtles in this area. However, it so important to protect this endangered species by ensuring the eggs are buried in the right place and left to hatch – we were told by the rangers there that only 1 in 1000 eggs laid actually turn into a turtle that survives into adulthood.   This is why the night patrols are key in preventing eggs being washed away or stolen.  It was such a wonderful sight to see several turtles laying their eggs.  They didn't seem to mind our presence at all and we all watched in awe.


Img_5640 We also visited the elementary school and day-care centre in Hojancha where our volunteers spend time teaching and mentoring students and leading sports, arts and crafts and other recreational activities.  The children love having the volunImg_0537_2teers there to play with and learn from  and this allows the head-teacher to get on with tasks she doesn't often get time to do.  It was great to see so many happy and playful children at the day-care centre.  It's a place where young children from less privileged areas go to play and learn important life skills such as how to eat healthily and how to brush their teeth.  The centre ensures that every child gets a good meal – something very important for their development and health.  You can see some more photos of the day-care centre on our website here.



Img_5916We spent a night at both the Monte Alto and Barra Honda National Parks where our volunteers are involved in erosion control, path maintenance, tourist assistance and environmental education.  At Barra Honda, our lovely friendly Costa Rican guide, Norman, took us to the underground caves – which was an adventure in itself – an underground world millions of years old where we squeezed, climbed and crawled our way through.  The views from the top of the mountain there over the Nicoya valley area were spectacular.  We stayed one night with a wonderful  couple who were so proud and welcoming to have us at their home and cooked us a huge feast for breakfast – the hospitality andImg_6000_2 warmth of the Costa Rican people is so humbling. The howler monkeys were  also out in force and provided a good wake-up call in the morning.


We were also lucky enough during the week to get a free surfing lesson at the surf school we recommend to volunteers in Tamarindo and try out a canopy tour (by zip-line) – one of Costa Rica's must-dos. Well, I can think of worst jobs.

It was great for the whole team to get a really good understanding of our projects and tours in this region and it was wonderful to spend the week with the rest of the team, getting to know each other better.   We are 7 people from different corners of the globe and it is fantastic to all be working together for the same cause.  We hope that when our volunteers come, the projects and people they meet will impact them as much as they did with us over the past week.Funny_faces

Pura Vida,

Sarah Morris

Marketing Intern.


Check out some videos of the trip on our Facebook group here:

Isaac Garcia - Zip-line canopy tour

Susan Schuetze - Funny faces

Sarah Morris - I don't think she knows the right way


 

 
"Come and Experience it Yourself."

My Testimonial Markus Berres

 

Bambu_last_day_248_634x1024 My name is Markus and I’m from Zurich in Switzerland. After more than two months now with Tropical Adventures, I really don’t know where to start. Let’s try at the beginning ….

When I was back home looking for something different to do with my upcoming holidays, I knew it would probably involving volunteering at some point. Then I surfed the Internet a lot. Somehow, I can’t remember how I found out about Tropical Adventures, but when I found them – I knew right away that was the program I had been looking for. 

 

It looked like a good mix of travel to places with some tours and adventure and, it had the volunteering component I was looking for. Because all my arrangements had to be kind of last minute, I was a little worried it wouldn’t work out. But after a couple emails and telephone calls, everything seemed to fall into place. Roberto from the office in Costa Rica answered all my questions promptly and clearly.

 

When I arrived in Costa Rica, I was met by their driver, Manuel, and was immediately taken very  good care of. After spending a night in a hostel near the airport in Alajuela, I was escorted once again the next day by Manuel to the bus station to go to the town of Puerto Viejo. Everything was already taken care of, and Manuel helped me find an ATM and take care of any needs I had.

 

My Spanish is very limited, so I was a little worried what would happen but again, all for nothing.  Just Voluntarios_scott_046_2   when I exited the bus, my coordinator, Mauro, was there to take me to my wonderful host family. The first week I kind of stayed in my own little paradise, teaching English to kids in the Cocles Elementary School, which I went to with the bicycle I rented for the week. First I thought, "Bicycles here? That’s crazy in this heat!" Yes, I sweat like never before, and the road conditions are everything else but bicycle-friendly, but soon I learned to love my bike and the freedom it afforded me.

 

Voluntarios_scott_035 The kids in the school where fantastic. Since I'm not good with Spanish, and English is not my first language, and I never been a teacher, again I was worried. But not only did the kids learn English from me, I learned lots and lots of Spanish from them. They even recognized me when I passed by the school 8 weeks later – that was a wonderful feeling – and for me it showed that my work meant something to them as well. That’s the experience I was looking for when I planned to volunteer.

 

I spent the next 2 weeks in Bambu, a little community on the Bribri Indigenous Reservation. There I Vol_029_1024x683_4 worked with the kids from the Bratsi School and in the retirement home. It was completely heartwarming just to see how much both the young and the old people enjoyed our company. They got really attached to us in those 2 weeks while we were there.

This time we didn't stay with a host family, but instead we stayed at the Community Center with Danilo (our local host). The place is amazing. It’s really just like a tree house. The whole community there was wonderful, the traditional food, the way of living. Everyone got so attached to the place, I just couldn't believe it. But after the 2 weeks were over, all of us had tears in our eyes when we were leaving.

 

Vol3_002_800x533_800x533 The tours we did together here are something I will never forget. The 2-day trip over to Panama, just mind-blowing… I thought I’m kind of fit to walk for a couple of hours. We have some pretty strenuous mountains back at home. Here the first part was easy. Hiking for 2 hours on a good path, sometimes in the shade from the trees, sometimes in the hot sun. And let me tell you, itVol3_039_1024x683 gets hot. I had plenty of water, at least I thought so, for the first four hours. Then the path began more and more to disappear into the jungle, and walking got harder and harder, especially because most of the locals coming through here come on horses. So the path was super muddy from the horses’ tracks and the rain (it was the rainy season, but so far I had not seen too much of it, luckily).

 

Vol3_087_1024x683 At one point I had to sit down, and Isaac started feeding me with crackers, our guide told me our destination wasn't more than a 15-minutes walk from here. Then for me...luck! A man and his daughter on a horse came by. The girl,Vol3_092_1024x683 maybe 12 years young, must have noticed my condition and offered me her horse for the rest of the way. Usually I would have declined, but not this time. I was happy not to walk the rest of the way (which was 25 minutes on a horse.) The little girl walked the whole way, like it was nothing, practically flying from rock to rock. Later we found out what we just did in more than 4 Vol3_115_1024x683_3 hours, she does every day to get to school...in less than half an hour!!!How crazy is that? Now I know I have to do more sports, or working out. But all the hard work was absolutely worth what was waiting for us. The pristine, tropical and nearly undiscovered waterfall close to the very small cabin we stayed for the night -- that’s what you never find on your normal “all inclusive holiday.”

 

The next week I spent at the Camaronal Sea Turtle Project. It was completely far away from civilization, as you might imagine. When we arrived there my first thought was: "Oh my god....noooo!" Now in retrospect, I think I would absolutely want to stay at that place for 1 or even 2 months. Domenica, Julian and German -- the project staff from MINAE (Ministry of the Environment) are the most welcomingVoluntarios_scott_1234 people one person could possibly imagine. My Spanish improved a lot in the first couple of weeks, but here I really had to practice it, and it was easy to speak to them after opening myself up to the idea. And it was not only the little small-talk that tourists usually have with the locals; we could speak about anything. But especially everything about the project interested me – and the knowledge they have about all of the projects and the animals and the surrounding area is just astonishing.

 

My next week of volunteering took me to the Monte Alto Natural Reserve, another great project Ultimas_volunteers_024_1024x694 managed by MINAE, and in serious need of volunteer help. Here we helped build paths, plant trees and flowers, as well as helped in the kitchen. One thing I did here one day that I did not expect to do was helping to fix toilets. No, no. Not the nasty kind. The kind where I could show off all my plumbing skills. (No...I don’t really have any. Back in my real life I’m a chef in a hotel!) And yes, by the way, the toilets work again.

 

My sixth week in Costa Rica was spent in another national park, Barra Honda. That would be the weekDsc08241_1024x768_2 where I definitely got my wish for physical labor fulfilled. Besides taking wonderful tours and walks in the area, the number one project for the park was to make it nice and to prepare everything for the big celebration in August (National Parks Day). That meant we had to dig a lot. Since they were expecting lots of rain -- and rainwater in masses destroys the street and especially the sides of the street -- we had to place 70 centimeter cement pipes on the side of the road near the main building to keep the water from eroding the street.

 

In that week, I must have sweat out my own weight a couple of times. This all sounds probably like too Charlottes_pics_702_1024x681_2 much work. But it wasn't at all. The work hours were usually only in the morning from 9 to 12, and the rest of the day we were free to do whatever we wanted. For example, the town of Nicoya is only a 400 colones bus ride away (less than 50 cents), and it provides all that I wanted and needed. And then there was enough time to spend at the pool from the nearby Barra Honda Hotel and to enjoy a good book.

 

Monkey Park was originally going to be my last project. It is an animal rescue center. It's a nice place toGregory_007_1024x896 see animals that live here in Costa Rica which would usually be hard to see in the wild. The stay in the park was nice. They provided a very good home, and the food there is delicious. I got "gordo" (fat)!

 

Like at all the projects, nearly at all times a project coordinator or Isaac (one of the directors) himself was present, or came on a regular basis, if for nothing else than just to see that we we’re all okay and to bring us some snacks. The women (the number of them seemed to change on a daily basis) who were responsible for the project at Monkey Park really work hard to make the place what it is. And having been part of that is a nice memory.

 

Gregory_018_1024x683 One of my jobs was to transfer the caterpillars out of the Butterfly Garden every morning so that they could not feed on all the plants faster than the plants could grow in there. So for that purpose there is an assigned place called, “the feeding house.” And then I had to check if there were some larvae hatched and then bring them back as "butterflies" to the "Mariposarium." This is one place where someone like me goes literally photo crazy!


The next 2 weeks I went to travel on my own to Panama. I needed to be in Panama City at a certain time. And that’s where the team of Tropical Adventures really helped more than I could have expected. They helped me with my hotel, and even delivered my bus tickets to me. The many small things they did for me made my trip easy and enjoyable and were just examples of how dedicated these people are to the work they do. It also made me feel really appreciated. I felt like I was in the best hands possible here, so I decided to come back for six days after my Panama-trip to do some more volunteering.

 

Mark_fister_172_1024x601 So now as I write this, these last six days here in the La Flor Project are nearly over. I’m super happy about my decision to teach English in a tiny agricultural community. I feel completely welcome and like I'm doing something worthwhile. After a few days here, I get recognized on the street from everyone; I’m not at all a stranger.

 

I can’t possibly fit all my experiences and feelings in these few words, but to everyone who enjoys traveling, some adventure and meeting endless amounts of friendly people, I say, "come and experience it for yourself!"

In the end, it was all the small things that made my trip with Tropical Adventures so priceless. (Geesh, I hope not to sound too much like the MasterCard commercial!)

Pura vida!

Markus Berres

 

 
New Guanacaste Projects

Tropical Adventures is happy to announce some new projects in the Guanacaste Province:

Measure_turtle The National Wildlife Reserve of Camaronal was founded in 1994 as part of the System of National Conservation Areas, and specifically of the Tempisque Conservation Area (ACT), which includes the Nicoya Peninsula. Tropical Adventures partnered with ACT in 2007 to support their many projects in the Tempisque area. As you can see, it's taken us a while to get this info on the website!

Our main purpose is to protect the our species of marine turtles nesting in this beach, which are: Olive Ridley, Hawksbill, Leatherback and Black turtles. This is a great project for families, as it's .

 Our Camaronal Sea Turtle Project is different from our other sea turtle projects as it receives much less funding and support -- and is in much greater need of help. Some other advantages of this project are the facts that volunteers can spend some of their time helping in a nearby elementary school (with only 5 students) as well as in environmental education and the fact that it's our only sea turtle project that allows children under the age of 17. For these reasons, this project is especially great for families.

Cascadas_2 Barra Honda National Park is located in the Province of Guanacaste about 15 miles northeast of the city of Nicoya. As a volunteer at Barra Honda National Park you'll assist with trail maintenance, tourists assistance, fire control, sign creation and maintenance, environmental education, meal preparation, building maintenance and construction or general cleaning and maintenance.

Barra Honda is a very unique park in Costa Rica where you'll find deep, subterranean caverns. Though there are other parks in Costa Rica where you'll find caverns, Barra Honda is unique because of the types of formations found here. Barra Honda is also famous for having the best views in the whole Province of Guanacaste. It's a very unique project to work at and is especially fun if you enjoy being outdoors and experiencing the natural beauty of your surroundings.

Kid_horse Hojancha is a small town located in the Province of Guanacaste. Because Hojancha is a small town, it's easy to start meeting people and to make new friends. Our volunteers are welcome in town and are taken care of very well by our host families and community members. We're currently focusing our work in Hojancha at two elementary schools and a daycare center. Because Hojancha is higher in elevation than most towns in Guanacaste, the weather is very agreeable at an average of about 79 degrees F year-round.

Hojancha is another great family destination and is a wonderful place to experience a "typical" Costa Rican town and culture.