Posts tagged Cloud Forest
Pure Adventures in Costa Rica
Sep 23rd

I had long wanted to visit Costa Rica. Travelers from around the world had extolled its virtues – a land of great natural beauty with the Caribbean on one side, the Pacific on the other and a lot of wild mountains and rainforests and friendly people in between.
On my Costa Rica holiday, this was not immediately apparent in San José, the grubby little capital in a highland valley. There are no elegant structures, but no one ever said that Costa Rica was known for architecture. Its beauty lies not in its buildings but in its environment.
NORTHERN COSTA RICA
Monteverde Costa Rica – Cloud Forest
Driving northwest of San Jose we travelled up into the clouds to Monteverde, the most peaceful place on Earth. Monteverde is a place to make oneself at home in an eco-friendly lodge and settle into the beauty of the Tilaran Mountains.
This stems from a community of Quaker farmers who arrived in the area from Alabama in 1950, after refusing to register for military service in the United States. At the time, they were looking for somewhere they could raise dairy cattle, without being called upon to shoot anybody. They chose Costa Rica largely because it had taken the surprising but enlightened decision to abolish its armed forces, following a brief civil war. To this day the little country of about four million people has no army, no navy and no air force.
The Quakers soon grew harmony with nature and their neighbours. From the beginning they had been careful to preserve the forest above their land, and now the botanists and the tourists were coming, and this benefited the wider community. “I’m content, I’ve been able to live according to my conscience,” Says Alejandro, one of the first Quakers to have settled there. “There is a sense of achievement.”
“I don’t feel I am the owner, how can anyone own a forest that has existed for thousands of years?” he said quite sensibly as we strolled towards his house through a meadow. “I think of myself more as a custodian.”
Arenal Costa Rica – Volcano
Like most travellers, we travelled to Arenal volcano, the most spectacular feature of Costa Rica. Travellers generally contend themselves with seeing the volcano but there is more to that. The vegetation in the region is exotic. I was drawn to every plant, to every flower that I admit, had not seen before.
The last time the Arenal volcano blew its top on July 29, 1968, it wiped out two villages, killed 80 people an incinerated 45,000 head of cattle. When we walked to its base, it continued its ominous rumblings like an angry bull terrier tied to a mast and belching ash and lava at us. The region is spawned with resorts from which one can observe its fiery convulsion; from a respectful distance.
It is also an activity destination; you can go biking, hiking, horseback riding, quad biking and canopy tours or take a guided rainforest walk. Later, try one of the many hot baths.
EASTERN CARIBBEAN – COSTA RICA
Tortuguero Costa Rica – National Park
A long journey through a banana plantation we reached north of Puerto Limon. From where adventurous tourists take a shallow-draught boat to Tortuguero, and get to see the wildlife at close quarters on canoe trips through the sort of jungle favoured by Indiana Jones.
The gods did not design the Atlantic coast of Costa Rica for mass tourism. It is hot and humid, and characterised by mangroves, swamps and rain. The local joke is that it rains 15 months a year. Because of the nature of the land, or rather the lack of it; there are no roads in or out of the Tortuguero National Park which encompasses a coastal swamp forest interlaced with rivers and canals. This is good news for a colony of green sea turtles that breeds there, as well as a menagerie of monkeys and sloths and anteaters and iguanas and crocodiles and frigate birds and kingfishers.
Poison-arrow frogs
It is useful in such places to have a guide who knows where to find tiny, scarlet poison-arrow frogs, and to explain the life and death dramas enacted on Heliconia atisphata. This is a plant with strings of red beak-shaped fruits that attracts humming birds which feed on its nectar, and in the process transfer pollen dusted on their foreheads. Unfortunately this little-known fact is common knowledge among eyelash vipers, who lie in wait for humming bird suppers.
Veragua Rainforest Adventure:
On our return, we visited the area’s newest attraction, the Veragua Rainforest Research & Adventure Park, located 40 minutes from the town of Limon. The Veragua experience, with guided tour and lunch, includes a gondola tram ride through the rainforest canopy, a butterfly garden, a reptile vivarium, a hummingbird garden, the largest nocturnal indoor frog garden in the world, spectacular walking trails through the primary rainforest, a grand waterfall and a working scientific research station.
“Everything has a purpose, and everything is recycled,” Diego, our guide observes. He explains that the leaves and mosses of cloud forests act as condensing surfaces, converting mist into drops of water that nourish the forest and form streams that provide local communities with fresh water. He has an expression for this perennial cycle. Ecological karma, he calls it.
The government shares his appreciation of wilderness areas, and has passed laws protecting more than a quarter of the country in one form or another. The ethos of a country that prefers wildlife to warfare is summed up by a popular T-shirt bearing a declaration by a North American native chief in 1854. “Only when the last tree has died and the last river has been poisoned and the last fish has been caught will we realise that we cannot eat money.”
Costa Rica thus has its head in the clouds and its feet firmly planted in rich volcanic soil and a stable democracy that has soared it the violent upheavals of its unruly neighbours in Nicaragua and El Salvador. The philosophy of its good- natured people is expressed in a popular saying, pura vida, meaning literally “pure life”.
Costa Rica Weddings
Sep 20th

Costa Rica might seem like an isle of paradise for any visitor who steps on this land that was truly blessed by nature. Even if the country is nowadays a touristic place par excellence, people continue to live here according to their own old traditions and the weddings are generally not exception to this. For a truly perfect wedding all that you need in Costa Rica are the graceful sundresses, bare feet and lots of tropical flowers.
Costa Rica is a tropical paradise and the people call themselves “ticos”. The majority of them are Roman Catholic and they are deeply connected to their families. This is the reason everybody is invited to a wedding, from both sides of the families. There is no such thing as a small Costa Rican wedding, for everybody comes to be happy together with the young couple. As you can easily imagine, the wedding savings are probably the last thing to be applied in the Costa Rican culture.
Perfect Locations for the Weddings in Costa Rica
For numerous couples, the ultimate location for their wedding is of course the beach. There are so many breathtaking beaches in Costa Rica that a couple can choose. Jaco Beach is a stunning wedding location on the Pacific side of Costa Rica. For the north side, couples choose Tamarindo beach, for its beauty and romantic atmosphere. The weddings take place mostly on sunset, because the general atmosphere is incredibly romantic and the photos are astounding.
Other couples choose to get married in the rainforest instead of having a traditional wedding. This is a truly unearthly experience, since the rainforest jungle will transform the wedding into an adventure that the couple will remember forever. Monteverde Cloud Forest or Tortuguero National Park are two of the most popular locations for the rainforest weddings. Such a non-traditional wedding is of course frequently followed by a nonconformist honeymoon in a nature lodge.
When going to Costa Rica, you immerse yourself in a wonderful landscape full of amazing waterfalls. They are truly incredible and easy accessible for vehicles. For that reason, they are wonderful locations for weddings. Many couples choose to get married at the edge of the Arenal Volcano, where they take benefit from the amazing view of the spewing lava in the evening that offers a special and unusual glow to the ceremony.
The Costa Rican Wedding Traditions
People belonging to different cultures consider weird one of the most important traditions of the Costa Rican weddings. This tradition says that the bride has to wear a black silk dress and a veil. This is a symbol of the Costa Rican weddings and it does certainly mean joy, as opposed to the significance black has in the European and American cultures. The vestment worn by the groom is white and in the traditional weddings it is embroidered by the hand of the bride. This is a sign of love and respect and the tradition of embroidering the wedding vestments passes down from mother to daughter in the conservative families.
During the wedding ceremony, there is a tradition of exchanging thirteen gold coins on a tray or in an embroidered bag. The coins are offered by the groom to the bride and they are a symbol of the desire of the groom to support his chosen bride and start a family together with her. The number of the coins is a religious symbol of Jesus Christ and his twelve apostles.
The traditional Costa Rican weddings are accompanied by joyful Spanish music, since the people here love to dance and sing along to express their happiness for the young couple. The music at the Costa Rican weddings is not just about Spanish beats. The sounds that can be heard at wedding range from Latin music to the contemporary tunes or today’s hits. There are also island theme tunes or reggae bands that are specialized in wedding parties.
There is also plenty of food at the wedding party and the guests are thrilled to taste the delicious casados. This is a specific wedding meal that consists of mixed gallo pinto (beans) and rice. Some other courses that are usually cooked by the women in the family for the great wedding feast are tortillas, fried plantains, eggs, salad and a mixture of different meat types, like chicken, pork and beef.
The traditional Costa Rica weddings are festive occasions and there is no place for saving money on food or musicians. These are the core elements of a perfect wedding if the bride and groom choose to get married in the old traditional way.
The Non Traditional Costa Rican Weddings
More and more engaged couples from Costa Rica choose to plan a nontraditional wedding and avoid the stress and the hassle that comes together with the traditional crowded and loud weddings. The wedding day is up to the couple and they sometimes choose to have a simple ceremony together with a couple of friends and just a few members of the family. They choose the unusual locations mentioned before or just avoid being dressed according to the traditional dress code that has been used for centuries in Costa Rica.
A nontraditional Costa Rican wedding might mean a themed wedding. It is not generally the custom in Costa Rica to have such a party after the ceremony, but many couples think that it is more suitable to their personalities to drop off the old customs and adopt new ones. There are weddings where there are miniature wedding cakes instead of a great one and weddings where there are no flowers at all. The menu is completely different to some weddings, from homemade treats to sushi.
Costa Rica is a country where contrasts can be met when it comes to weddings. The old traditions and the innovative modern ideas of the young people exist in the same place and they offer countless possibilities for planning and organizing a wedding that will remain in the memory of all the guests for the years to come.
