Once
again, now that I am in a different country I will write to you with what
happened in the previous one. Which in this case is Costa Rica, having arrived
in Nicaragua a few days ago.
My
first stop in Costa Rica was Puerto Viejo, where I last wrote from. The place
could be almost anywhere in the Caribbean, with many people speaking English and
a large number of Rastafarians. I spent just a couple of days there as I am not
such beach person and the owner of the dive shop there was very unenthusiastic
about what I might see, so I didn’t bother diving either. From there I went to
San Jose the capital (if you ever hear the Burt Bacharach song as sung by the
Carpenters “Do you know the way to San Jose?” and are curious about the
answer, in Costa Rica it is simple almost every bus is going there which
sometimes means you have to go there too).
San
Jose is not a particularly attractive place and doesn’t pretend to be either.
The locals all warned be to very cautious after dark as it has become quite
dangerous at night with regular robberies, particularly of tourists. The
favourite style these days being to put a choke hold on the victim, making them
feint so they can be robbed easily and no real physical harm is done. Thankfully
I didn’t get the opportunity to witness this technique first hand. At the
cheap hotel I was staying in there is a small restaurant where I met Susanna a
(French, German, American, Dutch) expatriate who has been living in Costa Rica
for the past seven years and after several drinks and talking into the early
hours, she convinced me I should see where she is living and building some
tourist Cabañas in the South West of the country in a village called Dos
Brassos del Tigre. So the following morning we took the bus to Jimenez the
nearest town and from there went to her place which is right next to Corcovado
National Park. I spent a few days there as it was interesting, tranquil and with
nature all around. It was also interesting to stay in a real village with no
tourists and see how the Ticos (Costa Ricans) really are and how they behave.
After
an enjoyable few days there I went back to San Jose as all roads lead there and
also as I had some administration to catch up on. I then went to La Fortuna a
small town at the base of Arenal Volcano. Arenal is a very active volcano and at
night one can see the red hot rocks being spewed out and rolling and
splintering down its slopes. It probably happens during the day too, it’s just
easier to see at night. The noises emanating from the volcano are eerie,
sinister and disturbing, so quite interesting. After seeing that I went to the
hot springs which are in a hotel complex and have been re-modelled and are tiled
with stools facing a bar, so one can bathe in the natural geothermically heated
water and have a beer and a cigarette. It is quite odd and is the first time I
have seen hot springs so crassly commercialised.
From
La Fortuna I went to Santa Helena via taxi boat taxi, which took me across the
Arenal
lake which afforded lovely views.
In
Santa Helena the cloud forest is the main draw and there are different ways of
seeing the forest at canopy level. Those who want an adrenaline rush and a
bit of adventure go along zip lines flying from tree to tree, whereas I chose to
take the sedate option of a walk through the forest and over several suspension
bridges. I was interested in seeing the canopy at my own pace and hopefully
seeing some wildlife, without just flying past it. I have been in several dense
forests before but this was the first time I had the opportunity to really check
the thing out at canopy level, which is where much of the life is. It was
interesting to see the diversity of flora at that height and one could also hear
and occasionally see some attractive birds. In addition to this I saw a really
attractive beetle and a tarantula that looked like a cross between the Zebra
tarantula and Mexican Red Knee. It was very big and had attractive colouring
that will hopefully come out in the pictures I took of it. Later on I went with
some girls who were staying at the same place as me to a butterfly garden where
it was possible to observe many of the insects and particularly butterflies that
can be seen in Costa Rica. I tried a beetle that apparently produces
antihistamine (it tastes peppery) and got to see at close range some of the more
interesting six legged residents of the forest. From there we went to Bajo del
Tigre, a rainforest preserve. There we saw white faced Capuchins, Quetzals (the
national bird) and some Blue Morphos (a particularly lovely, large butterfly
with satin blue wings on the top side).
I
then went onto Playa del Coco where I had been told there was some good diving
and can certainly confirm that there was. During the two dives I did I saw Eagle
Rays (2m across 3m tails), Southern Sting Rays (1.5m across) Round Rays (60cm
across). White tipped reef sharks up to 2.5m long, Panamic Green Morays (about
2m), white faced Morays (1m), different types of Nudibranchs, Octopi,
Scorpionfish (one particularly massive one), a red seahorse, coronet fish,
schools of yellowfin tuna and jacks, and much, much more. Although the
visibility was not great (less than 10m) and the coral was uninteresting, it was
one of the most interesting dives I have had with regard to the underwater
fauna.
Playa
del Coco being a touristic beach town it was not difficult to find the nightlife
and my final night in Costa Rica was spent there in the company of some English
girls volunteering in the national parks and some Kiwis I had previously met in
La Fortuna and a few Ticas.
Next
day I headed off to Liberia with the English girls where we parted company and I
headed north to the border with Nicaragua and they went south to another forest.
The border was absolutely stifling and had a real frontier feel to it, but the
process was not too lengthy before I entered Nicaragua for the next chapter of
my Central American travels.