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  • World-Class Birding in Manizales

    From Jardín, our journey continued along some of the most scenic roads in Colombia towards the city of Manizales. Nestled in the Central Andes range, Manizales sits at a higher altitude of around 2,150 metres and is surrounded by diverse ecosystems, including cloud forests and montane rainforests. It also lies in the shadow of Nevado del Ruiz, one of Colombia’s most prominent volcanoes, which reaches an elevation of about 5,321 metres. The upper slopes of the volcano are part of the unique páramo biome, a high-altitude ecosystem found only in the northern Andes. This makes this region a treasure trove for birders, with many endemic species, and some species live only in this central andes region too.

    I’d read about some of the amazing species we could see here – bearded hummingbirds, colourful toucans, the sword-billed hummingbird, and countless species of antpittas. We were both fully on-board for some proper Colombian birding at some of the regions TOP spots.

    Our first destination was the famous hotel Termales del Ruiz, perched high up in the paramo region on the slopes of Nevado del Ruiz, this hotel is famous for it’s hummingbird hand-feeders, antpittas and natural hot springs.

    We booked 2 nights at this amazing hotel to get the most of it. The rooms are modest, but between the hummingbird garden, orchid garden, forested paths, waterfalls and thermal pools, we didn’t spend much time in it. However, we did have to take it easy, since it sits at about 4,000m altitude.

    After our bad experience with accute mountain sickness when we visited Leh last year, we were a bit worried about getting sick again, but back in Leh, we flew there directly from sea level at the start of our trip, which exaggerated the effect. This time, we’ve been travelling across Central and South America for the last 4 months, spending the last couple of weeks, especially, above 1,500m (Monteverde, San Gerado, Medellin, Jardin etc). Plus, we still had some diamox left over from India in our bags, which helps considerably with acclimitisation if you take it in advance of travelling. So this time, we didn’t get sick, we just had to take it easy for the first 24 hours. And luckily, there was lots of things at the hotel to help us relax and take is slow…

    There were 3 thermal pools here, surrounded by beautiful gardens and hummingbird feeders.

    The valley where the hotel was was ever changing too, one minute it would have clear views out over the distant city of Manizales, then 5 minutes later the clouds and mist would roll in and you could barely see your hand out in front of you! And it was cold… bitingly cold, it took all our layers to shield against the cold, and so the thermal pools were a blessing in the cool afternoons as the sun began to set.

    on th bus from Jardin to Riosuchio
    Viewpoint near Riosuchio
    Approaching Manizales
    Heading into the Mountains…
    Termales del Ruiz
    Thermal Pools

    Termales del Ruiz is famous for it’s hummingbirds, and was even featured on “The Grand Tour” with Clarkson, May and Hammond visiting and commenting how amazing is it to see them up close.

    Each guest is given a mini hummingbird feeder and access to sugar water to refill them. A lot of patience is required, but if you’re still and quiet, you are rewarded by tiny sparkles of feathers like the shining sunbeam, golden-breasted puffleg, great sapphirewing, or if you’re lucky the rainbow-bearded thornbill. All in all we saw about 10 different species of hummingbird throughout the grounds, the shining sunbeam (the orange one) was the most common, the great sapphirewing is the 2nd biggest hummingbird in the world, and the buff-winged starfrontlet was probably our favourite – the pictures of this one don’t do it justice, but it’s head and neck in real-life were SO iridescent it was almost as if it glowed from within…

    There was also a couple of pufflegs – with little fluffy legs as the name suggests, the rainbow-bearded thornbill – which was more elusive but has a fantastic rainbow streak from it’s head to it’s beard, the tourmaline sunangel with a bright pink throat, and the tiny tyrian metaltail.

    Rainbow-bearded thornbill
    Rainbow-bearded thornbill
    Tyrian Metaltail (and Dave!)
    Buff winged starfrontlet
    Shining Sunbeam
    Great Sapphirewing
    Golden-breasted puffleg
    What you looking at? 😊
    Buff-winged starfrontlet

    Here was also where we got to experience our first antpitta feeding station! If you don’t know about antipittas, don’t worry – I didn’t until about a month ago! Basically, they are small, brown, long-legged ground birds which blend perfectly into the undergrowth. They are endemic to this region of the Americas, with a range about as North as Corcovado (where we saw the black-headed antpitta) and as far south as the Amazon rainforest. They have loud and distinctive calls which can travel a long way through the forest, and they are deeply territorial…

    Until very recently, antpittas across this region were basically ghosts – often heard, but incredibly rarely seen. Which made them kind of famous in the birding world – basically, if you did see one, you were a birding god! Haha! But now, that’s all changed, ever since someone in Ecuador realised that these charismatic little birds can be trained to come when you call their name and reward them with worms! This process of habituation can take up to 10 years, with females being more receptive. But once it’s done, the behaviour is passed down through generations. It’s utterly remarkable!

    Our first experience of this was when we saw little “Paramo” (that’s the antipitta’s name!) a Tawny antpitta which only live in these forest fringes of the Paramo biome. We headed towards a clearing in the forest and the guide called his name; “PARAMOOO, PARAMOOOOOO!!”. The next thing we saw was a little brown bird come hopping out of the undergrowth to collect his worms! I even got to hand feed him 🙂 So cute!

    Paramo – the Tawny Antpitta

    We also got to see “Chapulin”, a little crowned chat-tyrant which the hotel had also traied to come to it’s name for a little worm reward.

    In fact, there were many other birds here, aside from the hummingbirds and antpittas, many of them visiting for food, or trained in some way – even the flowerpiercers would occasionally visit the hand feeders if you were patient enough 😀

    There were so many birds, all around and it was lovely to see them coexisting with humans so well. We see humans negatively impacting on wildlife all around the world – deforesting, construction, roads, or pets – cats and dogs etc. So to see a positive influence – feeding stations and planting which encourages nesting etc., makes a nice change.  

    Chapulin – the little crowned chat-tyrant
    Hooded Mountain Tanager
    Pale-naped Brushfinch
    Golden-Crowned Tanager
    Golden-Fronted Redstart
    White-sided Flowerpiercer
    Scarlet-bellied Mountain Tanager

    We absolutely loved our time here at Termales del Ruiz, and spent most of our time walking around with the hummingbird feeders in our palms enjoying the company of these remarkable little birds. We also visited the orchid garden, and walked down past the hotel’s waterfall to enjoy the spectactular views. And of course we enjoyed the thermal pools every day too. The food at the hotel was also delicious and they even had a great vegan menu! We were sad to leave the hotel, but there were too many other places to visit!

    The hotel as seen from down in the valley
    When the clouds roll in…. which happened regularly!
    Enjoying the pools
    Orchids where the flower grows directly out of the leaf!
    Finally clear and you can see all the way to Manizales
    Hotel waterfall
    The source of the hotel’s hot spring
    Amazing vegan burger at Termales del Ruiz

    We headed back down to Manizales city in a taxi and booked to stay in a hostel called mountain hostels near to the stadium and the region around here was really nice, in fact we loved Manizales and it reminded us a lot of Manchester actually, it wasn’t too hot at this high altitude, and it had a relaxed and friendly atmosphere for such a big city.

    We also couldn’t believe the sports facilities available for free. Like Medellin, there was a push to get people out and social, as it has a big impact on peoples quality of life, but also lowers crime rates too… Right near our hostel was a HUGE football stadiium – one witha  running track around it. And it was open every morning to the public – for free, for running and sports. There was also an undercover roller-rink for roller-hockey and for speed skating too. Plus several astroturf fields, 5-aside fields, tennis courts and basketball courts… and as far as we could see, that was all free too. PLUS free city wifi as well.

    There were also quite a few tasty vegan restaurants in town, and we felt like we really could live here, it was such a nice place. And that’s not even mentioning the views from the city – since you can see Nevado del Ruiz from here and the surrounding mountains. And the hummingbirds aren’t only confined to the forests, but also found in gardens here too…

    Manizales
    the roller rink with stadium behind it

    Whilst we were in Manizales, we also booked to go on a birdwatching walk in the nearby forest reserve of Rio Blanco. The area is famous for it’s antpittas, toucans and hummingbirds, but it’s a private area owned by the water company (Rio Blanco provides the water to Manizales). So gaining entry to the park is supposed to be tricky and during peak tourist times, almost impossible…

    However, we were off season, so I simply sent a whatsapp message to the number listed on Google and booked us in with an English speaking guide.We got a taxi to take us there and after a bit of a confusing entry – we finally found our guide and headed our to spot some birds.

    By the main cabins and lunch area, there was a clearing with grapes and bananas and we sat and waited a short while before 2 beautiful emerald toucanets arrived, a mum and a juvenile, who was still a bit fluffy and begging for food. It could get the grapes itself if it wanted, but it preferred to sit and wait to be handed the grapes by it’s Mum haha! so cute.

    We also saw a beautiful masked trogon, but it didn’t come too close, it just sat and watched us, and loads of tanagers.

    On the other side of the cabin were a few hummingbird feeders, and we saw a few new species, like an inca, and even a few majestic sylphs with their outrageously long tails and bright feathers.

    Dave’s Pic
    Sickle-billed guan
    Masked Trogon
    Blue-winged mountain tanager
    Sylph
    Tourmaline Sunangel

    We then began the walk, and our guide was amazing. He told us he was a Sony ambassador and showed us his instagram page, his photographs were phenomenal, and he knew ALL the birds, either by sound or sight – straight away with no hesitation. We saw so many new species – I think I ticked off about 20 new ones on Merlin on this walk.

    There were also 3 species of Antpitta here in Rio Blanco. First up was Pancho and Panchita, a pair of Chestnut-crowned antpittas, then we saw Nana, a slate-crowned antpitta and finally Pollo, a Brown-banded antpitta, only found here in this Rio Blanco region.

    Pancho – chesnut-crowned antpitta
    Nana – Slate-crowned antpitta
    Pollo – Brown-banded antpitta
    Walking through Rio Blanco
    Can’t remember what we’d spotted here

    We had an amazing day, and they even made lunch for us, a really nice vegan meal with a soup starter and a dessert too. It was perfect 🙂

    However, there were a few birds I was still itching to see which we hadn’t yet. First of all, the swordbill hummingbird, with a beak longer than it’s body, it’s iconic and only found in this region of the high andes in Colombia and Ecuador. And the grey-breasted mountain toucan, again, endemic to the high andes… So the guide suggested I try and visit another local birdwatching spot – Hacienda El Bosque.

    However, this is definitely more of a boutique birdwatching spot – highly geared towards super serious photographers, and fairly expensive to get in, so Dave opted out of this one, and the next day I went over there on my own, taking an uber there from town.

    It was very well organised here, and fascinating to see the dedication that goes into managing such a birding site, as almost every species had it’s own “station” and dedicated feeder and photogenic branch they would try and coax the bird on to. The guide told me it takes YEARS to train some of these birds to come to the feeders, but of course, the most challenging to train are the antpittas. And Hacienda El Bosque has 2 of these quirky and elusive birds, that would take me up to 6 antpittas I’d seen in Colombia now, I was on a roll!

    First was an Equatorial antpitta called Pablos, before we headed over to a perch were a little grass wren called Simone (!) came to visit. It was just mad, to turn up to an area, shout a name “Simone! Simone!” and then a little grass wren hops out from the long grass to say hello!

    Then we went to the hummingbird feeders, but the swordbill didn’t visit them… I was disappointed at first, but then the guide told me the swordbill prefers the hummingbird feeder near the toucan feeder station, so I kept my finger’s crossed for later… But on the way there, we headed to a clearing where we saw Lunita (Luna’s daughter) a Crescent-faced antpitta, which apparently is the rarest of all the antpittas, and a load of other birds which all had names and came to get their daily worms! I couldn’t write them down fast enough! But if I remember correctly, the brushfinch was called Samwell, the mountain wren was Rafa and the Chat-Tyrant was Chati! haha

    The guide met me at the entrance and motorbiked me to the trailheads 🙂
    Pablos – Equatorial Antpitta
    Simone the Grass wren
    The iconic wren bottom haha
    Rafa the mountain wren
    Samwell the Brushfinch
    Chati the yeloow-bellied chat-tyrant
    All 3 on their perches haha
    Lunita the Crescent-faced antpitta

    We finally made it to the Toucan area and put out tonnes of bananas and then…. just sat and waited… we waited a LONG time, it must have been 2 hours, but luckily, there were loads of other amazing and brightly-coloured birds to see, and finally, the elusive swordbill I’d been so eager to see! it was incredible and came to the feeder several times!

    Then after what seemed like an eternity, a pair of mountain toucans finally started approaching. The landed in a tree further away at first, checking us out, but then slowly and surely they came closer one tree at a time, before the finally came to the perch with the bananas, right in front of me. They were incredible and considering their main colour is grey, they are still very bright, and have SO MANY other colours in their plummage too!

    What a great day, and what a great week of birding! All within driving distance of Manizales. This really is the hotspot in Colombia for birds, and it’s safe to say now, I am OFFICIALLY a mega birder!

    maybe my favoutite hummingbird – the sparling violetear
    the photo doesn’t even do it justice, it was so bright…
    collared inca
    majestic swordbill
    how incredible is that beak???
    cheeky thrush trying to get into the food store haha
    Grey-breasted mountain toucan

    We absolutely LOVED this part of Colombia, the mountains are spectacular, and the towns and cities have a bustling but chilled atmosphere which is very inviting, the locals are friendly and welcoming, the food was tasty and the nature and wildlife was just NEXT LEVEL. We couldn’t believe how much we saw just in this relatively small region of Colombia, we’d barely scratched the surface.

    We both said that Manizales could be somewhere we could very easily live, and at the very least definitely somewhere we could return to one day.

  • The birding starts in Jardín

    If you’re a regular follower of my blog, you might have noticed a significant trend over the last year we’ve been travelling… More and more birds popping up in the posts. Yeah… sorry about that 😂

    I’ve always been into wildlife, more than the average person, for sure, and most of my travels in my 30s have basically been centred around wildlife travel. But in the last year, a passion for birds has been growing under the surface. It happened slowly at first – we saw a turquoise-browed motmot in Uxmal, that was cool… and saw a trogon on the side of the road in Belize, so pretty… Then we went to Tikal, and it really began to get serious. I downloaded the Merlin bird app for the first time to track my bird sightings, and was hooked.

    Since then, there’s been a significant portion of our trip spent looking for exotic and endemic birds – kind of casually at first, but getting more and more serious. And of course, some birds stand out for me – Motmots for instance, their intelligence and quirky behaviour is captivating, so why not always have one eye open on the roadside? We see them all the time now!

    So now, we’re in a country which has 1 in 5 of the world’s bird species (and the most bird species of any country), it’s even harder not to get sucked into the seemingly birding frenzy which exists everywhere here…

    Yeah… So I think in this last year I’ve finally evolved into a birder haha.


    So where’s the best birding in Colombia? I hear you ask… There are several places, but Jardin and Manizales, 2 towns close to 2000m in the Andes, are famous for their biodiversity and for being incredibly beautiful as well….

    Jardín was our first stop, an easy 3.5 hour bus ride from Medellín, along winding mountain roads covered in lush green forest. The road was stunning!

    We passed through several quaint towns, with the houses all painted different colours, with mad colourful buses (or chivas) in the streets and 4×4 jeeps as the public taxis… We kept thinking, wouldn’t it have been nice to stop here… 😔

    But then, we arrived in Jardín, and it was the most beautiful of all the towns we saw. The streets were lined with colourful houses, all with balconies looking full of perfectly tended potted flowers and hanging baskets – it really did live up to its name (Jardin means garden).

    There was a central square with an ornate church, and the square was surrounded by independent cafes all with outdoor seating, which was full of locals enjoying locally grown coffee. (Jardin is in the heart of the coffee region of Colombia afterall…).

    There weren’t many tourists here either, which made the town feel authentic and genuine. We really did fall in love with this beautiful pueblo.

    Stuck in traffic due to landslides!
    View from the bus
    View from the bus
    Jardín
    Lunch at a vegan place when we arrived

    The bus from Medellín was at 6:30am, so we arrived in Jardín really early and got to enjoy the whole rest of the day. We went out for a walk down towards a little waterfall, and here we saw our first Andean Motmot, one of the biggest and most beautiful we’ve seen. (I’m on 8 Motmot species now!) We watched the pair make a burrow, they would fly into the dirt bank and remove some of the soil, then return to their perch.

    Andean Motmot
    Waterfall
    Red-bellied Grackle

    Then in the evening we went to one of the most famous birding spots in Colombia: Reserva Natural Jardín de Rocas – a Cock-of-the-rock lek within walking distance of the town centre. Yes, really.

    The Andean Cock-of-the-rock is an absolutely mad-looking bird (as you’ll see), part of the Cotinga family – which includes other weird and wonderful species like the Three-wattled Bellbird we saw in Costa Rica. And a lek is basically where male birds gather to strut their stuff and show off for the ladies. It’s rare behaviour in the bird world, and the Cock-of-the-rock is one of the most famous species to do it.

    Usually, leks are tucked away deep in the forest, hard to find and even harder to get to – like all those elusive manakin leks we heard in Costa Rica but never saw. So the fact that this one is right next to town is kind of insane.

    Even more so considering the Andean Cock-of-the-rock only lives in the Andes across Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia,  and outside of leks, they’re notoriously difficult to spot.

    It cost 15,000 COP to get in (less than £3), and when we arrived, we were the only ones there. No guides, no crowds – just us and around twenty bright red birds going absolutely wild, performing their bizarre dance just inches from our faces. No females around, just the boys practising their routines. It was so loud, echoing through the trees like some surreal, tropical bird boyband rehearsal 😂

    It was so good and much better than I could have imagined, they were WAY closer than I expected, I didn’t even get my binoculars out of my bag… 😌

    The next day was raining so much, so we decided to stay local and walk some more around the town of Jardín, we had a delicious coffee in the square and then when the rain eased, we took the “cable car” over the valley to start a walk back to town.

    Cable car was a bit of an overstatement though, and when we arrived, all we saw was a metal box big enough for about 4 people suspended on 2 metal cables and an electric pulley, pulling us across. It was a bit mental 😂

    On the other side, there was a spectacular viewpoint of the town, then we slowly walked back down the hill and across the river into the centre. On the way we saw countless hummingbirds, a toucan barbet, the famous green jays, lots of colourful tanagers, and of course, more Andean motmots 😌 it was a lovely walk, and we ended back in town at the central square.

    We even spotted a couple of male Andean Cock-of-the-rocks on the walk to, just on the trees, not in a lek, I guess now we know what to look for they are easier to see 😉

    Rainy morning
    Coffee on the square
    Metal box across the valley!
    View from the other side was worth it though…
    Female red-headed barbet
    Spotting an Andean cock of the rock
    Motmot

    The next day I wanted to go to a private reserve also walking distance from town where you can see Oilbirds, a truly fascinating species of bird. They are nocturnal fruit eating birds, which use echolocation (like bats) to navigate in the dark. During the day, the roost in hidden canyons along rivers, usually in big family groups. The seeds from their poop washes into the rivers and so they are a very important bird for seed dispersal too.

    It was a bit more expensive to get into this reserve, so I went by myself and Dave waited in the Cafe. We walked down lots of steep dirt steps carved into the hillside then came to the river.

    That’s when I noticed the guide had been carrying a harness this whole time… I had to put the harness on and walk across a narrow suspension bridge to the viewing platform on the other side to see the Oilbirds.

    It wasn’t a bad walk all-in-all, but since I might have been the only person there that week, it was full of spiderwebs crisscrossing the bridge and I got covered head to toe haha.

    But at the other end it was totally worth it, there were about 20 Oilbirds all cuddled up together sleeping or dozily preening each other. They were much bigger than I thought they’d be, and had beautiful markings on their feathers.

    In the canyon was also a Cock-of-the-rock nest – only the female takes care of the chicks (the males are too busy dancing) so I saw the female flying back and to several times whilst I was there as well.

    And there was an Oropendola next hanging from the tree which a male was currently building – the males build several nests and the female chooses one. He was concentrating solely on finishing this one and kept going off to get more grass and twine. Oropendola nests are amazingly intricate!

    It was a great bird day!

    Spooky bridge!
    Oropendola with his nesting material
    Walking back
    Hummingbird at the cafe

    That afternoon we walked around the town some more and spotted more birds, tonnes of tanagers, parrots, hummingbirds, there were so many, even our bird feeder at the apartment had loads (well it was called “the bird apartment” 🤣), including Colombian chachalacas (the forest chicken) as well.

    We walked down towards the Cock-of-the-rock lek in the evening, but we didn’t go in, we just chilled on the bridge nearby listening to them and spotting any which strayed too far from the lek.

    We loved Jardin, it was such a pretty little town with great Colombian coffee culture and cafes. The owners of our apartment even gave us some of their coffee, which is grown above 2,500m and so doesn’t need any pesticides etc, it was absolutely delicious and we ended up buying some to bring home.

    We decided it was probably the most beautiful town we’ve ever visited… And that’s a tough line up considering we’ve travelled across the world and been to almost every continent in the last 18 months!

    We would definitely return to this beautiful place!

    Chachalaca
    Blue necked tanager on our feeder
    Walking down to the bridge
    Amazing views
    Cock-of-the-rock
  • Medellín: From Notorious to Noteworthy

    So… We were supposed to be going to Panama next, to complete the journey through central America, then fly onward to Colombia afterwards. But as I was starting to seriously plan the Panama trip (aka looking the land border crossing, the bus to David, then a bus to Almirante (the port for boats to Bocas del Toro), then a bus to Panama city etc) I realised there was a major transport strike currently going on, all across the country. Bocas del Toro is now in a “state of emergency” (last time I checked) because of it!

    I wasn’t sure if it was over-hyped online, so I reached out to some bus companies, like the one we’d get from David to Almirante, and then to Panama city, and they confirmed it, they weren’t running any services at the moment because of the rock blocks ☹️

    Flights were excessively expensive too (I imagine because everyone in Panama was flying instead).

    So we made the sad decision to save Panama for another time, when we wouldn’t potentially get stranded somewhere. And fortunately our flight from PTY to MDN was flexible, so for £29 (for us both) we were able to change both the date and the departure city and fly directly from San Jose, Costa Rica to Medellín, Colombia.

    We headed back to San Jose from Corcovado, doing the epic travel day in reverse this time. We booked somewhere near the airport, got food delivery and visited the mall. Classy.

    We eventually landed in Medellín and it was absolutely stunning from the air. The skyline is quite iconic I guess, with the huge sprawling city in a mountainous valley, with several passenger cable cars taking residents from the centre to the hillside suburbs.

    We landed and got a taxi to our accommodation, as usual, a private room in a hostel. But this time, since the price was so good, we opted for an upgrade – a room with a terrace with city views, and it was well worth it!

    View from our terrace
    Delicious Colombian vegan dish

    Colombia is famous in the backpacker world for being one of the cheapest countries to travel globally, and you get way better value for money, on a par with say Thailand or Indonesia. So it was really nice to go for a meal out again once we arrived in the city after cooking so much over the last few weeks in Costa Rica! A beer is about £1, and even where we went – a fully vegan restaurant in Poblado district (a touristy bit) was only £5.40 a meal!

    For me, one of the big reasons I wanted to come to Colombia was the wildlife and nature. It’s the second most biodiverse country in the world (after Brazil), and holds the top spot globally for bird species, and for orchids too. It’s home to six of the world’s seven recognized biomes, spans a huge range of altitudes, and contains three distinct branches of the Andes. (The Andes, which run all the way up from Patagonia, actually split into three ranges when they hit Colombia.) So yes… it’s wildly diverse and utterly beautiful.

    But… is that what most people think of when they think of Colombia? Probably not. I’d guess a lot of people still think of white powder… And yes, most of the world’s cocaine is produced here, illegally of course, and it’s caused some serious problems over the years. Medellín was right at the center of it all, with the notorious Pablo Escobar based in the city during the height of the drug war. At one point, Medellín was considered the most dangerous city in the world, with more homicides per day than anywhere else.

    But that’s not the Medellín of today. The city has undergone a huge transformation. Public services were overhauled, the transport system expanded, including the iconic outdoor escalators in Comuna 13 (once one of the city’s poorest and most dangerous districts). A metro was built, along with cable cars, and investment in education became a real priority. Now, Medellín is considered one of the safest cities in Colombia – and one of the most innovative too.

    So on our first day we went out to explore this district of Medellín, Comuna 13. We had a recommendation to take a free walking tour with Zippy Tours, who could help take us through more backstreets and off the beaten track places of the district and teach us about the history first hand (all zippy tour guides have to have been from Comuna 13). So although we’re not that into guided tours usually, this seemed like the best place to perhaps actually do one…

    Taking the metro to Comuna 13 to meet the guide

    Our guide was George, and he was very knowledgeable about the district, he walked us through lesser known places, past community centres and free public sports facilities, highlighting the importance of these places to the redevelopment of Medellín. We then headed into the main part of Comuna 13, with it’s narrow streets, and quickly-built housing, up on the steep mountain side. We rode the famous outdoor escalators up and learned more about the history of this district and how it was the hardest hit region during the drug wars. With residents often accused of being involved due to the high level of poverty and crime in this district – many were, but many were obviously not involved, so wrongly accused, and the stigma of being from Comuna 13 has been hard to shake.

    But the district has now developed into something completely different, something bigger than itself, on the surface it’s a major tourist hotspot, with residents now capitalising on the success. There are art installations purely for photos/selfies over Medellín, shops selling souvenirs everywhere and street dancers and performers looking for tips. But beneath the touristy surface, George showed us the real passion, like the regions’ graffiti and underground culture such as rapping and break-dancing – which is real and not just for tourists.

    After the tour, we walked the area by ourselves and at no point did we feel unsafe. It really is a remarkable transformation.

    Walking through the lower parts of Comuna 13
    A school and community centre
    A break dance crew which practice at the community centre
    Dancing with the locals!
    Entering the main bit
    The outdoor escalators

    We headed back to Poblado and had a nice meal. In the evening we sat on the terrace watching the thunderstorms over the mountains around us.

    The next day, we went up into the mountains around Medellín, taking the metro and then the longest cable car ride ever, through several stations up to Park Arvi.

    The journey was incredible, with absolutely stunning views over the city.

    Park Arvi however was pretty underwhelming, perhaps because we came at the weekend 😕 (we keep forgetting what day it is haha), but it was so busy, and seemingly only really a city park despite it’s huge size and location. There was only one trail you could walk without booking a guided tour (I wish we’d checked the website properly!), and it was quite short. We did the walk, and it was nice, but at times busy and very loud with locals out for the weekend, and we unfortunately didn’t see any wildlife… Like, not a single bird haha

    But as I said, one of the main reasons we came here was because we wanted to ride on the mega cable cars, and so it was worth it for that.

    We headed back via a shopping mall, again taking advantage of city life before moving on to the countryside.

    Nice meal at “vegan & veggie”

    We both really loved Medellín, its been through a genuinely remarkable transformation. People here had ridiculously tough lives through the 70s-90s, but are still incredibly warm and friendly. The city is very rough around the edges, with many small houses/rooms, built from cheap, rough material, and densely packed together, but we never felt unsafe in any of the areas we went… We used the metro every day too, and it always felt safer than London or Paris at least.

    It is mad to think that even just 20 years ago the FCDO advice was “do not come here”, and yet now, we just went on a walking tour through Comuna 13, watching street performers and taking photos of the cool graffiti. It’s such an inspiring success story, and was a great introduction to Colombian culture!

    Our terrace at night
  • Corcovado: Costa Rica’s last wild frontier?

    Our next stop in Costa Rica was the biggy – Corcovado National Park. Located on the Osa Peninsula, on the south west coast, this region is a biodiversity hotspot, it’s the most biodiverse place in central America, not just Costa Rica.

    It’s a lowland rainforest, think hot steamy jungle, with brown muddy rivers, crocodiles, sloths, anteaters, countless birds and even pumas and jaguars….

    I’d wanted to come to this region for a very long time, following my childhood dream of one day seeing a jaguar in the wild, probably my favourite big cat. As it’s supposed to be one of the best places in the world to see pumas and jaguars in the wild. Although it’s still incredibly unlikely…

    However, the region is remote and underdeveloped – exactly why it’s so good for wildlife! So getting here was going to be an adventure in itself…


    From the high mountains of San Gerado we had to get the same bus again down towards the town of Palmar Norte first. But remember my last post, I said that the ATMs weren’t working at the bus station…. Well… We had about 10,000 in cash left, and the bus was probably more.

    As a back-up option, we’d booked another bus online, but this one would only take us as far as the nearest big town – San Isidro. From there we’d need 2 more buses. We just hoped the direct one with Tracopa, first of all, turned up, second, stopped (we’re at a tiny unofficial stop) and three, let us on with not enough money to pay the fare… 😂🤞🏻

    We got to the bus stop just before 9am, the bus was supposed to be 9:35am, but after just 5 minutes of waiting, a Tracopa bus passed us… But it didn’t stop…(!) Was it the right one? Had we missed it? Why was it early? We both got a bit stressed and weren’t sure what to do… But we needn’t have worried, as at almost exactly 9:35am another Tracopa bus passed and DID stop for us! PHEW!

    We told the driver in broken Spanish that we were going to Palmar Norte and currently didn’t have enough cash for a ticket. But we could withdraw some along the way or pay by card. He understood and let us on with no issues whatsoever! What a guy! We were now on a direct bus to Palmar Norte, no stress, perfect!

    The journey took about 5 hours in total, and at one bit of the route the bus goes off the main road into a town called Buenos Aires (not the Argentinian one!), then turns around in the town and comes back to continue along the highway. It was here that the driver stopped to let me out at an ATM. I got cash and by the time I was all sorted the bus had turned around in town and was on the way back to me. Seamless ☺️

    We arrived in Palmar Norte, and from here we had to get a taxi to the town of Sierpe. About 30 minutes away.

    Then from Sierpe, we got a 2 hour boat through the mangroves of the Sierpe river and then joined the Pacific ocean where we followed the coastline to Drake Bay.

    Spot the croc

    This boat ride was amazing, if not slightly terrifying! The mangrove region was stunning, the river was flanked by lush green forest with rolling hills covered in cloud behing, and you could see monkeys and toucans in the trees, as well as crocodiles in the river! But as we reached the confluence region with the ocean, the waves were breaking against the shallow river and they were BIG waves. The driver went from chatting and messing on his phone, to ultimate concentration. And all the passengers were side-eyeing each other like… Is this normal?

    It was pretty scary actually, people were screaming and ahhing, nervous laughter filled the boat and everyone held on tightly as we navigated the waves. Once we were through the breakers, the waves got BIGGER, but this was actually better as they were wider barrels so it was easier to ride over them.

    We eventually arrived at Drake Bay, which was quite calm relatively, but we still had a wet landing on the beach into thigh deep water. We definitely felt remote!

    And we STILL weren’t in Corcovado! Haha. Drake Bay is known as being one of the best places to stay to access Corcovado on a day trip. So for now, we were just outside the park.

    Landing at Drake Bay

    We’d booked a little apartment back away from the beach and the owner was waiting to meet us when we arrived. He took us in a 4×4 golf buggy up the steep hill to the apartment.

    We loved staying here, it had everything we needed to cook good meals, had AC in the bedroom, but the best thing was the private balcony looking over the gardens. Every day we saw toucans, Aracaris, chachalacas (forest chickens), hummingbirds, countless tanagers, parrots and the amazing scarlet macaws. There was also a pair of agoutis which foraged on the ground we saw most days too, and several iguanas in the trees. It was amazing.

    On our first day here we got up early to have coffee on the balcony and watch the animals, before walking down to the beach and the along the coastal walk here. We walked for a few hours and got as far as Playa Cocolito, where we saw a troop of white faced capuchin monkeys and tonnes of scarlet macaws really close! We considered continuing further, but it’s so hot and humid here, we were both completely soaked with sweat and already out of water trying to stay hydrated. So we turned back.

    Just at the right time it seemed too, as by the time we made it back to Drake Bay, the afternoon rains were just starting. It rained every afternoon here, usually starting about 2pm.

    Yellow Throated Toucan
    Fiery billed aracari
    Basilisk (aka the jesus lizard because it can run on water lol)
    Scarlet macaw
    Dave’s pic
    White faced capuchin
    Dave’s pic

    The next day was our Corcovado day! We were heading to Sirena station which appears to be the most remote and central ranger station in the park, and where I’d heard people often see pumas… We had our fingers crossed!

    To get here we had to get in a boat… again – Dave was not happy haha, but the waves weren’t as bad this time. It took 2 hours in a boat along the coast until we reached Sirena beach and another wet landing and short hike to the entrance.

    It was MUCH busier than I had imagined given the remoteness of it, and there must have been 100 people around the entrance when we arrived, maybe more. It’s mandatory to have a guide here, and although the groups are technically small, we all seemed to go the same way, so it felt so busy.

    We also felt quite rushed with every sighting, our guide would say, “right has everyone got a picture? Let’s go then”. Like snapping a pic was the only reason we were here… And it genuinely seemed to be the case actually… At least in our group…

    Dave and I wanted to watch the animals and enjoy the experience, taking our time and respecting nature, but we were rushed from sighting to sighting, ticking off the animals, but not getting chance to savour the experience… And our guide even shouted at us a few times for falling behind…(!)

    To say I was disappointed in the experience is a massive understatement… It ended up not at all being the remote, wilderness park I’d hoped for. 😔

    Still, we did get to see a lot, including spider monkeys, squirrel monkeys, crocodiles, terrapins, a black-headed antpitta (quite a rare and shy bird), a tamandua (an anteater basically – and the main animal I’d hoped to (realistically) see today), a pair a Tapirs sleeping (a mum and baby), lots of black throated trogons, some great curassows, and a common potoo too (which was unexpected, and a bird I’d wanted to see for a long time!), lots of agoutis and a huge family troop of coatis. It was great, just rushed, busy and not really feeling like a real wildlife experience, more of a tick-box exercise in seeing animals… What a shame.

    We also learned that Sirena station is not even a primary forest, and is actually what used to be a small settlement and town, with it’s own airstrip (where the station actually is) and schools and everything. All since reclaimed by the trees after it was declared a national park. We even saw a few old remnants of life here…

    We had our lunch in the busy station, which was full of people, then headed back to the boat and started the long journey back to Drake bay.

    The boat ride to sirena
    Loads of people
    Sloth
    Squirrel monkey
    Tamandua
    So cool
    Black headed antipitta
    Crocodile
    Black throated trogons
    Coati family
    Remnants of life
    Common potoo
    The old airstrip
    Tapir mum…
    …And baby
    Making our way out over the breakers as we left

    The following day we had planned to go out on a snorkelling trip to Caño Island, about another 2 hour boat ride from Drake Bay (sorry Dave). I’d read the island could be hit and miss, as if visibility is good, it’s one of the best visibilities in the world, and you can see many sharks, turtles and even pelagic species. However if the visibility is bad, it’s really bad… We had EVERYTHING crossed for good… 🤞🏻

    On the way to the island we saw several pods of tropical spotted dolphins they came right over and played with the boat, and were jumping out, so cool!

    Caño island

    We arrived at the island and the dolphins were still near, the guide jumped in quick and I followed him quickly but we didn’t see them whilst we were snorkeling. In fact we didn’t see much, sadly it was a bad visibility day and we could only see a few metres. 😔 It always looks better on the GoPro pictures, but with our eyes, it was terrible, and we only really saw what swam close to us.

    We saw quite a lot of turtles though, both loggerheads and green turtles, and a few yellow pufferfish (we could only really see the bright coloured fish!) but in this visibility and sharks would have been too well camouflaged, especially the white tip and black tip reef sharks, there’s no way we’d have been spotting them.

    We tried a few other spots but they were all the same. So instead we went to the island and chilled on the beach a little, picking and cracking open our own coconuts and enjoying feeding the baby basilisk lizards with the leftover pineapple cores.

    Caño island
    Caño island

    After the break we tried the water again and it was a bit better but barely… So we decided to call it a day. The guide and boat captain offered to take us to Playa Josecito instead, apparently the most beautiful beach in the region, so we all agreed and drove over to there instead. We enjoyed playing in the calm water and watching the macaws in the trees. It was a lovely beach, then we headed back around 2pm and landed back at Drake just before the afternoon rains started. Perfect timing!

    Playa Josecito

    We had supposed to be leaving the next day, but we decided that we loved this place too much and extended a night. The town here was small and local, and everyone seemed to know each other. We were settling into a routine, even after just 5 days, getting up early and watching the animals on the balcony, cooking our own breakfast then heading out in the day, back around 2-3pm when the rain started to cook a lunch/dinner/tea/all-in-one meal around 4-5pm whilst we watched the rains and the birds at dusk, then early bed in the dark! Haha.

    So on our next extra day we just chilled on the balcony most of the day, enjoying the birds and agoutis, we walked down to the beach one last time, and had a nice lunch at a restaurant with a view of the bay.

    Chilling on the balcony
    Toucan
    Chachalaca
    Agouti
    Long billed hermit – the hummingbird which co-evolved with heliconias
    White necked jacobin
    Scarlet Rumped Tanager
    Iguana

    Then in the evening we did a night walk into the forests behind the town. It was pretty spooky actually compared to the one we did around Rio Celeste. We were given rubber boots and we walked along and in the river, which (due to all the recent rain) was higher than our boots, so we got very wet feet!

    We saw a lot of frogs, mostly poisonous ones and loads of stick insects and spiders, including the water spiders which walk on water. We also saw a few birds, fast asleep, including a kingfisher and a little Manakin, all puffed up and hiding from the rain. We also saw a small snake which mimics the venomous fer de lance, but is safe, and right at the end we saw a highly venomous black tarantula…

    I had a shower as soon as we got back 😂

    Dave’s pic

    We loved this part of Costa Rica. Yes it was hot, yes it was super humid, yes it rained everyday, yes there were a lot of bugs and insects and poisonous snakes and spiders, but we loved every second of it despite all this. There is so much nature and life here, and mad coloured birds and animals, dolphins, fish, everything. And you don’t have to go all the way to Sirena station to see it. This is Costa Rica at its finest.

    Plus the people in Costa Rica, no matter where we’ve been, we’ve received so much warmth and hospitality. The owners drove us to the boat every time and asked for nothing, even when we tried to pay him. They did our laundry for free, told us about all the animals, and restocked the feeder outside our room with bananas every day.

    We are so sad to leave Costa Rica actually, it’s been our favourite country so far in this trip. Everyone was super friendly, it felt really safe and easy to travel around, buses were comfortable and cheap, and easy to find the schedules of. And the scenery and wildlife was on another level. The country is just STUNNING, and we only just scratched the surface. We will definitely return one day.

  • Finding peace (and Quetzals) in San Gerado de Dota

    Since we’d had such a hard time spotting Quetzals in Guatemala – we tried three separate places with no luck, I hedged my bets here in Costa Rica, and although we’d already had an amazing Quetzal experience in Monteverde, our next stop was another quetzal haven (just in case we hadn’t seen one) and was already booked…

    We were heading to the cloud forest reserve called Parque National Los Quetzals, and more specifically, the private valley just next door called San Gerado de Dota. It’s supposed to be the best place in the world to spot a resplendent quetzal, but is very good for hummingbirds and is way off the tourist trail too and quite remote.

    The valley was crowned a nature hotspot after some pioneers saw how beautiful the valley was and built the first hotel: Savegre Hotel. They preserved the region and noticed the high volume of quetzals here, promoting this region as a hotspot. To this day, Savegre is still one of the top hotels in the region for seeing the birds, and they have tonnes of private trails only accessible from the hotel. It sounded idyllic, but expensive, so I decided to finally use my hotels.com points which I’d had saved (I did this for countless epic hotels in the past, including Mashpi even!). This meant we could book Savegre hotel for the measley price of £0.58p per night 🤣 and it was definitely worth every penny!

    To get here we had to transit through the capital San Jose, we got the 5am bus from Monteverde, which arrived about 1pm, then we did some much needed resupplying in the malls. I got all the essentials (my la roche posay face sun cream, MAC mascara and my favourite decathlon t-shirt to replace a trashed one). Plus we both decided it was time for new trainers, and I found some AMAZING hokas, perfect for travel with really grippy soles for hiking, but still nice enough for day wear. 😍

    We decided that San Jose was like Manchester, couldn’t this just be market street?! The weather was the same too haha!

    The next morning we headed over to a different bus station to get a bus which was heading to the border with Panama, but hopefully would stop and let us out at the turn off to San Gerado valley. We got there with plenty of time to spare as we needed to go to an ATM too… But when we arrived, none of the ATMs were in service! Eeek… We literally had just enough for the bus and the taxis to and from the bus stop. So we kept our fingers crossed it was ok!

    The journey was stunning, along winding mountain roads covered in cloud. We arrived at the turn off and the bus did indeed stop for us, and we were met by the taxi from the hotel.

    Savegre was amazing. We had a private little cabin with huge twin beds and a massive bathroom. And the grounds were stunning, we instantly saw about 5 species of Hummingbird as soon as we arrived, including the Talamanca, volcano, fiery-throated (my fave), white-throated mountain gem and the lesser violetear.

    We had some lunch and whilst we were eating we saw Long-Tailed silky fly catchers which were beautiful too, flame tanagers and silver throated tanagers.

    After lunch we attempted to walk one of the famous trails, but not long into the walk a thunderstorm rolled in, it was ok at first, since we could hear the thunder in the distance, but it was getting closer and closer, and after one huge clap of thunder which was basically over our head, we decided that walking in a forest with an umbrella was not the best idea and headed back to walk along the road instead.

    Savegre Lodge 37 km
    Our cabin
    Lesser violetear
    Flame tanager
    Long-Tailed silky fly catcher
    Showing off my new shoes!
    Spotted wood quail
    Walking on the road by the river instead

    The next day we planned to get up mega early and walk the quetzal trail from 6-8am – the best time to see them apparently. We got up at 5am and headed up the steep road. The walk was lovely and in the cool morning air, the clouds clung to the trees.

    However the forest was quiet, we saw only a handful of birds, mostly wrens and redstarts, and no quetzals… We were a bit disappointed… We’d been to Monteverde and seen them on our own, and here was supposed to be BETTER, plus it was perfect time, 7am etc… but no… Nada.

    About 8:30am we headed back to have our free breakfast before 9am.

    After brekkie, we visited the hummingbird garden again, with the aim of taking photos of all the different birds. I was walking ahead of Dave and watching a little volcano hummingbird feeding in the bushes, when a blur of green swooped low over my head and landed (no exaggeration) about 2 metres above my head…. It was a male quetzal! What the….

    What was it doing here in the hotel grounds, an apparently elusive and shy bird, which almost flew into me haha. It jumped up and grabbed a aguacatillo (a mini wild avocado) from the tree. I signalled to Dave, by clicking my finger and mouthing “QUETZAL” and he literally didn’t believe me 😂, but moved over silently. We were both gobsmacked.

    It was hopping between the branches and honestly we were both so shocked to see it so close and in next to the hotel we barely took any photos (well, no good ones at least). It flew to another avocado tree near by and we silently followed. It tried another Avo, but it mustn’t have been good either as it dropped that one too!

    Then it flew away into the forest. How magical!

    White-throated mountain gem
    Volcano Hummingbird
    Fiery-throated hummingbird
    Dave’s pics of a lesser violetear

    Like most birds, quetzals are also creatures of habits, with favourite perches, favourite trees and quite regular routines. So we basically spent the rest of the time here waiting by this avocado tree for it to return. Which it did…

    This time, when it flew away, we followed it, into the grey water area behind the hotel, we could still see it flying between branches looking for food. We watched it for a while.

    The rest of our time here at Savegre we spent in the hummingbird garden or the grey water filtration area, watching the quetzals and the amazing other birds here. It was such a wonderful and peaceful stay in the end, and way better than I could have ever imagined.

    We were sad to leave San Gerado de Dota, and our new quetzal friends. But if we return to Costa Rica, I’d definitely come back here to this hotel. ☺️

  • Resplendent Monteverde: Quetzals, Clouds and Hanging Bridges

    When I think of Costa Rica, for me, the first thing that springs to mind is dense cloud forest, high in the mountains, full of birds and wildlife, with bridges suspended high in the canopy…. That’s the Costa Rica I’ve seen on TV in documentaries and on social media, and it’s the Costa Rica I was itching to see.

    That’s why our next stop was Monteverde (or Santa Elena Town) which is home to the most famous cloud forest regions of Costa Rica. Here, we’d heard, were quetzals, trogons, motmots, bellbirds and other cotingas and so many species of hummingbirds. It was probably the bit I was most excited about.

    To get there, the easiest and most affordable way from La Fortuna, is the famous “jeep-boat-jeep” combo, which takes you over lake Arenal. We booked it for $30 each which seemed great value compared to other transport options. However it turned out to be more of a bus-boat-minivan rather than actual jeep, but it still did the job.

    The journey was very scenic and surprisingly quick too and so, leaving at 8am we found ourselves in Monteverde around 12pm, plenty of the day left.

    Crossing lake arenal

    I had mega plans for our 2 full days here, but to make the most of the first afternoon, we decided to book one of the hanging bridge parks which Monteverde is famous for. The 2 main ones are Selvatura and Treetopia, and we picked the latter because we’d read about questionable ethics at Selvatura, which has a “sloth habitat” often dubbed as the “sloth prison” 🙁

    The other reason we booked treetopia was that it was supposed to be better for bird spotting, and in the afternoon, they offer a free shuttle to the park, which we took advantage of.

    We really enjoyed Treetopia, but in all honesty we didn’t see many birds. We could hear loads… loads of solitaires and nightingale thrushes, with their ethereal songs echoing through the mists and trees, but we only saw a handful. The highlights were a redstart, which nearly landed on Dave’s foot trying to get back to her nest(!), a pair of black guans, pair of blue dacnis (the male was SO BLUE), and some purple-throated mountain gem hummingbirds super close in the high canopy (which was underneath us!! Haha

    We also saw a pair of howler monkeys, probably the closest we’ve ever seen them, when they decided to use the hanging bridge instead of the trees as a little shortcut, and literally came within a metre of us as they walked past us! So cool!

    We spent 2.5 hours walking all the hanging bridges, some of them twice(!), until closing time. Then we decided to walk back into town rather than take the free shuttle, in case we got to see more wildlife… The decision paid off and we saw emerald toucanets from the road (but didn’t have chance to snap a pic), and a few more Motmots.

    We got back exhausted from the walking, and cooked our own dinner to save some money before getting an early night ready for the big day!

    Red start nest
    Black guan
    Blue dacnis
    View to the Nicoya Peninsula

    Our room was quite small here in Monteverde, and didn’t really have anywhere to put our bags or clothes, but after our scorpion incident in Laguna Apoyo, we made sure to pack all our clothes away zipped up in our closed bags on the floor… Or so I thought…. Seems when Dave got in bed he just left his shorts on the floor….

    We got a super early night, I was so tired, but then woke up again at 10pm after just a few hours. I was very thirsty, and Dave, ever the gentleman, offered to go down and get me some water… He put his pants on and instantly flinched!! He said there was something in them which stung him. He got his torch out, but couldn’t see anything, so put a different pair on and went downstairs…. Thinking he might be going crazy…

    In the morning, in the light of day, we both inspected the shorts… Dave slowly pushed them outside the room with the umbrella, and then he shook them. To our absolute HORROR, the biggest scorpion we’ve ever seen slowly crawled out of the shorts! It seems Dave had been stung the night before by this HUGE scorpion (and lived to tell the tale)!

    El Scorpion!

    Once we settled down from the scorpion horror, we got ready for the day. This was the day I’d been waiting for, we were visiting Monteverde National Park, which is supposed to be one of the best places in the world to see the Resplendent Queztal, a bird I have been trying to see since Guatemala! They live here year round, but March to May is supposed to be the best time to spot them, as it’s when they are nesting, so if you know where the nest sites are, you can wait in hiding to see if they come and go with food for the chicks. Apparently they are particularly hard to just spot in the canopy, since their bright green plumage and red bellies camouflage so well with the cloud forest environment and red bromeliads.

    We got to the park at 8:30am, we wanted to get there earlier, since quetzals are most active between 6-8am, but breakfast at our place was only from 7am and the shuttle to Monteverde only went at 8am… I was still hopeful though, and at the entrance to the park I asked if they knew of any active quetzal nests. The girl pointed and said, down the first trail to the left about 30 metres!! Thirty metres??? What?! I thought it would be deep in the park. But sure enough, about 30 metres down the trail were some people with binoculars trained on the forest… And right there was a hole in the tree…

    We waited probably 3 minutes and then the male quetzal appeared 😊 he flew to a nearby branch and posed for us, then went off in search of food and we lost him. We waited for another 5 minutes and he came back to the nest, disappearing into the hole!

    We’d been in the park a matter of minutes and already seen a Quetzal. I was SOOOO happy 😄

    A sign near the nest said to remain quiet and to avoid lingering near the nest site more than 10-15 minutes so as not to disturb the natural behaviour, so when he didn’t come out again after a few minutes we decided to move on a return later in the day. What a magical experience, and we’d only just started!

    Spot the Quetzal nest
    Peeking!
    A green blur of feathers!
    Dave’s pic!
    Flying back to the nest 😊

    We walked several of the trails today, basically in a big loop, and at the start of the day we saw many other groups all with guides and spotter scopes, some of which were quite noisy, but as the day progressed, the park got quieter and quieter, and we ended up spending all day here.

    Not long after the first quetzal sighting we heard another quetzal in the trees. Then…. We spotted him! It was a juvenile male, still with the bright plumage, but not quite with the long tail feathers yet. He posed in the tree above our heads for a few minutes before moving on!

    We also saw many other birds, but mostly thrushes and nightingales. And when the park was still busy in the morning, many of the guides we passed allowed us to look through their scopes, which were often focused on nests in the trees. It seemed to be nesting season for a lot of birds here.

    But even without too many wildlife sightings, the forest was still magical, as all cloud forests are. There’s something really mystical about them. A lot of the paths are dark, totally shaded, and between the trees is a dense covering of cloud and mist. And everywhere you look is green, there’s basically no bark on show at all, as every inch of the trees is covered in moss, vines, orchids, bromeliads, and air plants or pothos plants. The only differing colours being the orchid flowers and the deep red bromeliads.

    We walked to a view point, but all we saw was cloud! And then we continued our loop, spotting agouti and coatis through the trees, and the occasional hummingbird flying low over our heads.

    We stumbled upon one coati very intent on foraging near a fallen tree right by the path. He was a lone male and wasn’t interested in us in the slightest, just continued foraging and walking between us whilst he looked for the best site to dig through the loose soil.

    Juvenile male
    Nightingale chick!
    Amazing view point showing the meeting of 2 tectonic plates…. Errr…
    Crested Guan
    Cute coati

    The walk was about 6 hours before we finally reached the start again, and we quickly headed back to the Quetzal nest, but there were now LOADS of people gathered here staring at the nest, some talking loudly, others with their mega cameras set up on tripods pointing at the nest… We waited a few minutes and decided to continue along the path away from the masses. We walked about 200m further along the path and away from all the crowds til we couldn’t hear them any more… Then…. I saw the male quetzal in the trees. Perched not too far from the path, perfectly visible, and we had him all to ourselves ☺️. It was INCREDIBLE, and I couldn’t believe I’d spotted him. We stood and watched him in silence for about 15 minutes whilst he preened himself and had a chill. I couldn’t have asked for a better day, it was perfect, even more so that I spotted him myself 😇

    Dave’s pic

    We left the park, but the birding wasn’t over just yet, as we headed to cafe colibri (hummingbird) on the way back. Here we saw 6 different species of hummingbirds on the feeders, and they were kind of habituated I guess, as they got SO CLOSE to you, and were not phased in the slightest by your presence. We stayed here for quite a while haha!!

    What an amazing day! We finally got the last shuttle home and just collapsed in bed! We had to do this all again tomorrow!! Haha!

    Purple-throated mountain gem
    Green-crowned brilliant
    Violet Sabrewing
    Lesser violetear
    Stripe-tailed hummingbird
    Green hermit
    I couldn’t identify this one…

    The next day was another early start, today we were visiting the Curi Cancha Reserve, next to Monteverde, but slightly different biomes, more of a dry forest than a full on cloud forest. This place was supposed to be EVEN MORE mega for birds. Lots of quetzals, monkeys and the famous yet elusive three-wattled bellbird – a type of cotinga with a bizarre and unique call, it usually perches on the highest branch and makes a noise like an electronic buzzer, a loud “Bonk!” Followed by barely inaudible (because they are so high pitched) electronic sounding squeaks. This was our main bird we were on the look out for today…

    We got the shuttle to the park entrance, but the difference between here and Monteverde is that this is a private reserve. I asked for information about quetzal nests and they said there are none, so we should get a guide otherwise we wouldn’t see anything… The guide was over £100! So we left with no quetzal info, we think they were gatekeeping the info so we would get a guide 😞

    However, we did see less here than we’d hoped. We saw white-faced capuchin monkeys (a lot and several times), Agoutis and loads of wrens, thrushes and hummingbirds. But for most of the day, that was about it… The park was a lot sleepier, but fortunately also quieter with humans too, and we barely saw another person all day. Which meant we had the forest to ourselves.

    Oh and we saw a Motmot at the park entrance!
    Agouti

    On the last trail, on our way back to the entrance basically, we heard a few long tailed manakins lekking (the ones we saw in Nicaragua), we could hear them all around, but despite our best efforts of following our ears, the forest was just too dense to see them.

    Then we heard the iconic “BONK….. squeak, squeak” there was a bellbird about! We chased the sound until it was so loud, but again the forest was too dense. I couldn’t see anything…

    I’d read that they like to perch on high tree tops, often dead trees or sparse branches, so I was scanning them as best I could. I tried to see it for about 30 minutes, it was calling the whole time. But no joy…

    We walked to a Mirador instead, where we heard tonnes of keel billed toucans, but again, didn’t see any. Although I did see a punk rocker woodpecker here hammering the nearby tree, and some amazing mini hummingbirds, which I think were scintillant hummingbirds, with bright gold throats. It was definitely starting to pick up as the day went on!!

    We could still hear the bellbird, but decided to give up and headed away… Then… I saw a bird hopping in the top of a very high dead tree. It was the direction of the sound. It was hopping to face different directions, almost dancing. And it had the same silhouette of the bellbird. It was so high and hard to see in the light, but I’m sure it was the bellbird!! 🥳 I was made up! What a great end to the day!!

    This is what it should look like (photo from Wikipedia)
    My pic hahahaha… but come one, it has a white head, brown body and the short square tail. Plus I saw it hopping and it’s in the top of a dead tree…. I ticked it off in Merlin, that’s for sure!!

    We decided to walk back from Curi Cancha since the road is very scenic and you can see all the way to the Pacific ocean and the Nicoya Peninsula, but of course the heavens opened on our walk back… The afternoon rains here are like clockwork and it’s rained every afternoon so far. However, it’s not cold, in fact the rain is quite warm, and doesn’t usually last too long.

    We absolutely loved this region of Costa Rica, and after Biotopo Del Quetzal in Guatemala, Mombacho in Nicaragua, Mashpi Ecuador and here, I can safely say that cloud forests are my favourite ‘land’ biome (yeah, maybe 2nd favourite after coral reefs 😉). They are so magical and teeming with life. I hope we can visit more!

  • La Fortuna: Frogs, forests and free hot springs

    Miguel dropped us at the bus stop in Katira, a town on main road towards La Fortuna in the Rio Celeste region. We didn’t have to wait long until a direct bus turned up, and(!) we got seats this time! 🥳

    The bus was big and comfortable, meaning we could really relax and enjoy the views, which were stunning, and as we approached La Fortuna, we could see Arenal Volcano looming over the town.

    La Fortuna is probably the most touristy town of Costa Rica, and it’s basically on everyone’s itinerary. It’s easy to access, has lots of accommodation options, and is known as the “adventure capital” of Costa Rica, with tonnes of ziplining, ATVing, volcano hiking, canopy walks, sloth viewing centres and thanks to the volcano, lots of hot springs.

    We thought it might be too touristy for us, so we planned to stay just 2 nights and use it as a way to travel to Monteverde – the cloud forest region. Since the bus from Bijagua/Katira to Monteverde, well, it doesn’t exist. We would have needed 3-4 buses. But it was just one direct bus to La Fortuna, then we could get a $25 shuttle/boat combo to Monteverde over Lake Arenal, which looked really cool.

    So we ended up here for a few nights. To ease the pain of a mega touristy spot, I booked a really nice hotel, it was out on the outskirts of town, and had epic views of the volcano, plus lush gardens full of birds, lizards and frogs! We loved it here! There was even a pool table and a swimming pool! It was still only £40 a night! £20 a night each, with breakfast included!

    We arrived super early, at like 11am, but they let us check in straight away, so after a few big days of lots of walking, we finally had a chill day, and just relaxed in the hotel, watching the birds, playing pool, and having a dip in the swimming pool. In the evening, the gardens came alive with frogs and we saw SO MANY blue jeans poison dart frogs, plus a couple of red-eyed tree frogs too. We didn’t need to pay to go on a night walk, they were all here already! So cool!

    Arenal Volcano, our hotel was at the end of this road, you can see the sign – Xilopalo
    Plumed basilisk
    Rufous-tailed hummingbird
    Green Ibis
    The gardens behind the hotel
    Black cheeked Woodpecker
    Blue grey tanager
    Red-legged honeycreeper
    Caracara
    Lessons motmot outside our room
    Blue jeans frogs
    Red-eyed tree frog

    On our full day in La Fortuna, we again tried to escape the crowds, and went to the Ecological Park Arenal, which is a private reserve and hiking area up the slopes of arenal Volcano, but apparently much quieter than the national park, which can get incredibly busy.

    We got an Uber from the hotel, and then walked up a trail to a viewpoint of the volcano. We saw so many different hummingbirds here, included 2 new ones for me – the white-necked Jacobin and the violet-headed hummingbird, but there must have been 6 different species here, they were everywhere! Dave also saw a big gang of toucans (whilst I was in the loo at the visitors centre! 😭), and we saw crested guans in the trees too.

    The walk was nice and yes, it was so quiet, it was lovely, we only saw one other couple on the trails the whole day… Apart from at the view point at the top, where lots of people came up to on ATV tours via a different path. But it wasn’t too bad… We had all the walking trails to ourselves at least!

    We went back down via different paths, and on the way back down, we saw the toucans again! This time I was lucky enough to see them too! They followed us in the trees, and we managed one blurry snap! Haha. As Dave says, behind every epic photo we have of wildlife, there’s 10 blurry ones! Haha And usually it’s me who can get the fast shots with my phone, but I forgot it today and accidentally left it at the hotel 😭

    Entering the park
    Lizard with a mega long blue tail
    Dave’s viewpoint pic
    Volcan Arenal
    We didn’t see any though…
    Dave’s blurry toucan shot!!

    Before heading back to the hotel, we continued along the road away from town about another 1km to a free hot spring site. It’s actually a hot river flowing, and was really cool actually. I got in for a bit, but Dave realised he’d forgotten to pack his swim shorts 😞 but he didn’t miss out too much, as about 20 minutes after we arrived, a huge downpour started. We got back to the road and called an Uber.

    We chilled in the room again, and then in the evening we did another DIY/hotel night tour, again seeing loads of little red frogs!

    We really liked it here, and although it was mega touristy, we were able to escape the crowds and have an amazing time! We saw so many birds, especially hummingbirds and the hot springs were so cool. Perhaps it would have been nicer to stay longer…

    Walking down the road
    Soaking in a hot river
    Hot river
    Where we saw the frogs
    Gardens outside our room
    Blue jeans frog!
  • Sloths and Snakes in Rio Celeste

    Next stop in Costa Rica was the Rio Celeste region. Here, two clear rivers (the Quebrada Agria and Río Buena Vista) meet. One is slightly acidic, the other is rich in aluminosilicate particles, both thanks to the local volcanic activity. When they merge, the change in pH causes the particles to clump together in just the right size to scatter sunlight in the blue spectrum – the same principle that makes the sky appear blue. This results in the famous Rio Celeste, which is a striking bright blue.

    But that’s not all the region is famous for, as I’d read that it’s also a sloth hotspot, with almost guaranteed sightings in the whole area. We were super excited to get there!

    The journey by bus looked painless on paper. There’s a direct public bus from Liberia centre to Bijagua, the nearest town, which only took about 2.5 hours. The place I’d booked offered to collect us from the bus stop, and was about 25 min from Bijagua. Simple.

    However, we got to the bus stop in Liberia 30 min before the bus and it was sold out… Standing room only… 😭 The next bus was 3 hours later, and I’d already agreed with the accommodation what time we’d be arriving… So we reluctantly bought the ticket for standing…. I’m not going to lie, it was pretty horrendous haha, the roads were very winding and we both had to use both hands to hold on the whole journey, we couldn’t relax at all. And standing up in the aisle, we could barely see out of the windows too, so we weren’t able to sightsee and look at the mountains and volcanoes along the way…

    Still, we made it to Bijagua in good time and were collected by Miguel, the owner of Cabinas Cascada Rio Celeste.

    Standing room only on the bus 😭
    On the way in Miguel’s car

    Our accommodation was amazing, just 3 ensuite rooms underneath where the owners live – it was like a homestay, and they were both so helpful and friendly. They barely spoke any English, so it was a great opportunity to practice and learn more Spanish. The gardens at the place were also stunning and we saw so many different and unique birds just sat on the balcony overlooking them. I think I ticked off over 10 new bird species just in one hour here…

    We had some food at the restaurant next door, which fortunately for us (well… I also looked it up before hand, and it was one of the reasons I booked this place!) had loads of vegan options, so we had one of the nicest (and biggest) vegan burgers we’ve had on this trip.

    Then we headed out along the road, binoculars in hand. And although the road was quite busy with cars, there was still so much wildlife, just from the road! We saw the yellow-throated toucan – a HUGE toucan species, which was so cool, lots of new tanagers, hummingbirds, warblers and the red-lored Amazon Parrot.

    We carried on walking to a public swimming spot in the river, just under the bridge. Some locals were swimming, but we hadn’t bought our swim stuff, so we just dipped our feet in.

    Yellow Throated Toucan
    Red Lored Parrot
    The amazing blue water of Rio Celeste
    Some kind of Hawk but we couldn’t identify it…

    The next morning we woke super early to watch the birds in the gardens, there were so many! Then we had a lovely breakfast before heading over to Tenorio National Park. This is where the famous Rio Celeste waterfall is, but unfortunately, you’re not allowed to swim in the national park. So it’s a hike to look at the river, volcano features and wildlife.

    We got there bang on 8am when it opened and were one of the first into the park, so it was lovely and quiet. The trail was very well maintained and easy. The waterfall is quite near the start, but it was down a tonne of steps… Not bad on the way down, but a killer on the way back up. Still, it wasn’t that bad really. And it was stunning, and so inviting haha, I can see why they don’t let people swim here, as it would be PACKED I’m sure.

    Theres only one trail here though, and it’s linear. It goes up past the waterfall then continues up to a hot spring, a lagoon and volcanic areas, then ends at the actual confluence of the rivers, so you can literally see the reaction happening and 2 clear rivers mixing to make the blue one, it’s so cool!!

    Theres also supposed to be lots of wildlife and sloths in this park too, but we found the forest far too dense to see anything from the trail, it was pretty pathetic actually, we probably only saw 3 other birds/animals the whole day!! And not for lack of looking/trying. You know what we’re like too, we’re usually both very good at spotting stuff!

    Although we did have an amazing interaction with a Keel-billed Motmot (our 5th Motmot species!), we saw him on the way in, perched in a tree. We stayed and watched a while whilst he hunted and feasted on the huge cicadas here. Gracefully plucking them from the air in mid-flight, then landing and absolutely bashing them in on the branch haha. There was a burrow in the dirt bank which we thought must be his home too, So on the way back down, we recognised the same spot… He wasn’t here, so we called him! Sure enough, he answered us, far off in the trees, we kept calling and then both of them – the male and female, showed up! We stood and watched them again. Whilst hoards and hoards of tourists (mostly American) traipsed past us totally uninterested…. It seemed most people only come here for the Instagram shot of the waterfall and don’t actually care about the wildlife…

    In fact, we got very frustrated this day… In the morning, from 8-10am was quiet and peaceful and that’s when we saw the Motmots, some wrens, a few warblers etc, but after 10am, the park was swamped with noisy tourists, we could hear some of them from 100 metres away at times, they were THAT loud! And basically after that we saw nothing, or very little at least… (Apart from when we did our Motmot whispering haha).

    Keel-billed Motmot
    Terrapin!
    Bubbling hot springs
    A pool full of tadpoles!
    Where the rivers meet and turn blue!
    Managed to call the Motmot to us, a real-life Disney princess moment!

    We returned to the accommodation and Miguel asked us how it went, we must have looked disappointed and disheartened… “No sloths” 😞 so he offered to take us out along the road sloth spotting.

    We headed back to the Metamorphosis restaurant first though, and as soon as we arrived the waiter was so excited, “guys I have something to show you…” He took us around into the garden between our accommodation and the restaurant… And there was a sloth in the tree there! Just a big ball of fur completely motionless haha, but still, it was a sloth!! Our first one! And literally next to us, in our gardens!

    Completely stuffed, we met Miguel to go on a walk, and told him about the sloth we just saw. His wife was there and she told us yes this sloth is here a lot and has had 2 babies in fact! But Miguel said he could show us more…

    They are usually in the same tree, a cecropia tree, which has wide open branches, which actually makes them quite easy to spot when you know how. So every time we saw one of those trees we scanned with the binocs… And sure enough, we saw 2 more to add to the one in our garden! 3 sloths in one night, not too bad!

    Garden monitor 😂
    Sloth 1 (aka garden sloth)
    Sloth 2
    Sloth 3

    The next day, we had planned to go back to Tenorio, but since the wildlife spotting was so slim, and actually we seemed to see WAY more (like everything) on the actual roads or in our garden, we decided instead to just walk around the roads, and headed up to a private walk on someone’s land, walking along the roads and through the village to get there.

    It was $6 to get in, and we were the only ones here. We walked down through the forest and saw more Motmots! This time 2 different species at the same time! We saw both a keel-billed Motmot and a Broad-billed Motmot too, at one point, even sharing the same perch! But mostly they kept their distance, and did not seem to mind being in the same valley, or mind us being there, as they both continued to catch cicadas the whole time! That’s 6 species now!

    We also saw loads of lizards, quite a few frogs too, and some creepy caterpillars. It was miles better than Tenorio!

    Plus the trail ended at a beautiful swimming pool, where you were able to swim in the Rio Celeste. We’d taken our swimming stuff this time, but a combination of it being quite chilly, lots of bugs, and a bit spooky since we were the only ones here, meant we didn’t really get fully in the water, just dipped our legs in, and I floated about on a tube for a bit.

    Then… I saw a snake swimming in the water, it was so close to us and crazy colours and patterns on its skin! We both stayed relatively calm, but then we saw another, and another, and another… 😂 We had no idea if it was venomous or what, so we swiftly got out of the water!!

    Then as we were getting our clothes back on next to the river, we saw some keel billed toucans land in the tree above us. They were hard to see, but I managed to watch them for a bit through the binoculars.

    This mini trail was definitely better!

    We saw the Motmots again on our way back up, then headed back, once again to Metamorphosis for tasty vegan food, then back to the room.

    Walking along the roads
    Broad billed Motmot (with Cicada!)
    Errr nope
    Definitely nope…
    Keel-billed Motmot
    Broad billed Motmot

    That night we had planned to do a night walk with a friend of the owners near by, hopefully to spot a Tapir (like a big nocturnal pig with a long nose!), but whist we were at the restaurant a big storm rolled in. The thunder and lighting was cool to experience, but it rained so hard, we didn’t really want to go on the night walk…. But Miguel said it would be fine, we just kept in touch with the guy we were meeting, and if it carried on like this, we could cancel, but it should stop…..

    And fortunately it did!! The rains stopped as quickly as they started and so we headed out to the trail at dusk. Miguel and his wife took us there, and then joined us on the trail with the guide too, which was nice!

    First activity was sloth spotting. In the fading day light we saw loads, 5 in total I think, and one of them had a baby too! So cute, but none of them were particularly active. I mean, I know sloths are famously lazy and slow, but so far all the sloths we’d seen had been completely motionless, and hiding their face… But right at the end, in very low light, we finally saw a sloth face!

    Mother and baby

    Then we headed to a frog pool, where we saw SO MANY red eye tree frogs, like that classic perfect tree frog, they are so beautiful, very leggy and clumsy, which was quite funny to watch, but very beautiful too. When they are sleeping they hide their hands and feet and close their eyes, they are like completely camouflaged, but as the night drew in, they started to wake up and show their full colours.

    We also saw a blue jeans poison dart frog, a bull frog and a cross banded tree frog.

    Then we went off in search of tapirs, snakes and spiders. Thankfully (for me) we didn’t see any spiders, but we did see a lot of weird and wonderful insects and a Kinkajou! A nocturnal arboreal mammal with very reflective eyes!

    We walked around for a while with no joy on the tapir front… Then sadly we got to 7:30pm, the end of the tour, we were heading back to the start when… We saw the tapir!!

    It was MASSIVE, it was way bigger than I expected based on photos I’d seen of the animal. I thought they would have been small and nimble, living in these dense forests, but no, it was huge!

    This one was pregnant and so had a tracking/monitoring collar on it, apparently in this region all pregnant females are monitored, and then after as well to keep an eye on the baby, so they end up wearing the collar for up to 2 years at a time!

    We were so chuffed we got to see this amazing creature! What a great day!!

    Hiding tree frog
    Awake and ready
    Ready to…. Errr

    Everything was perfect! Until we got in bed that night and both found ticks on us!! We don’t know how long they’d been on us, but since I had a shower before the night walk, we think it was the night walk. The one on me I felt trying to bite me, and hadn’t fully latched on yet. Neither of them were big either, so obviously they hadn’t fed on us yet… But we still got worried about the tick diseases they potentially carry. Fortunately, it’s just like flu and fever symptoms, so we’ll just have to look out for those over the next weeks and fingers crossed everything is ok ☺️

    In the morning, I got up early again to sit and bird watching in the garden, and I saw a weird hovering insect feeding on a purple flowering bush… Wait… No…. It was flying like a hummingbird , but surely it wasn’t, I called Dave over and we watched it together. It was definitely a micro hummingbird, with a white and green body. We identified it as a snowcap hummingbird, which turns out to be ANOTHER holy-grail bird species I didn’t even know about!!

    The view from the terrace
    More birds visible in this garden than in Tenorio 🤣
    Snowcap hummingbird (yes this is the picture I took when I saw it… No, I can’t see it in the picture either 🤣)

    What an amazing time in Rio Celeste! After breakfast, Miguel dropped us at the bus stop in Katira too, one could catch our next bus. The couple who owned this place really made the stay for us, they were so helpful and we would have been lost without their generosity driving us to places. We are really starting to feel the kindness of the Costa Rican people now, and their love for nature. Miguel has lived in the area for 50 years he said, and I still caught him with his binoculars looking into the garden every morning. And clearly he knew where all the local sloths were haha. It seems Costa Ricans are brought up with a strong connection to nature, they feel part of it, not separate to it, and it really shows.

  • Liberia: the gateway to Rincon de la Vieja

    Costa Rica has been at the top of my travel list for a long long time. I am a big wildlife lover and pretty much all of my trips in the last 6 years have been wildlife focused, from hiking to see wildlife mountain gorillas in Uganda, a snorkelling expedition in Philippines, Mashpi Lodge and the Amazon in Ecuador, Safari in Kenya and Tanzania… And Costa Rica is renowned for it’s biodiversity and ecotourism centred on wildlife.

    The last few days in Nicaragua I spent basically all my down time planning the last details of what we should do and where we should go to maximise our time. So my head was kind of already there since we left Ometepe…

    The issue for me is balance… We’re not working and this Costs Rica trip is part of a one year trip, so budget is slimmer than it should be really, in a country famous for being very expensive to travel. So how can we still see all the birds and wildlife we want to see without blowing all our budget?!?!

    The key was going to be self catering! And also to continue travelling how we always travel – DIY (aka without a tour or a guide), on public transport (no expensive shuttles for us!). I’d always prefer to do this anyway, so there’s no change there!

    From San Juan in Nicaragua then, we got a bus up to the main road and the town of La Virgen, here we waited for a 2nd bus to take us to the border.

    The bus was alright and took us on a road next to Lake Nicaragua, with views over Ometepe again. At the border we hopped out and started the long walk to the Nicaraguan exit. We saw all the locals on the bus heading out into a field… We didn’t know if this was a dodgy crossing?! As we were the only ones from the bus here and in the exit building!

    We paid our $4 exit fee and then carried on walking, down a gridlocked road full of trucks trying to cross the border. We finally saw the Costa Rica entrance. There was an ATM here which was free! So that sorted us out with cash then we tried to enter Costa Rica… And failed!!

    We needed proof of onward travel…. 🤦🏻‍♀️ We do have a flight booked from Panama to Colombia – which on every site, forum and asking ChatGPT, said would likely be enough, since we obviously have to leave Costa Rica to take this flight, but no, that wasn’t enough, we needed an actual ticket showing leaving Costa Rica… We headed outside again. Fortunately, my home SIM allows roaming in CR, so I was able to look for an alternative. I had already heard about an online service which books you a flight, but then cancels it automatically within the 24 hour grace period. The service is just £8 (£4 each) so I did that, and booked a flight from San Jose to Panama (which is now cancelled) and within 5 minutes we were back in the border office getting an approved entry! ☺️ Phew! Definitely not stressful… 👀😂

    It was another short walk to the bus stop at the border, where we caught a bus to Liberia, our first stop here on CR. We planned to stay here for 2 reasons, first, it’s a convenient entry point from Nicaragua, and second, it’s very good for accessing Rincon de la Vieja national park, which looked EPIC!

    The drive was so good too, and weirdly, in my head I had imagined what Costa Rica would look like – green, heavily forested, clean, rolling hills of lush jungles and volcanoes… But then I realised, no wait, it’s going to look very similar to Nicaragua at first, dry dusty forests etc., as it can’t change that dramatically just over the imaginary line of the border… But then, it actually did!  It was instantly greener and more lush! 🤯 Plus, the roads were nicer – perfect tarmac, the buses were bigger and more comfortable (like UK coaches), it was clean and there was no rubbish along the grass verges. You could see the wealth difference straight away really.

    We arrived in Liberia and checked in to our apartment, it was really cute with a private kitchen, bathroom and A/C for so cheap. We walked to the supermarket straight away to get some groceries for the next few days, 3 days worth of food, like pasta, sauces, cereal, rice, some soya mince, almond milk etc cost us £20, not too bad. Where was this “super expensive” Costa Rica everyone was talking about?!

    We got back to the apartment full with food…. Then ordered a burger king plant based whopper off Uber eats 🤣🤣🤣 what?! It had been a long day!!

    The next morning we planned to start super early, but the national park only actually opens at 8am, so we set off at 7:15am from the apartment. We were going to get an Uber, but the guy renting us the apartment (Chris) offered to take us for $20. We bought our ticket to the park online in advance, and started on our way.

    It was about 45 min from the town to the entrance, and when we got there Chris gave us the number of his friend who has a taxi company, he said message him and he can collect us, or if not, he’ll find someone else. All seemed perfect!

    We entered the park, which has purified tap water (yes, you can drink tap water in CR 😵), amazing clean toilets and great sign detailing the routes and POIs… So far everything in Costa Rica is amazing! We planned to walk Los Pilas trail, a circular route around the park.

    5 minutes in we saw a troop of spider monkeys swinging gracefully through the trees overhead, good start!

    This park is quite unique in that it’s on the slopes of a very active volcano and has lots of visible volcanic activity, like fumeroles, bubbling mud pools, sulphuric lakes. It was a bit like Mombacho really, but the infrastructure here was much better and the trails very easy and well maintained.

    However, this made it much busier, and there were groups of loud American tourists everywhere around us, we couldn’t see to escape them!

    Steaming ground
    Smoking jungle!
    Boiling water pool
    Bubbling mud pool
    Fumerole
    Volcanic clouds

    We loved the volcanic activity, Dave was in his element, and there were many birds here too, so I was in mine. We saw a ground cuckoo near the fumeroles which was super cute, a turquoise-browed motmot too, and we heard SO MANY Long-Tailed manakins (the dancing birds we saw at lake Apoyo). I’m not kidding, we could hear a lek and their ethereal singing about every 50 metres, but the forest was so dense we didn’t see any ☹️

    Then I heard a Motmot… I think, I got the merlin app out to check, it was a tody Motmot apparently, unaware at how rare and special this species is, I chased after the sound, and tried the call and response trick, singing myself and playing the sound from my app. I accidentally got a group of birders mega excited and they nearly ran into me haha, oops. I stood with the other birders a while as we all tried to catch a glimpse of this holy-grail bird. We could hear it on the mountain side… Then… A flash, I saw them, 3 actually, 2 parents and a very recently fledged chick too, it was still a bit fluffy and it’s colours were muted. I saw one of the parents far away through the binoculars, but the chick was the one who moved close enough to papp. So my picture makes it look a bit brown and dull, but this Motmot is usually very pretty.

    And yes, afterwards when I looked it up, I read that the Tody Motmot is a particularly unusual species – it’s the only member of the genus Hylomanes, making it genetically distinct from the other Motmots. While it’s still in the same family (Momotidae), it diverged early on and has some pretty unique features, like its small size and lack of the typical racquet-tipped tail. So it’s a bit of a holy grail species for birders – no wonder there were so many people chasing it! I feel very lucky to have seen it. That’s now 5 out of the 14 known Motmot species ticked off!☺️

    We also saw a lot of iguanas, some huge ones too, and we heard some Keel-billed toucans, with their unique croaking sound, but we didn’t see any ☹️

    All in all it was a great day and we loved the park, albeit we regretted how much we had to share it with loud and ‘uncultured‘ tourists 😂 “oh my gawd, what is it, is it a lizard (it was an Iguana), oh my gawd it just moved”, and overhearing everyone either talking about how much money they earn/spent on ridiculous things or complaining how difficult the “hike” was when it was so so easy haha (and that’s me saying that!). We’re going to have to get used to this! Haha

    We left the park happy, but a little anxious as I had messaged the guy Chris gave me, but he’d not replied yet… I messaged Chris and he said he didn’t know how we could get back, maybe we could try an Uber… Signal was intermittent at best (mostly none). We tried to hail an Uber but we were too far from town…

    We thought, let’s walk down the road and keep trying, surely we will find an Uber eventually, and the walk was all downhill back into the town.

    About 45 min into the walk, in the baking sun, we still hadn’t managed to find a cab. (Although we did see lots of Motmots, a deer and some cute lapwings). We looked at the maps, we were maybe another 45 min walk from the nearest village along the road. We thought, we’ll walk there and see.

    But I had a better idea and instead tried to flag down a passing car. There was only one road, the one we were on from the national park, and it joined the main road at a T-junction 10 km away, so any car could drop us there, and we could get taxis or even a bus from there for certain. It was mostly tourists returning from the park in car hires too, so it felt very safe. One eventually stopped for us, a local Tico (Costa Rican) family in a pickup truck, so we jumped in the back. They were actually going all the way into Liberia, and didn’t mind taking us all the way. We spent the journey making faces at the small child sat in the back seat haha! But we made it, back to Liberia safe and sound! Phew!

    I made a tasty chilli sin carne that night for tea and we relaxed in the AC of our apartment.

    Lapwing
    Motmot
    Coatis crossing!
    Hitchhiking out of necessity!
    Chilli sin carne with dried soya

    The next day we decided to do a more adventurous trip, as I’d read about a waterfall walk to La Leona waterfall, where you walk through the forest and the river, swimming and wading to reach it. It sounded really good and was only $30 for a guided trip. We booked it for 9am first time, and got a Uber which got us there about 8:30am. They didn’t wait and said, let’s go straight out, but we were the only ones there, so we ended up on a private tour. Our guide, Ian was very good and low key a wildlife nerd, but cool at the same time (this seems to be a Tico thing!)

    It was such a great day, walking through the forest, first seeing an owl roosting and bats, then wading through the water, climbing up ladders and rappelling down rocks, swimming, and eventually pulling ourselves up the river towards the waterfall. Since we got here early, we were the first (and only) ones there for a while, so it was finally peaceful and quiet. But as we left the waterfall, there was a huge queue forming to enter! We timed it just right!

    We walked back along the river, crossing it several times with the help of ropes. We saw more Motmots and a pair of sunbitterns, which I saw and casually just said, oh wow, look at that bird, it’s wings are amazing. And Ian got so excited, and chased after them! Apparently they are ANOTHER holy-grail bird species which people go wild for, again because they are the only species in their family and have an ancient genetic lineage! I was getting so lucky with these accident sightings as a new birder!

    We had a fantastic day, and after, Ian gave us some contacts for the rest of our trip which I hope we can use ☺️

    Hiking through the forest first
    Spotting an Mottled Owl
    Walking through bat caves
    Using the rope to rappel down the rock
    Wading
    Swimming
    Pulling ourselves towards the waterfall
    We had it all to ourselves
    Sunbittern flying away

    We returned to the start and got changed in time to get the public bus back down to Liberia (no hitch hiking this time!!), but it was as much of an adventure, as we basically free-wheeled the whole way back as the engine kept cutting out!! Haha, the driver eventually got it started just in time for the flat terrain of the town (thankfully!).

    Liberia was a great introduction to Costa Rica, and Rincon de la Vieja was such a cool national park with volcanic activity and amazing animals. We already saw 2 holy-grail bird species (by accident!) which is hopefully a fantastic indication of what is to come with the rest of our time here 😉 The waterfall hike was also a highlight, and it was even more special being the only ones there and having a private tour!