Super early day this morning, whoo boy! Mom, Dad and I
set our alarms for 4:30 and after dragging ourselves out of bed and getting
everything packed, were up at Luke’s house by 5:30 to pick him and Arden
up. Then it was a three or so hour drive
to our final destination for the day; Monteverde. I remember going there once the last time we
were in Costa Rica about 14 years ago (I was 7 at the time) and I remember it
was a truly amazing place, and fun as well.
What I DON’T remember from that trip was the drive to Monteverde. Oh.
My. Goodness.
The
first two hours were anything but extraordinary, fairly well paved roads, well
marked road signs… the usual. But the
last hour… wow. I would say the roads were gravel, but this wasn’t just any
gravel. This was gigantor gravel, stone
sized, some verging on boulders. And
then there were all the tight turns and the stretches that shot straight up or
straight down. Oh, and then you had the combination of a hairpin turn WITH a
straight up. And this all the while you were
clacking your teeth together for the consistent bumps and jolts.
Some
of you may know me as not the best passenger in the world as I tend to be a
little on edge and overly jumpy sometimes while sitting in the side seat. Mind
you, sometimes. It depends on the
situation. Well, I can tell you I spent that whole hour on edge. I think Luke
was actually quite entertained at my terrifiedness and I’m glad it at least
made someone feel better.
I’ve already made it quite
evident that this little car is not the most gung ho, blazing its own trail,
crazy driving type car. It’s a great car
for city driving and parking in tight spaces, that’s about it. That and great
gas mileage. Just to give you a glimpse into my mind during that hour, here’s a
bit of a picture ran through my head at one point;
From all the strain
put on the poor car it finally decides it’s had enough and the transmission blows
up, sending shards of metal into all four tires which then explode from the
car, disintegrating into smithereens. This then causes the car to smash down onto
its undercarriage which breaks off the exhaust pipe, cracking the oil pan and
spewing oil all over the car. The oil
leakage than bursts into flames, igniting the entire car on fire, and we are
left standing there in the middle of nowhere, with a baby, watching our blazing
inferno of a car disintegrate into ash.
That’s how
bad the road was.
Moving
on from that lovely image… We got to Monteverde around 10:00, a little later
than we had hoped but we still made good time. We had had some difficulty with directionality
again once we got into a rather confusing town, and we learned that there was
more than one place to do what we wanted to do.
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No wonder we got lost... |
Finally finding our way to
the highly recommended Selvatura Park, we paid our entrance fee and got started
on our day in the cloud forest! First was the several hour self guided tour of
the Sky Walk which was a combination of about 8 suspension bridges that spanned
the canopy of a good part of the forest as well as some well maintained foot
paths.
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Felix and I on one of the Sky Walks |
That was super cool! We got to see over the canopy of the forest as well
as walk through parts of the forest and there were tons of butterflies and
birds around. I think we probably took
twice as long as the estimated completion time since we like to stop every ten
paces to take a picture, locate a calling bird, identify a strange fungus… Oh
biologists J.
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View of some of the forest canopy |
We finished up with the Sky
walk around 1:00 and made it just in time for the next tour of the butterfly
sanctuary.
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The Butterfly Sanctuary |
We got to see a bunch of the
native butterflies that they raised in this giant dome garden and they even had
boards of the chrysalises that they collected in preparation for their
hatching. A bunch of them were wiggling too!
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The box of chrysalises |
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One of the hundreds of butterflies |
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A recently hatched butterfly |
After that tour, we made our
way to the hummingbird garden where they had tons and tons of feeders set up
and even more hummingbirds of various varieties buzzing and zipping
around. We sat in there for quite some
time, Dad and I both content to sit and photograph and Arden completely enthralled
by all the pretty, flashing birds.
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Female Violet Saberwing |
At
one point, this old and beat up looking Coati came ambling up out of the woods
and walked about right around our feet looking for food and licking up the
sugar water that had accumulated on the ground.
That was cool and it didn’t really seem to care that we were there.
We finally dragged ourselves
away from the hummingbirds and left the park, driving a little ways into town
to a café that was recommended to us as a good place to sit and watch
birds. We got some coffee and lunch and
sat outside by the feeders to see what we could see.
We didn’t actually really
see any birds, to our disappointment, so after a while we packed up again and
headed down the road. We took a short
detour along the way to a park that we had spent a lot of time at the first
time we were in Costa Rica, the Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve. It was cool to
just walk around for nostalgias sake and some of my memories as a 7 year old
started coming back.
As we were getting ready to
leave Luke started cutting up some fruit for our drive home and we had this
rather curious coati come within arms distance of us. It was pretty funny to watch it stalk up as
close as it possibly dared and then just whip around and dart off a ways. It did that several times!
The drive back home was
rather uneventful, though of course there was that horrendous excuse for a road
that we had to travel back over. Yeesh!
By the time we got home we were all happy from a fun filled day and ready for a
good nights sleep.