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Costa RicaA Family Adventure Mecca
by Brian Morgan
Earlier this year a 5th grade teacher contacted me looking
for posters of the rainforest for her classroom. She hoped to turn her
entire classroom into a vibrant jungle to help teach her students about
the importance of this ecosystem. That got me to thinking about the families
I have known who have taken their kids on trips to the rainforest. What
better way for children and parents to understand this fantastic ecosystem
than to tromp through the rainforest seeing firsthand how the thousands
of insect and plant species, hundreds of types of birds, and varied animals
like three-toed sloths and noisy monkeys, all work together to create
this thing called a rainforest. And what better way to discover the natural
wonders of a rainforest than a Costa Rica tour.
Of all places to experience the rainforest, Costa Rica
comes to mind as one of the best choices for families with children of
any age. Small rainforest lodges with excellent guides and creative cooks
dot the country and travel times are rarely longer than three hours. Some
of these lodges have developed special programs for families traveling
with children as young as six years old. In addition, a Costa
Rica tour seems ideal for that first introduction to the jungle environment.
Although the country has some of the largest tracts of jungle in Central
America, it is also very easy to get to know this forest on short hikes,
canopy walkways, horseback rides, or half-day rafting trips.
Costa Rica's travel industry is well developed. It is
possible to stay at resorts complete with cable TV and air conditioning,
but I think the best places for family adventures are the small eco-lodges
that Costa Rica families have built to introduce visitors to their home
country. It is at these places that visiting families stop feeling like
tourists and start feeling like welcomed guests in another family's home--complete
with adventures suitable for all ages! These family run eco-lodges might
be slightly more rustic--no television, no room telephones, and sometimes
no electricity--but then who goes to the jungle to watch Nickelodeon?
The personal attention of your host as she takes you on walks through
the forest, complete with family anecdotes from her childhood, is well
worth the small sacrifice of no television and dining by candlelight.
With these small lodges dotting the country and with
short travel times between regions, families can spend a few days in the
rainforest, go whitewater rafting, and rent boogie boards and sea kayaks
on the beach all in a week long vacation. So where are the best places
to visit during your Costa Rica tour? I can't really answer that for you,
but I can tell you about some of my favorites.
A great way to begin your trip in Costa Rica is with
a whitewater rafting trip on the Pacuare or Reventazòn rivers.
The minimum age for rafting the Pacuare River (Class III-IV) is 12 and
the minimum age for the Reventazòn (Class II-III) is 9. A great
alternative for families with younger children is the famous Rainforest
Arial Tram. The trip lasts about half a day and includes an hour-long
guided gondola trip through the jungle canopy. We've had families with
younger and older children where dad and his eight year-old daughter took
the rainforest tram and then met up with mom and the older kids after
their rafting trip. This provides a great starter for any Costa Rica tour.
After whitewater rafting, many visitors return to San
Jose for the night. A great alternative, however, is to continue traveling
on the Caribbean side of Costa Rica. This area isn't as developed as other
parts of Costa Rica, but there are natural treasures worth several days
in any itinerary.
Another great alternative is to head to Tortuguero National
Park after your rafting trip. Tortuguero was created to protect four species
of turtles that lay their eggs there from April to October. At night,
visitors go on guided trips to watch the turtles come ashore to dig shallow
holes for their eggs. Tortuguero is the most famous place in Costa Rica
to watch the sea turtles. Families can canoe through the watery canals
to look for monkeys, toucans, and caiman, or they can stay around the
hotels and play pool, ping pong, or just relax.
Tortuguero isn't the only place to view sea turtles,
and if you are looking for that secluded Caribbean get-away, it probably
won't meet your expectations. My favorite place in this area is the little
known Pacuare Nature Reserve. This private reserve is located just south
of Tortuguero and it is the most important nesting ground for the giant
leatherback turtle (turtle season is roughly March 15-August 25). This
reserve has no hotels; instead, visitors stay in a beach house built years
ago by the reserve's founder. A maximum of six visitors can stay here
at any time as the house has only three rooms! Families can go on canal
trips during the day and wander the reserve's four miles of pristine beach.
At night families accompany biologists on their rounds, during which kids
and mom and dad can help measure the turtles, count the eggs, and even
help carry the eggs to incubators where they'll be protected from poachers
until they hatch.The beaches at both Pacuare and
Tortuguero are not suited for swimming as the tides are too strong, so
make certain to plan some separate beach time if you're looking for some
fun in the surf.
If you've returned to San Jose you might consider boarding
a charter flight the next morning for the Osa Peninsula or the Golfo Dulce.
The highlight on the Osa Peninsula is Corcovado National Park, one of
the crown jewels of the Costa Rica national park system, and a highlight
of any Costa Rica tour. Corcovado Tent Camp offers families a chance to
"rough it" without really doing so. Accommodation is in one
of 20 safari-style tents so kids feel like they're camping, but mom and
dad don't have to cook any of the meals. Instead, everyone gets to enjoy
the adventures of climbing into the canopy using a system of ropes and
pulleys, boogie boarding or surfing on the crashing waves just a hundred
yards from your tent, and hiking through the rainforest, as your guide
points out coatis (sort of like a tropical raccoon), capuchin monkeys,
and scarlet macaws.
Costa Rica has so many great places for families that
I can't describe all of them here. I haven't even mentioned Arenal Volcano,
Wilson Botanical Gardens, the Savegre Valley, Monte Verde, and Manuel
Antonio, Manzanillo and Cahieta. Costa Rica offers such diversity that
you're likely to come back again and again. Whatever places in Costa Rica
you choose to visit for your holiday, I recommend that you search out
those small lodges and hotels that are often owned and operated by families
like your own. What better way to create lifelong memories with your own
family. As they say in Costa Rica-Buen viaje!
Brian Morgan has been working and traveling throughout
Latin America since 1999.
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