Last Day…

After a full day of bouncing around in the car on the way to Monteverde and back, we chose a simple, relaxing beach afternoon for our last full day in Costa Rica.

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The bar/restaurant area of Rancho de la Playa. Pool to the right.

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The comfy hang-out area.  Pretty nice.  Our room included air conditioning, two beds and a full, if sometimes comical kitchen.  Friendly staff. $85/night.  Would be happy to stay there again.

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Oddly enough, this is not referred to “coco frio”, but instead “pipa frio”.

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Some light beach reading.  In case you’re wondering, the good guys won.

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Forgot my platform dancing shoes…

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Please help the fish.

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Oh yes, dinner by the sea.

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This is what you get when you order squid stuffed with Chorizo – basically chorizo with squid on the outside :-D.

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Here’s Dennis from Switzerland showing me his home-made backgammon board.  He’s traveling around looking for a good place to settle.

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Steve’s Photos of Monteverde

On Thursday we headed from the beach to the mountains to check out the Monteverde cloud forest.  We went to this nature park: http://www.selvatura.com/.  Sure, we could have done zip-lining, but we had made a vacation mistake – it was simply too far a drive to do more than a long tour and lunch.  To do this place properly best to spend the night.

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Joyce following Miguel into the forest.  We had an usual sunny day.  It’s supposed to be cloudy and raining.

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Here we go…

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Yikes, a long way down.

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A photo of Joyce taking a photo.  Fascinating to see plants that in our world are small decorative things that live in pots.  Here they are giants.

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Trees in this section are small because it was clear-cut for dairy farming in the 60’s.

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So, we started our day at sea level.  At the start of our hike we were at 5,300+ feet above sea level.  In between is a lot of steep, narrow gravel road switch-backing up the valleys you see below.  Some of it’s scenic, most of it is jouncy.

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Ever heard the phrase, “you look like 10 miles of bad road”…?  This road actually isn’t all that bad.  You can do the whole thing in the standard Tico battered compact asian sedan without incident, but it’s so nice when the pavement starts again.

Steve’s Mango Valley Photos

Ah, Hotel Mango Valley, possibly the single nicest place we stayed on this trip.   Just outside the town of Grecia in Costa Rica’s central valley, and about 40 minutes from the airport in San Jose.  Of course, we met some kids from Portlandia there in the pool…  Our cabin had the best view in the place.  Not all the big inside, but nicely constructed with kitchenette, a jet-tub, friendly staff and modern plumbing!  $80/night, very happy to go back there someday.  On weekends the Soda up the street delivers for free, and frankly it was pretty darn good.

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Joyce found a great coffee farm tour for us – Cafe El Toledo.  Over the last 20 years they’ve slowly converted the farm from conventional fertilizers + pesticides agriculture to certified organic and then to full bio-dynamic.  What the heck does that mean?  Our tour was lead by Gabriel, current owner of the farm.  The switch to organic was driven by his father getting sick from the chemicals they were using at that time.  The switch to organic dropped production at their farm and the family got by with odd jobs instead of going back to conventional farming which had put Dad in the hospital.  There has to be a better way, they thought.  Fast forward 20 years and their farm looks more like a forest.  A mixture of coffee plants, fruit trees, vegetables and shade trees provides conditions that naturally controls pests and fertilizes the soil.  This combination also reduces the labor needed to run the farm.  While it’s true that they get fewer coffee beans per acre than conventional ag, the farm is also producing other products that the family both consumes and sells.

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The tasting room.

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Yup, roasting coffee beans.

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Walking the farm.

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Mandarins off one of the trees among the coffee.

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If I lived in Costa Rica, I’d probably want one of these.  And a scooter.  And a machete.  It would be like some kind of “Gringo Tico Starter Kit”.

Much more about their farm and how it works at their web site: Cafe El Toledo.

What I left out of the story so far is how took a wrong turn on the way to El Toledo and were driving up the mountain on some kind of goat path, being uncertain if this was or was not a road to a coffee plantain as we’d never been to one before.  Finally we flagged down a police car coming down the mountain, and yes, we were on the wrong road and yes, we got a police escort over to the farm.

Afterwards we sought out the town of Sarchi, featured in this blog post…  After that we were pooped and rolled back to Grecia, and then the hotel.  Hung out with a fun couple from Montreal that night.

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Their cathedral came over from Belgium as some kind of erector set – it’s all metal and you can see the rivets that hold it together.

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Sadly, we weren’t appropriately dressed, so we didn’t proceed past the entrance.  Possibly no one would have cared about our shorts, but sometimes it’s best to err on being polite.

Guayabo Through a Lens Stevely

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On one side a crocodile, on the other a jaguar.  Thought to represent life and death.  This massive stone was dragged up the hill by some poor team of suckers who didn’t know we’d have hover boards by 2005.  In addition to doing that without dirt bikes and cell phones they also managed to align it perfectly north-south and east-west.

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Tombs.  This could be your final resting place.

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The view towards the area of the city that’s been cleared.

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As usual, the city goes on far into the jungle.

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Joyce is attempting to give you an idea of the scale of an established leaf cutter ant mound. It’s huge.

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You’ll have to use your imaginations to see the huge conical roof over each of the house mounds.

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Of course, Mr. Bigg lived in the biggest. But dudes were less important in this society. Even up to today the woman’s bloodline decides things and the guys are around to lift heavy things.

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See the ghosts from the future? Centuries ago the locals knew this spot was haunted!

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Why was this a good spot for a city? It’s way up a giant hill, and on two sides you’ve got this. No surprise visitors, eh?