Costa Rica Vacations

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Rincón de la Vieja National Park: Straddling the Guanacaste Cordillera lies Rincón de la Vieja National Park, invariably a favorite of those fortunate few people privileged enough to have visited the majority of parks in the system. Highlights of this park include six different life zones, abundant wildlife, gorgeous waterfalls, fascinating geothermal features, and an active volcano.

One of the most unique and easily observed aspects of this park is an area known as Las Pailas, a 50 ha. sector on the southern slope of the volcano with numerous kinds of geothermal activity. Bubbling, boiling hot mud springs, sulfur springs, steam vents, and fumaroles are all present in this relatively small area at the base of the volcano.

For those in good physical condition, a hike from the Las Pailas ranger station to the volcano's summit makes for a rigorous full day outing. The walk starts out through a magnificent stand of tropical moist forest where the most striking trees are strangler figs seen in every phase of the process of enveloping the doomed host tree. As the trail continues upwards it enters premontane wet forest and the trees become smaller and covered with epiphytic vegetation.

The last hour and a half (or more) of the hike is on steep, exposed rock rubble that has resulted from past eruptions. Cairns mark the way to the summit since this part of the climb is frequently in the clouds.

Getting there: From Liberia, take the PanAmerican Highway north for 5 km., turn right at the village of Cereceda and continue on for 23 km. (past Hacienda Guachipelín and Hacienda Rincón de la Vieja) to the Las Pailas ranger station.

Climate: Around the Las Pailas area the temperatures are quite warm (scalding if you manage to fall into one of the geothermal features) and the typical Guanacaste weather pattern prevails. As you go up the slopes of the volcano, the conditions get progressively cooler and wetter.

History: The name Rincón de la Vieja means "the old lady's nook" and is attributed to indigenous people of the Guatuso tribe living on the eastern side of the volcano who believed that an old witch lived on top of the mountain and would send columns of smoke into the air whenever she got annoyed.

Indeed, the active crater which bears this name periodically lets off steam (and large quantities of ash, too). Since 1863, there have been at least eight episodes of intense volcanic activity, the latest one in 1991.

Arenal Volcano

Almonds & Corals

La Paz Waterfalls

Corcovado


Alajuela
Caño Negro National Wildlife Refuge
Arenal National Park
Poás Volcano National Park
Juan Castro Blanco National Park
Guanacaste National Park
Rincón de la Vieja National Park
Cartago
Irazú Volcano National Park
Tapantí National Park
Guayabo National Monument
Chirripó National Park
Braulio Carrillo National Park
Guanacaste
Isla Bolaños Biological Reserve
Santa Rosa National Park
Guanacaste National Park
Rincón de la Vieja National Park
Barra Honda National Park
Palo Verde National Park
Lomas Barbudal Biological Reserve
Las Baulas Marine National Park
Tamarindo National Wildlife Refuge
Ostional National Wildlife Refuge
Heredia
Braulio Carrillo National Park (Barva Volcano sector)
Barra Colorado National Wildlife Refuge
Limon
Barra del Colorado National Wildlife Refuge
Tortuguero National Park
Braulio Carrillo National Park
Cahuita National Park
Gandoca - Manzanillo National Wildlife Refuge
La Amistad International Park
Hitoy - Cerere Biological Reserve
Chirripó National Park
Puntarenas
Peñas Blancas National Wildlife Refuge
Guayabo, Negritos and Pájaros Islands Biological Reserves
Curú National Wildlife Refuge
Cabo Blanco Absolute Nature Reserve
Carara Biological Reserve
Manuel Antonio National Park
Ballena Marine National Park
La Amistad International Park
Corcovado National Park
Caño Island Biological Reserve
Golfito National Wildlife Refuge
Cocos Island National Park
San Jose
Braulio Carrillo National Park
Chirripó National Park
Carara Biological Reserve

 

All Information Provided by Richard Garrigues Special Thanks to Him.

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