Sites of Interests
Bajo del Tigre (Jaguar Canyon)
This private 30-hectare preserve,
contiguous with the Monteverde Reserve and administered by the Monteverde
Conservation League is at a lower elevation than the Cloud Forest
Preserve and thus offers a different variety of plant and animal
Ito. Quetzals are more easily seen here, for example, than higher
up in the wet ter, mistier cloud forest. The same is true for the
three-wattled bellbird and long-tailed manikin. It is crisscrossed
by a network of easy trails and has strategically located picnic
spots. Access is off the main road, just above the CASEM Gallery.
Facilities include a Children’s Nature Center de signed to
help kids discover and appreciate the wonders of the tropical rainforest;
a self-guided interpretative trail; an arboretum; and a visitorfs
center and library. Guided tours are offered Mon.—Wed. at
7:30 AM. and 1 PM., plus guided night tours Thurs.—Sun. at
7P.M. Hours: daily 7:30 A.M.—5:30 P.M. Entrance: $5, including
map.
Cheese Factory
La Lecheria, tel. 645-5150, in
Monteverde, is famous throughout Costa Rica for its quality wares,
which are on sale. Production began in 1953 when the original Quaker
settlers bought 50 jersey cattle; that year they produced 76,000
Liters of milk, which they turned into pasteurized Monteverde Gouda
cheese. The factory produces 14 types of cheese—from parmesan
and Emmantel to Danish-style “darnbo” and Monte Rico,
the best-seller, popular in fondues. You may observe cheese making
through a window in the sales room. Alternately, you can take a
guided farm and factory tour. Hours: Mon—Sat 7:30 A.M.—4
P.M., Sunday 7:30 A.M.—12:30 P.M.
El Trapiche
This 100-year-old ox-driven sugar
mill, tel. 645- 6054, is two km northwest of Santa Elena, After
witnessing how sugarcane is processed, you can four the 24-hectare
family farm and, November—February, even join in harvesting
coffee. A pleasant patio restaurant lit by a skylight serves typical
Costa Rican food and features marimba music and dancing on Thursday
and Friday. A souvenir shop sells T-shirts, fresh cane sugar, and
other traditional dishes. You’ll see a botanical garden and
EcoPark immediately next to El Trapiche. Alas, the latter is merely
a rather sad display of animals caged to cull a tourist buck—a
Machiavellian example of jumping on the “eco” bandwagon.
Maybe it will have improved by the time you read this. Hours: daily
10 A.M.—7 P.M. Entrance: $2.
Monteverde Orchid Garden
It took five years of arduous work
to collate this collection but now you can admire the results of
the Monteverde Orchid Investigation Project, an ongoing effort to
document and research local orchids. Short paths wind through the
compact Orquideas de Monteverde, tel. 645-5510, displaying almost
500 species native to the region and arranged in 22 groups (“sub-tribes”),
each marked with an educational placard. Miniatures are preponderant,
including the world’s smallest flower, Platystele
jungermanniodes, about the size of a pinhead (fortunately,
you are handed a magnifying glass upon arrival). Hours: daily 8
A.M.—5 P.M. Entrance: $5.
Much
of the information on our site as it relates to Costa Rica is:
Courtesy
of Christopher P. Baker and Avalon Travel Publishing.
© 2004 Christopher P. Baker. All Rights Reserved.
A2Z Languages highly
recommends Christopher P. Baker's book: Moon
Handbooks Costa Rica. Click on the image to visit
his website where you can purchase this book or find out more about
the author.
Back
to the Top
|