Friday, May 29, 2009
More Pictures!!!!
Finally got an opportunity to upload a good number of random pictures. Click to see the PICTURES.
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Next day in La Fortuna me and two people I met from Colorado, a mother and daughter, did a really cool hike. It´s a steep and fairly grueling 4 hour round trip through jungle to a dormant volcano called Cerro Chato. You hike right up to the crater and then down into it, where I swam in the green lake that occupies the crater. We saw a snake on the trail, the mom´s scream probably scared even the howler monkeys.
Took an exhausting 12 hours of travel time with three bus transfers and a ferry to make it down to Montezuma on the tip of the Nicoya Peninsula. Only accessible by dirt road at the end, the last 12 kilometers took almost an hour, as torrential sheets of rain hammered us. Luckily, a cool lightning show kept me entertained on the last leg of the journey, magnified by the fact that the buses are completely dark.
Woke up to a beautiful day and a scenic beach view. The day before I had met a pair of cool Mormon guys from Utah on the ferry and the three of us had gone out to dinner in Montezuma the night we got in and met a group of 8 girls from a college in upstate New York, down in Costa Rica getting college credits. The plan was to hike up to some nearby waterfalls the next day which we ended up doing. Escorting 8 girls in pink aquasocks up a rocky river proved to be time consuming but it was worth it for the waterfall. Apparently the heavy rains the previous day are what lent the water the murky brown color, but it was extremely cool and refreshing.
After four nights I decided it was time to move on, and spent another long day of traveling to make it to the small town of Manuel Antonio on the Pacific Coast. The hostel here is great, with a swimming pool and a really friendly, social crowd. Partied it up last night and then relaxed at the beach all day today. Gonna go to the National Park nearby tomorrow morning with the camera and find monkeys! I want to upload all the pictures I´ve taken so far in their full resolution glory, but the free internet down here is painfully slow. I´ll figure out a way soon though.
The Brits have redeemed themselves! Met a chill guy named Chris in La Fortuna and actually just happened to run into him again where I am staying now. Had a good time exchanging cultural information and just hanging out. He dragged me along today to watch the end of some big soccer match at lunch today, he apparently hates Manchester United, himself being from some other corner of England. He was rather hilariously ecstatic when they lost. Those Brits love their ¨football.¨
There is a group of Quebecois French-Canadian separatists staying at my hostel who are rather amusing. They did tell me I am doing a good job dispelling some of their stereotypes about Americans as loud, stupid and obnoxious louts who are proud of their international and cultural ignorance, with no interest in learning about and understanding the local scene beyond buying drugs and getting hammered. So, I´m adding ¨Cultural Ambassador¨ to my resume.
Me swimming in the crater lake.
Extremely tired out from the hike we went to nearby Baldi Hot Springs resort, which has tons of pools pumped with spring water heated by Arenal Volcano. It was extremely relaxing, with tons of waterfalls, cold plunges, and swim up bars. There was even waterslides there, which never ever would have been built in the U.S. due to safety and insurance issues. It was the craziest, fastest waterslide I´ve ever been on by far. I caught four feet of air in the tube and gave myself a pretty good lump on the head with the landing, but totally worth it.
Extremely tired out from the hike we went to nearby Baldi Hot Springs resort, which has tons of pools pumped with spring water heated by Arenal Volcano. It was extremely relaxing, with tons of waterfalls, cold plunges, and swim up bars. There was even waterslides there, which never ever would have been built in the U.S. due to safety and insurance issues. It was the craziest, fastest waterslide I´ve ever been on by far. I caught four feet of air in the tube and gave myself a pretty good lump on the head with the landing, but totally worth it.
Took an exhausting 12 hours of travel time with three bus transfers and a ferry to make it down to Montezuma on the tip of the Nicoya Peninsula. Only accessible by dirt road at the end, the last 12 kilometers took almost an hour, as torrential sheets of rain hammered us. Luckily, a cool lightning show kept me entertained on the last leg of the journey, magnified by the fact that the buses are completely dark.
Woke up to a beautiful day and a scenic beach view. The day before I had met a pair of cool Mormon guys from Utah on the ferry and the three of us had gone out to dinner in Montezuma the night we got in and met a group of 8 girls from a college in upstate New York, down in Costa Rica getting college credits. The plan was to hike up to some nearby waterfalls the next day which we ended up doing. Escorting 8 girls in pink aquasocks up a rocky river proved to be time consuming but it was worth it for the waterfall. Apparently the heavy rains the previous day are what lent the water the murky brown color, but it was extremely cool and refreshing.
From the base us three guys hiked and climbed up to the other waterfall at the top of the base, at which you could do an adrenaline filled forty-foot jump into the pool. Hurt the soles of my feet but was definitely a rush.
Me doing a front flip
Me doing a front flip
Montezuma is a small, not easily accessed town, with an crunchy hippy vibe. Apparently there is some unwritten rule that if you have dreadlocks you must make and sell jewelry. Who knew? The Saturday night party scene at the one real bar in town, Chicos, was hopping with a great mix of locals and tourists and there was impromptu drum circles and even a fire-dancer. Had a great time, but declined to bring my bulky camera out, so no pictures. Trust me though, awesome party.
Spent the next couple days relaxing by the beach, hiking around, reading my book and nursing a newly acquired sunburn.
After four nights I decided it was time to move on, and spent another long day of traveling to make it to the small town of Manuel Antonio on the Pacific Coast. The hostel here is great, with a swimming pool and a really friendly, social crowd. Partied it up last night and then relaxed at the beach all day today. Gonna go to the National Park nearby tomorrow morning with the camera and find monkeys! I want to upload all the pictures I´ve taken so far in their full resolution glory, but the free internet down here is painfully slow. I´ll figure out a way soon though.
The Brits have redeemed themselves! Met a chill guy named Chris in La Fortuna and actually just happened to run into him again where I am staying now. Had a good time exchanging cultural information and just hanging out. He dragged me along today to watch the end of some big soccer match at lunch today, he apparently hates Manchester United, himself being from some other corner of England. He was rather hilariously ecstatic when they lost. Those Brits love their ¨football.¨
There is a group of Quebecois French-Canadian separatists staying at my hostel who are rather amusing. They did tell me I am doing a good job dispelling some of their stereotypes about Americans as loud, stupid and obnoxious louts who are proud of their international and cultural ignorance, with no interest in learning about and understanding the local scene beyond buying drugs and getting hammered. So, I´m adding ¨Cultural Ambassador¨ to my resume.
Two weeks of drinking tap water down here and my stomach has been a champ, whooo! Will try and post pictures of monkeys soon. Miss you all, hope the weather is good in Seattle or wherever you are. Hope to hear from ya soon. - Azi
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Wow! Trip got off to a rocky start. I landed in Costa Rica and watched with a sinking feeling as my fellow passenger's bags all appeared on the carousel and mine was nowhere to be seen. The last bag came out and was claimed as I stood there looking forlornly at a now empty baggage terminal. So, filled out a lost luggage form and proceeded to my hostel with nothing but my carry-on bag. Definitely a bit stressful, as you can probably imagine. Long story short, I called the airline 7 hours later and they said the bag had missed the connection in Denver and they would deliver it to me the next morning. I went to sleep that night feeling a little better about the whole thing and the next morning there it was. Relief! A tearful reunion ensued as I hugged my pack and promised it, "never again!"
Well, 3rd and final day in San Jose. It's been fun but I'm definitely ready to leave the city and head out to more naturalistic settings. I leave early tomorrow morning for Monteverde, a national park of cloud forests. It's an interesting scene here in the capital, spent my first full day doing the museum, market, general tourist stuff. The hostel has been fun, met lots of cool people from all over the globe.
Went out last night and started at a fairly seedy downtown casino/bar. I'd estimate that there were about 10 "working girls" for every actual patron there; lots of 50+ year old gringos dancing with with young locals... Wasn't my scene, so headed to a nearby complex of bars and nightclubs, which was much better: lots of locals just out for a fun Friday night of dancing and drinking. No pictures unfortunately as bringing a camera out at night is not advisable.
I understand now why the British are considered the assholes of Europe. We had a pair in our group last night that lived up to that reputation and then some. In addition to being unable to properly speak the language they spawned and always walking on the left in narrow corridors and stairways, they behaved in a generally disrespectful and obnoxiously drunken manner towards the locals. I'm now much more sympathetic towards the general trend of taxi drivers and other locals to try and steal from and rip-off tourists.
Finally escaped San Jose and made it up to the Monteverde Cloud Forest area. It's amazingly beautiful up here and the small-town feel is a refreshing change from the city.
I woke up early and was the first person to enter the Reserve and was rewarded by seeing what I believe was an agouti scamper across the trail right in front of me, followed closely by a sloth of some type in the trees and some small loris looking animal. I'll have to do some googling to confirm the species types. From what I heard from others though it's fairly rare to see mammals like that in the forest.
The next day I gave in and splurged on a Canopy tour, which was basically flying high above the ground on zip lines, with a little rappelling for variety and then something called a "Tarzan Swing, which was quite the adrenaline rush.
Day after I went by Jeep-Boat-Jeep to La Fortuna which sits below the recently active Arenal Volcano. It's an impressive sight though often shrouded in mist.
Took a good long hike up to a Waterfall above La Fortuna for a swim, felt good, it's constantly hot and 100% humidity. I take back all the mean things i said about the French. A French girl and her mom picked me up hitching, saved me an hour walk in the ridiculous heat...
Will post some more pics to my other photo sharing site once I find a computer that isn't mind-numbingly slow.
Anyway, enjoying myself so far, hope you all are doing well as well. Will try and post again soon with lots more pictures. Must find monkeys!
Pura Vida!
Well, 3rd and final day in San Jose. It's been fun but I'm definitely ready to leave the city and head out to more naturalistic settings. I leave early tomorrow morning for Monteverde, a national park of cloud forests. It's an interesting scene here in the capital, spent my first full day doing the museum, market, general tourist stuff. The hostel has been fun, met lots of cool people from all over the globe.
Went out last night and started at a fairly seedy downtown casino/bar. I'd estimate that there were about 10 "working girls" for every actual patron there; lots of 50+ year old gringos dancing with with young locals... Wasn't my scene, so headed to a nearby complex of bars and nightclubs, which was much better: lots of locals just out for a fun Friday night of dancing and drinking. No pictures unfortunately as bringing a camera out at night is not advisable.
I understand now why the British are considered the assholes of Europe. We had a pair in our group last night that lived up to that reputation and then some. In addition to being unable to properly speak the language they spawned and always walking on the left in narrow corridors and stairways, they behaved in a generally disrespectful and obnoxiously drunken manner towards the locals. I'm now much more sympathetic towards the general trend of taxi drivers and other locals to try and steal from and rip-off tourists.
Finally escaped San Jose and made it up to the Monteverde Cloud Forest area. It's amazingly beautiful up here and the small-town feel is a refreshing change from the city.
I woke up early and was the first person to enter the Reserve and was rewarded by seeing what I believe was an agouti scamper across the trail right in front of me, followed closely by a sloth of some type in the trees and some small loris looking animal. I'll have to do some googling to confirm the species types. From what I heard from others though it's fairly rare to see mammals like that in the forest.
The next day I gave in and splurged on a Canopy tour, which was basically flying high above the ground on zip lines, with a little rappelling for variety and then something called a "Tarzan Swing, which was quite the adrenaline rush.
Day after I went by Jeep-Boat-Jeep to La Fortuna which sits below the recently active Arenal Volcano. It's an impressive sight though often shrouded in mist.
Took a good long hike up to a Waterfall above La Fortuna for a swim, felt good, it's constantly hot and 100% humidity. I take back all the mean things i said about the French. A French girl and her mom picked me up hitching, saved me an hour walk in the ridiculous heat...
Will post some more pics to my other photo sharing site once I find a computer that isn't mind-numbingly slow.
Anyway, enjoying myself so far, hope you all are doing well as well. Will try and post again soon with lots more pictures. Must find monkeys!
Pura Vida!
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
The Day Has Come
Well, here goes nothing. I'll miss you friends, family and city.
8AM: OMG! I'm so excited to go to Costa Rica, this is gonna be great!
9AM: Oh shit! What am I doing?! This is crazy, I must be nuts!
10AM: I'm gonna meet cool people and see awesome stuff, should be a good experience.
11AM: I wonder if it'd be weird to tell everyone, "just kidding! I'm staying in America...."
12PM: I can already picture myself on a beach drinking a cool beer.
1PM: Oh god, do I have everything I need?! Why am I doing this again?! I'm probably going to get malaria and be attacked by a Jaguar....
2PM: Okay, deep breath Azi, you can do this. You've wanted to travel for a long time, so here goes nothing. Whatever else, it's going to be a new experience and an adventure. Everything will work out and you'll have a great time!
8AM: OMG! I'm so excited to go to Costa Rica, this is gonna be great!
9AM: Oh shit! What am I doing?! This is crazy, I must be nuts!
10AM: I'm gonna meet cool people and see awesome stuff, should be a good experience.
11AM: I wonder if it'd be weird to tell everyone, "just kidding! I'm staying in America...."
12PM: I can already picture myself on a beach drinking a cool beer.
1PM: Oh god, do I have everything I need?! Why am I doing this again?! I'm probably going to get malaria and be attacked by a Jaguar....
2PM: Okay, deep breath Azi, you can do this. You've wanted to travel for a long time, so here goes nothing. Whatever else, it's going to be a new experience and an adventure. Everything will work out and you'll have a great time!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)