I've no idea if you're already down there, but perhaps you'll have time and access (things are pretty spread out in Guanacaste Province (formerly part of Nicaragua, but Nicaraqua gave it to CR -- no war or anything; just a handover. I forget the details.), but I'm assuming you're flying into Liberia. If the wacky airport is the same as it was ten years ago (It's processing as usual in a smallish federal building, but the waiting area up at the tarmac has the hugest thatch building I've ever seen -- when inside, I looked up. Two Barn Owls were looking down. A good omen, I thought).
Rincon de la Vieja ("corner/place of the old" is a reasonable translation) N.P. is amazing -- gangs of coatimundis pillaging the camping area, agoutis bouncing away in the tropical hardwood understory, cassowaries and guans hanging around ... if you see a mid-sized toucan, it's automatically a Collared Aracari by range; its similar counterpart, the Fiery-billed, is central and south. The big toucan is Keel-billed, again by range (and unmistakable plumage if they're just sitting around); the other large toucan farther south is the Chestnut-mandibled, usually being attacked by about 10 species of passerines -- they have a big appetite for eggs and nestlings ... well, you get the picture. I wish I'd studied ranges and similar species extensively before that first trip. Hope you don't mind very windy (always) and dry conditions. I went solo (my aunt was back in the mental hospital) in ''97 or was it '98 and hiked 12 hours a day for three days -- it's just the best place in the north for bird people. You'll love it. Do you have room (and enough colones) to hire me as your guide? I'd also require a GPS device implanted in my brain, or we'll all die. Think about it.
So have a great time, see lotsa feathers, and post a few reports here, so we can vicariously escape winter. Just a quick summary of how it's going ... please!
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by norman »
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