Casa Pajaro is located 2 hours south of Manuel Antonio National Park and 1 1/2 hours north of Corcovado. Both of these parks represent the best of what Costa Rica has to offer for unspoiled natural beauty, wildlife, and lush tropical surroundings.

MANUEL
Destination content © Christopher P. Baker, used from Moon Handbooks Costa Rica, 5th edition.
Tiny it may be, but this 682-hectare national park epitomizes everything tourists flock to
Despite its diminutive size, Manuel Antonio is one of the country's most popular parks, with as many as 150,000 visitors annually in peak years. A few years ago the deluge of visitors threatened to spoil the very things they had come to see. Park Director José Antonio Salazar believes the park can withstand no more than 300 visitors a day. In 1994, the Park Service began limiting the numbers of visitors to 600 per day (800 on Saturday and Sunday), and the park is now closed on Monday. If you wish to do your bit to help preserve Manuel Antonio, consider visiting in the "green" or wet season. Litter and pollution are additional problems. Pack out what you pack in.
Nonetheless, the park is too small to sustain a healthy and viable population of certain animals. If the monkeys do not have access to areas outside the park, the population will decline because they cannot breed. Corridors that allow animals access to areas outside the park have been taken up by hotels, so that the park has, in recent years, become an island. As a result, the titi (squirrel monkey) population is declining. Fortunately, in 2000, a decree was issued to triple the park's size to just under 1800 hectares.
Beaches The park has four lovely beaches, each with its own personality: Espadilla Sur, Manuel Antonio,
At the far right on Playa Manuel Antonio, you can see ancient turtle traps dug out of the rocks by pre-Columbian Quepoas. Female sea turtles would swim over the rocks to the beach on the high tide. The tidal variation at this point is as much as three meters; the turtles would be caught in the carved-out traps on the return journey as the tide level dropped. The people also used female-turtle decoys made of balsa to attract male turtles over the rocks. Olive ridley and green turtles still occasionally come ashore at Playa Manuel Antonio.
Wildlife Viewing
Between bouts of beaching, you can explore the park's network of wide trails, which lead into a swatch of humid tropical forest. Manuel Antonio's treetop carnival is marvelous, and best experienced by following the Perezoso Trail, named after the lovable sloths, which favor the secondary growth along the trail (perezoso means "lazy"). You might see marmosets, ocelots, river otters, pacas, and spectacled caimans in more remote riverine areas.
Howler monkeys languorously move from branch to branch, iguanas shimmy up trunks, toucans and scarlet macaws flap by. About 350 squirrel monkeys live in the park, another 500 on its outer boundaries. And capuchin (white-faced) monkeys are also abundant and welcome you at treetop height on the beaches, where they play to the crowd and will steal your sandwich packs given half a chance. Some of them have become aggressive in recent years and attacks on humans have been reported.
Even though it is illegal to feed the monkeys, insensitive people still do it. Note that if you're caught, you may--quite rightly--be ejected from the park. Recent studies have found a worrisome increase in heart disease and heart failure among the local monkey population. Unfortunately, the animals are much more prone to rises in cholesterol than humans. Do not leave food lying around.
Hire a guide. A guide can show you other interesting tree species--among them, the gaupinol negro, an endemic species that is in danger of extinction; cedro maria, which produces a yellow resin used as a traditional medicine; vaco lechoso, which exudes a thick white latex that also has medicinal properties, and the manchineel tree(manzanillo), or "beach apple"-- common along the beaches. The manchineel is highly toxic and possesses a sap that irritates the skin. Its tempting apple like fruits are also poisonous. Avoid touching any part of the tree. Also, don't use its wood for fires--the smoke will irritate your lungs.
Information
The park entrance is at the eastern end of Playa Espadilla, where you wade across the shallow Río Camaronera and pay your entrance fee ($6); little rowboats are on hand at high tide (30 cents), when you may otherwise be waist-deep. The ranger station, tel. 777-0644, fax 777-0654, sells maps for 40 cents. There's a small open-air natural-history museum and information center on Playa Manuel Antonio.
Camping is not allowed in the park. There are no accommodations or snack bars. There's secure parking by the creek near the park entrance ($1.70 all day).
Cautions
Theft is a major problem on the beaches, not least by the monkeys. Don't leave your things unguarded while you swim. Take whatever precautions you can to protect your goods.
DID YOU KNOW THAT…
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is beloved by tourists for its national parks, beautiful beaches, traditions, friendly people and perfect climate. Costa Rica
- The Costa Rican democracy is considered to be the oldest still in existence in theThird World .
-has one of the richest ecosystems in the world. It contains 5 percent of the world´s biodiversity. Costa Rica
- When Spanish navigators first came uponCosta Rica in 1502, struck by tremendous beauty of its green mountains… they exclaimed “”. Costa Rica
- Soccer is by far the most popular sport in the country.
-has some of Latin America´s best beaches, with clean white sand and many types of water sports. For water sports lovers, there´s windsurfing, scuba diving, kayak, swimming, and sailing. Costa Rica
- Costa Rica´s bird life is profuse and contains some exceptionally exotic and colourful species, such as the quetzal, one of the most beautiful birds in the world.
-was the first country in the world to promote ecological tourism in an accelerated form. Costa Rica