Thinking Travel

Video: Zip Line in Costa Rica

What’s new at thinkingtravel.com? Video! Yeah.

This one is from Costa Rica. Zip lines rock.

Slideshow: Costa Rica, January 2008

Update:

I had a FlickrSlidr slideshow here until I moved around some Flickr fotos and somehow broke my slideshow.

You can still see my Costa Rica photos — just click here.

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5 Costa Rica Rainforest Travel Tips

Here are five tips culled from my recent 10-day work-and-vacation trip to Costa Rica:

  1. Bring Sturdy Shoes. If you plan to hike through the rainforest or over lava rocks to a volcano make sure to wear shoes with soles thick enough that you won’t feel every little pebble with every step you take. Don’t bring cute black-and-red plaid “sneakers” with traction so minimal that you slip while climbing lava rocks and cut your hand open.
  2. Do the Canopy Tour. Best. Thing. Ever. If you’re in Costa Rica and there’s a zipline canopy tour, sign up immediately. Enough said.
  3. Rainforests are Humid: Bring Lots of Shirts. Doing laundry at your hotel will be expensive because you’ll have to pay for each shirt, sock, and pair of undies you hand over to their laundry services. And the new t-shirt you fork over could come back a tad smaller and more raggedy than when you originally forked it over. So either spend an afternoon hunting down a laundromat (hint: there’s one in La Fortuna) or bring extra t-shirts you don’t mind sweating in.
  4. Stop at a Soda. A “soda” is a Costa Rican fast food restaurant. They’re easy to
    find because there’s one in every town, village or string of 3 houses. They’re considered fast food because sodas can dish out a “casado” of beans, rice, meat, plantains, and some type of salad quicker than you can say “Let’s stop at a soda for a casado.”
  5. Don’t Tip. Don’t tip extra, that is. Here’s what I learned:
    1. Restaurants: A 10% tip is generally included in the bill so there’s no need to add anything additional, unless you want to.
    2. Taxis: In San Jose it’s not expected that riders will leave a tip. But feel free to round up when paying.
    3. Tours: I don’t know what the guidelines are but there are tip jars everywhere. We tipped each of our fantastically knowledgeable nature guides and the shuttle driver who picked us up from the hotel, gave us bottles of water, and answered our many questions — in English and Spanish — on the 3-hour ride to Volcan Arenal.

One last tip.

If you find yourself packing at 11pm the night before your 7am flight and you own two pairs of the same sandals — but one pair is a raggedy 3 years old and the other nearly brand new — make sure the two sandals you grab are the same age.

I speak from experience.

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Costa Rica Photos


Wow.

We had a fantastic time in Costa Rica. I’m preparing several posts about the trip.

In the meantime, click here to see the photos I’ve uploaded to Flickr.

Update: Click here to see a slideshow of photos.

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Costa Rica Itinerary

By the time you read this, Aaron and I will be in Costa Rica! (I wrote this post before we left.) We used a recommended Costa Rican travel agency to plan our quick trip. Here’s a brief overview of our plans:

Wednesday: Get up way too early. Fly to San Jose. Take shuttle to the Arenal volcano area.

Thursday: All-day tour to Cano Nego Wildlife Refuge for a 4-hour float tour and hopefully animal spotting.

Friday: Hanging bridges tour in the rain forest.

Saturday: TBA (probably visit the volcano and maybe the nearby town of La Fortuna)

Sunday: Shuttle to San Jose.

Monday: Aaron flies back to RDU, Cate works.

We’ll post photos and info about the trip once I’m back home!

Hi, I'm Cate.

My goal in 2010 is to do one new thing each week, no matter how small. I'm documenting my progress on this blog and Twitter.

If you'd like to follow along - or even start your own do-one-new-thing-a-week project - that would be awesome. Your supportive comments, insights, and accountability are most welcome.

I'm utterly fascinated by the projects people commit to so if you're working on a personal project in 2010, I'd love to hear about it -- you can email me at cate [@] thinkingtravel [.] com or leave a comment.

week 1 :: morning pages
week 2 :: lynda.com
week 3 :: in bed by 11pm
week 4 :: cook new veg meal
week 5 :: connect

my other project CulturallyTeaching.com



    follow me on Twitter