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Costa Rica Travel >>natural areas>>Cahuita

Cahuita National Park
Coral Reefs

Cahuita National Park Costa Rica
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The beat and the feel are inescapable. We rode our bikes into Cahuita a scorching sun drenched afternoon and were met by strains of Bob Marley through the palms. After a quick swim while the sun set, we found a place to stay and then had an incredible fish dinner under the stars. For breakfast we stopped at the little bread stand for banana bread, Jamaican spice cake, and papaya juice; there was no doubt we had reached the Caribbean coast.

Four eyed butterfly fish on the reef (photo C. Huss, F. K. Nat.Marine Sanctuary)
Four eyed butterfly fish on the reef (photo C. Huss, FKNMS/NOAA)

The Caribbean coast was settled Africans brought in by way of Jamaica in the late 1800's to build the coffee railroad from San José, or to work the banana plantations. The Caribbean has an unmatched rhythm and Cahuita National Park is as much about culture as wildlife and botany.

When the area was first protected as a Marine National monument in 1970 there were many disgruntled farmers and inhabitants, and several hundred people gathered at a community meeting to speak against the park. According to D. R. Wallace's Story of Costa Rica's National Parks, Alvaro Ugalde, was the last speaker, and the only one who was for the park. But, he turned the sentiments of the community by pointing out that the likely alternative to a National Park would be a "mass of hotels, marinas and golf courses which nobody wanted except foreign companies waiting on the sidelines." This independent spirit has persisted, and the development of the area has been by small local owner operators and Alvaro Ugalde is today recognized as one of the fathers of Costa Rica's National Parks system.


Close up of flower coral polyps (photo FKNMS/NOAA)

Attractions
Cahuita National Park is best know for the coral reefs close to shore. In the dry season, there is good snorkeling from the beach, and you are likely to see light yellow brain, elkhorn, and blue staghorn corals, sea fans, and gorgonians as a back drop to the more than 500 species of fish endemic to the reefs.

Brain coral (photo J. Reid USFW)
Brain coral (photo J. Reid USFW)

If the corals, fish, lobsters and clams don't hold your attention, there are also two sunken ships to explore. They are well known and in shallow water so the likelyhood of treasure is low, but the exposed cannons insinuate they are protecting something secret.

The hiking trail from the Kelly Creek station at Cahuita village, around the point to the Puerto Vargas is an excellent route to spot green ibis, yellow-crowned night herons, Northern boat-billed herons, Swainson toucans, keel-billed toucans, rufous kingfishers, and the Central American curassow. These feathered friends will most likely appear while you are in the middle of wading the tannin stained waters of the Perozoso (Sloth) River, and trying to extract your camera from your fanny pack to capture a photo of the tamandua, paca, coati, raccoon, or agouti that you've spotted at the edge of the trees.

The villages of Cahuita and Puerto Viejo are not in the National Park, but their Caribbean attitude mixed with the multicultural community of locals and expatriates from North America and Europe are definitely a local attraction. Excellent French and Italian Cusine compliment the local spicy seafood fare and the music plays long into the night.

In the region
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In the region

Puerto Viejo de Talamanca. In contrast to the murky and sometimes rough waters of the Pacific Ocean, Costa Rica's east coast has Caribbean blue water. (© B. Schmierer)
Puerto Viejo de Talamanca. In contrast to the murky and sometimes rough waters of the Pacific Ocean, Costa Rica's east coast has Caribbean blue water.
(© B. Schmierer)

Puerto Viejo de Talamanca just south of Cahuita is the gateway to Playas Pirikikí, Cocles, Chiquita, and Uva and Gandoca-Manzanillo Wildlife Refuge.

 


When to visit Costa Rica
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When to visit:
Because of increased visibility, the best time for snorkeling the reefs is during the drier season from mid-February through April.
Macaws may be spotted December through February.

Books and other resources
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Resources
Books

Toucan Ratings Explained | Lowest Available Price
Why Buy from Us?

Quetzal and the Macaw: The Story of Costa Rica's National ParksQuetzal and the Macaw: The Story of Costa Rica's National Parks
by David Rains Wallace (Author)Publisher: Random House, Inc., (May 1992), ISBN: 0871565854

Delivers exactly what the subtitle promises. It's the story of the politics and personal efforts that brought one of the greatest systems of National Parks in the world into being. Not nearly as dry as it sounds.
rated four out of five toucans by Costa-Rica-Guide.com
Out of print but available used from Amazon and Barnes&Noble

National Audubon Society Field Guide to Tropical Marine FishesNational Audubon Society Field Guide to Tropical Marine Fishes : Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, Florida, Bahamas, Bermuda
by National Audubon Society, Flexible binding, 720 pages, Publisher: Knopf, (September 1997), ISBN: 067944601X

An excellent guide that isn't specific to Costa Rica, but should cover anything you'll encounter on the Caribbean and Cahuita National Park.
rated four and a half out of five toucans by Costa-Rica-Guide.com
$US 13.97 from Amazon -or-
Barnes&Noble member price $US 15.16

Field Guide to the Wildlife of Costa RicaField Guide to the Wildlife of Costa Rica
by Carrol L. Henderson (Author), Steve Adams (Illustrator), Paperback, 559 pages, Publisher: Univ. of Texas Press; 1st edition, (2002), ISBN: 029273459X

Color photos, species accounts, and distribution maps, for almost three hundred species of birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, butterflies, moths, and other invertebrates are complimented by general introductions to each group, the ecology of Costa Rica, and how to travel to see wildlife.
rated five out of five toucans by Costa-Rica-Guide.com
$US 27.97 from Amazon -or-
Barnes&Noble member price $US 30.36

 

National Audubon Society Guide to Marine Mammals of the WorldNational Audubon Society Guide to Marine Mammals of the World
by Pieter Folkens (Illustrator), Randall R. Reeves (Contributor), Brent S. Stewart (Contributor), Paperback: 528 pages, Publisher: Knopf, (April 2002), ISBN: 0375411410

As usual the National Audubon Society has published a target for everyone else to reach for.
rated four and a half out of five toucans by Costa-Rica-Guide.com
$US 18.87 from Amazon -or-
Barnes&Noble member price $US 20.48

Information on the web
Attractions | The Region | When to Visit
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Information on the Web

Great general resource for information on coral reefs from the University of Queensland, Australia.

How to identify corals of the Caribbean

Map showing the location of natural area in Costa Rica
Location: 110 miles (180 km) by air east of San José.

Visiting
Getting There:
Driving Directions from San José
If you are starting from downtown San José take Calle 3 out of town to where it becomes the Guápiles Highway (32) headed northeast. Continue to Limon where you turn South on 36 for Cahuita.
Detailed roadmaps are available in acrobat pdf format or printed on waterproof tear proof plastic.
Driving Directions from Juan Santamaría International Airport
If you are starting from Juan Santamaría International Airport, you can save a lot of time and hassle (and see some nice scenery to boot) by bypassing San José to the North through Heredia. Turn East (towards San José) on 1 (the Pan American Highway) at the airport exit. After ~1/2 km bear left at the stop light onto route 3/112 East towards Heredia. You'll pass by the Imperial brewery and San Joaquín on the 8 remaining km to Heredia. Continue on 112 East to San Isidro where you catch 116, you start out heading South, but turn to the East (still on 116) to get to San Luis and the intersection with Highway 32. Turn left (North East) on 32 and climb to the tunnel that opens into Braulio Carillo National Park and the stunning drive to Flores (34 km from San Luis). Continue on 32 another 90 km to Limón. Welcome to the Caribbean. To continue to Cahuita and Puerto Viejo, turn South on 36.
Bus
Several buses depart San José for Cahuita every day.
750 Cahuita
Express departures daily from San José, Terminal Caribe, 10:00 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 3:30 p.m., 4 hours, ~$US 6.00, Auto-Transportes Mepe S.A., Telephone (506) 257-8129
Air
Both regional airlines offer daily service to Limon where you will have to catch the bus or rent a car to continue to Cahuita.

Entrance fees:
$US 7

Hours:

Both entrance stations are open from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 pm Mon.- Fri. and 7:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. on weekends.

Amenities:

Hiking trails
One soggy trail winds between the beach and forest from the Kelly Creek station at Cahuita village, around the point to the Puerto Vargas station.
Snorkeling
Equipment is available to rent in Cahuita village, where you can also arrange for a boat to take you to the outlying reefs. From the shore you should enter from the Punta Vargas side and swim out to the reef. Check with rangers for the safest and clearest areas.
Camping
Camping is allowed in the Puerto Vargas sector, 2 miles (3 km) south of the village of Cahuita. No services.
Tours and lodging:

Quick Facts
Weather:

Hot, humid and rainy.
The drier season is from mid-February through April and sometimes again in September and October.

Size:

2,635 acres with approximately one-tenth of the area marine (1,067 hectares, 4.1 square miles, 3 times the size of central park NYC)

Elevations:
Sea level

Established:
Cahuita National Park was established in 1970 to protect a large coral reef off the Caribbean coast. Unfortunately the reef is struggling for survival. An earthquake in 1992 lifted a large portion of the coral by about three meters (10 feet), some of it was exposed to the air and sun at low tide and rapidly perished. If it rains while you are there you will find that the submarine visibility is limited to a few feet for a few days due to the silt brought down in the Estrella river. This is an increasing threat caused by legal, and illegal logging of the forests inland from the park. The denuded slopes erode quickly and the silt blocks the sunlight the reefs need for survival. When it's not raining the fate of the reefs is equally grim. The sunlight in combination with the excess fertilizer from the Dole banana plantations (what most of the forest lands are planted with after clear-cutting) causes plankton blooms that not only block the sunlight but poison the water... Something to think about when you sit down at your teak dining table to have a banana.

Habitats:
Tropical lowland wet forest (rain forest), beach, and coral reefs

Inhabitants:

Marine Invertebrates brain, elkhorn, gorgonian, and blue staghorn corals, sea fans, lobsters, urchins, clams, ghost shrimp, and sea cucumbers. On the shore look for red land crabs, and blue fiddlers.
Fish
over 500 species of fish including French angelfish, rock beauty and blue parrotfish
Birds
green ibis, yellow-crowned night herons, Northern boat-billed herons, Swainson toucans, keel-billed toucans, rufous kingfishers, and the Central American curassow.
Animals tamandua, paca, coati, raccoons, howler and capuchin monkeys, sloths, armadillos caimans, and iguanas.

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