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We spent two nights in
Quepos, and rode out to Manuel Antonio National Park to hike in the intervening
day. The park is considered a jewel of the system in Costa Rica. The access
road in is paved, there are hotels, restaurants and bars within easy walking
distance and approximately 30 km of well developed and maintained trails,
and undeveloped beaches to walk on. In spite of the surrounding development
and heavy use (admission is limited so get there early), the park is quite
nice. The beaches are beautiful (even if they are the most crowded walk
in beaches in Costa Rica) and if you choose to walk the trails, you will
discover that 90% of the people in the park stay on the beach.
The road south from
Quepos to Uvita is one of the worst that is considered more than a cart
path by map makers. Parts of it are in the midst of being paved, but when
we talked to the locals about when they thought it would be finished,
they laughed and said "It's supposed to be done by last Christmas."
Much of it is round rock road
and the going is slow for vehicles and bicycles alike. However, the area
makes up for what the road lacks.
Rancho Merced Wildlife
refuge just outside of Uvita was one of the best examples we saw of ecotourism
working on a local level. Since we weren't doing any investigative reporting,
we didn't gather any data on the economic impact or employment opportunities
provided by the rancho. It was apparent though, that the tourists were
spending their money with local businesses and not multinational corporations.
Apparent because there were no corporate hotels, restaurants or tour companies
around.
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