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Arenal Volcano in Costa Rica
We've spent a lot of vacation time
and travel over the last few years going to Venezuela for
mission activities, but with so many family milestones
happening this Spring we thought maybe it was time to head
out for a purely fun trip. We had been hearing great things
about Costa Rica recently, so Karen starting looking into
it, and before you know it, we were on our way Costa Rica has been well known for
its stability in an otherwise turbulent region, and it's
recent ecological focus has inspired lots of eco-tourism. As
admirable as that may be, we went for the volcanos and the
beach! We flew into the airport at
Liberia, which is less well known than the one in the
capitol city of San Jose, but far closer to our
destinations. We rented a 4-wheel drive car (which ended up
being a good thing) and headed to Arenal for our first stop.
There are active volcanos running through the middle of the
entire country, but the one at Arenal seems to be the most
popular tourist spot. Our hotel room was actually a
chalet that had a gorgeous view of the volcano. Sitting in
the rockers and watching the volcano turned out to be as
much an attraction as the outings we planned to do things
like: walking the hanging bridges through
the cloud forest, white water kayaking, and horseback riding
up the volcano. We also watched butterflies emerge
from their cocoons at the butterfly house, and sat in an outdoor jacuzzi one
night watching glowing red lava spurt out of the
volcano. After three days we loaded back
into the car and headed further up into the mountains to
Monte Verde. The trip up required us to traverse about 30
miles of really bad, unpaved roads, and about twenty miles
in we suddenly realized one of the tires was going
flat. Considering the fact that we'd seen
very few houses, and almost no other cars we were glad we
had a good spare. But things started looking a bit grim when
neither Gerrit nor I could
loosen the lug nuts on the flat tire (clearly they'd been
enthusiastically tightened with one of those pneumatic
wrenches). Well, what looked like a
potential disaster turned into quite the "God story". A lady
walked up from the opposite direction and announced that a
tire repair shop was just up the road. Moments later a car
pulled up with a man and his dad offering to help. Between
our two jacks, a couple of flat rocks, and some creative
engineering we were able to get the flat off, the spare on,
and drive to the tire shop to get the tire
repaired. Monte Verde was an
interesting place; a strange combination of gorgeous
mountain rain forests, touristy restaurants, and hippy
hangouts. But the reason we'd come was for the zip line
through the forest. Once we got all harnessed up and
trained, we climbed the first tower and worked our way
through nearly two miles of cables through the trees, out
over deep valleys, and back into the trees. The views were
spectacular and the ride was totally
thrilling! From Monte Verde we
headed to the beach at Tamarindo where we stayed in a luxury
hotel on the beach for three nights. While there the boys
took surfing lessons, we all went snorkeling (we saw a sea
turtle, several kinds of blow fish, and hundreds of other
fish), Karen had a massage on the beach and then found a
place where she got a custom bathing suit made. Each night we explored
and ate at different restaurants. There was lots of kickback
time to read on our own, but we especially enjoyed Mom
reading aloud from the book "Marley & Me" about a
family with a totally out of control Lab. Far too soon it was time
to head back to Liberia and our flight home. The flight took
us over Nicaragua and it's picturesque
lake with two volcanos in the middle. It was a trip to
remember!
The view from our
hotel room