Costa Rica's Palo Verde National Park
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Parque Nacional Palo Verde National Park, located 28 km south of Bagaces, protects 13,058 hectares of floodplain, marshes, limestone ridges, and seasonal pools in the heart of the driest region of Costa Rica--the Tempisque basin, at the mouth of the Río Tempisque in the Gulf of Nicoya.
The tidal river rises and falls up to four meters and is navigable for about 36 km, as far as the confluence with the Río Bolsón. There are 15 different habitats, including several types of swamp and marshland, and a corresponding diversity of Costa Rica fauna.
Plump crocodiles wallow on the muddy riverbanks, salivating, no doubt, at the sight of coatis, white-tailed deer, and other mammals come down to the water to drink. The banks of the Tempisque are also lined with many hundreds of archaeological sites for the curious.
Palo Verde National Park is best known as a bird-watchers' paradise. More than 300 bird species have been recorded, not least great curassows and the only permanent colony of scarlet macaws in the dry tropics. At least a quarter of a million wading birds and waterfowl flock here in fall and winter, when much of the arid alluvial plain swells into a lake. Isla de Pájaros, in the middle of the Rio Tempisque, is particularly replete with waterbirds, including white ibis, roseate spoonbills, anhingas, and wood storks, which prefer the isolation, and jabiru storks, the largest storks in the world. Isla de Pájaros is also home to the nation's largest colony of black-crowned night herons.
The Costa Rica national park is laced by three well-maintained trails that lead through deciduous tropical forest and marshland to lookout points over the lagoons. Others lead to limestone caves and large waterholes such as Laguna Bocana, which are gathering places for a diversity of birds and animals.
Limestone cliffs rise behind the old Hacienda Palo Verde, now the park headquarters, tel./fax 671-1290 or 671-1455, fax 671-1062, eight km south of the park entrance. Entrance costs $6.
Ask a ranger to point out the mango trees nearby. The fruits of the mango are favored by peccaries, monkeys, coatimundis, deer and other Costa Rica mammals.
The national park, which derives its name from the palo verde (green tree) or horsebean shrub that retains a bright green coloration year-round. Its contiguous to the north with the remote 7,354-hectare Dr. Rafael Lucas Rodríguez Caballero Wildlife Refuge and, beyond that, Lomas Barbudal Biological Reserve, to the north.
The three, together with Barra Honda National Park and adjacent areas, form the Tempisque Megapark. Dr. Rafael Lucas Rodríguez Caballero Wildlife Refuge has a similar variety of habitats--from swampland to evergreen forest and dry forest--and wildlife.
Costa Rica's dry season is by far the best time to visit, although the Tempisque basin can get dizzyingly hot. Access is far easier then. Deciduous trees lose their leaves, making bird-watching easier. Wildlife gathers by the waterholes. And there are far fewer mosquitoes and bugs. When the rains come, mosquitoes burst into action--bring bug spray. Biting insects abound. And bring binoculars.