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		<title>Costa Rica 2011 The Art of Biodiversity &#8211; Part 2</title>
		<link>https://www.dennisgoulet.us/costa-rica-2011-the-art-of-biodiversity-part-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Jul 2011 15:37:26 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Selva Verde Lodge We spent three days at this tropical rainforest lodge located on the banks of the Sarapiqui River.&#160; The attraction here is the abundance of green and black poison dart frogs and red poison dart frogs as well as masked and red-eyed tree frogs.&#160; One back lit basilisk lizard was a challenge to &#8230;]]></description>
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<p><strong>Selva Verde Lodge</strong></p>



<p>We spent three days at this tropical rainforest lodge located on the banks of the Sarapiqui River.&nbsp; The attraction here is the abundance of green and black poison dart frogs and red poison dart frogs as well as masked and red-eyed tree frogs.&nbsp; One back lit basilisk lizard was a challenge to photograph as we tried to move through the undergrowth off the path and not chase the lizard off.&nbsp; There were also lizards climbing a tree next to the dining room, and we even saw a baby fer-de-lance on the side of the path.&nbsp; It couldn’t have been more than three inches in diameter coiled less than a foot from the path. The lodge naturalist moved the snake into the forest for everyone’s (and the snake’s) safety.&nbsp; When Greg was selecting some vegetation for nighttime photography of a red-eyed tree frog, he explained that we had to carefully look under the low vegetation to make certain no fer-de-lance were there.&nbsp; We could hear numerous birds throughout the forest, but they were elusive with the exception of a mot-mot, a chestnut billed toucan, and an ochre bellied flycatcher on the nest. We also had some time with howler monkeys which were very close and almost eye-level from the balcony of the lodge’s classroom.&nbsp; The naturalist believes they come to see their reflection in the floor to ceiling windows.</p>


 [<a href="https://www.dennisgoulet.us/costa-rica-2011-the-art-of-biodiversity-part-2/">See image gallery at www.dennisgoulet.us</a>] 



<p>One morning we traveled to a nearby farm owned by a local family that has preserved some of its property as forest.&nbsp; Great Green Macaws and Scarlet Macaws live in the forest and stay close to the farm to roost and feed.&nbsp; He also had a large enclosure that injured birds, which locals had found were rehabilitated and allowed to go free.&nbsp; There is an opening in the cage where birds can come and go as they please.&nbsp; The owner also rescued two jaguars from being hunted and killed by local villagers for killing cattle.&nbsp; The farmer got the villagers to agree to let him capture the animals rather than just kill them.&nbsp;&nbsp; He built an enclosure to house the jaguars and takes good care of them; they look healthier than some zoo animals I’ve seen.</p>


 [<a href="https://www.dennisgoulet.us/costa-rica-2011-the-art-of-biodiversity-part-2/">See image gallery at www.dennisgoulet.us</a>] 



<p>&nbsp;</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading"><a href="http://www.dennisgoulet.us/?p=161">Costa Rica 2011 The Art of Biodiversity -Part 3</a></h3>



<p>&nbsp;</p>
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