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Company Contacts
Florida
Office
21 Old Kings Road North
Suite B-212
Palm Coast, FL 32137
phn: (386) 449-0059
fax : (386)
449-0060
Costa
Rica Office
Sabana Sur
Costa Rica
phn: 011-506-2296-9948
fax : 011-506-2220-3493
Toll-Free
1-800-783-7839
tours@sunnylandtours.com
Sunny Land Tours, Inc.
where responsible tourism meets exotic
adventure
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The small
village of Tortuguero (translated as "Region of Turtles") lies
on the northeastern Caribbean coast of Costa Rica,
approximately 50 miles north of the principal Port of Limon.
the village is comprised of a variety of cultures: Hispanic,
Miskito Indian (Nicaragua), and Afro-Caribbean. Both Spanish
and Creole English are spoken. The region surrounding
Tortuguero is called the Tortuguero Plain, which is a vast low
lying area of little topographic relief still covered by a
large expanse of tropical rainforest. Tortuguero beach is the
most important nesting site of the endangered green turtle in
the Western Hemishpere. Giant leatherback, hawksbill, and
loggerhead turtles also nest here. The green turtle population
is believed to have come perilously close to extinction in the
1960s when nearly every female turtle arriving to nest in
Tortuguero was taken for the export market for turtle soup.
CCC was established in 1959 specifically to study and protect
Caribbean green turtles. Working closely with the Costa Rican
government, CCC helped establish Tortuguero National Park in
1970, a move that offered protection to the turtles and
strictly limited the number of turtles that could be taken.
With the park established, development along the coast would
never stretch much beyond the existing village, and the
presence of CCC researchers and park guards would discourage
poaching. The park now includes over 19,000 hectares (46,900
acres) and protects 22 miles of nesting beach from the mouth
of the Tortuguero River south to Parisimina. The park, and the
Barra del Colorado Wildlife Refuge to the north, comprise the
largest remaining adjoining tract of lowland wet tropical
forest on Costa Rica's Atlantic Coast. Even with the
establishment of the park, CCC realized that the cultural
demand for sea turtle meat and eggs would be harder to
overcome. Trying not to interfere with local customs, CCC
instead began working with villagers to promote ecotourism as
a more sustainable use of the sea turtles that come to
Tortuguero each year. In 1971, CCC began hiring Tortuguero
villagers to walk the 22-mile stretch of black sand beach and
count turtle tracks. Gradually, local shops and hotels have
sprouted offering villagers a steady source of income. Each
year, tens of thousands of tourists come to Tortuguero to see
the nesting sea turtles and the other natural treasures of the
national park. After receiving certification through a CCC
training program, villagers are issued government permits
authorizing them to guide tourists on nightly turtle watching
excursions. Villagers take great pride in receiving a guide
permit, and those that do are staunch defenders of
Tortuguero's turtles. Other early initiatives focused on the
importance of educating Costa Ricans and visitors alike about
the various threats to sea turtle survival. With support from
the Tinker Foundation, CCC built an educational kiosk in the
center of Tortuguero village that told the story of sea
turtles. The kiosk still stands today, and CCC has augmented
its ability to educate by constructing the H. Clay Frick
Natural History Museum and Visitor Center, which now reaches most visitors to Tortuguero. CCC's sustainable development
work with the Tortuguero community has demonstrated that live
sea turtles on the beach have greater value for the villagers
than dead turtles in the stewpot. Tourists pay considerable
fees to watch sea turtles nest on Tortuguero Beach. Some
50,000 tourists visit Tortuguero annually to see nesting
turtles and visit the tropical rainforests of Tortuguero
National Park.
Climate: Tortuguero is warm and humid.
Daily temperatures average 79 F and annual average
rainfall is over 200+ inches. Warm days are tempered by
trade winds and cool nights.
Vegetation: Most of the park
is low alluvial floodplain (sea level to 20m) which extends
far inland, and is occasionally interrupted by isolated
volcanic hills of 100-300 m. An intricate network of
blackwater canals and creeks dissect palm swamps and mixed
rainforest throughout the region. The natural vegetation of
the area progresses from the poorly-drained swamp forests in
the lowlands near the coast to tropical wet and pre-montane
forests further inland at higher elevations. Forest species
composition gradually shifts from coastal scrub to huge
expanses of Raphia palm swamp and mixed species along waterway
margins, to tall multi-layered evergreen forests. Canopy trees
may exceed 60 m in height with girths of 1-2 m, some with
massive buttressing. Species diversity of both plants and
animals is very high here -- among the highest in Costa Rica.
Fauna: Abundant wildlife inhabits Tortuguero, including 57
species of amphibians, 111 species of reptiles, and 60 species
of mammals. More than 300 species of birds live in Tortuguero
for all or part of the year. Birdwatchers commonly see
keel-billed toucans, slaty tailed trogons, Montezuma
oropendulas and a variety of parrots. Birds common along the
canals include green and great blue herons, egrets, belted
kingfishers, anhingas, jacanas, sun grebes and several species
of hawks and kites. Other animals commonly seen are fishing
bats, three-toed sloths, iguanas, basilisk lizards, poison
dart frogs, and howler, white-faced and spider monkeys. The
tracks of river otters, collared peccaries, and Baird's tapirs
are often seen on the banks of rivers and canals. Caiman are
commonly observed in the waterways, which also are home to
gar-fish, manatees, crocodiles, crustaceans, and an occasional
bullshark. Jaguars, ocelots, and kinkajous inhabit the park,
but are rarely seen.
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