Osa’s Utopia: Guaria de Osa Rainforest Ocean Discovery Center
and Ethnobotanical Gardens is tucked away in the remote southwest
corner of Costa Rica, near Corcovado National Park on the Osa
Peninsula. Clockwise from top left, a group arriving by boat from
Sierpe approaches Guaria de Osa’s beach at sunset; the three-story,
pagoda-style Lapa Lapa Lodge is the center space for retreat and
relaxation; a young visitor plays with natural cotton on an ethnobotanical
tour that educates guests about tropical plants and their uses;
Ana, the highly entertaining macaw, is a favorite among the lodge’s
younger guests; the airy dining Pacific room is a pleasant place
for meals.
Photos by Shannon
Mendes | Tico Times
By Tamara Neely
Tico Times Staff
A motorboat
carrying nine tourists into a bay off the Osa Peninsula landed
with a jolt on a pristine beach in a remote corner of the Osa
Peninsula, shaking shrieks and laughter out of its passengers.
That was my introduction to Guaria de Osa resort.
Its full
name is Guaria de Osa Rainforest Ocean Discovery Center and Ethnobotanical
Gardens – a big name that speaks to the vision and interests
ofthe people at its helm. Guaria de Osa, on Costa Rica’s
southern Pacific coast, lies 15 minutes by boat from Corcovado
National Park, revered for its primary rain forest supporting
an abundance of wildlife. The property covers 10 acres, and is
set up as if a peppering of huts and two main lodges were plunked
down in the middle ofa garden,with a sloping sandy beach and the
warm ocean along one side and dense forest on the other.
An extended
stay of a week or more is warranted here;the journey from San
José is long (bus or plane, then a taxi, then a boat and
possibly a hike), and there’s a lot of nature to take in.
First, there
is beach time, just feeling the sand and fooling around in the
waves. Then there is Corcovado National Park,which can be hiked
on your own or with a guide, such as Jonathan Miller-Weisberger,
ethnobotanist and mastermind behind Guaria de Osa,to guide you
through and pick out flora and fauna with expert eyes and teach
you about indigenous medicinal uses of the plants found there.
Made up
of 54,540 land and 2,400 marine hectares,Corcovado is the kind
of place people get excited about because of the intense biodiversity
it shelters; the park is full of howler and white-faced monkeys,
sloths, frogs, snakes, countless birds and never- been-logged
forest.
Close by
is Caño Island, an uninhabited biological reserve and site
of a pre- Columbian cemetery, as well as some of the region’s
famous stone spheres of unknown origin. Known for certain, however,
is that the island is a good spot for snorkeling and diving, and
the boat trip often rewards tourists with glimpses of whales and
dolphins.
If you feel
like staying closer to home,the Río Claro is a pretty river
that can be reached by walking down the beach. Plastic canoes
can be rented for paddling upstream to a waterfall.
Miller-Weisberger
leads walks through the Guaria de Osa garden for kids and adults.
His interests include medicinal applications of plants, world
vision of indigenous cultures and old-world ideas such as the
I Ching – the spirit of which casts a turn-on and tune-in
vibe about the place.
He and partner
Mónica Serrano, fromEcuador, welcomed our group at the
beach when our boat landed, and led us to our accommodations.
My room was a wood-framed hut with a tarp pulled tight over a
center beam, creating a tent-shaped roof over an open-air space
— no door — surrounded by jungle.
A safe for
valuables is made available, but Guaria de Osa guests are a one-love
kind of
crowd,so I wasn’t worried about my belongings — rather,
I fretted over how to modestly change in and out ofmy bathing
suit several times a day, with the heat and the ocean always beckoning.
Despite
this logistical puzzle, the hut was beautiful and I felt closer
to nature than I had for a long time. At dusk, frogs, crickets
and cicadas started chirping, and from my bed I could see huge
tropical leafs lit with moonlight, and feel the nighttime breeze,
perfumed with ylang-ylang flowers. The mosquito netting kept out
biting insects,and when the sun started to rise I heard the birds
wake up,their peeps and songs and squawks progressing into a wall
of noise.
It was
like camping,only with a comfortable bed,three prepared meals
a day, all-day
homemade ginger and lemongrass tea, coffee, hot showers and flush
toilets. The shared bathrooms feature lovely tiling in the roomy
shower stalls, and each sink in the communal area is tiled with
handpicked shells from the beach. (For those wanting more separation
from the wild, Guaria de Osa offers five rooms with private bathrooms
and closing doors.)
The Lapa
Lapa Lodge is a striking, three- story, pagoda-style structure,
made by local
craftsmen out of wood felled naturally by windstorms or found
in a pasture cleared more than 20 years ago. This is the center
space for retreat and relaxation at the resort. There is space
to hang out or meet on the lower floor, in rattan furniture and
hammocks, while the second floor is wide open, with wood floors
designed for yoga, dance, tai chi, qigong, capoeira and other
body-movement practices. The top floor offers a prime view of
the Pacific Ocean, across the botanical garden, past the tent
huts and the dining hall and over the jungle treetops. It’s
a fine spot to take in the sunset.
When the
dinner bell rings, guests head for the Choza Lodge,to be greeted
by Ronald
Delgado,caretaker and all-around good guy, whose musical team
plays marimba tunes while guests file through, pick up plates
and serve themselves from the buffet of home-cooked dishes, including
gallo pinto, fish, plantain, vegetable curry, fried chicken and
salad made by Delgado’s wife Laura, with help from others
in the kitchen.
Guaria
de Osa doesn’t serve beer or cocktails,but if you’re
looking for a nightcap and a bit of adventure, you can take a
pleasant stroll down the beach to an open-air bamboo bar with
a neighborhood feel, under a ceiling of endless stars.
On a clear
night, the bioluminescence can be seen in the ocean, crashing
in the waves, or up close if you get in for a swim, with sparkling
swirls of light following your every movement in the water.
Guaria
de Osa is a comfortable, luscious place to dig into the natural
beauty and abundant wildlife of the Osa Peninsula. The rate for
two guests, for four days and three nights, is $612
per person, including three meals a day, coffee and tea bar, three
rainforest and ocean adventures and round-trip boat transfers.
For more information, visit www.guariadeosa.com,
or call 358-9788 or 786-6753 in Costa
Rica or (510) 235-4313 in the United States.
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