Howler Monkey

While I was waiting on the arrival of Walter for my return trip the boat driver took me across the river to a tree with several of these Mantled Howler Monkeys (my gallery link). They are almost constantly looking for something to eat and here it is leaves. See more shots in the above linked gallery from my many trips all over Costa Rica..

Mantled Howler Monkey, Maquenque Lodge, Costa Rica
Mantled Howler Monkey, Maquenque Lodge, Costa Rica

¡Pura Vida!

Great Curassow

The other big forest bird (like the guans shown earlier) is the Great Curassow (my gallery link) and the first photo is of two females and a second photo of one male. Note that the male is mostly black like the guans, but has a bright yellow bump on his beak while the male Crested Guan has a red waddle. And interestingly to me is that the Curassows have bigger crests than the Crested Guans with crest in their name. 🙂 The above linked gallery has better photos than these two. I guess I’m getting “rusty” or “slow on the draw” as an action photographer! The birds wait for no one and never pose! 🙂

2 Female Great Curassow, Maquenque Lodge, Costa Rica
1 Male Great Curassow, Maquenque Lodge, Costa Rica

¡Pura Vida!

Yellow-throated Euphonia

Just one of many photos with more available in the gallery: Yellow-throated Euphonia (linked).

Yellow-throated Euphonia, Maquenque Lodge, Costa Rica. One of the birds from my cabin’s back porch!

¡Pura Vida!

Immature White-collared Manakin

At first I wondered what these pudgy little brown birds were in a tree behind my cabin. Then on eBird’s Merlin I discovered that they are little White-collared Manakins with no white collar yet if male and if female that brown will turn green with a yellowish breast and the females don’t have white collars like the males. See more photos of these juveniles and my photos of mature males in the gallery White-collared Manakin (linked). I’ve seen them twice now at Maquenque and once at Selva Verde Lodge (across the river in their private forest reserve).

Immature White-collared Manakin, Maquenque Lodge, Costa Rica

¡Pura Vida!

Collared Aracari

This small toucan, Collared Aracari (my gallery link) is found mostly on the Caribbean Slope of Costa Rica but it is possible to see one on the Pacific Slope occasionally where his close “cousin” the Fiery-billed Aracari (my gallery link) lives only on the Pacific Slope.

Collared Aracari, Maquenque Lodge, Costa Rica
Collared Aracari, Maquenque Lodge, Costa Rica

¡Pura Vida!

Maquenque Lodge Tonight

Today I will travel for about 4 hours to one of my favorite lodges and best birding place, Maquenque Eco Lodge (their link) near the Nicaragua border in Boca Tapada, San Carlos Canton, Alajuela Province, almost directly north of where I live in the center of the country. It will be my 6th trip there and 3rd time to celebrate my birthday there, which is July 4 and this year number 86! 🙂

3 years ago I planted an Avocado Tree there to help the endangered Green Macaws at Maquenque.

I may or may not do a post tonight from there, but otherwise a daily post from Maquenque reporting on my nature finds there for the next 5 days and as always a few more days after a trip. This will be my 6th time at Maquenque with, of course, lots of photos and a “Trip Gallery” from every visit there . . .

Continue reading “Maquenque Lodge Tonight”

Reflected Sunset

When you live surrounded by both hills and trees, you don’t get to enjoy full sunrises or full sunsets. (I get both of those when I visit the two coasts of Costa Rica + at Arenal.) But occasionally the weather, the clouds and whatever else come together for a reflected colorful sky at sunrise and at sunset, as shown here from my terrace the other night at sunset (June 23). I look forward to my September trip to the Caribbean where I enjoy beautiful sunrises every morning, While my Christmas trip to Arenal Observatory will have semi-indirect (time of year thing) sunsets over Lake Arenal, visible from my choice room. 🙂

Sunset from my terrace on June 23, 2026, Atenas, Alajuela, Costa Rica – Sunsets to the left of this view.

For the “real” sunsets, see my galleries: VISTAS, BEACHES, SUNRISES, SUNSETS Costa Rica which includes a sub-gallery of other sunrises & sunsets from my terrace.

¡Pura Vida!

Streamside Forest

When you fly anywhere in a small plane you can easily see how trees grow thickly along almost all streams, even in urban or developed areas and that is certainly so for the little stream across the cow pasture from me. I zoomed in on it with the camera from my terrace and I like the thick forest look, even in a highly populated town or small city. 🙂

Streamside Trees, Roca Verde, Atenas, Alajuela, Costa Rica

“Trees are poems that the earth writes upon the sky.”

~Khalil Gibran

¡Pura Vida!

And check out my Trees Gallery!

Yigüirro

The Clay-colored Thrush (my gallery link) is called a Yigüirro in Costa Rica and is the National Bird, yet such a simple, Robin-sized brown bird. Not only does his singing in April attract the rain (and me), but his simple, plain look is also appealing. Another favorite bird seen at Xandari this week.

Clay-colored Thrush or Yigüirro, Xandari Costa Rica.

¡Pura Vida!

Lesson’s Motmot

One of my favorite Costa Rica Birds, the Lessson’s Motmot (my gallery link), previously called “Blue-crowned Motmot,” is usually one of the first birds I see at Xandari and that was the case this morning on my circle walk through the gardens just after seeing two toucans fly over (no photo). I saw several other small birds in the shrubs without good photos, including a White-eared Ground-Sparrow and the National Bird, Yigüirro or Clay-colored Thrush. The pre-breakfast walk is always the best time for birds, but with overcast skies and the threat of rain, there were not as many today. And that is usually too early for butterflies that seek the sun, but I did get one which I will share in a separate post later today.

Here’s photos of the two Motmots, male & female, with couples like this usually seen together . . .

Lesson’s Motmot, (I think the female), Xandari Nature Resort, Alajuela, Alajuela, Costa Rica
Lesson’s Motmot, (I think the male), Xandari Nature Resort, Alajuela, Alajuela, Costa Rica
Lesson’s Motmot, (I think the male), front view, Xandari Nature Resort, Alajuela, Alajuela, Costa Rica

¡Pura Vida!