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Manuel Antonio National Park

We decided to head back up the coast to Manuel Antonio National Park. We’d read that it was extremely busy and suffered a bit from the “party set”, so we were a bit hesitant. The busiest part of the season had passed so we had our fingers crossed.

On the way Ronnie was keen to visit the Stone Spheres at Sierpe. Michelle wasn’t so excited. There are over 300 stone spheres left by the indigenous inhabitants of this region. Many have been looted or moved so a lot of information has been lost. They were said to be status symbols for the people who lived here. Like a fancy car in the drive these days, stone spheres were used to show off to the neighbours. In the public areas they also appear to have astronomical alignments (one of Ronnie’s favourite subjects!).

Before we could visit the indoor and outdoor museum at “Finca 6”, Ronnie managed to lock Michelle in the outdoor toilets. Eventually a security guy was found to unlock the door and release a stressed Michelle.

Pinning it down.
Buried spheres

Many spheres were buried by sediment from flooding of the surrounding estuary.

The partially buried spheres below seem to be aligned due East to the sunrise.

The usual trails of leaf-cutter ants
Some leftover rails for transporting bananas
A group of spheres. What’s the collective noun? Galaxy?
Some rude stones too!

Then we got to the town of Manuel Antonio. It wasn’t nearly as bad as we’d been led to believe, and we actually enjoyed being able to easily walk to restaurants etc.

A restaurant prop. There seems to be a mysterious story how it got here to do with CIA and gun/drug runners but we never got the story.
Many things are big here. The leaf, not Michelle!
View to the Pacific

Manuel Antonio is famous for its surfing, so Ronnie and Michelle decided to try it for the very first time. We both eventually managed to get up regularly, Michelle from the very start. That was despite the waves really being too big for beginners. We had great teachers though. You’re never too old to try something new!

Surf dudes
Sunset view from bar

The next morning we visited the National Park with a guide. Without the guide, we would hardly have spotted anything. Many of the photos below were taken with Michelle’s phone camera through the guide’s powerful telescope.

Howler monkey
Hooded lizard – weird
Another lizard
Hummingbird
Grasshopper. Maybe should be “leafhopper”?
Dragonfly with transparent wings
Another type of lizard
Lesser nighthawk, camouflaged high up in the trees – don’t know how the guide spotted this
Three-toed sloth – strange
This frog has found a great home
Lizard
… close up
Iguana

At the end of the trail there was a bunch of white-faced capuchin monkeys

Picking fleas
Lazing around
Something scary
Maybe just the humans
Scratch just there
Hanging around

There is a lovely beach within the park. No facilities allowed.

Toucan (at a distance)
Number two
Bay view
Different angle

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