Everyone prefers the Emerald Basilisk, sometimes called Green Basilisk, but the Brown Basilisk is seen just about as much even with his better camouflage. 🙂 In these photos, the Emerald is an adult male with the head crest while the brown without a crest could be either a juvenile or a female. Both are found all over Costa Rica, especially near water. Note that both have a tail longer than the body. And both are sometimes called “Jesus Christ Lizards” because they walk on water (or run).
Continue reading “Two Basilisks”“Upside-down Yogi” (Sloth)
This Brown-throated Three-toed Sloth (Wikipedia link) was in this Guarumo or Cecropia Tree long enough for multiple efforts to photograph it, though in the shadows or no good light, at Chachagua Rainforest Hotel grounds. A peaceful creature! 🙂 In a peaceful place! 🙂
Continue reading ““Upside-down Yogi” (Sloth)”“The three-toed sloth lives a peaceful, vegetarian life in perfect harmony with its environment. A good-natured smile is forever on its lips…I have seen that smile with my own eyes. I am not one given to projecting human traits and emotions onto animals, but many a time during that month in Brazil, looking up at a sloth in repose, I felt I was in the presence of upside-down yogis deep in meditation or hermits deep in prayer, wise beings whose intense imaginative lives were beyond the reach of scientific probing.”
― Yann Martel, Life of Pi
Social Flycatcher
This pretty little bird does not get a lot of attention and is often mistaken for an immature or small Kiskadee or Boat-billed Flycatcher. This particular Social Flycatcher (eBird link) landed on this rusty old ornamental fencing around a lake platform and made an interesting image to me. 🙂 And of course I have a Social Flycatcher Gallery with photos from all over Costa Rica.
¡Pura Vida!
TRIP GALLERY: May 2022, Chachagua Rainforest Hotel
A Peaceful Place
“Everybody needs time to reflect and contemplate, and the most inspirational and peaceful place to do so is in nature.”
~Akiane Kramarik
¡Pura Vida!
TRIP GALLERY: May 2022, Chachagua Rainforest Hotel
Rainforest Frogs
I only have photos of 4 species of the many we saw on the night hike at Chachagua Rainforest Hotel, but any frog I can add to my collection is great for me and two of these are new to me. There are about 150 species of frogs in Costa Rica and my gallery Amphibians CR has 33+ species, some I’m unable to identify. Frogs are amazing! 🙂
Continue reading “Rainforest Frogs”Scarlet-rumped Tanager
This one on the Caribbean Slope used to be called Passerini’s Tanager with the Pacific Slope’s called Cherrie’s Tanager, but now they are all called Scarlet-rumped Tanager (eBird link), yet eBird and others still use “Passerini’s” and “Cherrie’s” in parentheses after the new together name, especially with the females which are distinctly different. And you will see below that I have two photos of females with one either a Cherrie’s or a darker morph of the Passerini’s. Confusing? Yes! 🙂 And of course the new species name only describes the male which is, by the way, identical on both slopes! 🙂
Thus IN MY BIRD GALLERIES, I still have two galleries but added the new name in front of each:
- Scarlet-rumped Tanager, Passerini’s (Caribbean Slope)
- Scarlet-rumped Tanager, Cherrie’s (Pacific Slope)
- I originally put photos in these two galleries based solely on the location where I made the photo.
Chachagua Waterfalls
The feature photo is their main or largest waterfall with several other small ones like the one at the swim hole I showed in my May 16 Arrival at Chachagua Post. And repeated here:
Their Main Waterfall . . .
And tourists getting their photos by this falls . . .
Continue reading “Chachagua Waterfalls”Sleeping Kingbird
One of the things different on the Night Hike at Chachagua Rainforest Hotel was that we saw more sleeping birds than I’ve seen on any other night hike all over Costa Rica. Our guide said this one was a Tropical Kingbird (eBird link) which looks like a baby or a little smaller than usual to me, but this one could be an immature or they just scrunched up tight for warmth and sleeping. 🙂 And the whiter stomach could have been the camera flash, made with a cell phone camera plus people’s flashlights. So I’m sticking with the ID our guide gave us. 🙂
And for comparison, here’s two more Tropical Kingbirds photographed in the daytime . . .
Continue reading “Sleeping Kingbird”Leaves, Lichens & Nature Things
Not flowers or trees but a few more rainforest oddities that captured my attention or you could say “some more Nature as Art” . . .
Continue reading “Leaves, Lichens & Nature Things”Band-tailed Barbthroat
My favorite hummingbird seen or photographed on this trip was this Band-tailed Barbthroat which is not seen very often (only my second time). And I got only one useable photo before he flew off as do all hummingbirds. You can read about this uncommon species on eBird or see the one other I’ve photographed in my Band-tailed Barbthroat Gallery. The other one was at Esquinas Rainforest Lodge near Golfito (where I photographed almost twice as many species as here). This bird is found only in Central America and Northern South America.
This was indeed a fortunate find and on top of that, in decent light! 🙂 But only one good shot and he’s gone! 🙂 I had very little sunshine the whole week I was at Chachagua, just a few hours on Wednesday, so to get this beautiful bird in good light was a real blessing! My trip gallery is up now but unfortunately is filled with a lot of low-light photos. Sorry!
¡Pura Vida!
TRIP GALLERY: May 2022, Chachagua Rainforest Hotel