Golfo
Dulce Rainforest Lodge
Piedras
Blancas Golfo Dulce Costa Rica
The Swiss owned and
operated Golfo Dulce Lodge is surrounded
by the undisturbed primary lowland
rainforest of the Piedras Blancas
National Park, an extension of the
Corcovado National Park and the clear
waters of the Golfo Dulce. The remote
lodge at Playa San Josecito is only
accessible by a boat ride of about
30 minutes either from Golfito or
Puerto Jimenez.
The Golfo Dulce Lodge consists of
more than 300 hectares (750 acres)
and was bought to conserve the existing
virgin rainforest, and to set up a
small place for nature and animal
lovers to experience the magnificent
world of an almost untouched environment
on an individual basis, far away from
tourist crowds.
The lodge offers boat tours to the
mangroves of the Esquinas River and
different hikes leading through various
ecosystems such as primary and secondary
rainforest, an extensive heliconia
field, fruit trees and pasture. An
easy accessible, safe observation
platform invites for birding and nature
studies. The platform can also be
reached within 20 minutes on a self-guided
tour with an educational description
of the most interesting plants growing
along the path.
So far, bird specialists have identified
340 different species of birds on
the lodge property or in the adjacent
Piedras Blancas National Park. A local
naturalist and/or German/English speaking
biology students guide the jungle
hikes.
From 1997 up to 2000 the Golfo Dulce
Lodge supported the official Wildcat
Rehabilitation Center Profelis, founded
by the two German biologists Sigi
Weisel and Sabine Weber, for reintroducing
confiscated margays (Leopardus wiedii)
and ocelots (Leopardus pardalis) into
their natural habitat, the tropical
lowland rainforest of the Piedras
Blancas National Park. On a remote
part of the lodge rainforest, the
first worldwide documented margay
release took place in February 1998,
conducted by Profelis, and was filmed
by the German TV-crew VOX. Additionally,
part of the documentaries on cats
by the well-known broadcasting teams
of BBC and Wild Things California
were filmed on the lodge property.
On Playa San Josecito, there is also
a release center of the privately
owned Zoo Ave outside San José
for hurt, rescued or formerly domesticated
birds. Since 1999 groups of highly
endangered scarlet macaws (ara macao),
born and raised at the zoo, were released
into the Piedras Blancas National
Park where macaws were once present
but no longer existed due to poaching
and pesticide use. Those first releases
are part of a long-term project to
establish a third self-sustaining
scarlet macaw population, to add to
the two existing groups in the Corcovado
National Park and the Carara Biological
Reserve. However, the release center
is not open to the public.
Accomodations
The little complex of buildings is
informally grouped together as a tiny
village in a large landscaped garden
right on the edge of the tropical
rainforest and is less than 300 yards
(250m) away from the rocky beach.