





This morning we drove up into the hills to the Finca la Esperenza farm for a chocolate growing and making tour. It is a family-run operation, and they hire a neighbour as a translator for the English tours.
Oscar got to help the farmer harvest some yuca while we were waiting for our tour to start.
The first part of the tour was a walk through the forest, where we had some of the best wildlife sightings of the trip so far. We saw a sloth relatively low to the ground, two toucans and a hummingbird nest with babies in it.
The farm was a mix of cocoa plants and coffee, and also some pineapples, guava, and a smattering of small livestock and exotic birds.
Our guide explained how they cultivate the cocoa beans and let us try some of the raw seeds right out of the pod.
After checking out the peacocks, roosters, ducks, turkeys and other birds, we went back to the main area to learn about the process to make chocolate from cocoa beans.
This morning we drove back through La Fortuna to the Arenal National Park to go on a hike to see the old lava flow. The spot we visited was from 1992.
The kids did great hiking the 4km Las Coladas trail, though Penny did need some shoulder rides. The big kids wanted to check if Pat can still carry them on his shoulders. Not for too long, but he can still do it.
We said goodbye to our treehouse this morning and hit the road for the La Fortuna, a few hours drive to the east in the shadow of the Arenal volcano. The only road was a windy one through many mountains and around a big lake. The kids in the middle row all quickly dozed off, while Oscar stoically played candy crush on his dad's phone in the trunk seat.

This morning, after the kids ate an entire loaf of bread's worth of french toast, we walked over to a bakery that was recommended by the host of our tree house.
The kids were dying to play an April fools joke on someone, and Pat played along by letting them fill his croissant with hot sauce.
We kept walking along the main highway towards the town of Monteverde. From the viewpoint along the road, you can see all the way to the ocean and across to the Nicoya peninsula.
After a few hiccups (arriving before the park opened, then not having cash to pay the entry fee), we took a short hike to the Cararata Los Murcielagos waterfall.
There were two suspension bridges on the trail and lots of ants to see.
The trail ended at a beautiful waterfall and small swimming hole.
We were back at the tree house for lunch and tried to have a relaxing afternoon to get ready for the night hike. The monkeys made a re-appearance around the house, and we also saw our first capybara wandering around the forest floor. A coati took a bite out of our loaf of bread before we had a chance to unload it from the stroller. They seem to be the raccoons of Costa Rica.
After an early dinner, we geared up in our rain gear and headed to the Bajo del Tigre reserve for a guided night hike. Oscar's highlight of the day was when we had to stop to watch a coach bus attempt a 75 point turn, blocking the entire (narrow) highway.
It was hard to get good pictures, but we saw a scorpion, two tarantulas, a headlight click beetle, a walking stick, a tree frog, a sleeping toucan and thousands of ants.