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COSTA
RICA
Quetzal & Hummingbird Special March 27 - April 3, 2025 Combine this tour with our Contact gina@sunrisebirding.com to reserve your space! Trip Cost & Travel Planning> | Registration Form> Tour Registration Details, Terms and Cancellation Policies> Join us to escape the cold weather and bird in sunny, Costa Rica this winter on our easy, affordable getaway in search of Resplendent Quetzal (Photo: Gina Nichol) and the charming hummingbirds and other feathered gems of this bird filled country. Our itinerary features stays at lovely lodges where we'll enjoy warm tropical weather, nice accommodation, great food, lush forests, and an incredible variety of vibrant birds. A stay in the famous Valley of the Quetzals will offer the chance to explore mid-montane habitats where trogons, hummingbirds, tanagers, flycatchers and other vividly colored birds flourish. Book
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ITINERARY
Day 2 - Cerro de la Muerte and the Valley of the Quetzal Later on, we will head to the Valley of the Quetzals and our lodge set in Parque Nacional Los Quetzales. We've visited this spot many times over the years as a favorite spot to enjoy a cup of coffee and check the birds in the back garden. In recent years, comfortable cabins have been built allowing us to stay in the middle of this birder's paradise. On arrival, we'll check the balcony behind the restaurant. If the fuchsia shrubs are blooming, it is likely that Volcano Hummingbirds will be taking advantage of it allowing great views. Also here, keep watch for Sooty-capped Bush Tanager, Flame-colored Tanager, Sooty Robin, and Large-footed and Yellow-thighed Finches foraging on the ground. We have arrivedin the Valley of the Quetzal and will of course be keeping an eye out for the Resplendent Quetzal (Photo: Gina Nichol), the most beautiful of Costa Rican birds. This area is also the home of Unspotted Saw-whet Owl and Dusky Nightjar. In the evening, we'll listen and look for these very special birds pending reports in the area.
Day 3 - All day in San Gerardo for Quetzals and other avian gems As we explore the beautiful, wooded Valley of the Quetzal, our day list may include White-throated Mountain-gem, Volcano Hummingbird, Stripe-tailed Hummingbird, Collared Redstart, Yellow-thighed Brushfinch, Sulphur-winged Parakeet, Black-faced Solitaire, Long-tailed Silky-flycatcher, Northern Emerald Toucanet, Flame-colored Tanager and others! The winding road into the valley follows tumbling river that holds American Dipper, Torrent Tyrannulet and sometimes Louisiana Waterthrush. There will be no shortage of other birds to look for in the valley including Collared Trogon, Silvery-fronted Tapaculo, Yellow-winged Vireo, Ruddy-capped Nightingale-Thrush, Spangle-cheeked Tanager, Yellowish Flycatcher, Acorn Woodpecker, Lesser Violet-ear, Scintillant Hummingbird, Ruddy Treerunner, Black-faced Solitaire, Flame-throated Warbler,Black-headed and Tufted Flycatcher, Barred Becard, Long-tailed Silky-Flycatcher and White-collared Swift. Throughout the day, there should be more chances to see the amazing Resplendent Quetzal - a highlight of any tour to Costa Rica. We'll also visit a small cafe in the mountains where we can enjoy a cup of fresh Costa Rican coffee while watching dozens of Fiery-throated Hummingbirds (Photo below by Gina Nichol) coming into feeders. This stunning little gem breeds only in the mountains of Costa Rica and western Panama, and seeing the congregation of these birds and their antics around the feeders is an amazing spectacle. Joining these flying sparklers and vying for position at the feeders are the larger (Magnificent) Talamanca Hummingbirds (right, photo by Gina Nichol) and Lesser Violetears. Occasionally the tiny Volcano Hummingbird (another regional endemic) drifts in with its bee-like flight for a quick nectar drink.
Day
4 -
Travel to El Copal and
then on to Hotel Quelitales El Copal is a very special place situated between Turrialba and Tapanti on the Caribbean slope of the Talamanca mountains. Protected from being turned over the croplands, El Copal’s rainforests offer irreplaceable biodiversity and our visit here will be memorable. The main target hummingbirds here are Green Thorntail, Crowned Woodnymph and world-famous Snowcap (Photo: Gina Nichol). The Verbena bushes in front of the buildings and the Inga trees could offer many others including Green Hermit, Bronzy Hermit, Green-crowned Brilliant, Black-bellied Hummingbird, Scintillant Hummingbird, Purple-throated Mountain-Gem, and Purple-crowned Fairy. We’ll be looking for mixed flock species on the trails such as the Tawny-crested, Bay-headed, Speckled and Emerald Tanager (Photo: Steve Bird). Tawny-chested Flycatcher is a specialty here and keeping an eye to the sky, we hope to see raptors. Possibilities include Double-toothed Kite, American Swallow-tailed Kite, Barred Hawk, White Hawk, Short-tailed Hawk and even Black Hawk-Eagle if we are lucky. After a homemade typical lunch in the reserve, we’ll drive to Hotel Quelitales. Set in the mountains of Peñas Blancas de Cachí at about 4500 feet, this eco-friendly accommodation features an organic farm and a fusion restaurant. Bungalows have contemporary décor, hardwood floors, open-air waterfall showers and gorgeous rainforest views. Rooms here are designed with large windows that offer stunning views of Costa Rica's highland rainforest. The hotel grounds boast 400 species of birds and more than 70% of Costa Rica's hummingbirds including special ones like Black-bellied Hummingbird, Green-fronted Lancebill, and the endemic Coppery-headed Emerald. We'll settle in and survey the grounds if there is time before dinner.
Days
5 & 6 - Birding Hotel Quelitales
& surroundings Some of the highlights may include Violet Sabrewing (Photo: Gina Nichol), Black-bellied Hummingbird, Coppery-headed Emerald, Green Thorntail, Purple-throated and White-bellied Mountain-gems, Green Hermit, Zeledon’s Antbird, Chestnut-headed Oropendola, and the beautiful Keel-billed Toucan! Other specialties here include Highland Tinamou, Scaled Antpitta, Ochre-breasted Antpitta, White-collared Manakin, White-eared and Cabanis’s Ground-sparrow, and Barred Parakeet. We'll also explore the Ujarrás Valley looking for Green-breasted Mango and Ruby-throated Hummingbird, the only migratory hummingbird present in Costa Rica! Other specialties here could be Green Ibis and the declining White-faced (formerly Prevost's) Ground Sparrow. One of the many benefits of staying at this wonderful hotel are the evening meals prepared by birder/chef, Jose Alvarez. Jose's passion for cooking is only matched by his passion for birds and the meals are delicious. You'll be completely enthralled by this birding lodge and all that it has to offer. Day
7 -Birding and
then return to San
Jose
late afternoon. Day 8 - Departures from San Jose
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