Outdoors
Swinging From Treetops in the Jungles of Costa Rica
By Gerald Eskenazi
The New York Times
August 2, 1998
There are countries made for hiking, and some made for fishing. But in Costa Rica,
the paradigm of an ecologically concerned nation, you can scamper over the jungle
treetops tethered to the world's highest clothesline.
More than two-thirds of this Central American country is protected by law from harvesting
or cutting or otherwise insulting the land. So what do you do about the cloud forest,
which perpetually hides most of the sky? Simple -- at least to Rodrigo Carazo, one
of this country's former Presidents.
He constructed a sort of sky-hiking among the treetops in that verdant place. You
look at, and travel over, the land from above. It is called a Canopy Adventure,
and you are part of the panorama. This is not a passive activity. You are working
the rope, and you are controlling your speed.
Learn more about
Costa Rica.
Copyright 1998 The New York Times Company
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