Cuba & Costa Rica Blog
About this blog
Written by Cuba and Costa Rica expert Christopher P. Baker, this blog will update readers on life in these two diverse and exciting countries.
Recent Posts
- Last blog post on Costa Rica and Cuba
- First-ever group motorcycle tours of Cuba successful
- Cuba’s Mariel port readying for Panama Canal expansion
- Musings on wildlife encounters on Costa Rica’s Osa Peninsula
- Cuba’s Steam Trains puffing their last gasp
- My top five thrilling activities in Costa Rica
- Cuba’s fun February festivals include Harleys, Books, Cigars
- Five top volcano viewing experiences in Costa Rica
- New road along Costa Rica / Nicaraguan border mired
- Cuba’s Hotel Campoamor at Cojímar to be restored?
- Cuban revolutionary Celia Sánchez honored in new book
- Christmas challenge for Costa Rica’s sexually abused girls
- Costa Rica opens Chinatown in downtown San José
- David Soul films Hemingway’s car restoration in Cuba
- National Geographic Expeditions receives license for Cuba tours

Costa Rica Expeditions Offers an Innovative Voluntourism Option
I’ve always admired Costa Rica Expeditions’ founder and CEO Michael Kaye’s visionary approach to tourism. Not least, he was one of the initiators of the entire adventure travel and ecotourism movement in Costa Rica, where he helped establish whitewater rafting after a career as a rafting guide in North America.
Since then he’s grown his San José-based business, founded in 1978, into a pioneering juggernaut in ecotourism, and one respected worldwide. Along the way, he’s pushed the envelope of responsible tourism. For example, CRE founded and supported The Park Guard Fund dedicated to the well being of Costa Rica’s national park guards; and the Tortuguero Foundation , dedicated to generating funds to help the remote and neglected Tortuguero region in the areas of health, education, and wilderness protection.
Viewing the company’s website, I found it apt that Michael opens with a quote he wrote for a 1981 brochure: "Our goal is to create unique travel experiences that transcend conventional sightseeing and travel. Our dream is to promote the type of tourism which is mutually beneficial and nourishing to both the visitor and the visited."
Why apt? Because in July 2010 Michael added to his list of creative and inspiring do-good efforts by initiating a program that lets guests at his Tortuga Lodge & Gardens, in Tortuguero, contribute directly to community welfare by teaching English to underprivileged children (most aged 9 to 12) from the nearby and impoverished hamlet of San Francisco.
Tourism has played a vital role in conservation and sustainable development in Costa Rica. Not least, it has fostered an incentive to protect precious natural resources at the community level. And it has helped foster renewed pride among indigenous peoples previously affected by a low sense of worth resulting from centuries of abuse and neglect by outsiders.
For kids in San Francisco, learning English is a passport to employment in tourism and to a future that may otherwise be denied. Guests, who at Tortuga Lodge (the finest ecolodge in the Tortuguero region) tend to be relatively affluent, have reportedly taken to the program enthusiastically.
Sometimes the kids are brought to the lodge aboard the lodge’s own speedboats. Sometimes guests are taken to San Francisco. Either way, CRE’s bilingual guides coordinate the hour-long sessions, which provide guests with a tremendous sense of contribution and fulfillment. Much of the sessions revolve around games that inspire children and around which they can learn English.
With his usual thoroughness, Kaye employed English as a Second Language (ELS) specialists to devise a curriculum, which always involves two guests interacting with four children.
Want to see the community you’ll be helping? Here’s a link to a panoramic video of San Francisco community.
For information about Tortuga Lodge’s ESL program, call 506-2257-0766 or 25216099 or e-mail ecotur [at] expeditions [dot] co [dot] cr
For further information about travel in Costa Rica, buy Moon Costa Rica
If you're traveling only to San José and the Caribbean, buy Moon Spotlight Costa Rica's Caribbean Coast pocket guide.
If you're traveling only to the beaches of Nicoya, buy Moon Spotlight Costa Rica's Nicoya Peninsula pocket guide.
If you're traveling only to Arenal and/or Monteverde, buy Moon Spotlight Costa Rica's Arenal & Monteverde pocket guide.
Disclosure: I occasionally accept free or discounted travel when it coincides with my editorial goals. However, my opinion is never for sale. The opinions you see in Cuba & Costa Rica Journal are my unbiased reflection of the good, the bad, and the ugly.
Copyright © Christopher P. Baker
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Moon Travel Guides make independent travel and outdoor exploration fun and accessible. With expert and adventurous travel writers delivering a mix of honest insight, first-rate strategic travel advice, insider travel tips and an essential dose of humor, Moon Travel Guides ensure that travelers have an uncommon and entirely satisfying experience. Each travel book is filled with unique trip ideas, easy-to-use maps, and detailed information on sights, restaurants, and accommodations. Moon Travel Guides not only point you in the right direction, they inspire new ideas and adventure. Whether you are seeking a relaxing beach trip to Hawaii, or an adventure travel trip to the rainforests of Costa Rica, Moon guidebooks—and Moon.com—are with you every step of the way. Founded in 1973, the Moon Travel Guides series includes Moon Handbooks, Moon Outdoors, Moon Metro, Moon Living Abroad and Moon Spotlight travel books. Moon is based in Berkeley, California and is a proud member of the Perseus Books Group.