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
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- 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’s fearsome fer-de-lance—this snakes deserves respect!
Want a good laugh?
Then watch me hike the rainforest trails of Costa Rica alone. I look like a blind man tapping his way forward with a long stick in front of me, probing the leaf litter for venomous snakes.
Specifically, the fearsome fer-de-lance.
The thought of stepping on a Bothrops asper, king of the deadly tropical vipers, sends shivers down my spine.
So well-camouflaged is the “ultimate pit viper” that on a recent National Geographic Expeditions 7-day “Costa Rica & Panama Canal” trip, sixteen trip participants filed past a fer-de-lance on the San Pedrillo Waterfall Trail, in Corcovado National Park. No-one—not even our eagle-eyed naturalist guide at the front of the line—saw it until I spotted it, coiled up just inches from where I was about to tread. I was bringing up the rear.
Amazing!
True enough, it was only a juvenile measuring perhaps 18 inches long, uncoiled. But young fer-de-lance, which Costa Ricans call the terciopelo (velvet) for its velvety skin, are as potentially deadly as their full-grown parents. Adult females (the species is dimorphic, with females considerably larger than males) can reach a sobering length of 8 feet. (Adults regulate the amount of venom they inject; youngsters typically give you everything they’ve got.)
It seemed remarkable that the snake hadn’t struck at the 16 pairs of feet traipsing past literally inches from its head. It was actually on the path, hard up against a fallen tree-trunk.
The fer-de-lance is no shrinking violet. This snake species is renowned for its propensity to strike first and ask questions later.
Peter Aspinall, owner of Tiskita Lodge at Pavones (on the Pacific Southwest coast, near Panama), once told me about how he was walking his dog one day in the rainforest. The hound disturbed a full-grown terciopelo, which took off toward a stream.
Costa Rica’s rural folk have no love for this species, which accounts for half of all snake bikes (and almost all the fatal ones) in Costa Rica; herpetologist Douglas March was killed by a fer-de-lance. Thus, Peter, who was born in Costa Rica, raced after it.
As he raised his machete, the snake suddenly turned and with vicious speed struck at Peter, who tumbled backwards into the stream. His machete had come down hard on the snake as he fell, breaking its spine. Peter scrambled to regain his composure, then he dispatched the snake. Its head—the size of a coffee mug—is pickled in a jar for viewing at Tiskita Lodge.
The excitable and fast-moving fer-de-lance is easily distinguished by its disproportionally large, broad, V-shaped head, flat on top and tipped like a spear at the nose. It lives below 4,000 feet elevation in Costa Rica (but ranges from eastern Mexico to Venezuela) and prefers moist habitats, especially rainforests. It is also found in the tropical deciduous forests of northwest Costa Rica. In all cases, it’s extremely difficult to spot, as its patterned skin in multiple shades of brown blends in perfectly with the leaf litter.
An ambush snake, it uses its highly-sensitive heat-detecting pit organ to detect prey. It’s also nocturnal, which perhaps explains the somnolent response of the juvenile we encountered as 16 people trudged past on January 18 on the trail in Corcovado.
Now you understand why Costa Rica’s campesinos (peasants and country workers) wear tall rubber boots. In all cases, wear hiking boots that cover the ankles whenever you’re hiking the forest trails.
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.
Learn more about Christopher P. Baker.
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.