As Canada is a land of lakes (more than a million of
them identified by satellite), Costa Rica is a nation
of volcanoes, divided into two distinct mountain ranges;
the Volcanic Ridge of Guanacaste and the Central Volcanic
Range. To the south, in Talamanca, there are no volcanoes
but the forest is one of the most dense in Costa Rica.
However, this fits perfectly with the theme ‘official
or unofficial volcanoes’, as defined by the various
geographers and volcanologists who have studied, in
minute detail, Costa Rican topography. That is to say
that the volcanoes have been exactly located, their
height and activity measured, and their history, their
tourist attraction potential, their accessibility and
whether there are restaurants and look out points, have
all been accessed and recorded. They all have names
that are well known throughout Latin America.
IMPOSING AND WORTHY OF RESPECT
The volcanoes in Costa Rica are really worth admiring,
like all the other famous volcanoes in the world Vesuvio,
Etna or Karakatoa, as well as many others. Their cones
are majestic, rising up into the sky. They are surrounded
by their own unique dense vegetation not found in other
parts of the country. These plants and trees have flowered
in the rich and fertile lava soil, as expelled by the
erupting craters. The most well known volcanoes are
Arenal in the Guanacaste mountain range; Irazu, the
highest volcano in Costa Rica and Poas located in the
Central Mountain range. These are considered the ‘official’
volcanoes, at once respected, feared and admired by
local people as well as tourists. Poas, in Alajuela
province, boasts the widest crater in the world with
sustained activity, that is to say that it has expelled
regular sized rocks for the last decade or so, and acid
rain, which has affected the surrounding vegetation.
Irazu last erupted 60 years ago, coinciding with President
Kennedy’s visit to Costa Rica. He experienced
the tremors and rumblings of the earth caused by this
volcanic activity. He also witnessed the enormous quantities
of ash that fell all around San Jose, Cartago, Heredia
and Alajuela. Today Irazu is considered to be ‘dormant’
as there has been no recent recorded activity. There
is good road access for tourists.
MORE THAN 100 ARE STILL UNKNOWN....
The ‘unofficial’ volcanoes are not known
for any major eruptions, but they exist all over Costa
Rica. They have ‘deceived’ both visitors
and farmers alike. The innocent farmer has always lived
in the nearby fields precisely because the volcanoes
look like inoffensive mountains, whose craters have
been covered over with time by earth, mud, rocks and
trees. But the day they erupt, the National Institute
of Volcanology may a lot them a name and a place on
the map.
The most famous of these ‘unoffical’ volcanoes,
‘Misti’, stands in the province of Cartago.
It is a major tourist site because of its bareheaded
crater. ‘A giant and impressive dead eye’,
claimed Roberto Zúñiga, a Chilean visitor,
who was very impressed by the sight when he visited.
The list of these volcanoes can easily top 150 or maybe
more. There are also those that exist in the Pacific
Ocean, on the continental shelf or ‘hidden earth’.
It has been calculated that in the Costa Rican maritime
zone (more on the Pacific side than on the Atlantic
side) there are other volcanoes that have never been
seen and whose activity belie their existence. The activity
of these ‘unknowns’ manifests as huge waves,
underground earthquakes and coastal flooding. Volcanologists
have no idea and are unable to even guess, and it would
be presumptions to do so, how many of these volcanoes
exist on the Costa Rican seabed.
DANGEROUS OR WORTHWHILE?
This is the main question. The majority of the Costa
Rican population during the 60’s and 70’s,
considered the volcanoes as ‘highly dangerous’,
thus making them omnipotent, because the people were
powerless against them; they couldn’t divert their
path like rivers, or cover their enormous openings to
contain the eruptions that destroyed so much of the
land and sometimes entire villages.
However, as time went on, Costa Ricans began to understand
that volcanoes could be dangerous or worthwhile, depending
on which looking glass you looked through. And it could
be possible that they were ‘friendlier’
than previously thought.
Certainly, after a terrible explosion that left in
its path the death and destruction of cattle and people,
there remained an extraordinarily mineral rich and fertile
soil in which to plant crops. Naturally, if the eruptions
persisted the surrounding area would end up looking
like the area around Arenal volcano, which is full of
rocks and in some parts it is really bleak.
There have been cases in other countries where islands
have formed as a result of seabed eruptions, such as
in Lanzarote, in the Canary Islands off the coast of
Spain. These islands are perfectly habitable, beautiful
and 100% scenic.
Experienced farmers have come to the happy conclusion
and agree that the land around the volcano is ideally
suited for agriculture and makes for excellent cattle
land. And the woods that have sprung up in those areas
are denser and richer in flora and fauna than anywhere
else. To see this, you only have to visit Rincón
de La Vieja, which is full of the biggest and leafiest
trees around.
TOURIST RICHES
Perhaps the best way to describe the benefits of this
phenomena is as follows: ‘the village that discovers
the riches of the volcanoes, will touch the sky with
them’. And from the tourist point of view, this
saying will be completely vindicated. A country can
be successful or not if it can show it’s foreign
visitors the beauty of it’s ‘columns of
fire’. It was in the 60’s when Irazu was
erupting, that Costa Ricans began to understand that
if they so chose, it’s volcanoes could be fountains
of permanent attraction. The tourist boom that Costa
Rica is experiencing now began when they started building
the roads leading to the volcanoes. Thus, these ‘giant
chandeliers’, that spit fire, rocks and lava,
are part of this country’s enormous attraction,
though everybody thought that they were ‘asleep,
quiet and at peace’ for centuries and centuries.
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