Services:
• Drinking water
• Sanitation services
• Parking lot
• Local guides (they are not part of park staff)
• Universal Access trail: a distance of 0.74 miles (1.2 km) with nine resting bays; drinking water systems all the way; sanitation battery adapted to the requirements of the law 7,600 (Equality law opportunities for people with disabilities); labeling in Spanish, English and Braille; maps with this system for blind people; sculptures; auditive system; QR code app, and most of the road has Wii-fi, among other facilities.
• Las Aráceas Trail: circular trail of approximately 3.937 feet (1.200 meters) long, it takes about one hour. Gets its name from an important family of plants, Araceae. On this trail you can see plants growing on trees, one of those is known as Mano de Tigre (Monstera deliciosa) which is easily distinguished by its large and lobed leaves with small holes that allow the passage of sunlight pierces to other leaves and allows the plant to make efficient use of the limited sunlight it receives in the forest. Its long roots down to the ground where they absorb the nutrients needed to live. Other examples of this family are the genera Anthurium and Philoderdron.
• Laguna Meándrica Trail: a little lineal trail around 6.561 feet (2000 meters) that runs between two and four hours. Its name is related to the meander formed in the Tarcoles River with a lake formed in the sector of approximately 1.968 feet (600 meters) long and 131 feet (40 meters) wide. On the river you can observe crocodiles (Crocodylus acutus) and it the trail stands the Cafecillo (erythrochiton gymnanthus). This trail is usually used by ornithologists to observe many birds, mainly in the morning.
• Quebrada Bonita Trail: circular trail with a length of 4.265 feet (1.300 meters), it can be covered in approximately half an hour. Its main attraction is Quebrada Bonita, hence the name of this trail, there you can appreciate large and tall trees and climbing species, among others.
• Ecosystem Meeting Point Trail: it is a linear trail of 2.132 feet (650 meters) that connects Quebrada Bonita trail with the universal access trail, among its attractions are bird watching and interpretation of forest and environment.
• Flora y fauna: among the fauna species that more feature it are howler monkeys (mono congo), three-toed sloth, agouti, armadillo, opossum, raccoon and the scarlet macaw (lapa roja), emblem of this area.
According to scientific data, it presents the following records of flora and fauna:
• 480 species of plants, including trees and shrubs, with 14 endemic species and 29 species that are considered rare and endemic.
• 124 species of reptiles, corresponding to 53% of the species of reptiles in Costa Rica (234).
• 112 species of mammals, being 47.8% of these species in the country (237)
• 62 species of amphibians, being 32.8% of the 189 species of toad in Costa Rica.
• 420 species of birds, 47% of the 893 species reported in the country, considered one of the most important sites in CR for observing birds in their natural state.