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Regional Guide · 07

Wildlife & Living in Nature

What you'll actually see and hear, whether the monkeys really come to the house, the night sounds, and how to live easily alongside it all.

“I wonder if God created man because He was disappointed with the monkey.”

Mark Twain
In this guide
  1. What you'll actually see
  2. The howler dawn chorus
  3. Will the monkeys come to the house?
  4. Where to reliably see wildlife
  5. The night soundscape
  6. Is it safe? Snakes & scorpions
  7. Geckos & the small stuff
  8. Sea turtles & the wider wild
  9. Living gently with nature

What You'll Actually See

A great deal — this coast is genuinely wild. Birds are a certainty; monkeys are common; sloths and the rest are a happy bonus. Many guests describe it as staying inside a national park.

The regular cast you can expect over a week:

The Howler Monkey Dawn Chorus

Yes, you'll hear the howlers — usually before dawn, and they are loud. It startles people for about one morning, and delights them for the rest of the week.

The deep, rolling roar that rolls across the hills at first light is the howler monkey, one of the loudest land animals on earth, and it carries a remarkable distance. The first time, half-asleep, it can sound like something enormous; by the second morning it's simply the sound of where you are. Many guests come to love it — it's the alarm clock you didn't know you wanted, and a sign you really have woken up in the rainforest.

Will the Monkeys Come to the House?

Often, but never on a schedule. We'll always promise you the birds; we can't promise a monkey on cue — they keep their own timetable.

This is the honest answer the team gives every time, and it's worth hearing before you arrive. Troops of monkeys do move through the trees around many of the homes, sometimes daily, sometimes not for a few days; toucans and a constant stream of birds are far more dependable. So watch from the pool and the terrace with a coffee and patience, and let the sightings come to you. As one of our hosts puts it, "I can't make promises on the monkeys — though plenty of guests see them from the house — but I can absolutely promise the birds."

Where to Reliably See Wildlife

If seeing monkeys and sloths up close matters to you, go to where the guides know exactly where they are — the sightings are far more certain than waiting at the villa.

The team's go-to spots, all real recommendations: Hacienda Barú in Dominical, where guests have "seen monkeys within the first five minutes" on the trails; the Alturas Wildlife Sanctuary rescue centre near Dominical; Reptilandia for reptiles and a sure thing with kids; and a guided naturalist or night tour, which is the best way to find sloths and the harder-to-spot nocturnal life. A little further north, Manuel Antonio National Park near Quepos is famously rich in monkeys and sloths. Even a lunch with a view — La Parcela, for instance — often comes with monkeys in the trees. Adrian and Jordan book these for you; the full list is in the Beaches, Parks & Days Out guide.

The Night Soundscape

Nights here are not silent — they're a layered chorus of frogs, insects, and the occasional rustle. It's one of the loveliest parts of the experience once you settle into it.

Guests often ask about a high-pitched, clinking or chirping sound in the dark — that's the frogs and insects of the rainforest, at their most active after rain, and completely harmless. The jungle is loudest at dusk and just before dawn. If you're a light sleeper, the bedrooms close up quietly with the air conditioning on; but most people find the night sounds become the thing they miss most when they get home.

Is It Safe? Snakes & Scorpions

Yes. Snakes and scorpions exist in the rainforest, as they do everywhere in the tropics, but encounters are uncommon and serious ones are rare. A few sensible habits are all it takes.

You can relax about this. In open-air living, the simple routines matter more than worry: don't leave food out (it's what draws unwanted visitors), keep screens and doors closed in the evening, shake out shoes left outside, and watch where you put hands and feet on trails. Geckos and the odd insect indoors are normal and harmless. If anything ever does turn up that you'd rather not handle — a wasp nest in an AC unit is the usual culprit — the team deals with it; just message them. Families with children stay here constantly and comfortably.

Geckos & the Small Stuff

The little house geckos are friends, not pests — shy, harmless, and quietly working the night shift eating mosquitoes.

You'll see them on the walls and ceilings, and most guests grow fond of them by the end of the trip. For keeping insects outside in the evening, there's a simple trick — outdoor fans and balcony lights on, screen doors closed — covered in the Weather, Packing & Daily Comfort guide, along with the humidity and the open-air realities of these homes.

Sea Turtles & the Wider Wild

The wildlife isn't only in the trees. The coast has its own calendar — baby sea turtle releases on the beach, and humpback whales offshore in season.

At certain times, conservation teams release baby sea turtles near the lifeguard stand at Playa Hermosa — a quietly magical thing to catch with children, and the team will let you know when it's happening. Offshore, the same coast that gives Costa Ballena its name hosts migrating humpback whales across two seasons; that, and the boat trips to see them, are covered in the Beaches, Parks & Days Out guide.

Living Gently With Nature

One small philosophy makes all of this better: you're a guest in the animals' home, not the other way around. Don't feed the monkeys, however charming — it harms them and changes their behavior. Keep food put away, close up in the evening, and let the wildlife keep its distance and its wildness. Do that, and the jungle rewards you with exactly what guests come back describing: toucans at breakfast, howlers at dawn, and a week of small wild surprises.

"Life by the jungle is never boring."

It's something the team says often, and means warmly. The wildlife here isn't a feature to be delivered — it's the place itself, and settling into its rhythm is half the pleasure of the stay.

“The location has abundant wildlife — it's like staying inside the national park. We watched it all from our balcony.”

From a guest review

Quick FAQ

What you'll see
What wildlife will we see around the house?

Reliably, lots of birds — toucans, hummingbirds, and many others. Monkeys (howler and white-faced) commonly pass through the trees, and geckos and iguanas are everyday sights. Sloths and scarlet macaws are around but more of a treat.

Will we definitely see monkeys from the villa?

Often, but not on a schedule — they keep their own timetable. Birds are the sure thing. For guaranteed monkey and sloth sightings, take a guided tour or visit Hacienda Barú, Alturas Sanctuary, or Manuel Antonio.

Where's the best place to see sloths?

A guided naturalist or night tour, or wildlife spots like Hacienda Barú and the Alturas Wildlife Sanctuary — the guides know where they are. Sloths are hard to spot on your own from the house.

Sounds & nights
What's the loud noise at dawn?

Howler monkeys — one of the loudest land animals on earth, and the voice of the coast. It surprises people the first morning and becomes a favorite by the end of the week.

What's the high-pitched clinking sound at night?

The frogs and insects of the rainforest, loudest after rain and at dusk. Completely harmless — and many guests find it's the thing they miss most at home. Bedrooms close up quietly if you're a light sleeper.

Safety & etiquette
Are there snakes or scorpions? Is it safe?

They exist in the rainforest but encounters are uncommon and serious ones are rare. Don't leave food out, keep screens closed in the evening, shake out shoes left outside, and watch hands and feet on trails. Families stay here comfortably all the time.

What if an insect or wasp nest turns up?

Message the team and they'll handle it — a wasp nest in an AC unit is the usual culprit. The geckos indoors are welcome; they eat the mosquitoes.

Can we feed the monkeys?

Please don't — it harms them and changes their behavior. Keep food put away and enjoy them at a distance, where they stay wild and healthy.

Can we see baby sea turtles?

Sometimes — conservation teams release them near the lifeguard stand at Playa Hermosa at certain times. The team will let you know if it's happening during your stay.