Student Testimonials About Costa Rica

Kat's Video Presentation of the Trip


What Other Students Have Said About the Trip

Frogs will leap, birds will nest, and bats will fly above your head on their mission to find mosquitoes. Perhaps a howler monkey will study you on your way as he watches over his troop or a coati will sit in a nearby tree, still as he can be so you won’t spy him. A sloth will hang upside down enjoying the cool of the evening, or a long-nosed armadillo will noisily shuffle on his way.

The morning light brings a multitude of birds into the trees, foraging for their breakfast.  You join in on a lecture by people who have devoted their lives to the preservation of the rainforests and learn what you can do to make a difference. These people will become your mentors and inspiration. You will learn more in one day than you might in an entire semester in a classroom.

 As the night approaches once more, you recline in a chair on the porch listening to the sounds of the forest and the forest creatures and realize that you are experiencing firsthand what it is to be truly alive.

- Lisa


How "human" the Costa Rican people treated each other. They didn't scurry around hurrying to some other worthless task; instead they took the time to enjoy the family and friends around them. These people didn't define themselves by what they did for a living, but how they fit into their community.

It seemed to me that the most important thing to them was the on going personal interactions with each other. These people who maybe had a duel income of ten thousand dollars, were wealthier than the majority of us in the States.

I learned that everything is important. Each organism, plant and animal is a small building block to its' delicate whole. With pieces of the ecosystem missing, which puts a strain on the whole, or what happens is that part of that ecosystem ceases to be.

American is a just a small part, not the biggest or most important but, one section of many components of natural ecology. We must as a nation, come to realize that we are treading too heavily on the earth.

- Sharon


I felt like a sponge, soaking up all of the knowledge I could. Every meal we gathered around the dining table sharing what we had seen during the day. The delicious food disappeared before the stories ran out. Each day my knowledge of the rain forest and its inhabitant increased dramatically. The mantra for the week was "I can't believe how much I have learned." The more I learned, the more I realized the vast amount that remains to be researched. Many of our questions were answered "There has not been a study on that. I don't know."

- Brenda


Perhaps one of the most elegant and enduring lessons to be learned came from our class. We all benefit from each other’s contribution, and the lesson learned is not to take each other for granted. The reason for this from an ecological standpoint is that it is really primarily up to us to take our part in the conservation effort.

It is quite fantastic to note that people can really get a grasp with what they know already and apply it to the effort. Additionally, it is an important fact to know that nature does not work for us humans, but rather we must work together with nature for each other's benefit.

- Joe


How is it that a rainforest ecology course could have opened my eyes to a brighter and livelier world I live in?

Talking to naturalists who are actually college interns working on the reserve stirred up envy in me how I wished I were working on the reserve as well. There was a much-needed demand for rainforest research, a worthy and admirable cause to learn more about the very thing needing preservation.

But after the trip I had a greater concern for the rainforests as well as a strong appreciation for it and our environment. I looked at my landscape at home in a different light with a greater understanding and appreciation and outlook in regards to a healthy environment.

I dwelled on ideas of how to redesign a low water consuming landscape. I surprised myself of such thoughts. For the first time in several years, I noticed what appeared to be a trail leading from the fire road into the lush forest of the creek. It amazed me that I haven’t noticed it all these years.

- Ray


I learned a lot about myself on this trip. I was able to inquire into things that interested me, things that other people might not know, and I was given the chance to find the answers on my own. I found something I would be happy to wake up in the morning to do. I found out what floats my boat on this trip and that may be the most important lesson anyone could learn in his or her life.

I found out that I could live without stress, without money, without the superhuman pace of American society. When you are reduced to only a few belongings, what is really important is not hidden by all of the material goods of this fast paced life.

For entertainment in Costa Rica we talked, and talked, and talked and never got bored. We didn't even mention the TV.

It was wonderful to walk through the forest and take time to breath and look around me. It really was a calming experience and when I am calm, I can function better. Questions and ideas poured out of me and I had a great time trying to answer those questions. It was ok to be myself. That was really a profound insight considering the insecurity of America.

- Michelle


Costa Rica operates a lot differently than the U.S. If there is a problem over there, they join together to solve it, rather than fight about it and not get anywhere.

I learned is that I can make a difference, we all can. And seeing how conservative everyone is there (Costa Rica) made me think twice. I mean there is a lot of ways I could help conserve I just need to give it a little effort.

I feel very fortunate to have this experience as part of my life and I wish everyone could do this because it really opens up your eyes on many different issues.

- Rhianna