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Listening To Volcano Arenal, Costa Rica E-mail
Friday, 01 June 2007

by Floyd Egner

Publisher, Tropical Breeze

Walking along a lava rock path, our close encounter with Costa Rica’s Volcano Arenal began with sounds. Like a muffled popcorn popper or distant thunder, the force of the volcano is audible. We had seen it from a distance, dancing in and out of a veil of clouds that form around its top, but now we were hiking up a 1.6 kilometer path that began near the entrance to Arenal Observatory Lodge and the Arenal national park. Guiding us was Giovanni Borgasin, whose life has been shaped by the volcano. He was six-years-old and living on a farm near Monterrey — a few miles from Arenal — with his parents and 10 siblings when the volcano erupted in 1968. It ruined their crops and drove his family from their farm, but now repays him and at least one of his brothers by providing them a living as guides.

The hike was just before sunset, getting us to a prime observation point in time to enjoy the sun reflecting off Lake Arenal as it slid behind the mountains. With darkness the lava flow becomes visible. During the daytime, we had seen smoke from the volcano’s peak. Sometimes the smoke and steam blends with clouds so you are not sure which you are seeing. Other times, it puffs dark and thick, clearly forming a plume that the winds sweep away into the distance. When a strong puff of smoke appears, a rumble follows a minute or so later as the sound travels across the countryside. From a distance, only the biggest belches are heard, distinct from thunder but similar in sound and deep intensity.

Up close, the volcano’s sounds are more varied and complex. It breathes. Hisses and exhalations bring to mind an idling steam engine, a cappuccino machine, a steam iron; a horse’s labored breathing after a hard gallop. Then comes a serious belch. That produces the popcorn popper-like sound. It is a rattle, a clatter with deep undertones. It is the sound of boulders rolling down the mountainside, bouncing off one another and the boulders that fell before. As dusk falls and darkness sets in, the falling, rolling boulders are streaks of red, fireworks in reverse, falling down the mountainside rather than soaring into the air as the concussions of rock against rock send glowing sparks flying into the air.

Arenal doesn’t spew liquid magma. The lava is contained within the volcano, but pushes steadily upward to spit out boulders. Borgasin notes that the strength of the eruptions has declined steadily over the years he has known the volcano. it was dormant for 500 years or more before it erupted in 1968 and may go silent again in the near future. Meanwhile, it pushes cooling boulders of lava from its peak, building the cinder cone that dominates the countryside for miles around. It is the most active volcano in Costa Rica and one of the most active in the entire hemisphere. Costa Rica has more than 100 Pacific Rim volcanic mountains, five of them active. The lava may not be liquid, but the boulders are extremely hot — nearly 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Our observation point is in the midst of a field of lava boulders that was formed in a major eruption in 1992, before the volcano and its surrounding area became a national park. Borgasin said it was six months after the eruption before the boulders became cool enough he could begin to build a hiking trail into the field.

The mountain grows slowly. The lava field formed in 1992 grew by only a meter or two each day, he said. It pushed against the jungle growth steadily, burning trees and bushes in its path with inexorable and undeniable force. Nonetheless, when boulders are falling, they are extremely dangerous. During some of the strongest eruptions, boulders have been thrown an estimated kilometer upward. A five-kilometer zone around the cone is designated as a high hazard area and visitors are warned that they enter at their own risk. Thousands do each year, because the volcano not only provides spectacular views, but heats natural springs and entire rivers, providing nearby resorts with soaking pools and spas. Or, for no charge, Borgasin points out a public path to a river that literally steams with volcano heated water. As we began our hike, we crossed a simple bridge over a river, the Rio Caliente, which Borgasin assured us was not hot, despite its name.

We followed a path created by a local farmer who has had to fight in court for his right to provide access to the mountain. The national park system and other private property-owners have been his enemies, Borgasin said. His land borders a public road, a calle publico, and he has won on the basis of the argument that once designated as a public road, the public right of way continues to exist, even if the “road” is a path through the jungle. Borgasin pointed out the spot where a barbed wire fence had been cut after the farmer recently won his argument.

Although there were a few inclines, most of the path was level and completely shaded by jungle trees and plants. Our destination was the lava field, a jumble of black rock that the jungle has only begun to reclaim. Climbing atop some of the larger rocks, we had a spectacular view of the sunset over Lake Arenal, a man-made lake that powers hydroelectric generators that provide 40 percent of Costa Rica’s electricity. As night fell, fireflies came out, providing a counterpoint to the volcano’s fireworks.

• • •

Arenal Volcano is one of many eco-tourism attractions of Costa Rica, which has become a popular destination for American travelers. It offers water sports ranging from river rafting to surfing, sportfishing to sunbathing, snorkeling and diving. It has a greater percentage of its land area contained in ecological preserves than nearly any other country in the world. Its tropical rain forests and cloud forests are considered a world treasure of bio-diversity.

 
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