Tropical orchids and flowers in Costa Rica cloud forest
12,000+ plant species · 1,500 orchids · Cloud forest specialists · Botanical gardens

Costa Rica for the plant obsessed.

More plant species than all of Europe in a country the size of West Virginia. Kevin knows the botanical gardens, the cloud forest experts, and where the rare orchids are currently blooming.

What awaits a serious plant enthusiast

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1,500+ orchid species

Costa Rica is one of the world's orchid capitals. From tiny cloud forest epiphytes to dinner-plate Cattleya hybrids. Lankester Botanical Garden near Cartago has the most important collection in Central America — over 3,000 plants from 1,000+ species.

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Heliconia & tropical aroids

Hundreds of heliconia species line forest paths. Dramatic philodendrons climb 20m into the canopy. Anthuriums cling to mossy boulders. The Caribbean lowlands (La Selva, Tortuguero) have the most spectacular aroid diversity.

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Cloud forest bryophytes & ferns

Monteverde's cloud forests are draped in 800+ fern species, mosses, and liverworts. Every trunk, every rock, every fallen log is covered. For pteridophyte specialists, the diversity is staggering.

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Bromeliads everywhere

Costa Rica has 220+ bromeliad species, many endemic to specific altitude bands. Tank bromeliads hold miniature aquatic ecosystems — frogs lay eggs in them, insects breed in them. Look up — every tree fork holds one.

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Lankester Botanical Garden

Located near Cartago on the slopes of Irazú Volcano — the premier orchid institution in Central America. Guided tours with specialists available. Best visited March–April (peak bloom), but something is always flowering.

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Botanist guides Kevin knows

Kevin has contacts with plant specialist guides in Monteverde, the Osa Peninsula, and the Caribbean. For serious botanists wanting to see specific genera or work with local experts, Kevin can connect you directly — not through a booking platform.

Best regions by vegetation type

Monteverde
Cloud forest · 1,400–1,800m

Orchids, bromeliads, mosses, cloud forest epiphytes

Caribbean Lowlands
Wet tropical rainforest · 0–100m

Aroids, heliconias, palms, aquatic plants

Chirripó Highlands
Páramo & cloud forest · 2,000–3,800m

Alpine plants, endemic species, dwarf forest

Osa Peninsula
Primary rainforest · 0–800m

Old-growth trees, epiphytic diversity, rare endemics

Nicoya Peninsula
Dry tropical forest · 0–600m

Deciduous trees, dry-adapted bromeliads, cacti relatives

Lankester / Cartago slopes
Volcanic mid-elevation · 1,400m

Orchid garden, cultivated + wild species, coffee + macadamia

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Ready to plan your botanical trip?

Kevin can connect you with specialist guides and route your trip through the right vegetation zones — timed to peak bloom where possible.