After breakfast, depart with your guide on a full-day tour of Naranjo and the surrounding area.
Your first stop will be at the Espiritu Santo Coffee Tour where, over an hour and a half, you will learn all the secrets of why this famous drink has taken over the world. Learn about all phases of the coffee-making process, from the seed to the cup. The visit takes place on a farm owned by the local cooperative of coffee growers, where a landscape of rolling hills makes a unique scenery. After the coffee tour, continue to the Municipal Market, where fresh vegetables, fruits, meats and other produce is sold to local inhabitants.
Your guide will tell you about the different fruits and explain how they are used in local homes. Have lunch in one the eateries at the market. After lunch, visit the local church, the Basilica of the Lady of Piedades, rebuilt after several earthquakes in the 1940s.
Then, visit the town of Sarchí, known for its colourful and intricate handicrafts. You will have time to see the artists in their workshops while they make the famous oxcarts, declared a Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO. There will be time to visit the souvenir shop before you return to the lodge in the late afternoon to relax in the property, have a drink or get dinner in the local restaurant.
Overnight in Chayote Lodge, Naranjo
Meal plan: Breakfast & lunch
Named after the orange trees that once dominated this agricultural city, Naranjo is at the heart of the country’s second-largest province, Alajuela. The city is home to one of the province’s largest coffee farms and is popular with visitors wanting to sample authentic Costa Rican coffee. The inhabitants of Naranjo are master practitioners of the 'pura vida' (meaning 'pure life'), relaxed way of life for which Costa Rica is known.
The colourful town of Sarchí is nestled on the slopes of Costa Rica’s Central Mountain Range. The ‘cradle of Costa Rican handicrafts’, it is known for its intricately constructed handicrafts and colourful geometric designs. Its most popular items are hand-painted colourful oxcarts and wheels. A national symbol of Costa Rica, the oxcarts were originally used to transport goods, including coffee beans, to distant markets. Nowadays, they are predominantly used for decoration and cultural celebrations.