Sunday, January 15, 2012

Hidden Valley Inn

You know the experience of wanting something unattainable. We hope you also know the joy of getting there. This blog entry describes such an experience: a visit to Hidden Valley Inn.

Like most regular visitors to the Cayo district of Belize, we knew of HVI as the exclusive resort off the road to the Thousand Foot Falls high in the Maya Mountains of Belize. Here is the description of the highest waterfall in Mesoamerica on the official tourism website of Belize: http://www.travelbelize.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=104&Itemid=325&Ytemid=407

Here is a snapshot of Dr. & Dr. Terdal (Erik's parents) at the 1000' Falls back in 2009:
From MPR 2009

Hidden Valley Inn itself (http://www.hiddenvalleyinn.com/) has 12 rooms on 7200 acres (2900 Ha). Think about that for a minute or two. Most of the land is high on the Mountain Pine Ridge at about 2000 feet (600 meters) above sea level. The north of the property features an escarpment dropping down to tropical broadleaf forest along Barton Creek. You know the 1000' falls? Bad name: it is more like 1600' (500 meters). Yes, Erik has wanted to explore this area since his first visit in 1999 when he bought a copy of Means, D. Bruce. 1997. Natural history of Mountain Pine Ridge, Belize. Bull Run Overseas, Ltd., Benque Viejo del Carmen, Belize. 94 pages. 


We knew HVI had the best raptors in Belize, but what about mammals? Erik has wanted to find out for over a decade. Erik had introduced himself to the managers previously, and was waiting permission to set camera traps. In late 2011, he got it! Much thanks to our friends at Blancaneaux Lodge (http://www.coppolaresorts.com/blancaneaux) for coordinating. 


The morning of Wednesday, 3 January, we awoke at Clarissa Falls (http://www.clarissafalls.com/) where we feel like family, having been regulars since 1998 and often staying for a month at a time.

Erik breakfasted on his favorite, huevos rancheros with corn tortillas:
and did work for his University (http://www.nsuok.edu/) using the strong WiFi signal Clarissa Falls has.

Erik made a little time for photography, his hobby:
Erik uploaded both of these to his Facebook page and immediately was hated by his coworkers.

We checked out, paid and drove the Suzuki Jimny

From Garden Centre Belize


away, after leaving behind at Clarissa Falls the Areca palm (Dypsis lutescens) Erik won months earlier in a Facebook contest sponsored by the Garden Centre (http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Garden-Center-Belize/157287564315902?v=info).

We bought out the store in Santa Elena of Duracell D batteries , then continued east on the Western Highway to the Georgeville Road. Headed up that. Fun! If you have driven up that way, you can imagine how delightful it was to drive a Suzuki up that collection of boulders called a "road" in jest.

We appreciated the excuse to stop at Moonracer (http://moonracerfarm.com/default.aspx). The official reason to stop was to ask them to telephone HVI to say we were running late, but really we wanted to smell the bread baking in their new oven: http://moonracerfarmbelize.blogspot.com/2011/10/cooking-with-wood.html Moonracer has a great chef; if we didn't already have dinner reservations at HVI we would have tried to finagle a seat at the table....

We made our way up the road, past the Mountain Pine Ridge Forest Reserve checkpoint. Staff there are always friendly. Continued up, turning left onto Cooma Cairn road at the signs for 1000' Falls and Hidden Valley Inn. Past the Bull Run fire lookout tower to the entrance sign for Hidden Valley Inn. Proceeded to the circle drive by the main house. Parked and went in. Front desk staff came out to greet us warmly. Big smiles all around!

We were given warm tea and offered massages. Rhea enjoyed a hand massage as her hands were hurting from tightly gripping the Suzuki steering wheel up the Georgeville road. Erik was eager to get to work and so refused to sit down.

Massage over, we set out in the Suzuki, following HVI staff in their vehicle. First stop was Butterfly Falls. We parked and walked part way down the path to the ecotone where pine forest blends into broadleaf forest. Ecologists have loved edge habitat ever since Aldo Leopold established its importance for wildlife back in the 1920s. We placed our first camera trap:

From 2012-01-06

and tested it to make sure it worked:

From 2012-01-06

We placed another camera trap in the pine forest:

From 2012-01-06

and tested it:

From 2012-01-06


We were running out of daylight and so headed back to the HVI main house. From there we were directed to our cottage. Rhea examined the bed:

From 2012-01-06

and then the fireplace:

From 2012-01-06

as it was cold!.
Good thing there were matches behind the note on the mantle, plus wood in the fireplace and more on the porch.

From Rhea Belize 2012


We showered and changed clothes, then went to the main house. Drinks in the bar and chatting with other guests. The couple we talked to most were from Scotland and had saved money for years to come to Belize.

Dinner was great. Erik had a snapper fish filet that was superb. The chef (who came out to introduce herself) let the fish stand out as a flavour rather than masking it, as too many chefs do. Rhea had the cowfoot soup. Call her a traditionalist. Sorry, no photos: we were too famished to take the time for pictures. Portions were large, so Erik took his pecan pie and ice cream desert back to the room as a bed-time snack. One more note: tap water in the cottages is safe to drink and especially tasty. We love our water and appreciate the taste difference in water from granite vs. limestone. Terroir and all that.

With the fire crackling, we slept very, very well.

In the morning (Thursday, January 5, 2012) we rose and walked through the lovely gardens to the Main House for breakfast. Served buffet-style, we had yogurt, fruit and coffee. That is one of the HVI trademarks: they grow and roast coffee right there. Doesn't get any fresher. While we enjoyed the fruit pieces on our plates, a staff member set out fresh fruit (i.e., what we were eating) on a platform feeder for the birds just outside the dining room. The birds were clearly expecting him and they flocked. Erik's favorite was the green jay (Cyanocorax yncas).

After breakfast, we packed up our luggage and loaded the trusty little Suzuki. Disappointed to have missed the legendary Butterfly Falls despite being so close the previous afternoon, we headed there first. Be patient for several amateur photographs....

Bridge on path to waterfall; another visitor to HVI took snapshots of a jaguar on this very bridge recently.
From Rhea Belize 2012
Scene on the trail to Butterfly falls:
From 2012-01-06
And at last the falls themselves:
From 2012-01-06
Which required the mandatory posed snapshots:
From 2012-01-06
And of the two of us:
From 2012-01-06
And finally with our friend, the legendary Roni:
From 2012-01-06

We hope you can forgive a digression. On the hike back, Erik found a palm he could not identify. Here are a few snapshots. If you have a guess as to its identity, please comment. In brief, it is a slim--trunked feather (pinnate) palm of the undercanopy. Not found in the pine forest or the broadleaf forest--just this ecotone between them. Other palms in the area are Schippia concolor, Attelea cohune and Chameadorea spp. Not one of those. Best guess is the Maya palm ( Gaussia maya). Help, please!
From 2012-01-06

From 2012-01-06

From 2012-01-06

From 2012-01-06
And for the flower lovers following this blog, here is an epiphytic orchid:
From 2012-01-06
From Butterfly Falls, we hiked back to our vehicles and sought a third camera trap site for our grid. The first place we checked was the overlook to Tiger Falls:
From 2012-01-06
in an area that experienced forest fires last May:
From 2012-01-06
from which the vegetation is recovering:
From 2012-01-06
From 2012-01-06
We decided not to place a camera trap at Tiger Falls as the GPS receiver reported that it was too close to a "trap" we already had on non-HVI land. We set off by vehicle instead towards the HVI airstrip and found a perfect site: a bridge over a steep-banked creek which will funnel wildlife through the trap:
From 2012-01-06
Don't tell the tapir (Tapirus bairdii), but this is what our camera traps look like:
From 2012-01-06
Having daylight left, and wanting a better sense of the landscape of HVI, we went to the King Vulture Falls:
From 2012-01-06
and of course spotted a King Vulture (Sarcoramphus papa), through a spotting scope:
From 2012-01-06
on this ridge (zoom in the see him! [kidding]):
From 2012-01-06
(Hint: he is roosting in a tree near the upper right LOL).
The broadleaf canopy below us was fascinating:
From 2012-01-06
as was the vegetation clinging to the cliffs:
From 2012-01-06
Good times!

Our work done, we returned to the main house for lunch. Erik had a fish sandwich and Rhea a Greek salad. Both good, but the Greek salad was exceptional. It burst with flavor from fresh ingredients. Our friend had a burger, and our HVI host the stewed chicken. We shared stories and generally had a delightful repast. While we dined, the HVI manager brought the owner over to our table to meet us. There is definitely something to be said for staying at an exclusive resort with twelve cottages!

2 comments:

Terdal Farm said...

I'm not a palm expert, but I found an online key to palms of Belize:
http://www.plantapalm.com/vpe/palmkey/belizekey/belizekey.htm
and using that, I'm thinking
Euterpe precatoria Mart. var. longevaginata (Mart.) Henderson
What do you think?
--Erik
Hat tip to Roni!

Me said...

You pictures are fantastic! Make mine look like crap. Jeez...I should have known...I totally would have walked on all fours in front of the camera. I'll have to go back.