Lapa
Ríos Ecolodge Offers
Behind-the-Scenes Sustainability Tour

By
Dorothy MacKinnon
Special to The Tico Times |

|
Living
Recyclers: Sustainability
coordinator Marijke Mulder shows off the lodge's pigs, which allow kitchen
waste to be converted to methane gas.
Photo
courtesy of Hans Pfister |
Behind-the-scenes tours
tend to dissolve the glamorous gloss of any enterprise. Do you really want to
see the waste-disposal system at the Ritz Hotel in Paris ? But in the case of
southern Costa Rica 's Lapa Ríos, renowned for both its comforts and its
impeccable ecolodge credentials (see sidebar), taking a look at the
infrastructure actually enhances the eco-experience.
Part of the credo of
sustainable tourism is raising ecological awareness through education. How
better to do that than by offering a free Sustainability Tour to your guests?
Even before they arrive, Lapa Ríos guests have pretty well
been primed to expect – and demand – a true ecotourism experience. The lodge's
Web site and the reservations staff emphasize the rusticity and the
conservation goals of the lodge on the southern tip of the Osa Peninsula. Since most guests start out with an interest in conservation and sustainability,
the tour has a lot of takers.
Marijke Mulder is the lodge's official sustainability coordinator. Born in the Southern Zone
town of Golfito to a Dutch father and a Tica mother, Mulder moved to Holland at age 2, returning to Costa Rica when she was 16. She speaks Dutch, English,
Spanish and some French, and, like almost all the employees at Lapa Ríos, she's
a local.
And
We're Off

|
| All Natural: View from Lapa Ríos, on the Osa Peninsula. Dorothy
MacKinnon | Tico Times |
The tour starts after
breakfast or lunch at the hotel entrance, where Mulder gives a short introduction
on the lodge's overall conservation goals, pointing out that Lapa Ríos has two
identities: it's an ongoing conservation project as well as an ecolodge.
Then we are off and
running, prying into every corner of the lodge, including garbage cans. Along
with bins for recycling paper, underneath the reception desk is a small pail
for discarded flashlight batteries. It used to be a huge bin that filled up
quickly with dead batteries, but ever since the lodge switched to the new
generation of kinetic, wind-up flashlights (for sale at the front desk), Mulder
says the amount of batteries collected (mostly from guests) has dropped by 75%.
Next stop is the kitchen, where everything is done
manually, including the dishes, to save on power. In addition to buying in bulk
to reduce packaging, every container is washed out and reused, including
plastic bags and the large plastic pails of food staples, which are sent back
to the supplier to refill. And, of course, every leftover is sorted, destined
for either the compost heap or the pigpen (more about pigs later). The head
cook keeps a detailed garbage-recycling log, tracking changes in the amount of
garbage so that staff can analyze what they're doing right or wrong.
Fruits, vegetables and other perishables are kept fresh in
a sealed room, cooled by a single, tiny air conditioner, the only one on the
property, set at 18 degrees Celsius (about 68 Fahrenheit ).
From the kitchen, Mulder leads the way to the garden
outside to see the solar panels that heat water for the kitchen. One of the
reasons guests are asked to place their dinner orders at breakfast is so that
the kitchen can do all the dinner prep work and wash dishes with sunlit hot
water during the day. Preordering also cuts down on the amount of wasted food.
Down the hill from the kitchen garden, the next point of
interest is the pool shed. The first thing you notice is the absence of any
chlorine smell. The pool's filter works on a salt principle, with an
“autopilot” that measures the level of salt in the pool. This method requires
more cleaning, since algae grow more quickly, and the standard concrete pool
bottom had to be replaced with tile, which is easier to clean. But the payoff
is no noxious chemicals.
We move on to the guest bungalows, where Mulder points out
all the sustainability measures, ranging from the cosmetic – papier-mâché
lampshades that incorporate 16 different leaves from the area and bamboo
toiletry holders made by a local artisan – to the more practical: low-voltage
bulbs, sheets and towels changed every two days, biodegradable toiletries in
packaging-saving dispensers and solar-heated hot water, as well as the familiar
admonitory signs to turn off lights and fans when you leave the room. One of
the lodge's newest policies is to provide each guest with a personal plastic
water bottle, which can be refilled free at water dispensers all around the
property. This drastically cuts down on the number of plastic bottles that
would have to be recycled, and guests take away their souvenir bottle.
As we walk down the steep hill to the maintenance area,
Mulder tells us that the trails we're traversing were built with steps and
dividers made from railroad ties from the United Fruit Company's abandoned
Golfito line, and rescued by the lodge's founders, Karen and John Lewis. She adds that all the gardening is done by hand – by one lone gardener – without the
aid of noisy, gas-belching machinery.
The only fly in the sustainability ointment at Lapa Ríos is
the diesel generator. There are actually two, working alternately, so one is
always humming noisily away. This is the most common criticism leveled by
guests on the tour, Mulder says. But she gamely explains that when the lodge
was built almost 15 years ago, it was the most economical solution available. Management
is working on ways to wean the lodge from generator power, she adds, including
solar systems for heating water, which are taking some of the pressure off the
need for generators. The lodge did a feasibility study on using the nearby
river for hydroelectric power, but the river doesn't have enough capacity and
damming it could cause ecological damage.
Ironically, when it's cool and raining, the generators
attract lots of animals that come to hang out in the trees overhanging the
humming generators to get warm. So it's a great place for guests to spot
wildlife, Mulder says.
Next stop is the laundry. Standing under clouds of
billowing sheets drying in the “solar dryer,” Mulder shows us the labels on the
sheets. They're made from modal, a high-strength fiber made of reconstituted
European beech trees in Turkey. They're biodegradable, and although Modal is
more expensive than cotton, its production is more sustainable.
Pig
Power
From the fresh, clean
smells of the laundry, we move on to a dark shed redolent with the distinctive
odor of pigs. This is the lodge's most basic recycling project. About 15 pigs
of varying sizes eat the kitchen leftovers – except for pineapple skins, mangos
and a few other compost-able items that are buried in nearby pits. The
excrement produced by the well-fed pigs is hosed down into a trough that
funnels into an underground tank. There, bacteria growing on the excrement
produce methane gas, which in turn travels through a pipe to the staff kitchen,
where it fuels the gas burners used to cook daily meals for 52 employees.
The last stop on the tour is the staff kitchen, for a
demonstration of the methane-fueled stoves and a social visit. Over a cool
glass of fruit juice and a chunk of watermelon, we make small talk with
Zeneida, the head cook, talking about families and food as she carefully
separates kernels of rice. It's a pleasant visit and another building block of
sustainability – a cultural exchange, however brief, between guests and locals.
On the walk (or truck ride) back up to the lodge, Mulder
fields questions. The most commonly asked question, she says, is what happens
to the pigs after a productive life of eating and excreting?
Happily, there's no chance that guests will encounter a
working pig on a plate.
“The pigs are killed on the property and we sell them to
our employees at a low price,” Mulder explains. “We don't serve the meat in our
restaurant because we haven't got the proper processing machines.”
At the end of the tour, Mulder says, the comment she hears
most often from guests is that they have a new appreciation for what it takes
to make a tourist lodge sustainable. In the face of all the “green-washing” of
some self-proclaimed “ecolodges” that have hitched an undeserved ride on the
eco-marketing bandwagon, this tour shows what it really takes to be
sustainable, and that sustainability doesn't come cheap.
The Lapa Ríos Sustainability Tour is free for lodge guests;
interested non-guests can call 735-5130 to ask if they can be included on a
tour. For more information on Lapa Ríos and its sustainability practices, visit
the lodge's informative Web site at www.laparios.com.
<< Return to articles