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Ziplines

After settling in at the hotel in Monteverde on Saturday, titled “El Estado,” my friends and I spent our time exploring the huge property before getting on the buses that would take us to the ziplines. We found random luxuries to entertain us, such as hammocks and seesaws, but before we could get too far, it was time to load the buses.

The ziplines provided endless fun for us. As we moved on, the ziplines kept getting longer and longer, and more and more people needed guides to help them get across. Some simply refused to or weren't able to stop without having the assistance of the tree trunk in front of them. Others got in trouble for releasing the grip of either of their hands to take pictures or videos as they flew across the sky. I was all set as I strapped my GoPro to my head and zoomed on.

The last couple ziplines were the most spectacular, as they were the highest, giving us an amazing view of the mountains below us. These ziplines were long enough that they gave you time to relax and stop thinking about braking in time. You could stop and smell... the greenery. In all honesty though, the air there was something different. In Monteverde, the air felt extremely fresh and just smelled amazing. There were moments where we all just stopped to breathe, and just breathe.

As a grand finale to our zipline experience, we got a chance to go on the Tarzan swing – a mix between a bungee jump of 120 feet and a swing, similar to the Dare Devil Dive at Six Flags Great America. You had to walk out on a long bridge which at some point just stopped, and you were attached to a couple ropes and would jump from there. The wait was filled with anticipation, since as you watched the people in front of you, you would see the person on the bridge, on the bridge, on the bridge, and then gone. Suddenly, without warning, they would disappear, and we were all waiting for our own turn to do just the same.

I finally got out to the platform. I was one of the first of my friends to attempt the jump and any of my friends who already did it were way ahead of me in line. And there I was, on the edge. “Las dos manos aqui.” …This is all I can hold onto? “Bend your knees.” “What?” “Bend. Your knees. Bend.” ...Umm, Okay. And then without further warning I was essentially shoved off the edge. I managed to scream for the first half second of the drop and then my stomach fell behind my body, leaving me breathless. Finally the rope caught, and I swung above the tree tops to catch one last glance at the green mountains that I got to marvel at on the ziplines.

When we got back to our hotel, we went swimming, and afterward returned to our dorms. Our key cards got deactivated and Julia and I weren't able to get back into our room, so while we were waiting outside for the new cards to come, we caught a glimpse of a light moving sideways across the skyline above us. The next morning we saw a zipline set up outside of the forest. Apparently, a company decided it didn't need a rainforest to set up a zipline, so it built steel stands and ziplines on top of concrete. The result was the fastest zipline around, since speeds were controlled by the constructors rather than the forest landscape. Somehow, however, I still wouldn't feel comfortable doing a Tarzan bungee jump with only the solid concrete below me.


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1 comments:

Alex Gorbokon said...

Oy. That's all.

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