The Osa Peninsula is located in the south pacific of Costa Rica. It is the southern Peninsula of Costa Rica. Peninsula de Osa is home to a wide variety of endangered animals of Costa Rica including pumas and the scarlet macaw. In the Peninsula de Osa is the Corcovado National Park, which is the largest tropical rainforest in Central America of lowland and one of the tallest rainforest in the world. This is the home of the most deadly snakes of Costa Rica called the fer-de-lance.
The main town of Peninsula de Osa is called Puerto Jimenez. You can fly into this area and enjoy extensive hikes on the beautiful trails along the forest. If you move into the coast you can easily spot whales and dolphins as you ride along the coast with a boat. You will always have access to the best guides either for hiking, sailing, sport fishing, or just to go out for a boat ride.

The Peninsula de Osa in Costa Rica also offers you possibly the most bio-diverse place on earth for bird watching. It is home for approximately 400 species of birds, including among others, the Scarlet Macaw, White-tipped Sicklebill, Black-cheeked Ant-Tanager, Turquoise Cotinga, Band-tailed Barbthroat, Yellow-billed Cotinga, Marbled Wood-Quail, White-crested Coquette, Whistling Wren, Harpy Eagle and Red-throated Caracara.

Peninsula de Osa is also known as having the finest diving spot of all. This virgin area offers unique diving attractions, for example “The Devil’s Drop”, a rockpile beginning at 40’and dropping as deep as 250’. All this combined with the visual beauty of its forests and of its coastline with its unhabitated beaches and beautiful cascades makes it a unique beauty of the world.