Tallest mountain in Panama, Baru Volcano (11,398 ft) high.
Cerro Punta, a misty land of eternal spring where bright flowers grow at the roadside and farmers about 80% of the land products of Panama .
La Amistad International Park (PILA) With a total of 207,000 hectares was declared a World Patrimony for Mankind by UNESCO due to the great importance it has for the preservation of biodiversity in Panama and the American continent.
Tropical Cloud Forest is important for the conservation of watersheds, and biodiversity.
Around Cerro Punta.
Waterfall. Boquete
Panamonte Hotel. Boquete
Reservation of the Ngobe people. The Ngobe Bugle are compromised of two seperate ethni-linguistic groups (The Ngobe and the Bugle). They inhabit the the Ngobe-Bugle Conmarca which is a protected area that operates it's own political system (comparable to a reservation).
Caterpillar. The larval stage of butterflies and moths. This stage usually lasts from about two weeks to a month, and is the longest life stage for many lepidoptera (butterflies and moths). During this stage, the caterpillar can grow in size more than 30,000 times.
These big leaves have been used as umbrellasand are called "the poor man's umbrella."
Punta Burica
The Central American Squirrel Monkey (Saimiri oerstedii) is a squirrel monkey species from Central America.
Squirrel Monkey (Saimiri oerstedii) Squirrel monkeys eat predominantly fruits and insects, but also feed on flowers, shoots, buds, and flowers.
La Barqueta beach
Finca Lerida, Chiriqui, Panama Finca Lerida, one of the best birding spots in the highlands of Panama, visited by birdwatchers looking to see the Resplendent Quetzal. One of the oldest and traditional Coffee Estates is owned and administered by members of the Collins family. The Estate has been producing and processing coffee since 1922. This beautiful Estate produces one of the best highland coffees of Panama.
Cofee workers , Boquete Chiriqui.
Coffee as we know it kicked off in Arabia, where roasted beans were first brewed around A.D. 1000. By the 13th century Muslims were drinking coffee religiously. The “bean broth” drove dervishes into orbit, kept worshippers awake, and splashed over into secular life. And wherever Islam went, coffee went too: North Africa, the eastern Mediterranean, and India.