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Inn at Coyote Mountain of Costa Rica: Boutique Eco-lodge & Nature Retreat

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Inn at Coyote Mountain of Costa Rica: Boutique Eco-lodge & Nature Retreat
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Comfort, seclusion, and elegant dining in the mountains overlooking the Pacific Ocean.
 
Award-winning eco-friendliness.

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Built in the Mudejar style of architecture from Spain, the five-room inn has circular windows and glass-tile tubs, custom-made wrought iron sconces and four-poster beds, and a spectacular Observatory Suite with its own spiral staircase.” Heidi Mitchell, Travel & Leisure

The Inn at Coyote Mountain counts among the finest hotels or inns in Costa Rica and welcomes a select number of guests to a secluded universe of natural beauty, superlative service, and gourmet cuisine. The Inn has received recommendation from Green Places to Stay, Food & Wine, and the Tico Times.

Guests relax in the Hacienda, an architectural jewel with five guest rooms, courtyard garden, Great Room, Map Room, and numerous public areas, decks, and patios with broad vistas of the Pacific Ocean from 4100' in altitude. Imported tiles, tropical hardwood furniture, gentle stucco, and superb Mudejar style blend perfectly with the Mediterranean climate of Cerro Coyote or "Coyote Mountain." Guest Room options include:

The Observatory: Located on the third story of the Hacienda's tower, this spacious room with windows on all sides boasts stupendous 360-degree views of ocean, forest, and mountain, making it one of the most stunning bedrooms in all of Costa Rica. It has full ensuite bath with a spacious, custom-built round tub, imported Italian floor tiles, handmade furniture, and a queen bed. Access is by a spiral staircase that climbs through the tower.

The Tamarindo Room: A large, distinctive guest room with high ceilings and both courtyard and porch access. The large bathroom has a custom-built, extra-large, round bathtub and dressing area. King bed.

Nicoya and Gunacaste Rooms: Spacious guest rooms with high ceilings and full ensuite bath, courtyard and porch access. Queen bed or queen and full.

Perched atop the Cordillera de Tilláran mountain chain, the Hacienda overlooks miles of Pacific coast and ocean, the Gulf and Peninsula of Nicoya, and the Rio Baranca. A very private hideaway, the Hacienda accepts only a select number of guests. Each room or suite features breathtaking views of the Pacific Ocean, full ensuite bathrooms, handmade tropical hardwood furniture, handmade textile decoration, and queen or king beds.

Cerro Coyote's 70 acre property encompasses an entire mountaintop, and includes hiking trails, gardens, and stable, amongst pristine forests, streams, and open fields. The Cerro Coyote preserve is a bird watchers paradise. Mountain bikes, horseback riding, facials, pedicures, and manicures await Coyote Mountain guests.

Cerro Coyote is perfectly located for exploring the rest of Costa Rica, or as a place to simply get away from it all.

 

ONLINE AVAILABILITY AND RESERVATIONS

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Please call us in North America through our sister property, Trout Point Lodge, at 1 (902) 482-8360 or visit our web site.

Chosen among the Top 10 ultra-boutique hotels by globorati.com and Retuers Life
November, 2007
"A standout among Costa Rica's premier eco-lodges"

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"Our castle, when we finally arrived, was perched on a promontory in a small clearing in the forest. A luxurious villa built around a courtyard with a fountain, it has just four guest rooms. With 20-foot-high, half-timbered ceilings, four-poster beds and enormous mosaic-tiled bathrooms, it felt hundreds of years old."
Ottawa Citizen

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Member of Elegant Small Hotels

Lowest fares to vacation paradise

Congratulations to the Inn at Coyote Mountain
The World's Greatest Hotels, Resorts, and Spas
Selected for inclusion in Travel & Leisure's The Best of 2007

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Click Here for
Last Minute Specials

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The Inn at Coyote Mountain, recommended by Green Places to Stay:
 
Up the spiral stair in the tower to one of the most stunning panoramas in Costa Rica -- it's worth paying extra for the 'observatory' suite! The other bedrooms -- all lofty, all large -- open to a Moorish courtyard where fountains play and swallows swoop. No air conditioning, no fans: the modern hacienda has been carefullty designed to be cool in the summer and warm in the winter. Once here, you will pretty much stay put -- the 4x4 van does not come cheap -- but there are guided walks within the reserve and orchids and wildlife aplenty (flycatchers, hummingbirds, sloths, coyote). Visitors are enchanted by the peace, the setting and the food. Start with a margarita by the fire, move onto four gorgeous Spanish/Creole courses served at a big friendly table (or privately on the veranda). Sophisticated bedrooms display textiles on walls and floors, huge bathrooms, delicious beds. No need for room keys: staff are trustworthy, courteous, and caring.

The Inn has also received a responsible tourism award from ethicalescape and was chosen for inclusion in Travel & Leisure's The Best of 2007: The World's Greatest Hotels, Resorts, and Spas

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A spell-binding retreat: Inn at Coyote Mountain is a luxurious Costa Rican hideaway, with Canadian ties

Alex Hutchinson, Citizen Special
Published: Saturday, March 03, 2007

It wasn't until morning, when we were sipping glasses of starfruit juice and watching day break over the Pacific Ocean in the distance, that the spell finally broke. Until then, frankly, we'd felt a lot like the Scooby Doo gang must whenever they get lost in the remote mountains of Transylvania and end up spending the night in a spooky castle staffed by a small complement of the undead.

In fact, we were in the mountains of Costa Rica, about 70 kilometres north of San Jose. The web booking we had made for our last two nights in the country said the Inn at Coyote Mountain was in the hills outside the town of San Ramon. That turned out to mean a 50-minute ride in a four-wheel-drive cab along some of the steepest, most winding and rock-strewn roads I've ever encountered. It was dark and misty -- the area is in a "cloud forest" -- and we quickly left all signs of civilization behind.

Our castle, when we finally arrived, was perched on a promontory in a small clearing in the forest. A luxurious villa built around a courtyard with a fountain, it has just four guest rooms. With 20-foot-high, half-timbered ceilings, four-poster beds and enormous mosaic-tiled bathrooms, it felt hundreds of years old. And we were the only guests.

The Inn at Coyote Mountain is actually best known for its food. It's the sister property of the Trout Point Lodge in Nova Scotia, and both places regularly offer three-day cooking classes taught by the three owner-chefs, Daniel Abel, Charles Leary and Vaughn Perret, who specialize in Cajun and Creole cuisine. The magnificent building, despite its medieval Castilian feel, was completed only in 2004, and the lodge's sustainability policy includes wind-generated electricity, its own organic fruit and vegetable plantings, and staff hired entirely from within a two-kilometre radius.

In other words, it's a luxury retreat -- but one whose seclusion and small-yet-grandiose scale made it unlike anywhere I've stayed before, even once the sun rose and the mists cleared.

The dinner choices were very simple: "When would you like to eat?" our host asked us. "How about 7:30?" we suggested. "It will be served in the dining hall," he said. And that was that.

In the stately dining hall -- where, had there been other guests, we would have shared the long table -- we were served a four-course meal: a velvety eggplant soup with an undertone of smoked pepper, a salad, then a main course of marlin with a citrus, honey and tarragon glaze accompanied by sauteed cauliflower and carrots. Dessert was banana-chocolate bread baked in individual custard pots.

It was exceptional.

The cost -- though such vulgarities were not mentioned at the time -- was $35 (all figures U.S.) per person, and well worth it. The three-course breakfast the next morning was a less-palatable $20 each, worthwhile mainly for the indescribable lightness of the starfruit juice.

It's possible to make daytrips from the inn to major tourist destinations like the Monteverde Cloud Forest and, farther afield, the famous Arenal volcano. But after 10 days of travel, we were eager for a break from the ravening tourist hordes, so we decided to make our day's entertainment the quest for a less expensive lunch than the inn would have offered. Armed with a complete ignorance of the area's geography, we headed for the surrounding valleys.

After a 90-minute hike through farmers' fields and past occasional houses, we came to the village of Piedades Sur, where we found a small restaurant with two tables and no menus. With sign-language and smiles, we signalled our willingness to eat whatever they offered us, and enjoyed an ample lunch of rice, beans, vegetables and pork for a little less than $3. When we left, the proprietors came to the door and shook our hands heartily.

Back at the inn, time passed pleasantly: we hiked around the inn's 30-hectare private nature preserve, watched Austin Powers with Spanish subtitles (Si, nina!) on satellite TV in the lounge, and sampled the inn's eclectic library -- a P.D. James for me, a guide to Sri Lankan cuisine for my girlfriend.

Coyote Mountain isn't the place to try the standard Costa Rican tourist activities like canopy tours and zip-lines. But its isolation from the usual tourist routes gave us our best opportunities to interact with ordinary Costa Ricans, and its sedate pace allowed us the rare pleasure of finishing our vacation more rested and relaxed than we started it.

It's luxurious -- rooms start at $153 a night, or $219 for the third-floor tower room with 360-degree views -- but we got one of the regularly available online specials for just $79 a night.

And it's not as inaccessible as we first thought: with daylight to help navigate the rocky roads, the $12 cab ride back to San Ramon took less than half an hour. And it was a lot less spooky.

© The Ottawa Citizen 2007

Canticum Hotels Group
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ECO-LUXURY

Canticum, S.A., San Jose, Costa Rica

Costa Rica Luxury Real Estate For Sale

www.small-luxury-hotels.ca