Blue Black Grosbeak – Photo courtesy Daniel Mangold, Birding in Belize Tour

Blue Hole National Park is a 575-acre protected area located along the Southern Highway near Belize’s capital city of Belmopan. The park boasts many outstanding features, including Blue Hole, a magnificent sinkhole, and its surrounding cave system. The Blue Hole is actually a short but deep stretch of underground rivers whose course is revealed by the collapse of a limestone cavern. It flows on the surface for about 55 yards before disappearing beneath another rock face. This is a wonderful place for bird watching and swimming.

Northern Royal Flycatcher – Photo courtesy Daniel Mangold, Birding in Belize Tour

There are a number of trails to hike within the park. Some of the unusual birds known to this area include White Hawk, Spotted-Wood Quail, Crested Guans, Lovely Cotinga, Keel-Billed Toucans, Red-Legged Honey Creepers, and Slaty-Tailed Trogons.

We can easily spend half to a full day here and end the trip with a refreshing dip in the pools. A number of stairs descend to this small spring. Its cool, turquoise waters, surrounded by dense forest and overhung with mosses, vines, and ferns are the perfect spots for a cool and relaxing dip.

St. Herman’s Cave is part of Blue Hole National Park. It is a short hike from the parking area/visitor center to the cave entrance. Upon entering, visitors go down steps that the Maya originally cut. Once inside, people can clamber over rocks and splash through the water, while admiring stunning cave formations created over a millennium ago. After exploring the cave, there is the option to hike a 2 1/2 mile interpretive trail with observations that leads over the cave.

White-collared Manakin- David Oakley