Costa Rica Landscape Photography
Learn how to handle humidity, shoot in rainforests, and capture stunning images with insider tips from 15+ years of field experience.The Reality Behind Those Stunning Tropical Images
The Technical Realities: What the Guidebooks Don’t Tell You
The Humidity of Costa Rica and Photography Gear
- Keep silica gel packets in every camera bag and replace them frequently (they saturate quickly in the tropics)
- When moving from air-conditioned spaces to humid outdoors, seal cameras in airtight bags for 20-30 minutes to acclimatize
- Wipe surface condensation immediately, it can seep into electronics
- Check weather sealing ratings; even “weather-sealed” cameras vary dramatically in moisture resistance
The Light Challenge: Shooting Under the Canopy
- Embrace higher ISOs, modern cameras handle them well
- Use fast primes when possible (f/1.4-f/2.8)
- Look for forest clearings and gaps where directional light penetrates
- Focus on intimate landscapes and macro subjects that benefit from soft, even lighting rather than fighting for grand vistas
Compositional Strategies: Finding Order in Chaos
The “Wall of Green” Problem
Working With Flat Light
Prioritize strong shapes, bold tones, and saturated colors to compensate for lack of directional light - Shoot waterfalls, streams, and forest interiors that benefit from soft, even illumination
- Focus on macro subjects, orchids, insects, fungi, where harsh shadows would be problematic
- Use long exposures (3-5 seconds) to create ethereal effects with moving water and wind-blown vegetation
Costa Rica Landscape Photography Spots
Location-Specific OpportunitiesCloud Forests: Monteverde and Beyond
- Epiphyte-covered trees creating otherworldly textures
- Mist moving through the canopy (use longer exposures to blur movement)
- Unique flora including orchids and carnivorous plants
- Morning light breaking through fog layers
Volcanic Landscapes: Arenal and Poás
- Golden hour is critical, plan arrivals for sunrise or late afternoon
- Use polarizing filters to deepen blue skies and enhance clouds
- Include scale references (trees, buildings, people) to convey the immensity
- Shoot from multiple elevations to find optimal perspectives
Coastal Scenes: Pacific and Caribbean
- Protect gear from salt spray and sand
- Long exposures (20-60 seconds) create smooth water effects around volcanic rocks
- Use graduated ND filters to balance bright skies with darker foreground rocks or tide pools
- Shoot during blue hour for moody, saturated colors
Costa Rica Landscape Photography Gear (The Gear Reality Check)
- Weather-sealed camera body with good high-ISO performance
- Wide-angle lens (16-35mm equivalent) for landscapes
- One fast prime or zoom (f/2.8) for low-light forest work
- Sturdy tripod (you’ll use it constantly)
- Multiple lens cloths and cleaning supplies
- Waterproof camera bags or rain covers
- Extra batteries (humidity drains them faster)
- Macro lens (60-105mm) for intimate details
- Polarizing and ND filters
- Telephoto zoom for wildlife opportunities that inevitably arise
One photographer’s experience resonates:
Timing Your Photography in Costa Rica: Beyond Golden Hour(and tico time)
The Most Important Photography Lesson
Your best tropical landscapes won’t look like your desert or mountain work, and that’s exactly the point.
Let's Work on your Project
If you are an editor, journalist, or publication looking for a photojournalist in Costa Rica or Central America, I am available for assignments locally and internationally. My aim is simple: to create visual narratives that are truthful, human, and urgent, images that inform, evoke empathy, and endure.