There's a bird in Crooked Tree so large that, when it spreads its wings over the lagoon, some local guides say first-time tourists mistake it for a small airplane: it's the jabiru stork, with a wingspan of up to two and a half meters, the tallest flying bird in all of the Americas. Seeing it planted among the shallow waters of the lagoon, with its enormous bill and its red collar, is the postcard that draws hundreds of birdwatchers from all over the world each year to a village that, until a few decades ago, was known barely for its mangoes and its cashews. Before being a wildlife sanctuary, Crooked Tree is, above all, a community. The village of Crooked Tree sits on an island in the middle of the lagoon, connected to the mainland by a causeway, and is considered one of the oldest interior communities in Belize. With Creole (Afro-Belizean) roots, its population settled here centuries ago, drawn by the richness of the wetland and by its position on the region's river routes.
For generations, the inhabitants of Crooked Tree lived off fishing in the lagoons, farming and logging, an activity historically central to the colonial economy of Belize (then British Honduras), where logwood and mahogany were for a long time the great resources. The village keeps that rural, quiet character, with scattered houses, fruit trees and a strong community identity.
One of the most characteristic features of Crooked Tree are its fruit trees, especially the mangoes and the cashews. The cashew harvest gave rise to the Cashew Festival, an annual party (usually in May) in which the community celebrates its most emblematic product with music, food, cashew wine and crafts. The festival has become a cultural event that draws visitors and reinforces the bond between the village and its natural setting.
The name of the village and sanctuary, 'Crooked Tree', is a source of curiosity among visitors. The most widespread explanation among the residents refers to a cashew tree with a twisted trunk that would have served, in ancient times, as a reference point or landmark for getting oriented among the lagoons and the paths of the area —a common custom in rural communities before the arrival of modern cartography. Whatever the exact origin, the name ended up designating both the village and, centuries later, the whole system of wetlands that surrounds it.
The Crooked Tree Wildlife Sanctuary was established in 1984 to protect one of the most important wetland systems in Belize. Its management fell to the Belize Audubon Society, one of the oldest and most active conservation organizations in the country, which manages several of Belize's most emblematic protected areas. The creation of the sanctuary sought to safeguard the habitat of resident and migratory birds against the pressures on the wetlands.
A notable aspect of Crooked Tree is that the protected area did not exclude the community: the village remains inhabited and is part of the sanctuary landscape. This model, which combines conservation and human presence, has made Crooked Tree an example of how nature tourism can rely on the local community, which participates as guides, boatmen and hosts, and benefits from the conservation of the wetland.
The designation of the sanctuary coincided with a stage in which Belize —independent since 1981— began to develop a system of protected areas that today is one of the pillars of its identity and its tourist economy. Crooked Tree thus joined a network that includes marine reserves, national parks and other sanctuaries, many of them also linked to birdwatching and wildlife.
Unlike other protected areas of Belize created through the purchase or expropriation of large stretches of uninhabited land, Crooked Tree presented a different challenge: to protect an ecosystem where an entire community, with its own lands, crops and productive activities, had lived for generations. The solution adopted —to declare the wetland system a sanctuary without displacing the population— became over time a model replicated in other parts of the country, which recognizes that effective long-term conservation needs the commitment, and not just the tolerance, of those who inhabit the territory.
The value of the Crooked Tree Sanctuary lies in its wetlands: a system of lagoons, marshes and floodable forests whose life is marked by the rhythm of the seasons. During the rainy season, the lagoons fill and spread, covering large areas; in the dry season, by contrast, the waters recede and shrink, concentrating the fish and other resources in ever-smaller pools.
That seasonal dynamic is precisely what makes Crooked Tree a magnet for birds. When the water diminishes, the waterbirds and waders —herons, cormorants, jacanas, ducks, spoonbills and many more— flock in to feed on the abundance concentrated in the lagoons. It's then that the sanctuary unfolds its greatest spectacle and becomes one of the best birdwatching destinations in Central America.
For their ecological importance, the Crooked Tree wetlands were recognized as a Ramsar site, that is, as a wetland of international importance under the Ramsar Convention, the intergovernmental treaty dedicated to the conservation and wise use of these ecosystems. This designation underscores the sanctuary's role not only at the local scale, but within the migratory routes and bird conservation at the international level.
If there's a species that symbolizes Crooked Tree, it's the jabiru stork (Jabiru mycteria), the tallest flying bird in the Americas, with its impressive wingspan, its long neck and its characteristic red collar at the base of the neck. Crooked Tree is one of the most reliable places on the continent to observe it, since the jabiru nests in the region and frequents its wetlands, especially in the dry season. For many birdwatchers, seeing a jabiru here is one of the great goals of a trip to Belize.
But the jabiru is only the most famous face of an extraordinarily rich birdlife. The sanctuary is home to a long list of species, both resident and migratory: different kinds of herons, cormorants, anhingas, ducks, jacanas, roseate spoonbills, raptors like hawks and ospreys, kingfishers and many more birds, which make Crooked Tree a benchmark for Central American birdwatching.
The wildlife isn't limited to birds. The sanctuary is also home to iguanas, turtles, crocodiles, howler monkeys and other mammals and reptiles typical of the region's wetlands and forests. This diversity makes Crooked Tree a complete and valuable ecosystem, where water, forest and wildlife form a whole that the community and the Belize Audubon Society work to conserve, and that each year draws nature-loving travelers.
Crooked Tree's international fame as a birdwatching destination consolidated from the 1990s, when ornithologists and specialized guides from the United States and Europe began to include the village in their observation circuits through Central America, drawn by the unique combination of accessibility (just an hour from the country's commercial capital) and species density. International publications and bird guides began to cite Crooked Tree as a must-stop for those looking to add the jabiru to their list of species seen, which consolidated a local industry of guides, boats and specialized lodges that today sustains much of the village's economy, complementing traditional fishing and farming.