You climb a red-dirt road from San Ignacio, the tropical jungle opens up little by little, and suddenly the landscape changes completely: instead of the green, humid tangle that dominates 90% of Belize, rolling plateaus covered in pines appear, pink granite rocks poking out among the low vegetation, and notably cooler, drier air. For a moment, you could swear you took a wrong turn into another country. That abrupt break in the very heart of a tropical country is Mountain Pine Ridge's calling card, and to understand it you have to start with its geology, because that explains almost everything else.
Most of Belize sits on limestone rocks, which give rise to tropical jungles, underground rivers and countless caves. Mountain Pine Ridge, by contrast, rises on outcrops of granite and very ancient metamorphic rocks that form the core of the Maya Mountains, in the west of the country. It's, geologically, one of the oldest areas in Central America.
Those granite-derived soils are sandy, poor in nutrients and acidic, conditions in which the lush tropical jungle doesn't thrive. What does grow well there is the Caribbean pine (Pinus caribaea), along with oaks, ferns and highland vegetation adapted to poor soils. The result is a landscape of rolling plateaus covered in pine forests, crossed by clear-water rivers that, running over the granite, form waterfalls, pools and natural slides like those of Rio On Pools.
This contrast makes the reserve seem, for many visitors, 'another country' within Belize: an enclave of cooler air, broad views and the scent of pine, surrounded on all sides by tropical jungle. That ecological singularity is, precisely, one of the reasons the area was protected.
Although the current image of Mountain Pine Ridge is that of a natural area of pine forests and waterfalls, these highlands and their surroundings were not outside the Maya world. The western region of Belize was densely occupied by the ancient Maya, as attested by the great nearby cities —Caracol, reached by crossing the reserve area, is the most spectacular example— and the numerous smaller sites of the Cayo District.
The caves of the region, formed in the limestone edges and at the contacts between formations, had a deep ritual meaning for the Maya: they were considered entrances to the underworld (Xibalba) and sacred places for ceremonies and offerings. In western Belize caves with archaeological remains abound, and Rio Frio Cave itself, within the reserve, is part of that underground landscape that the Maya knew and frequented.
So, although the poor soil of the pine forests didn't favor the intensive agriculture that sustained the great cities, the highlands and their caves were part of Maya territory: routes, resources, ceremonial sites. The closeness of Caracol, one of the largest Maya cities in the whole region, recalls how much this corner of the west was integrated into that civilization.
Mountain Pine Ridge is one of the oldest protected areas in Belize. It was declared a forest reserve in the first half of the 20th century, in the time of the British colony (when the territory was called British Honduras), with a dual aim: to protect the pine forests and, at the same time, to use them as a timber resource in a regulated way. Forest management —cutting, planting, fire control— marked much of the modern history of the area.
The Caribbean pine was for decades the basis of the reserve's economic activity. The pine timber was exploited for construction and other uses, and the management of the forest sought to balance use with the conservation of an ecosystem that, because of its poor soils, is fragile and slow to recover. That tension between productive use and protection has accompanied Mountain Pine Ridge over time.
Over the years, and especially with the boom of nature tourism, the reserve also gained a strong recreational and ecological value. Today forest management coexists with conservation and tourism: waterfalls, pools, caves and lookouts draw visitors from all over the world, while the pine forest continues to be monitored and managed by the Belizean forest authorities.
At the beginning of the 21st century, Mountain Pine Ridge suffered one of the most dramatic episodes of its recent natural history: a severe pine bark beetle plague (a beetle of the genus Dendroctonus). These insects attack the pines by boring through the bark and, in massive infestations, can kill large stretches of forest in a short time.
Between the late 1990s and the early 2000s, the outbreak affected a very important part of the reserve's pine forests, leaving entire slopes of dead, dry trees. It was an enormous blow to the ecosystem and to the characteristic landscape of Mountain Pine Ridge, and forced the authorities to take management measures: cutting and removing affected trees, controlling the plague and reforestation plans to regenerate the pine forest.
Over the years, the forest has gradually recovered, partly naturally and partly thanks to the management and replanting work. The experience of the plague made evident the fragility of an ecosystem based on poor soils and the importance of active management. Today the visitor tours a reserve in the process of recovery, where sectors of mature forest coexist with younger areas in regeneration.
Today Mountain Pine Ridge combines three dimensions: the conservation of a unique ecosystem, forest management and nature tourism. The reserve protects not only the pine forest, but also a rich wildlife associated with the highlands: birds of prey like eagles and hawks —highly sought by watchers— pine-forest species, mammals and the aquatic life of its crystal-clear rivers.
Its natural attractions have become a tourist magnet within the western Belizean circuit. Rio On Pools, with its granite pools and slides; Rio Frio Cave, one of the largest and most accessible in the country; and Thousand Foot Falls, presented as the tallest waterfall in Central America, draw travelers who come from San Ignacio on excursions or who stay at the area's lodges. The reserve is also the gateway to the great Maya city of Caracol.
That tourist development coexists with the challenges of protecting a fragile ecosystem and of maintaining roads in an area of highlands and intense rainfall. The history of Mountain Pine Ridge —from forestry exploitation to the beetle plague and the recovery, from timber resource to nature tourism— illustrates well how Belize has gradually reconverted its protected areas toward a model where conservation and ecotourism go hand in hand.