The Maya Golden Landscape is centered around the Golden Stream and Golden Stream Corridor Preserve. It covers approximately 200,000 acres and includes several Mayan villages. The Landscape is unique because of the large number of Protected Areas that converge within a relatively small area. In fact, approximately 80% of the land is still natural vegetation, forming the primary southern biological corridor for Belize, which is the only remaining broadleaf forest link between the Maya Mountains and the forested coastal plains of southern Belize.
In addition to this, the Maya Golden Landscape encompasses a wide range of other land uses. Traditional farming is practiced by local Mayan communities, much in the way their ancestors have done for thousands of years. There is also a tourist resort (Belize Lodge and Excursions) and several private farms, using modern agriculture to produce citrus, rice and other cash crops for national and foreign markets.