Monday, May 16, 2011

A true update

            This will be one of my last posts because sadly, I leave Costa Rica on the 20th.  Sorry I haven’t been posting regularly, but I haven’t been doing a whole lot that is worth mentioning.  Turns out I won’t get to work with the local children.  They never ended up coming April 25th because the materials for them weren’t ready.  So instead, I have been following around the guides here.  I go with them on all the tours and observe them to see what they do, and to get a better feel for how the tours are organized.  I have observed the chocolate tour (of course), the night hike, the natural history walk, and the two different bat tours.  They have 5 main guides here, but also some workers who used to be guides who are now doing other things around Tirimbina that they can use if they need to.  I picked a bad time to start observing tours because the rainy season just started and this is the time of the year where the number of tours decline.  Not many people want to go into the middle of the rainforest when it is raining. Go figure.
Here are some pictures from some tours.

Chocolate tour
 
Night Hike
 
Bat program (Cristhian showing how a nose-leaf works)

Bat tour (Wendy letting people touch the wing of the bat)


            In other news, one of the researchers found a baby squirrel on the forest floor somewhere and now we are taking care of it.  If it were up to me, I would have taken some pictures of it, and then let nature take its course.  But no, the others who live here said that they wanted to care for it, so we now have a baby squirrel.  Conveniently, those who said they would take care of it left for 4+ days, and guess who is now taking care of it? Yup. Me.  It has to eat every 4 hours, warm milk from a pipette.  And it will cry if it doesn’t.  AND you have to make it go to the bathroom by massaging that specific area.  As much as sometimes I don’t like the responsibility, (you know, like when it is crying at 3am and won’t shut up) it is a pretty cool experience, and the little critter is pretty adorable.
Jackie (4 weeks??)

Not Jackie, but a REALLY cool insect (Rhinocerous beetle?)

Also not Jackie, but a really pretty emerald basilisk
          Also, in other interesting news, there were parties in La Virgen (the town that Tirimbina is in) the past 2 weekends (not including the weekend we just had) where there was a ton of dancing! And I mean legitimate Salsa, Merengue, Cumbia dancing.  It was a lot of fun to just go out and dance salsa and merengue for hours! (I am completely inept at dancing cumbia).  I am really going to miss dancing like that in the states!  Oh, and on one of these nights I ran into the guide I had here when I was here 3 years ago, Fito.  It was pretty crazy, and he ended up remembering me and my group, so that was pretty cool.  Since then, he has shown me some really cool places nearby that I never knew existed! 

I am going to miss a lot of things when I go.  But, I will probably do one more post before I go back, so stay tuned!

Post that should have been posted a month ago!!!

So this is a post that I should have posted a month ago, but I just now have the pictures! Sorry!

Wow, I’m sorry, I didn’t realize how long ago the last post was!  So the kids didn’t end up coming April 5th.  They are now coming April 25th, next Monday.  Since I was originally going to only stay until May 3rd, the fact that I would only get about 5 days with the kids was not good.  I ended up switching my flights and now I don’t leave until May 20th.  I haven’t been doing much since I last updated, until about last week.  I worked on the Tirimbina newsletter for a couple days, which kept me occupied.  I also went out into the forest with Eugenia (the woman in charge of the education program) to look for bat tents to show the kids when they come.  We found a few, but also made a few artificial ones on the trail that we are going to take the kids on, just so they would have more experience spotting them.  Building bat tents is not as easy as it sounds! It’s pretty tough to be a bat!  Here are some pictures of the tents we made.

Apical

Pinnada

Inverted boat


            I also helped some of the researchers go out and collect bat tents for an experiment they were doing about temperature in bat tents.  The day after that I helped a different researcher change mammal traps that were high up in trees, and he even let me climb one!



Triumphant!!

            It was pretty tiring, but very exciting. 

            And then this Saturday, I visited Alex, the woman who rescued me the first day I got to Costa Rica.  Her boyfriend Felix picked me up at 7:30 am and took me to their farm.  I got to help her and Felix do some field research (because she is a biologist working on reforestation experiments) as well as get some well needed animal time!  In the morning I helped her change seed traps that she had set out, which she then takes the seeds and grows them to see what they become so she can make a seed identification type guide.  Then, in the afternoon, I got to play with her 3 dogs, meet her cows and calves, and go horseback riding through her old growth forest!!!!!!  And to top it off, she made pizza for dinner!  It was a great day, and I only got one tick! (My 5th one, and no, I haven’t found the best home remedy to get them out).

            Yesterday was pretty low key, just walked around the forest a little and went for a run.  This week is Santa Semana, which is pretty much the same as Holy Week, but they take it to the extreme here and practically everything closes down for the whole week.  I’m about to venture to the grocery store with my new roommate in hopes that they are still open.  So yes, I just got a new roommate, Joyce, from the Netherlands, and she will be here for 6 weeks!  But now I am really outnumbered because out of the volunteers and researchers living here there are 5 Germans, 4 Dutch, and me, from the US.  But everyone here is awesome, so I don’t mind.



I will post an update hopefully later today since this is from a while ago :)

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Camera!!

                  Not much has happened since the last time I updated.  I hiked more with my parents and we ended up seeing a fer de lance (really poisonous snake), a white collared peccary (very rare to see, but you smell them often enough!), some howler monkeys up close and personal, along with possible spider monkeys.  And, they got to see a basilisk right before they left, which was pretty cool.  They left on the 13th to see other parts of Costa Rica, and I didn’t do much for most of that week because Eugenia wasn’t around.  On Thursday I left for San Jose with Claire, Mat, Debbie and Stephen because we were going to pick up Claire’s mother and sister from the airport and then Friday morning go to Monteverde.

            Monteverde was fun, it was a long and bumpy bus ride, but it was worth it.  Santa Elena, the town next to the Monteverde reserve was a small touristy town.  We stayed in a pretty nice hostel, and we got some good deals on zip lining and hiking.  We did a zip lining tour that had between 11 and 14 cables (I don’t remember exactly), one of which was called the “Superman” where they strapped you up to the cable by your back so you could glide down the cable and hold your arms out in a superman pose.  Definitely awesome.  The last one was called the Tarzan Swing, where you jumped off of a platform and freefell for a couple seconds and then ended up swinging like a pendulum.  I screamed, but it was a lot of fun too.  Definitely worth the $40.  The next day we hiked through the Santa Elena cloud forest (which is basically the same thing as the Monteverde cloud forest) and here are some cool picts!





            We came back on Sunday and I have actually had a little bit of work to do! The kids were supposed to come this week, but the program wasn’t ready yet, so they aren’t coming until April 5th.  But I get to make a bat tent identification sheet that the kids can take out into the forest with them.  I’m trying to take my time with it because I know I won’t have much to do.  On the plus side, I got my camera last week! FINALLY!  Those pictures of the cloud forest above? MINE.  Horay! At least now I can go out into the forest and look for stuff to take pictures of when I’m bored now.

            Oh, and Tuesday we went to a little hidden waterfall back on some guys farm in La Virgen (the town I live in) and jumped from the cliff into the pool below.   The place was called Pozo Azule, and it was amazing.  Someone had to lead me up the path the entire way because I had to go without my glasses, so it was almost scarier going up to the cliff than to jump.  Almost.  The first jump I did pretty well, I only hurt the inside of my arms, but the second jump I landed smack on my butt.  I emerged from the water and all I could say was “OWWWWWWW” for a good couple minutes.  It was really a beautiful and secluded place, and I wish I had brought my camera!
           
            I have no plans for this weekend, probably staying here and getting up early to see if I can get some good animal picts.  My Ball State friends only have 2 more weeks here, and it’s really sad.  I’m going to miss them a lot.  Costa Rica won’t be the same without them!

Friday, March 11, 2011

I'm Back!

So, it’s been a while, wow, almost a month!!  I’m sorry but I have actually been busy! So I actually have some pictures from the Amphibian Center that I will try to get on here, and I have some pictures from the beach!  Which, by the way, was amazing!
Agalychnis callidryas
Red-Eyed Tree Frog

(I forgot what one this is!)

Cruziohyla calcarifer


Anotheca spinosa



And yes, that is a spider eating a cockroach!

            I ended up meeting 5 of my friends, some Ball State students, at San Jose on Saturday, and we left for Tamarindo Sunday morning, really early.  We left the hostel around 5am, and took two separate taxis (there were 6 of us) to the bus station which none of us had ever been to.  So, I got in the taxi with Mat and Claire, and our taxi was behind the first one, which Debbie, Alyssa and Steven were in.  The ride started off ok, we were all still very sleepy, until our taxi turned when the one ahead of us holding the rest of our friends didn’t.  Mat, Claire and I looked at each other and only panicked slightly.  When we pulled up to this tiny, really sketchy bus station, we all got out and exchanged really nervous looks.  It was still dark out and nobody was there except for this one weird guy who we weren’t even sure worked there.  We waited, and then a few minutes later, the other taxi showed up, thankfully.  Even after we all were together again, we were stuck outside with this one guy who was acting strange.  The bus station didn’t open until 5:50 and our bus was supposed to leave at 6am.
           
            While we were waiting for the bus, the strange guy greeted the few other brave souls who came at such an early hour.  Then, he started talking to the payphone, without picking up the actual phone.  Then he pointed to the payphone, then pointed two fingers at his eyes, and then back at the payphone in the “I’m watching you” gesture.  Thankfully he stayed outside while we went inside to wait and pay for our tickets.  While we were waiting for our bus, he started a mini uproar by screaming that a dog had bit him, and he ran around holding his arm, trying to show people.  There was no dog around, and he was not really bitten.  As a group we decided he must be a crackhead or something like that.  The rest of the trip there was uneventful, we got on all of the buses we needed to,  got to Tamarindo, ate lunch, and then picked up the car from the rental place.
           
            We drove to Coco Beach, which was 45 minutes away, with 6 people smushed in a 5 person car.  We resolved this problem by always making one person lay down across the laps of the people in the back.  Most of the time it was me (which I didn’t mind).  We stayed in a really cool hostel, called Coco Azul, in which we had our own kitchen area, a futon (which the guys shared), a single bed and double bed in the bedroom and we asked for another mattress which we put on the floor.

Car ride solution :D

Our kitchen area at Coco Azul

           We beached hopped the whole time and we made it to Playa Hermosa, possibly Playa Panama, we weren’t really sure, Playa Blanco (I think it was called) and Playa Tamarindo.  Playa Blanco was my favorite because you had to cross a bunch of rocks during low tide to get to it, and leave before high tide or else you would be stuck there!  I got sunburnt the first day, and I was called the lobster because of it.  We cooked most of our food, but one night we ate at a really touristy place called the Happy Snapper, which was a lot of fun.
           
Playa Hermosa


Playa Blanca


Playa Blanca

I forgot which beach this sunset was at


The Happy Snapper!!

Playing cards on the beach

All dressed up ready to go out on the town for some dancing!

            I was supposed to leave earlier than everyone, on Thursday, to go meet my friend Meagan at the San Jose Airport, but after realizing that I would get there at night, by myself, and remembering how sketchy it was that morning, I decided to wait until Steve and Alyssa left Friday morning.  I met Meagan at the hostel she was staying at in San Jose on Friday and all was good.  Meagan came back to Tirimbina with me on Saturday, and she stayed until Tuesday.  I showed her around the forest and a little bit around the town nearby.   I didn’t do much the rest of the week after Meagan left, because I was getting ready to go home to Rome on Friday.  I woke up at 6 of Friday and caught buses and taxis to the airport and flew home and made it home by midnight on Friday.  I had a nice relaxing stay at home, and then yesterday I flew back here with my parents and they are going to stay here until Sunday, and then travel to Las Suenos on the West coast.  I took them hiking through the forest this morning, and so far they like it!

            That’s it for me right now, and hopefully on Monday I will be helping Eugenia prepare for the arrival of kids!!

Friday, February 18, 2011

CRARC!!!

            Time to update again! Monday in the afternoon I helped Catherine and Gato bait mammal traps, even though it started to downpour shortly after we started.  Tuesday I didn’t do much because it was pouring the whole day.  Wednesday is where all the adventure was! 

            On Wednesday I traveled with the four German researchers, Vito, Eva, Simone and Max to Guayacan to the Costa Rican Amphibian Research Center!  We had to take four different buses to get there, and it took about 4 hours.  We arrived there around 4pm on Wednesday and stayed in the guest house that could fit 7 people.  Around 6pm we started off on a guided hike by the owner, Brian Kubicki, who studies the phenology of the herps (amphibians and reptiles) in Costa Rica.  This was one of the best hikes I have ever been on because we saw sooooo many things!  In the end we counted about 25 frog species alone, plus one bolitoglossid (a CR salamander), a few snakes, many spiders, and even some scorpions!  I was able to see some frog species that are endangered and only occur in certain spots of Costa Rica that not many people have seen!  After about 6 hours of hiking, we finally made it back to our guest house around midnight, but the guys kept searching around the hillside and found even more species while Eva and I went inside and got some food.  I kind of wish I had gone with them even though I was incredibly footsore from rubber boots, because they found Anotheca spinosa which I think is called the spiny headed tree frog, and it looks soooo cool.  Of course I didn’t have my camera with me because I haven’t received it yet, but I will get pictures from the researchers and post some (if I figure out how to post picts).  We returned yesterday evening, after staying only one night.

            The next adventure starts tomorrow!  It is spring break for the Ball State students, so I’m meeting some of them in San Jose tomorrow so we can leave for Tamarindo on Sunday morning.  Tamarindo is a place in CR that has a ton of beaches! I can’t wait because I haven’t been to a beach yet!  I’m only staying with them until Thursday, at which point I am leaving and going back to San Jose to meet my friend Meagan at the airport that night.  We are going to spend Friday in San Jose and then return to Tirimbina on Saturday.  She is going to stay the week with me (she had to reserve her own room though) and then she will return to the US March 3rd, and I will return March 4th!  Busy, busy, busy! I will post pictures as soon as I get them!

Monday, February 14, 2011

Blue Morpho!

        Well, a lot has happened since Wednesday when I updated last.  Thursday I went out into the forest with Laura again, helping her set up more traps, and in the afternoon I translated stuff for Eugenia while Laura patched up some more traps.  Friday morning I went out with Laura again, to help her bait the traps with the banana stuff that I helped her mush the other day.  I got to see howler monkeys (we set up a trap right under where they were hanging out actually), a ton of blue morphos (a BEAUTIFUL big blue butterfly), a red morph of the pit viper, and again, more cool butterflies and bugs.  Friday afternoon I went on the chocolate tour (again) with Matt, Claire and Julia (3 Ball State Students) and we saw an agouti and a beautiful hog-nosed pit viper!  Then later that night we all went on a night hike, but didn’t see much because it hadn’t rained in a while.

            Saturday I slept in and had a relaxing day.  I went out into the forest with Matt to help him collect ants.  He wanted a bullet ant, but instead we found some ants that mimic wasps with their coloring, so he got those instead.  Then I went to lunch and came back to my room to find that I had a new roommate!  Her name is Lisi (and I have no idea if I am spelling that right) and she is from Spain and she is a photographer.  She seems pretty cool.  In the afternoon I went into town with Claire, Julia, and Annie (another researcher) and we got some supplies and ice cream, because ice cream here is ridiculously cheap and tasty.  Then Saturday night, Matt, Julia and I watched the Chronicles of Narnia in Spanish (with English subtitles) which was pretty cool.

            Sunday it was raining in the morning so I didn’t do much, but in the afternoon I went to the hot springs with some of the researchers and some of the Tirimbina workers.  We had a whole bunch of beer and food, intending to make a day of it, and when we got there they told us we couldn’t bring in food or drinks (not knowing if we had any or not) but we brought them in anyway.  Nobody ever said anything! It was a lot of fun, and we didn’t get back until around 10pm. I was surprised that Lisi wasn’t in the room, but she had talked about going to Tortuguero for the day, so I thought she might be back later, but she didn’t come back at all.

            This morning I got up nice and early to go help Catherine, one of the Tirimbina researchers, but it was pouring buckets outside, so she said to see if I could help Christian, another Tirimbina researcher, collect caterpillars.  When he came by, he said that it was raining too hard to find larva, so we would do it later.  So I came back and went to bed for a bit, and now I’m updating!  I’m not sure what I will be doing today, if anything, but I will keep posting!

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Stuff to do!

Howdy all, thankfully a lot has been happening lately! Sunday I didn’t do much, just did some drawings of local flora and fauna.  Monday, again, I didn’t do too much, but I did see an iguana going to the bathroom in a tree, all of which landed on the cabin next to mine.  Also, I saw a lineated woodpecker, which is very similar to our pileated woodpecker.
           
            Tuesday I got woken up at 9am ( I didn’t fall asleep until 3am) by Eugenia, the woman who is in charge of the environmental education program here, saying that they were leaving for a meet with the directors of the schools and she invited me to come.  So I showered real quick and went with her and another person.  The meeting was cool, Eugenia just gave a quick presentation about the results from last year’s program, using my excel graphs, and made dates with the schools for when they are going to come.  The first school doesn’t come to Tirimbina until March 21, so I’m free to do whatever until then.  So Eugenia said that she would talk to the other programs to see if they needed an extra volunteer for a couple of weeks.
           
            In the meantime, on Tuesday, I volunteered to help two butterfly researchers mash up brown bananas with my hands to make bait for butterflies.  I got to talking to them, and ended up offering my services to one of them, Laura, for today.  So I got up at 7 and helped her carry stuff to make butterfly traps out into the rainforest.  All morning, until 1, we were out on trails putting up butterfly traps.  We saw lots of cool butterflies (go figure), a mot mot, a potoo, which is a really cool bird that looks like the extension of a branch, dendrobatis pumillio, and some cool bugs.  We went out again after lunch, but for a shorter time, and just to drop off the rest of the traps.  When I got back, I enjoyed a nice, cold beer in my hammock. I’m going to help her tomorrow too, and we are going to set up the traps we dropped off, and hopefully end up baiting them in the afternoon.  Then, this weekend, I think I am going to Monteverde with some of the Ball State students. 

            Next week I will be working with different people on butterfly stuff, collecting larva and whatnot.  So yay for keeping busy!!

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Jessica left me :(

           So Jessica left me this morning to return to Canada!  She told me on Thursday that she had decided to go home early because she was sick and felt like she had seen what she wanted to see already.  She has had a cold with a horrible cough for the past week and a half, the poor thing! She was supposed to stay until the end of February, so I don’t know what I’m going to do now that I don’t have a partner in crime anymore!

            Time to recap the week! (Well since Tuesday at least).  So Tuesday night I ended up playing soccer with some of the Tirimbina staff and the Indiana students in a small soccer field next door.  It was a lot of fun!  Afterwards I went out for beers with some of the Tirimbina staff at a restaurant nearby called El Chante.  Nothing exciting really happened on Wednesday.  Thursday was one of the Indiana student’s birthdays, so they had a bbq at one of their houses and then Jessica and I met some of them at a local bar call Kasa Luna.  It was nice because Jessica and I got there before everyone else and had a little celebratory goodbye drink to her.  We couldn’t go out last night because she had to get up at 5 this morning.  Friday was pretty relaxed, nothing really exciting happened.

            Today is rainy and kind of cold.  It doesn’t really look like it is going to clear up anytime soon, it’s just been drizzling for the past hour.  I hope it does clear up though, because I would like to go to the ATM and then hit up the supermarket.  I might also be going out tonight with some people from Tirimbina, but nothing is set in stone, as usual haha.

            Good news though! My camera made it to Costa Rica, it is now just a matter of when it gets picked up and brought to Tirimbina!  So hopefully I should have it sometime this week!

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

From my hammock :D

            It’s been over a week, so I guess I’ll update again.  I really haven’t been doing much since I am pretty much waiting for the kids to go back to school.  I finished with all of the paperwork stuff, and now I am just thinking of ways to evaluate the program.  So last week was a lot of relaxation time. 
           
            I think it was on Wednesday that I finally got my hammock!  Simon (pronounced Simone), one of the German researchers, knew somebody who works at Tirimbina who was going to a town that sells hammocks I guess.  So if I gave this guy 20,000 colones, (about 40 bucks), he would buy me a hammock and bring it back with the change and receipt.  So I gave the guy the money last Tuesday and go the hammock last Wednesday! But I couldn’t hang it up just then because I needed cord to tie it to the wood columns. 
           
            Other exciting news for Wednesday (or Thursday, I can’t remember) I may have had a tick on me (which I took out with tweezers) and I saw an armadillo at night!  There were a bunch of kids staying at Tirimbina, and some of the girls saw the armadillo and were screaming about a giant rat.  It was funny, but all their screaming scared it away.
           
            Then one night last week Jessica and I and some of the researchers went over to the house of some of the workers at Tirimbina.  One of the girls who lived there was Eugenia, the woman I volunteer for.  It was fun, there place is beautiful! And they pay less that $100 each a month for it.  If I go over there again, I will definitely take pictures lol.  Speaking of pictures, I don’t have my camera yet, but it’s on its way and should be here soon!

            This weekend was fun, I didn’t do much Friday except get cord for my hammock and hang it up.  Saturday morning I was approached by two of the Indiana students, Matt and Claire, who asked me if I wanted to go to San Jose in a couple hours and stay in a hostel there that night.  I said yes, mainly because I want to know how to get to San Jose and back by bus without a problem.  So we left around 12:30, and actually got a ride from a Tirimbina researcher to the bus station instead of picking up a bus.  We got on the bus and got to San Jose around 3:30ish, and had a taxi drop us off at the mall.  We walked to our hostel from there, which was like a 5 minute walk, and actually met up with a couple of the other Indiana students (and Jessica) who left for San Jose on Friday and ended up staying in the same hostel!  Then Matt, Claire and I went out to dinner, and headed back to the mall to catch movie.  Jessica met us there and we ended up watching “Little Fockers”, which we thought would be in Spanish, but it was in English with Spanish subtitles.   Then we all went back to the hostel and chilled until we went to bed.

            The reason Matt and Claire wanted to go to San Jose was so that Matt could go to church Sunday morning, because he is Mormon and didn’t know of any other Mormon churches closer.  So while Matt was at church, Claire and I walked around San Jose for a bit and then hit up the mall.  Matt met us at the mall when he was done with church and we walked to the post office, but it was closed because it was Sunday.  So then we caught the buses back to Tirimbina and were back here by 4:30. 

            Yesterday was another relaxing day because I just sat in my hammock and read, or watched the toucans play.  I also saw a beautiful green iguana climb up the tree not far from my hammock.  And I got to see a tiny gecko that one of the researchers found and brought over!  I’m not sure what is in store for today or the rest of this week, but I will keep you posted!

Sunday, January 23, 2011

New Roommate!!

             A lot has happened since I last updated! First of all, I got a roommate! I don’t think I mentioned my room set up before, but in my room there is one set of bunk beds, a dresser type thing (more just like shelves for clothes) a desk, and the bathroom (with a shower) is right next door.  So I got my roommate a few days ago (I think Wednesday night?) and she is awesome! Her name is Jessica, she is from Quebec and French is her first language and English is her second, and she knows very little Spanish.  She is 22 and looks a lot like me! Since she’s been here, I’ve had tourists come up to me and ask me if that was me they saw taking pictures in the rainforest (my camera is broke, so obviously not lol) confusing her for me!
           
            Anyway, now I have a partner in crime and can actually do things!  We did the chocolate tour and the bat tour (because volunteers get to do the tours for free!) the day after she arrived and it was fun! I saw a weevil (an adorable insect) on the chocolate tour and learned how a fungus is threatening the cocoa fruits.  On the bat tour I got to pet a bat!  They are so cute! Then, the next night, I was eating by myself because Jessica was cooking her own food, so this group of overzealous tourists adopted me and invited me to eat with them (some of them were the ones who mistook me for Jessica) and so when Jessica walked by, they roped her in to our tables too. 
           
            Later that night Jessica and I went on our own night hike by ourselves because the “official” tour-guide lead one was full.  On our hike we saw sooo many cool things!  We saw a giant tarantula (about the size of my palm) on a tree trunk, we saw a katydid that was camouflaged like a leaf, but he was on a pole trying to camouflage and it wasn’t working out for him.  Sorry Katydid, but last time I checked, poles don’t have leaves.  Right above him, on a tree was a stick bug!  Then we saw a juvenile pit viper (yes, they are poisonous), along with several different types of spiders and frogs.  We also saw scorpions on some trees thanks to one of the German researchers, Vito! Apparently scorpions have something in their skin that glows green when under a UV light, and Vito knew this, and had a UV light on him, so we got to see these tiny scorpions that we wouldn’t have noticed otherwise!  We have also seen a few basilisks running around here too! (no, not the things from Harry Potter, Google them if you don't know what they are, because they are cool!!)
           
            The next day we walked to the little town nearby to check it out and get supplies.  I was on a mission to find a hammock, but I forgot to look up the word in Spanish (assuming it would be the same, or close enough so people would know what I’m trying to say).  The word in Spanish is “maca”, close enough people! But alas, no one understood me, and I didn’t find any.  So we came back and since it was so hot out, we went looking for a place to swim in the Sarapiqui River, but we didn’t find a safe place to swim.  Then, around dinner time, Jessica and I went to the little party at Todd’s house, the kid I mentioned before, with some of the other students from Ball state.  I guess it was his host mothers’ birthday, and that is what they were celebrating.  So I got to meet a whole bunch of Costa Ricans, and made some new friends, it was fun.  Then, when Jessica and I got back, one of the German researchers, Simon, had found a very pretty type of glass frog that apparently he had been looking for for years, so he showed us because it wasn’t very far away.  I hope it is still hanging out there when I get my camera! I want a picture!

So, it is now Sunday and I don’t have anything planned.  I might go for a hike later or something, not sure yet.  But, that is all I had to update, and I will post again soon!

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

The sun is shining!!!

The sun is shining, I think it’s about time to update again! So far, since last time I updated, not much has happened.  Since the kids here are on vacation, there isn’t much else to do but paperwork.  They have me pretty much grading papers from the last time the kids were here.  They have a bat program, where the kids come here to Tirimbina and they take a pre-test on what they know and their opinions on bats, then they get a presentation from us on bats, then we go out into the rainforest to look for bats, and then the kids take a post-test, which is the same questions as the pre-test.  So right now I’m inputting the data from the pre and post-tests into excel to see if the kids learned something.  It’s no hike in the rainforest, but it keeps me busy, and I don’t mind it.

            On the social front, not much has happened, until today haha. I have kind of made friends with one of the cleaning ladies, as well as the bartender (not because I’ve been drinking!).  I have noticed that every day for lunch there is about 10-15 students my age who come to Tirimbina to hang out and eat, but I have never said much to any of them until today.  One kid named Matt came up and introduced himself and we had a nice conversation about what we were each doing here, and explained to me that all of these people my age were from a university in Indiana who were staying with families really close to Tirimbina, and their Spanish teacher was staying here.  He invited me to come play cards with them or hang out with them sometime, which was nice of him.  Then another kid from the group, named Todd, who I had talked to briefly once before came over to see how I was doing and to invite me to a party at his host families house this Saturday where pretty much all the Indiana kids will be.  So yay with my social life!

            Last post I commented on how I was probably going to walk to town soon.  Well, so far I have only walked to the supermarket, which is 10 minutes away, and only half way to town.  It was pretty uneventful except I got a lot of honks and shouts (because I am CLEARLY not from around here hahaha).
           
            So far just walking around the main part of Tirimbina where the cabins and reception area are I have seen several little lizards, some cool bugs, some pretty neat birds and once I saw some monkeys playing around in the trees.  My camera is broke, so no pictures for now, but hopefully soon! I miss everyone and I hope to update soon again :D    

Saturday, January 15, 2011

The First Few Days

          So I finally made it to Tirimbina Thursday morning! I was supposed to get here Wednesday, but there were a few hitches, because nothing can ever go according to plan.  I got up at 4:15am Wednesday and mom and I were on the road at 4:30.  My flight was supposed to leave at 7, but they had to de-ice and anti-ice the plane before we left, so of course we left late.  I was supposed to get into Orlando at 10 and get on my connecting flight to Costa Rica at 10:35, but my plane didn’t get in until 10:25. Luckily they let the people who were going on connected flights get off the plane first.  I just made it to my second flight.  The plan was to fly into San Jose, take a taxi to the bus stop, get on a bus to the Sarapiqui bus stop, and take another taxi from there to Tirimbina.  Once I landed safely in San Jose, Costa Rica, I got a taxi to the bus stop.  Once I got to the bus stop, around 2pm I tried to buy a ticket to Sarapiqui, but the first guy I talked to spoke quietly and wasn’t very patient with me, and all I understood was that something was closed.  So after a brief panic attack, I asked the other ticket guy and he gave me a ticket and said the bus was leaving at 3:30.  So I got on the bus (I almost missed it because it wasn’t labeled) and was on my way to Sarapiqui (after the bus hit a taxi on the way out of the parking lot).  Two hours later, we stopped at a bus station rest stop and I was very confused as to where we were because my instructions said the bus would only be a 2 hour ride. 

            So I asked a woman who I had heard speak English what was going on, and she explained to me that the main road that the bus usually takes to Sarapiqui had a landslide and is closed (I guess that’s what the first ticket guy was trying to tell me), and the bus we were on was going the long way around the landslide.  Instead of 2 hours of a bus ride, it ended up being a 6 hour bus ride.  I got to know the woman who spoke to me in English, she was from the U.K. and now lives in Costa Rica as a biologist (AWESOME!!!!).  So we didn’t end up getting to Sarapiqui until 9:30ish at night and there were no taxis in sight.  So Alex, the woman from the U.K. and her boyfriend Felix, said they’d give me a ride to Tirimbina in their cattle truck, in hopes that someone would be there to give me a room.  Alex had already offered the third seat in her car to another woman she met on the bus, so I ended up sitting on Alex’s lap for the first few minutes until we dropped the other woman off.  When we got to Tirimbina, turns out everyone had already left, and I was S.O.L.  So Alex and Felix brought me back to their place to sleep for the night.  They live about 5-10 minutes (drive) away from Tirimbina.  They were soooo hospitable! I don’t know what I would have done without Alex!!  Probably would have had several breakdowns. 
           
           Alex and Felix have this quite large farm with dogs, and cows and ponies! Alex told me a little about the research she was doing, and I hope I get time to go help her out! In the morning, they made me a traditional Costa Rican breakfast!!!  When I was talking to Alex in the morning, she said she had missed the 1:30 bus to Sarapiqui by 5 minutes, and I told her that it happened for a reason! So she could adopt a poor lost student!
           
            Then Alex brought me back to Tirimbina where I was welcomed by the volunteer coordinator and showed my room.  The woman in charge of the environmental education program wasn’t here when I arrived so I prepared my room and walked around a bit when it wasn’t pouring.  Since the kids are on break, I am just pretty much grading quizzes that they did last year and putting them in excel.  The fun part is that I get to read all of the names of the kids, which have at least 4 names to them, and they usually write their whole name. LOL.

           Other than the small hitch in the beginning, everything else is going pretty well. The food is great (they really do have beans and rice as a part of every meal) and even though it is pretty much constantly raining, it is warm (60-70s).  The internet here is sporadic so I will update when I can! The next adventure I assume will be walking to town to buy supplies (by myself!).