Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Acabamos de llegar...
¡Hola amigos! So here I am making a blog post...cool. Been here 2 days but it seems like a couple weeks. we all flew in on Sunday, got picked up at the San José airport by Kathy (a Costa Rican born Quaker from Monteverde) and Moncho (tall, long/dark-haired tico) and went to Hotel Balmoral in the center of San José. Tico drivers are insane--today there was an old woman in front of me crossing the street and she almost got owned--she had to kind of hop/jump to avoid the fender of a typical tico driver. So that's been fun so far--we've been doing a good deal of human frogger. Anyway--so we all got here and went out to dinner and began what has so far been a pretty ridiculous frenzy of meeting people (30 students from all over the place--mostly public universities). The director (Alan) is a middle-aged American with a longish ponytail who is very relaxed and down to earth and a pretty hardcore biologist/ecologist (as are all the program people)--he seems to have a pretty solid lifestyle--living in the cloud forest teaching people like me about the badass-ness of tropical nature. Alan then introduced his wife, Karen, the tropical diversity professor, who said while laughing, "I usually don't drink before meeting my students." Good show. Turns out she's really funny and wicked smart--told us a whole bunch of schtuff about the evolution of butterfly toxicity and coloration whil we were in a butterfly garden today. Then there's Pablo, bilingual Costa Rican who's real fun (soccer player and former b-pong champion) and Tegan, a Bates graduate who's been on the program before. They're the resident assistant type people who also help teach. Anyway--I kind of have to hurry but I'll try to tell you a little more. Today, we had our first "humans in the tropics" lecture which was pretty long--about urbanization and the green revolution and population growth and such. Then an urban planner came and talked about how there's a whole bunch of urban development plans but none have ever been implemented...so the Central Valley is hellah sprawled and the government is kind of inept at that. After lunch, we went out into the city to survey 3 ticos to find out their ecological footprints, which were all way better than any of ours. It was fun talking to them a little bit and using spanish and all that jazz. Um...so yeah--we've been exploring the city a little bit in pretty comfortable 75ish partly cloudy w/ a breeze weather. tough life. Observation: costa rican females (ticas) anywhere near our age tend to be attractive. ... Anyway--by tonight, many of us are itching (not yet literally) to actually get to the rainforest, having come for that rather than the urbanness. Tomorrow we head out on a 2+ week camping trip along the west coast of the country. Tomorrow night, we will spend the first of a few nights camping on the beach on the southern Osa peninsula and touring mangrove swamps and lowland wet rainforests. Word. Probably won't be able to post again until the end of february...just so ya know. By then, I will have seen too much to write about...but I'll do my best...keeping my fingers crossed for the elusive jaguar. Ciao.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
5 comments:
Yo, Howdy--
The state of Maine is closed today, 2/13...getting a foot of snow on top of 2+ feet then up to an inch of freezing rain. Filling the tub as I write.
Sounds like a great adventure. Update when you can and stay safe.
120 showed up at Readfield Dem caucus and Obama got 6 delegates to Maine convention and Hilary 2...
L
DOD
I AM SO JEALOUS. It's freezing rain here and I hate you. If I could have squeezed myself into that crazy pack of yours, I would have. :)
I wrote a comment last night but apparently I didn't press the right button as usual. We had so much bad weather yesterday and there was so much ice, that we are trying hard not to hate you. So glad that the group is good and that your leader is mellow and into the same stuff you are. Enjoy the beach and parks and people and sloths and don't forget to drink good water and watch out for slugs and such.Happy Valentine's Day! did you read my card yet? Love always, dom
So much hostility from your familia. Geez... I'm glad you are alive and adventuring. Later, gator.
I am fully living the 75 degree tropical-ness vicariously through you (plus hanging onto the memory of that last, glorious surf sessshhh) because I've been sitting at the end of Hwy110 roundabout L.A. for a few days now, just dying to get on with the study abroad fantasticasm :P
um...you're a badass and I'm proud to have you as a friend...that's pretty much it.
alohas,
JRizzle
Post a Comment