Monday, December 31, 2007

2007 round-up

Here is a little photo mosaic of notable things I've seen and done this year:

Woo-hoo, I did a lot in 2007! I was based in Costa Rica for the entire year (and still will be until this summer) working on my dissertation, which is pretty much a 24/7 job. I made a couple of trips back to Miami this year to update my advisor and committee on my progress here. My advisor also traveled to Costa Rica for a few days to see what I’m doing firsthand. In July I took a trip to Mexico to present my research in the palm seed dispersal and predation symposium at the 2007 annual meeting of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation. I helped a dazed and confused sloth. I took care of and played with a cute (though slightly inflated) wiener dog named Salchichita until she moved to the city. My mom and her friend Judy came to La Selva for a visit in September and we had a great time seeing the forest and celebrating my 26th birthday. I got to meet Jane Goodall -- one of my childhood heroes. Thanksgiving at La Selva was a really extravagant affair filled with friends, fireworks, and food! And finally, Carlos and I spent Christmas in La Fortuna, soaking in the hot springs, eating good food, and relaxing for once!

I hope that 2008 will be just as great if not more so. I will be finishing up data collection, driving across the USA, teaching, writing my dissertation and submitting papers for publication, and hopefully traveling to a couple of conferences to present my research and start inquiring about post-docs. ¡Feliz año!

New year's eve tonight

Hey, tonight is new year's eve! It really sneaked up on me and I can't believe that it is soon going to be 2008. I really liked 2007, but this year did seem to last a long time. I am trying to make a little list of resolutions -- I never really do this, but I thought it would be a good exercise to organize and re-prioritize things for the upcoming year. Most of my resolutions pertain to my dissertation and its completion -- pretty boring sounding but definitely topping the list of next year's priorities.

As for new year's eve, I don't have any major plans. I might go out to dinner with a few of the other researchers from the station, but it won't be anything big -- I do have to work tomorrow! I haven't ever really been that into new year's parties so Carlos and I will probably take it easy at home and maybe watch some fireworks outside at midnight. The ticos LOVE any excuse to shoot off fireworks...the louder the better. It sounded like a war zone on Christmas!

Friday, December 28, 2007

Back in La Selva

Yay -- Carlos and I made it back from La Fortuna late last night after a pretty long bus ride (it really was only 2.5 hours, but the bus stopped about every 5 meters to let people on and off). Our vacation was so awesome and it is great to come back to work revitalized. The hotel we stayed in (called Hotel San Bosco) was excellent -- it had 2 pools and jacuzzis, nice breakfast included each morning, cable TV, AC, hot water, and really pretty plants everywhere. It was well worth a bit of extra money to stay at such a nice place.

Fortuna is really crowded with tourists at this time of year and they were everywhere. It was pretty strange to see so many gringos everywhere! The weather was fairly cloudy (since it's the rainy season after all!) the entire time, but it was very nice. Our first day there we spent mostly walking around the town looking at souvenirs (nothing interesting -- just the same old junk they sell everywhere here) and relaxing at the hotel. The following day (Christmas), we went to Baldi Hot Springs and enjoyed all the pools and waterfalls. Baldi is a really fun spa/hot springs/water park which we had visited before. Our third day in La Fortuna we relaxed and did some more exploring around the town. Yesterday we stayed in town, checked out, and ate a really nice Italian food lunch before hopping on the bus to head back home.

Here are a bunch of random pictures from our trip. It was weird to spend Christmas here in Costa Rica (I missed the cold weather back in Washington), but we had a great time relaxing away from La Selva! Woo-hoo -- I hope everyone had a great Christmas vacation too!
(one of the pools at our hotel)

(Volcan Arenal -- the peak is covered in clouds, but at night you can see lava!)

(one of the warm pools at Baldi)

(another set of pools at Baldi)

(Tanagers eating some plantains)

(Italian restaurant where we ate our last lunch in Fortuna)

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Vacation starts tomorrow

Tomorrow, Carlos and I head off to La Fortuna for a 3-day vacation and boy do I need it! We are currently finishing up here on station to prepare for leaving and this past week has been super busy -- for some reason busier than usual.

We are going to take the earliest bus (5:30am) from Puerto Viejo to Ciudad Quesada and from there take a short ride to La Fortuna. We are setting out so early since tomorrow is going to be a huge travel day around here...blargh...lots of people. We should get to Fortuna before lunch. We don't have anything really planned for tomorrow but the following day (25 Dec) we are planning on going to Baldi -- a hot springs/water park/resort. We've been there before and it was really fun with slides, pools with lots of different temperatures, waterfalls, etc. Woo-hoo!

We'll return to Pto. Viejo on the 27th and then it's back to work. Merry Christmas everyone!

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Felt crafting

I’ve been really into making more felt things recently during nights at home after dinner when we watch TV. I was inspired to make a red poppy a couple of nights ago after browsing the totally radical craft site called Etsy (www.etsy.com). If you’ve never heard of this site before, you should really check it out -- especially if you are into crafting. Basically, you can buy crafts that other people make (the selection is enormous!) and you can also open a little store on the site and sell your own stuff. I might set up a little shop when I get back to the states since it is really easy and a good deal (20 cents to list an item and Etsy gets about 3% of each sale). Fun!

Anyway, back to my recent craftiness. Two nights ago I stitched together a little red poppy (inspired by the seller Lupin on Etsy). It looks really pretty and would make a nice pin maybe.

Last night I made 2 more little potential pins: a stack of pancakes and a pretzel! Mwahahaha! Maybe I will make more tonight!

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Gecko wake-up call

Has this ever happened to you? It is 6am and you are awake but still snoozing. All of a sudden -- SPLAT!! -- a huge fat (6cm body length) gecko falls on your face! Well, it happened to me this morning and it really freaked me out. Once it splatted on me (it was heavy!) I sat up and slapped it away and Carlos said that the gecko looked just as scared as I was! Heehee, at least it wasn't a scorpion like I initially thought.

That may be weird but the even weirder thing is that this has happened to me before. I was sitting on my bed watching TV in my last apartment in Florida and a little gecko landed on my head! What the heck! At least geckos in the house are supposed to be lucky right?

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Christmas travel planning

I will be staying in Costa Rica for Christmas this year and this will be my first Christmas away from home and my family. I am really going to miss everyone and it will be weird to not be in a cold/seasonal place for the holidays! I am going to take a break from working though -- Carlos and I have just made reservations in a nice hotel in the town of La Fortuna. Fortuna is about 3 hours away (by bus) and is a nice little town situated at the base of an active volcano: Volcan Arenal. We have been there before (back in September 2006) and it was great! There are gorgeous hot springs and waterfalls to hike. The hotel we will be staying at is pretty posh (for our hostel-level standards!) and has cable, air conditioning, a pool, and jacuzzi! We will leave Puerto Viejo on 24 December and come back on the 27th. We will probably spend a full day at one of the hot spring parks (probably the 25th) and spend the rest of our time relaxing. This will be the first vacation I've had for a while. I think the last time I took a break was in July when I visited Mexico (and even then I was pretty busy!) so this will be fun. Carlos and I don't even take weekends off here!

Sketch post -- Day 7


Today's sketch is of a village scene from the Greek island of Santorini. This is basically a work in progress. A couple of the domes are colored now, but the sketch is still far from finished. One of these days I will be able to visit Greece -- and eat real Feta!

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Sketch post -- Day 6

Nothing much going on here today -- I collected some data and did some laundry. I am probably going to go home soon to work on writing a paper (almost all done and ready to submit!).

Here is a sketch of a Dipodomys sp. -- a kangaroo rat!

Friday, December 14, 2007

Sketch post -- Day 5


Here are a couple of agouti sketches I did a couple of months ago. Agoutis are suprisingly difficult for me to draw -- if you don't get the face or hump in their back just right...they look weird.

I drew agoutis from two species: one is found here in Costa Rica (D. punctata) and the other (D. leporina) ranges throughout South America.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Sketch post -- Day 4

Today we have two sketches for the price of one (one is a re-run though)...these are sketches of some 8-bit and 16-bit characters from two of my favorite Nintendo games.

I've talked about Mega Man before, but Ness (the other character) comes from a little-known game on the Super Nintendo called EarthBound. This is my absolute favorite video game of all time! It is an RPG about a boy (Ness) and his 3 friends (Paula, Jeff, and Poo) who set out to save the world from an evil power (Giygyas). This game is really fun and very quirky. It has a pretty significant cult following, but the game was not very successful for Nintendo commercially so there are no sequels in the US. I still have my original game and SNES console back home and play it every now and again. If you like Super Nintendo RPGs you should definitely give EarthBound a play!

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Sketch post -- Day 3

Here is a sketch I did back in September when I watched the movie My Neighbor Totoro for the first time.
This sketch is of a scene in the movie where Totoro stands at a bus stop in the rain waiting for his bus. The bus he is waiting for is not a normal bus -- it is a cat-bus...basically a huge cat with lots of legs, windows, a door, and mice with glowing eyes as lights in the front and back of the "bus." Rather than an umbrella, Totoro only has a leaf to shield him from the rain. Totoro is a forest spirit who lives in a big tree and harvests acorns and other seeds with 2 other Totoros (a tiny white one and a medium-sized blue one). This is a great movie with fantastic animation produced by a famous Japanese animation studio: Studio Ghibli. I also highly recommend the movie Spirited Away by the same director (Hayao Miyazaki) from the same studio (Ghibli).

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Sketch post -- Day 2


Here is the sketch from the 2nd page of my Moleskine. I have drawn 2 different views of a leaf chafer beetle (Macraspis lucida) that I found one day in the forest. I found this beetle dead on the trail and brought him back to my office. After arranging the legs and letting him dry out for a few days, I pinned him and made some tags so now he is a museum specimen. This beetle species is really beautiful and I would like to bring him back to the states, but if I can't I will likely donate him to the arthropod museum here so they can add this M. lucida to their collection.
PS. I have also included a photo of my specimen so that you can see how shiny it is!

Monday, December 10, 2007

Sketch post -- Day 1

I think I am going to try and post on this blog more frequently than I have been. I was really on a roll in November with NaBloPoMo (despite missing one day) and it was fun trying to think of interesting things to put on my blog. I have also been making an effort to sketch a little every day in the beautiful Moleskine sketchbook my parents gave me for my birthday. So, maybe I can try and post a scanned picture from my sketchbook each day! This is a pretty daunting task, but I just scanned a whole bunch of pages a couple of days ago so there is a little backlog that should take care of a few days' posts! OK, lets start from the beginning. Here is sketch 1 from my sketchbook:

This is a chambered nautilus (no, not the submarine from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea...it's Nautilus pompilius!).

Saturday, December 08, 2007

Motmot

Yesterday was a beautiful day in the forest. The weather was warm with a cool breeze and the light was great. There were no tourists to walk around on the trails and the forest was silent except for the constant buzz of insects and the chirps of birds. While checking one of my seed depots, I heard a commotion in the vines above my head -- I had startled a Rufous motmot (Baryphthengus martii). These birds are beautiful and this guy let me get pretty close before he would fly off to another perch. I probably spent a good 10 minutes stalking him to take a picture, but I never got a good one so I drew a sketch of him in my notebook.

Isn't Motmot just about the best name for a bird ever?

Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Animals, animals everywhere


Wow, today has definitely been an animal-rich day! I usually see tons of animals each day (if you count birds, lizards, insects, peccaries) but today I saw an unusual abundance of more rare animals. This morning I saw a huge tayra (Eira barbara) which is a member of the weasel family but is BIG -- body is about a meter long plus a half-meter (or more) bushy black tail. On my way to lunch, I heard a commotion in the trees and watched as a group of howler monkeys (3 males, 2 females, 2 babies) jumped from branch to branch, making their way to the bridge, then crossed on the bridge cables to the other side of the river. This happens fairly frequently but is always fun to see. Finally, this afternoon (about an hour ago) I saw a huge Boa! He was at least 1.5 m long and was really chubby.

Monday, December 03, 2007

New blog header

Yesterday I added a new header to my blog -- did you notice? I like it, but I think it still needs a little work. There are a couple of other sketches in my notebook that I still need to scan and tinker with a little. I have Photoshop on my computer now (yay!) and it is a big help when recombining images. I have gotten pretty good at using Photoshop (for instance I used it heavily to color, arrange, and crop images for the ATBC logo I made a few months back), but I am still restricted to its most basic functions. Let me know what you think of this header -- at least it's better than the bland, text-only heading that I had up there before!

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Sad

I am feeling pretty sad right now because yesterday I talked to my parents and learned that our dog Sierra passed away the night before. It feels like we lost a member of our family. She was over 15 years old, which is extraordinary for a large dog (most German Shorthair Pointers don’t live to see 11). I know that she had a very happy life and she was not in any pain -- it all happened very suddenly. I had known Sierra for the majority of my life. All of our animals are getting very old so this was inevitable, but it is still really hard to deal with when it actually happens.


I also still miss little Tiffy our Siamese kitty who died a few months ago. She was 18 (I think -- it’s hard to keep track after a while!) and she is also very much missed. Tyler is still alive and kicking and now he needs lots of extra attention since his buddies are gone. I just thought I would let everyone know so that you can understand if I neglect this blog for a few days or if I sound a little less than upbeat.

Friday, November 30, 2007

Estoy aprendiendo

I have been living in Costa Rica for over a year now (actually around a year and a half) and my Spanish skills are still pretty sad. I am able to hold conversations and discuss my research with Spanish-speaking scientists, but I am far from fluent. This makes sense since I spend most of my time on a station run by and populated mostly by English-speakers. English is the language of science and although researchers here come from many countries all over the globe (USA, England, Germany, France, Bulgaria, Colombia, Peru, Panama, to name a few), everyone is able to speak at least rudimentary English. It is really difficult to practice Spanish when I have a constant crutch of English to fall back on.

When I worked in Santa Rosa National Park for 2 months a while back, I became better in my Spanish speaking abilities. This was basically because no one there spoke English. I would converse with the cleaning ladies and over time got a bit better…until I came back to La Selva! Oh well, I am trying to get better now by practicing with a Rosetta Stone program (level 2!). I am not sure if it is working and I think the best way to learn is immersion, but that’s not going to ever happen here!

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Mega Man

Have you ever played the game Mega Man on the original Nintendo Entertainment System (NES)? I haven’t played much myself, but I love its sequels Mega Man II and III. Mega Man II was one of my most favorite games on the NES. The plot of the game is pretty neat: A scientist (Dr. Light) has invented robots with artificial intelligence to help humans complete housecleaning, laboratory, and industrial tasks. However, Dr. Light’s assistant (Dr. Wiley) grew jealous of his advisor’s success and reprogrammed most of the robots for the evil purpose of conquering the world. One robot (Mega Man) escaped reprogramming and volunteered to destroy the other robots and prevent Dr. Wiley’s world domination. At first, Mega Man can only shoot little bullets, but as he defeats each boss robot, he acquires that robot’s special powers (e.g. time stopper from Flash Man, leaf shield from Wood Man, bubble lead from Bubble Man). For each game, Mega Man ultimately faces Dr. Wiley and stops him from taking over the world.

The original Mega Man game is infamous for its difficulty, but Mega Man II and III, while hard, were not impossible games to beat (I beat both). There have been many many more titles in the Mega Man series (more than 10 I think!) but I have only played the first three. Ah, the original Nintendo -- here is a little picture I drew of Mega Man shooting from the second game:

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Forest sights

Yesterday afternoon I went to check one of my seed dispersal depots to track down some dispersed seeds and I noticed something. Hmmm...there is a HUGE tree that fell over...hey...where is my cage? Oh, there is a huge branch crushing one side of it...and it was only missed by the HUGE tree by about 5 cm. Hey, where are my uncaged seeds...there are a few...the rest are...UNDER THE TREE! I got them out and moved them away from this new log. This morning I can't go out to my site because they are chopping the tree with chainsaws and putting guide-wires into other trees to keep them from falling now. It is too dangerous to be around that. What wacky fun! I am just glad that the tree didn't land on my cage, or a peccary, or me!

Yesterday I found some beautiful orchids in bloom. There are tons of orchids all over the trees here in the forest, but these are actually growing on a stump in the lab clearing!
This morning I also saw a really pretty male Curassow (Crax rubra) sitting in a sun beam and warming up. These birds are so cute with their fluffy feathered heads and they are really big -- turkey-sized (but probably bigger!).

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Last night

Last night there was a going-away party for one of the researchers here. Carlos and I went over to the party (it happened to be next-door...nice and convenient!) for a pasta and salad dinner. The food was good and for dessert we had flan. It was really fun to hang out with the gang of researchers from the station and everyone had a good time.

After coming home, we watched the movie Sicko directed by Michael Moore (of Fahrenheit 9/11 fame). It was a well-done, but super-depressing movie. I have always been appalled by the health "care" system in the states, but to hear some of these stories was horrible. I may want to eventually live somewhere that is not in the US -- wow, it is definitely a worthwhile movie to see. But be forewarned, it will make you angry and want to move to France. Let's go -- they have good cheese!

Rats!

Well, yesterday I totally forgot to write a blog post! So much for NaBloPoMo -- to make up for it I will try to write 2 today. Yesterday afternoon Carlos and I had to make a trip to town to pay the electricity bill (exciting, no?). We brought all the numbers on the newly-installed meter with us to pay and of course, since this is Costa Rica, they couldn't find the account...using their numbers...from the meter they installed...hmmm. What they needed was the name that the account was under -- our landlord. I had his first name and his first last name, but not his SECOND last name so of course the lady could not find the account...hmmm. I should know by now that logic really has no place in this country. Silly me! We are going to send someone to town to try and pay again today -- we shall see if it works.

To cheer ourselves up, we went to the ice cream parlor. Yay -- ice cream!

Sunday, November 25, 2007

A moth

Last night Carlos and I found a really nice moth in our room. It kept flying up to the light then spiralling down. Finally I guess he got tired and he just rested on the DVD player. He kept so still that I was able to sketch him in my notebook. This moth is a member of the family Arctiidae so we named him Arcty.
After I finished my drawing, Carlos put him outside so that he could be happier. Bon voyage Arcty!

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Animal watching

I know I've said it about a million times, but there are so many animals to see here! I get a little complacent sometimes seeing 20 species of beautifully-colored birds each day during lunch but this place is great. I am trying to take my camera everywhere with me (even to the comedor for meals) so that I can take pictures of all the beautiful critters I see on a daily basis. Here are some photos I took yesterday.


The first is of a bird called the Green Honeycreeper (Chlorophanes spiza). It was so hot yesterday that this guy didn't mind me getting close to snap a photo. Carlos and I also found another 3-toed sloth snoozing in a tree really close to the lab clearing. He is actually still there now (I can almost see him from my office window!) and still sleeping. In the picture you can see that one of his back feet isn't even holding onto anything -- it is very tiring being a sloth.

Friday, November 23, 2007

Thanksgiving -- the aftermath

Well, today is the day after Thanksgiving and the food last night was great. There was a ton of turkey (10 of them imported from the states, to be exact!), mashed potatoes, gravy, cheese platter (woo-hoo!), cranberry sauce, fresh fruits, stuffing, sweet potatoes, ayote (like a pumpkin) pie, wine, and a bunch of other goodies. My favorites were the mashed potatoes with gravy, ayote pie, cheese platter, and cranberry sauce. I can’t believe it -- they actually had cranberry sauce -- and it was the kind from a can! That is my favorite! I ate a lot of food and had a good time with all my friends. There was also a fireworks show and lots of decorations for Christmas. I had a really good time and although I would rather be home enjoying Thanksgiving with my family, it was nice to have something here to celebrate.

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Thanksgiving

Hey, today is Thanksgiving day -- happy Thanksgiving everybody! Although Costa Rica doesn't celebrate it (duh), La Selva has a delicious Thanksgiving feast each year since most of the researchers here are gringo. It is also a nice chance for the ticos to learn about our holiday. There will be a big party on station tonight around 6pm with tons of delicious turkey, potatoes, pumpkin pie, etc. I was here for it last year too and it was a nice, relaxing dinner. They even have candles and tablecloths! I will bring my camera with me tonight so that I can take pictures and I will be sure to post them tomorrow. To everyone in my family: eat lots of green top salad for me!

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Trits

A couple of days ago I bought an ice cream from the gift shop (can you believe that we have ice cream on station...in the rain forest -- awesome!). There are many different types for sale, but this is one of my favorites. It is called Trits (pronounced “treats”) and comes in a little ~3.5in diameter cup with a lid. When you remove the lid there is a nice graham cracker-type cookie on top. Trits is basically a big cookie sandwich with a cookie on top and bottom with vanilla ice cream and chocolate fudge in the middle. You can pop the sandwich out of the cup and eat it like that or use a spoon!

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Yesterday

Yesterday was a pretty full day. I had my interview with the Brazilian journalist after 1pm and it went really well. The guy is a professor of journalism in São Paulo and even had a video camera with a microphone and everything. The interview was easy but it was strange to be videotaped. I talked about my research (in layman terms -- that's hard!) and showed him my seeds and described how agoutis and peccaries are affecting different seed species. The interview was pretty short (only about an hour) and the guy was really nice.

Last night we also had a pizza and cookie party to welcome back my friend Arietta and to say goodbye to another researcher who leaves today. The pizza was really great (someone had made the dough from scratch!) and the cookies were good too. Carlos and I went home stuffed.

Right now it is raining really hard so I am going to enter data and try to wait it out before I go to the field...maybe the forest will flood again!

Monday, November 19, 2007

Town

Carlos and I reaaaaaally need to make a trip to town. We have no food in the house. I think our fridge currently contains the following: half a box of milk, 2 tortillas, a blob of rice pudding, mustard, ketchup, and water. Isn’t that pathetic! It is such a pain to get to town though. We take a taxi back and forth so that we can bring a lot of groceries at one time (we try to get food only once a month or at least enough for 3 weeks).

The town’s name is Puerto Viejo, Sarapiqui and it isn’t much. Puerto is about a 5-minute cab ride from the station and the town is actually pretty well stocked for being out in the country. There are 3 banks, 3 grocery stores, 2 ice cream stores, and a bunch of “junk” stores. Everything is located along a single road that passes through town. We usually buy our food at the market called La Viña -- this store probably has the biggest variety of food. As for meals, Carlos and I don’t have the widest diet breadths. We usually eat: masamun curry (I brought some curry paste from the states and it lasts forever), spaghetti, patoux chinois (mashed potatoes, ground beef, and sweet corn all mixed together), quesadillas, tostadas, soup and salad, nachos, sandwiches, tonkatsu, and coconut chicken wraps. We don’t get any “exotic” food items here (there are only 2 types of cheese in the store: squeaky and cheddar) so it’s hard to think of meals to eat. Good thing I love noodles!

I don’t think Carlos and I will be able to make a trip to Puerto today but tonight we are going to a dinner on-station to welcome back a couple of long-term researchers. Yay, we get to put off town for another day!

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Free days!

I forgot to mention something very important in my last post. Whenever I give a welcome talk I get compensated by the station -- they give me 2 free days! Not bad for only an hour of work.

Tomorrow I have an interview with a Brazilian journalist (I was asked by the station to do this, Carlos is giving an interview too). In return for this, I get another pair of free days! Woo-hoo! I have absolutely no idea what questions he will be asking (or if the interview will be in English...though I can't imagine that it would be in Portuguese!), but I will be sure to post about it tomorrow afternoon!

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Charla and some rain

This afternoon (about an hour ago) I gave a welcome talk (a bienvenidos charla) to a group of students. The station director put Carlos and me in charge of this whenever she or the normal staff who give these talks are unavailable. This was my first one and it went really well...almost fun! Hehe, the talk was about an hour long and consisted of a pretty basic introduction to La Selva, the forest, programs, and research that go on here. This group of students (undergrads) was from Illinois and they were pretty low-key.

Oh yea, the forest is closed AGAIN! Wow, two floods in almost as many weeks. I am going to get as much writing done in the office that I can before taking the boat home. I think the last one leaves at 6pm. It's a bummer since that means I can't bring my computer home to work more. C'est la vie -- that's what I get for living in a WET forest!

Friday, November 16, 2007

The Mole


Today, for some random reason, I really feel like watching one of my favorite TV programs: The Mole. This was a reality game show centering around a group of people (usually ~12 individuals), one of whom is a saboteur -- the mole, who was hired by the show’s producers and is trying to undermine the group’s efforts to win money in contests. The goal of the group is to work together at these physical and mental games to win money (which one person only will win at the end) and also to determine who is the mole. I liked this show since people were removed from the show based only on their own lack of knowledge about the mole (not based on conniving and vote-mongering like in shows such as Survivor). At the end of each show, all contestants would take a quiz, answering detail-oriented questions about the mole. The person who gets the most answers incorrect goes home.

This game involved a lot of thinking and detective-work on the parts of the players and it just looked like a really fun game. The challenges that the players participated in were usually elaborate, well thought-out and fun-looking. I really wanted to be a contestant when this show was on the air, but I was under 21 at the time and thus ineligible to play (boo). The show only ran for two seasons in the US, but it is a big success overseas in Europe and Australia. The first season of The Mole took place in France, Monaco, and Spain while the second season was held in St. Moritz, Switzerland, and Italy. I have both seasons of the show -- the first on DVD and the second on my computer. I think it is unfortunate that such a clever game was discontinued after only 2 seasons (4 if you count the two seasons of Celebrity Mole that followed the original) while boring shows highlighting manipulative people (like Survivor) have lasted for about 20 seasons!

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Clean desk


I just spent an hour or so cleaning up my desk and office -- it really needed it! Stuff just ends up getting piled on top of everything and you lose stuff in all the strata! Here is a picture of what I see when I am at work in my office with my computer and field book in the center and lots of seeds, specimens, toys, pens, and pencils all over the place. I even have a little wood-carved agouti given to me from Panama -- can you find it? (It's about 5in tall).

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Camping

I haven’t been very often, but I really like camping. On our road trip this summer, Carlos and I are planning to visit a lot of national parks and camp as we pass through them on our drive. We will buy our gear in Seattle before we set out on the road and I have been looking into tents etc. So far, we are planning on camping in: Olympic National Park (WA), Redwood National Park (CA), Yosemite (CA), Sequoia and King’s Canyon National Park (CA), and Grand Canyon National Park (AZ). These are the big parks we will visit on our road trip, but once we are back in Miami we will go camping in the Everglades, Canaveral, and the Keys. Northern/Central Florida also has some really nice places to camp in Payne’s Prairie (where I’ve been before) -- you can even see wild bison there. I am really excited to start camping more this summer and if anyone has more suggestions of cool places to camp, let me know!

PS. For this trip, we are going to buy an annual pass from the National Park Service. This will give us unlimited access to all the US National Parks for a year and it costs $80. That seems pretty expensive now, but entrance to all those parks really adds up (entrance for Grand Canyon National Park alone is $25!). Besides, it is good for a year and I am sure we’ll be visiting a lot of the Florida parks when we get back to school. Yay, national parks!

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Katydid or leaf with legs


Here is a cute picture of a walking leaf...er...katdid that I saw this afternoon on the bug cloth in the lab clearing. The bug cloth is basically a big white sheet stapled into a frame that has a black light on at night to attract pretty insects. It works really well. Anyway, I see these little katydids all the time in the labs, but this guy is especially cute in his leaf mimicry -- he even has little veins, spots, and imperfections to mimic a real leaf. Amazing!

Monday, November 12, 2007

Dwarf manatee

Have you heard about the dwarf manatee species (Trichecus bernhardi) that was recently discovered in the Amazon? It is so cute -- an adult is about the size of a baby manatee from the more common species (Trichecus manatus); adult body length of the dwarf manatee = 130cm. This species was discovered in the Brazilian Amazon by dutch biologist Marc van Roosmalen and colleagues. I think this little fella would make a good pet! Manatees are awesome animals and living in Florida I am pretty lucky to see them in the wild. I have seen them mostly near Cape Canaveral in northern Florida, but they also live in the many canals that criss-cross through Miami.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Monkey bridge

This is so commonplace to me. This afternoon, while walking back to my office from lunch in the dining hall, I saw a big commotion up in the trees near the bridge (which I was walking on at the time). It was a big troop of howler monkeys eating leaves in one of the Inga trees! I have been crossing the bridge many times when these monkeys were crossing too. They just walk along the cables and I try not to bug them...like ships passing in the night. I also try to dodge their poop. Heehee, I have shared the bridge with a bunny, porcupine, olingo, kinkajou, and a coati. Think of it as an aerial highway for the arboreal (and some terrestrial) mammals!

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Future travels

As usual, I am thinking about all the traveling I want to or will be doing in the future. For some reason, I really want to visit Japan. I guess I have always wanted to go there, but for some reason it was never one of the places at the top of my travel list. Greece, of course, is probably my top choice if I could go anywhere. I would really love to visit the ancient sites and nature reserves on the mainland and then spend some time hopping around the islands and beaches. Unfortunately, both of these trips will require a LOT of funds (especially with the dollar plummeting as it is right now). I wonder if I can start getting paid in euros? I am also thinking about a trip to Portugal, Spain, and France. That would be a really great trip and I am definitely going to be in France (Montpellier) in 2010 so maybe I can put that together for then. I know 2010 sounds like a long way off, but that’s when the 5th International Symposium on Seed Dispersal and Frugivory happens (and I will definitely be presenting my research there!).

As for the more recent future, this June I will visit Paramaribo, Suriname for another tropical biology conference (and a little sight-seeing of course) and I will also have my 2-3 week road trip from Seattle to Miami. I will probably also present at the Ecological Society of America conference this August and I think it is being held in Milwaukee, Wisconson. Hmmm...I’ve never been there before, maybe it will be fun? What is there to do in Milwaukee?

Those are my plans for now, but who knows what the future holds? Mwahahaha!

Friday, November 09, 2007

Blog banner

I have been thinking of making this blog look a little nicer -- it is pretty plain right now. I drew a sketch last night of a mouse and it turned out pretty nice. I can't get to a scanner right now but I am going to play with it to try and make a new banner for my blog. I am not really sure how to do this, but once I get it finished I don't think it'll be too hard to figure out. I am kind of running low on topics to write about every day so they might start getting a bit more random...hee. In the meantime, here is a sketch:

This is a mouse opossum (Marmosa mexicana). I've seen a couple here, but they are pretty rare.

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Ice cream

I just got back from a short trip to town and while I was there I had some ice cream. Costa Rica can make really good ice cream, but they are missing a lot of good flavors. I usually get ron con frutas (rum with fruits); it tastes nothing like rum and the "fruits" are those little cubed jelly thingies that get put into fruit cakes. It tastes good, but sometimes I miss the more gringo flavors like mint chocolate chip, cookie dough, almond, rocky road, or even the more strange ones that most people never eat (cotton candy, cake batter, pumpkin, root beer). They do make flavors here that I rarely see in the states: guanabana (soursop), cherimoya, pitahaya (dragon fruit) and they are really good!

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

The forest is closed...again!

Wow, the forest is very flooded, and hence closed, today. This happened previously in July after a night of continuous, heavy rain. The same thing happened last night as Carlos and I were on station until around 9:30pm eating pita-pizzas and cookies with friends at a goodbye party for a couple of researchers. The night was really fun and you could tell that the frogs outside were loving the rain from their loud constant chorusing.

It was still raining this morning and we had to take a motor-boat onto the station since the road was totally flooded. Today is not a very productive field day (I went into the forest even though it was closed, but didn't get very far because of the floods!), but hopefully I can get a good chunk of office stuff/writing done.

PS. This is a picture of a bridge on the path to the river station...usually the water level is at least 10m below the bridge but now it is only mere centimeters underneath it!

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Agouti of felt


The other day, while working at home, I took a break to make a felt creature. I was on a roll making these back in September when I received The Cute Book from my mom for my birthday. It had been a while since I made anything so I thought I could make a little (cute) felt agouti. It wasn’t that hard to make and I think it turned out pretty nice. Agoutis don’t really have blue eyes though...hey, creative license!

Monday, November 05, 2007

Argh, peccaries...

This morning I went out to check on some seeds I had put in the field a couple of days ago. These seeds were in a cage that allows only agoutis (not peccaries) to enter and get the seeds. Well, as I walked up to the cage it didn't look quite right...one of the poles was falling over...hey! The pigs had gotten in. They basically dug up one side and charged their way in. Oh yea, and they ate all the seeds -- bad! Those were for the agoutis. This is really a pain because now those data are worthless, I have to prepare more seeds, and fix the cage. Grrrr...I like peccaries, but sometimes they can really get on my nerves!

Sunday, November 04, 2007

Sushi

I really like sushi. I’m not really hard-core into it like a lot of people, but I think it is a really nice combination of delicious sticky, vinegary rice, fresh seafood, veggies, and nori (seaweed). I used to hate those dried seaweed sheets, but they actually work really well with sushi. My favorite types of sushi are:

1. Crab Rangoon. I talked about this type of sushi previously when I ate it at Lan in Miami. It is comprised of crab, cream cheese, and crispy won ton strips rolled up in rice and nori.

2. California Roll. This was probably the first sushi I ever tried and the combination of avocado, crab, and cucumber wrapped in rice and nori can do no wrong!

3. Ebi. This is simply a big shrimp sitting atop a blob of rice. Shrimp is the best.

4. Tropical Roll. This may be a specialty found in Miami. This roll has cucumber, red bell pepper, and mango wrapped together in rice and nori. It sounds weird, but the flavors and crunchiness go really well together. (This one is also super-easy to make at home).

5. Inari. This consists of a fried bean curd pocket with sushi rice inside.

6. Kappa-Maki, a cucumber roll. This roll only contains cucumber surrounded by rice and nori.

There is a lot of sushi that I have to try still, but I like almost everything that I’ve tried so far!

PS. These pictures are of various sushi-themed objects that I have in my office: a pack of tissues my sister gave me for my birthday (these are too cute to ever use) and a stuffed felt ebi sushi that I made.


Saturday, November 03, 2007

50th post

Cool, this marks my 50th entry in this blog! I have tried to keep up with posting about once per week and it looks like that has definitely been happening. I don't have much to write about today because I have to go to town soon and stock up on groceries then go back and clean the house with Carlos. Blah. Then, today will be a day of working at home -- mostly writing the methods sections of my thesis chapters and reading more papers! It should be a pretty laid-back day...

Friday, November 02, 2007

Theobroma cacao -- chocolate

I found one of the coolest fruits in the rain forest the other day: a ripe Theobroma cacao fruit! This is the same fruit that contains the seeds used in making chocolate.
Here are the fruits on the tree (the fruits grow directly on the trunk)

This pod is about 18cm in length (it’s pretty big!) and contains many large (1-2cm long) seeds covered in slimy white pulp.
What a lot of people don’t know is that the pulp (called an aril) is really delicious too and no, it doesn’t taste like chocolate. To me the aril tastes like a combination of a sour banana + pineapple + Monstera fruit (which is another fruit that people in the temperate zone might not know the taste of). Theobroma pulp is really good, but I like the pulp of its smaller-fruited cousin, Herrania, a little better.
I have never used the seeds to make chocolate, but I think it is a pretty labor-intensive process. I brought back some dark chocolate squares from the states (called Cacao Reserve) -- there are nice imprints of cacao pods on each chocolate. Hmmm...I saw 3 more fruits on a tree this morning and, if the squirrels and parrots don’t eat them all, I will be able to eat delicious cacao all week!

PS. I am actually eating the cacao pulp while writing this. Hee.