Thursday, December 29, 2011

Ha-ha bunnies


I can finally post about a bunch of the crafts I worked on this past fall and winter (and gave out as holiday gifts). One of these little crafts that was really fun to make was the "ha-ha bunny." I got the ha-ha bunny pattern out of a book my sister gave me for my birthday: The Cuter Book. I modified the pattern a little to make a variety of bunnies: plain white, albino, siamese kitty-like, blue, and gray. I turned all of the little ha-ha bunnies into ornaments and gave them to friends and family as gifts. I kept the albino one to add to Carlos' and my Christmas ornament collection. Ha-ha bunnies are really fun and full of an energetic happiness!

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Home for the holidays

Carlos and I are up in Washington state visiting with my folks for the holidays and we are having a great time! We are relaxing, working, playing, wrapping presents, and eating well. We have been pretty busy enjoying hanging out with my parents and seeing friends. I have also been able to visit my buddy Molly in Seattle and we had a blast thrifting, wandering, and murdering burgers (I had a burger called "The Fig & the Pig" -- burger with bacon, gorgonzola, and fig paste. It was SO good!).

I will post some pictures of all the festivities soon -- Merry Christmas everyone~

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Charley Harper x-stitch for mama


I have been working on a bunch of crafts for the past couple of months, but I can't really post about any of them because they still need to be sent out as Christmas gifts and cards to people who read this blog! One crafty item that I can post about is the birthday present that I made for my mom (I made it back in October to send out before leaving for Costa Rica -- Carlos and I were traveling on my mama's birthday on 30 November).

I was inspired by a mural made by the awesome nature artist Charley Harper and I interpreted his tile-work into a cross-stitch: I call it the "Alaska Sampler." I stitched a black bear, musk ox, and moose (some of my mom's favorite mammals) and added little sparks of colorful stitches (Charley Harper also did this in his murals and I thought it looked cool and interesting). I really like the way this turned out and I think my mom also liked this little textile interpretation of Charley Harper!

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Costa Rica -- Rara Avis


During our 1-month field trip to Costa Rica, Carlos and I spent 20 days at a remote location called Rara Avis. It is really more of an ecolodge than a proper biological field station, but there are a few biologists who still conduct research at this site (its heyday was back in the 80's and 90's). To get there is difficult. To get in, Carlos and I rode horses and hiked the final 2 km up the mountain while our gear was brought in on a big tractor. To get out, we hiked most of the way before getting on the bumpy tractor.

Rara Avis is nice and quiet. There is no electricity (except for a generator for a couple of hours at night) and there is a lot of rain (about 8 m per year!). The elevation at Rara Avis ranges from 600 - 800 m asl and is classified as tropical premontane forest. Carlos and I collected lots of beetle and plant specimens for his project. I even made a completely new discovery of a beetle-plant interaction that I plan to write up and submit as a manuscript.

The photo mosaic above shows highlights from the trip. Here are some short descriptions for each photo by row (starting at the top and going left to right):

ROW 1: Paca skull at Plastico station, Waterfall, Mosquito net covered bed, stained glass palm, Carlos collecting plants

ROW 2: Me on the bridge, hummingbird, waterfalls, pink coral fungus, me setting a camera trap

ROW 3: Tent bats (Artibeus), Carlos and Heliconia, eyelash viper (there were TONS of these at Rara Avis), red and black weevil, a new discovery

ROW 4: Cow weevil, spotted weevil, Rolled leaf, bromeliad inflorescence, canopy

ROW 5: Mot mot, tapir skull, view of the forest, river, Erythrina fruits

Tuesday, December 06, 2011

Fall Festival at Cox Farm


Before Carlos and I left for Costa Rica, we took a trip out to the Cox Farm in Virginia to attend a fall festival. It took about an hour to get to the farm from DC, but it was well worth it! This farm is huge with tons of cool farm animals to see, feed, and pet. There were also a lot of good snacks to eat (including all the apple cider you want), slides to ride, and large pumpkins to look at. I think my favorite thing at the farm was the hay ride: Carlos and I got into the back of a huge cart being pulled by a tractor and it takes you around the farm. There are lots of weird painted wooden cut-outs of rip-off cartoons posted along the route along with lots of other weird, but really fun things. At one point, there is a countdown (with the presidents next to signs of numbers) and when you reach the end of the countdown, people dressed as aliens run out of a space ship to give everyone high-fives! What?! It was really fun and kitschy -- if we are still in Washington next fall, we will definitely go to Cox Farm again. We even got a free pumpkin and squash when we left!

Monday, December 05, 2011

Back!

Sorry for the lack of posts for the entire month of November, but I was in Costa Rica working on some projects -- one of which is at a remote field site without electricity (so no internet either). Carlos and I are back in DC until 15 December when we fly over to Washington (state) to visit my parents for 2.5 weeks. It will also be great to catch up with some friends, eat tasty food, and watch TV with Remlington. I have one adventure to post about that occurred before our Costa Rica trip and I hope to download the photos from my camera soon -- Carlos and I went to a farm for a fall festival and it was a lot of fun~ More to come soon.