Wednesday, January 23, 2013

poesía


“Instantes”
por Jorge Luís Borges

Si pudiera vivir nuevamente mi vida.
En la próxima, trataría de cometer más errores.
No intentaría ser tan perfecto, me relajaría más.
Sería más tonto de lo que he sido,
de hecho tomaría muy pocas cosas con seriedad.
Sería menos higiénico, correría más riesgos.
Haría más viajes, contemplaría más atardeceres,
subiría más montañas, nadaría más ríos.
Iría a más lugares donde nunca he ido,
comería más helados y menos habas.
Tendría más problemas reales y menos imaginarios.
Yo fui una de esas personas que vivió sensata y prolíficamente cada minuto de su vida.
Claro que tuve momentos de alegría, pero si pudiese volver atrás,
trataría de tener solamente buenos momentos.
Por si no lo saben, de eso está hecha la vida, solo de momentos.
No te pierdas el ahora.
Yo era uno de esos que nunca iba a ninguna parte, sin un termómetro,
una bolsa de agua caliente, un paraguas y un paracaídas.
Si pudiese volver a vivir, viajaría más liviano.
Si pudiera volver a vivir, comenzaría a andar descalzo a principios de la primavera
y seguiría así hasta concluir el otoño.
Daría más vueltas en calesita, contemplaría más amaneceres y jugaría con niños.
Si tuviera otra vez la vida por delante.
Pero ya ven que tengo 85 años y sé que me estoy muriendo. 

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

fotos de la vida rica

Here are some photos of the trip so far. I don't have a camera, so I'm supplementing with other people's. Just wanted to give ya'll back home a taste (and peek) at some of the adventures we've been having!

last week we cooked a delicious lunch at my Spanish teacher's house!

la comida

this saturday we went to a coffee plantation, part of La Bella Finca farming coop in San Luis and picked café.  it was a very meditative experience.


on our way down to San Luis, we could see this waterfall...

which we then got to play in!

our daily view walking to school.

So as you can see, it's incredibly beautiful here : ) we're all living it up (YOLO is dropped on the daily), eating delicious locally-made ice cream (aaalmost as good as Maple View), studying, walking, soaking up the sun. 
¡Pura vida!
Love, abrazos, y besos,
emma




Thursday, January 17, 2013

blue-crowned motmot


Saw this bird behind the Institute on Tuesday! SO beautiful.  List of bird species spotted has reached 33!!



(picture from google images J)

continuación... la vida aquí en Monteverde


Monday marked our first day of classes at the Monteverde Institute!  This week we have three hours of Spanish every morning, then 2 hour long introductory classes to the other classes we’ll be taking here.  They have been great so far—overviews of what to expect for the semester and first lessons on topics like tropical ecology, environmental sustainability, and community health!

The class that drew me to this program and that is the reason I’m studying abroad here this semester is the class on community health (Human Health and Development in the Tropics).  Of course it’s the perfect class for me; we’ve only met once, and already we’ve talked about STIs, epidemiology, learned new public health terminology, and heard the birth story of our teacher, whose one-month-old stays in class with us.  What could be more up my alley?!

…Tropical Ecology?  I never would have thought so.  The professor let me and the others of us who are in the community health class sit in on the first day of class (“class”=a tromp through the reserve behind the Institute, “sitting”=climbing a strangler fig) and I loved it.  Unfortunately, because these are elective courses, we’re only allowed to take one of them.  The community health course is so exactly what I have always been interested in… but when else will I have the opportunity to explore/study the tropical cloud forest of Costa Rica for a semester?!

Luckily, there is a solution.  Because of the number of credit hours needed for each class, Human Health and Development in the Tropics doesn’t start until mid-February (Tropical Ecology starts this week and ends early in the semester).  The Tropical Ecology professor told me that I could audit her class until mine starts, so I get the best of both worlds!! Crisis averted. 

I already feel like I’ve learned so much here.  New animals and plants, new friends, new ways of life, new Spanish vocabulary, new foods.  New amount of sunshine!  (Molly and I joked that sunscreen has become our lotion, part of our daily routine.)  And now classes are starting and I’m taking classes in subjects I’ve never studied before, like anthropology and environmental sustainability, so I’ll get to expand my academic knowledge too. Adjusting to life with my homestay family has been a challenge, but nothing I can’t handle.  Adjusting to the 40-minute uphill walk to school has also been a challenge (for my calves) but I’m gonna be so buff when I come home. 

A couple of nights ago I had a dream that I was telling someone back home that living here was helping me realize how much I have that I don’t really need in the U.S., how I wanted to live more simply when I go home, like my host family here does.  That morning, my host mother’s partner and I had a conversation in which he restated much more eloquently what I had said in my dream (I think my exact words were “there’s so much shit I have that I don’t need!”).  I asked him how he was doing and he said he was well, thanks to God… “Thanks to God for health, for happiness, for having what I need.”  I agreed.  He said he didn’t need a lot of money as long as he had those things: health, happiness, and just enough to live on. 

Thought that would be a good note to end on.

Love, abrazos, y besos,
emma


Sunday, January 13, 2013

week 1 of pura vida



Ay, ¡¡que linda está la vida!!

I promised some people a blog… so here goes!  I don’t know how often I’ll be able to update it, as at my house there’s only internet in my little sister’s room if you sit next to the window and put your laptop on a chair.  But I’ll do my best.  It’s also hard to want to sit still and type on the computer when there is a new town to explore, new friends to play with, a new family to get to know, a farmer’s market (la feria) to visit, and an entire reserve to explore behind the Monteverde Institute!

I’ll start with an abridged(ish) description of what we’ve done so far.  Today, the 13th, marks a week that I’ve been here, so there’s a lot to say!

My first night was spent in a hotel in the capital, San José.  Monday morning we boarded a bus and drove up to the Irazú Volacno.  Hiked around the national park there and looked down into vast, beautiful craters created by the flow of lava.  Pati, our environmental sustainability professor, had her first opportunity here to talk to us about the extensive biodiversity of Costa Rica.  That night we slept at CATIE, a graduate studies university that does outreach with the Costa Rican and Central American agricultural community, promoting poverty reduction and human wellbeing through the sustainable management of agriculture.  On Tuesday we traveled to various types of plantations—cacao (owned by CATIE), sugar cane (caña, owned by a local family), and a huge caña production plant.  Wednesday morning we said goodbye to CATIE and headed to Guayabo, a national monument of the ruins of an ancient society.  Very cool!  From Guayabo we traveled to Tirimbina, an ecological field station where we would spend the next couple of days.  That night we went on a night hike and had the opportunity to see firsthand the biodiversity that Pati had been talking about: we saw a red-eyed tree frog, a cane toad (and 4 other types of frogs!), a sleeping female Manakin (a little puffy green bird), a turnip-tail gecko (the largest gecko in Costa Rica), and manzana de agua, a beautiful pink-flowering tree. 

If the night hike didn’t awaken my latent dorkism about exploring the rainforest and seeing an incredible amount of different animals and plants, the next day’s activities certainly did. On Thursday I woke up at 5 am to go birdwatching with Sofie, the tropical ecology professor.  Just that morning we saw 10 different types of birds, some of which I got to identify by memorizing their features and looking them up in the “Birds of Costa Rica” guide book (if you’re looking for a birthday present for me…).  As if that wasn’t exciting enough, after breakfast we left to go on a three hour long hike through Tirimbina’s rainforest reserve!!  Led by two of Tirimbina’s staff members who were very knowledgeable about the area and its flora and fauna and Pati and Sofie, there was something new to discover every second.  We saw pierella, a glass-winged butterfly that feeds on rotten fruit in the understory of the forest; a wavy vine called monkey ladder; a puffbird, a bullet ant (somewhere there’s a picture of me holding a stick with the ant crawling on it!); a walking stick that I spotted that was as long as my hand; a blue jean frog; Ectophila alba, a tiny white bat who makes its home underneath Heliconia leaves; two types of toucans (chestnut-mandibled and keel-billed); a blue-grey tanager (called “bulita” or “little widow” in Spanish); and a long-billed hermit hummingbird (incredible!!), among many others!  About halfway through the hike it started raining, real rainforest raining, and it was wonderful.  It hadn’t occurred to most of us to bring our rain gear (we learned our lesson), but the downpour was incredibly rejuvenating.  
That day we also visited a pineapple (piña) plantation and had a presentation on bats that night, with some nice birdwatching from our front yard in between (spotted: Passerini’s tanager, golden-hooded tanager, blue dacnis, rufous-tailed hummingbird, and a green honeycreeper!)  Friday morning I got up early again to birdwatch (black-crested coquette hummingbird, olive-backed Euphonia, and black-faced grosbeak) and then we boarded the bus to come to Monteverde!

After a long winding beautiful bus ride we arrived at the Institute for lunch!  It was nice to finally be in one place that we knew would be our home for a while.  We met the staff (among them was my host mom, although I didn’t know it at the time), had a tour, and headed up a mountain to a lodge where we would stay for our last night before moving in with our families!  The lodge was amazing—we hiked up to the top of the mountain it was on and there was a giant rope swing that you stood in and could look out over the entire town of Santa Elena and see all the way to the Nicoya Peninsula.  ¡Increíble!

The next morning we had the chance to explore Santa Elena and then we met our families at the farmer’s market and went home with them!  My host mom is very nice and accommodating, and my sisters (16 and 11) are fun and giggly.  It feels good to live in a home, and the differences are going to take some getting used to, but I get along great with my family and feel very lucky to speak as much Spanish as I do!

Of course I’ve been missing people from home… Lenore would have loved everything we’ve done so far, and last time I came to Costa Rica I was with her, so she’s been close to my heart this last week.  I’m able to keep in touch with family and friends through limited access to facebook and even less access to Skype.  All in all, I’m having a WONDERFUL time here, learning new ways of life, learning about biodiversity and environmental effects of different styles of agriculture, learning more Spanish, learning to navigate a new culture, town, and family.  I’ll do my best to keep y’all posted!

Love, abrazos, y besos,
emma