Saturday, April 17, 2010

Bark scorpion

We have found around 20 scorpions in our house so far. The uncomfortable reality is that nearly all of the scorpions have been alive.

This bark scorpion had been camping out on my shorts for at least a half hour while I was preparing breakfast for the kids. Mélanie spotted it before it had a chance to sting me.

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Scorpions seem to like my bathing suits and shorts. Maybe I should start wearing pants?

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Volcán Arenal

The volcano was asleep for hundreds of years… In 1968 it had an eruption and destroyed the small town of Tabacón… Arenal is considered Costa Rica's most active volcano

Wikipedia

We visited Arenal last year around this time and we had beautiful weather during our stay in the area. I was able to snap some clear, early morning pictures of the smoking crater.

DSC_0265[1]Unfortunately, we returned this year to mostly rain and fog. Some cheap ponchos helped us enjoy the outdoors despite the dreary weather.

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On the last day, it did clear up a bit (but not enough to see the volcano) and we enjoyed the hot springs at Los Lagos.

The kids striking a pose in front of the hot springs:

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Sunday, April 11, 2010

Jesus Christ Lizard

The Common Basilisk (Basiliscus basiliscus) is a lizard found in Central and South American rainforests near rivers and streams… [they] take the nickname the "Jesus Christ Lizard" or "Jesus Lizard" because when fleeing from predators, they gather sufficient momentum to run across the water for a brief distance while holding most of their body out of the water.

Wikipedia

The children spotted this Jesus Christ Lizard off the path to the beach in Manuel Antonio National Park.

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Saturday, April 10, 2010

Kids Saving the Rainforest

We headed back to the Manuel Antonio National Park with Marie and Sylvain. This time, we stayed close to Quepos at the Blue Banyan Inn. The inn is part of a finca (farm) which encompasses 25 hectares (or 65 acres) of rainforest. To get there, we drove through 3 miles of jungle and for 2.5 miles, questioned if we were lost.

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At one point, you do pass a very small village that suggests that you might still be headed the correct way.

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The Blue Banyan Inn has a variety of animals roaming the property and the owners are active in the Kids Saving the Rainforest (KSTR) organization.

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KSTR purchased 4 acres of rainforest property where they built an animal rehabilitation center in which they care for and release injured and abandoned animals. During breakfast time one morning, our kids got to meet these cute marmosets who have been nursed back to health.

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Marmosets and Tamarins, collectively known as "callitrichids" are charming New World monkeys that dwell within the rain forest canopy of Central and South America. They are among the smallest members of the monkey family, usually weighing around 1 pound.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Mamie Marie

The kids got to spend a fantastic 2 weeks with Mamie Marie, Mélanie`s Mom, and “Papie” Sylvain.

Sylvain doesn’t speak English so Naimah spoke to him only in Spanish. We tried to convince her that he didn’t understand Spanish either but she was insistent.

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Monday, March 29, 2010

Look before you leap

The route from our house in Atenas to Jacó passes over the Tárcoles River. It is often stifling hot in that part of the country and it might be tempting to go for a little swim in the river until you spot the sunbathers.

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Many, many crocodiles. (I couldn’t fit them all into the picture without a wider lens.)

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If that is not enough of a deterrent to stop you from going for a swim, keep this in mind:

The river is the most contaminated river in Costa Rica, carrying much of the sewage from the central towns and cities. The river's watershed drains approximately 67% of Costa Rica's untreated organic and industrial waste and is considered the most contaminated river basin in the country. It was also affected by a leak of 400 thousand litres of diesel fuel by the state-owned Costa Rican Petroleum Refinery in 2000 which further damaged the ecology of the river and its immediate surroundings.

Wikipedia

Monday, March 22, 2010

Signs

Costa Rican street signs that you don’t see in Canada.

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At our children’s school, there is a sign indicating an iguana crossing along the path to the playground. (As if that is going to save the iguanas from being trampled by all those eager little feet headed to the monkey bars.)