Tuesday, March 10, 2020

February 29 

Leap year! Tomorrow is March already. I purposely got up early to get onto Wifi to pay some bills, but even at 5am it’s not connecting. 
My little friends playing with fruit baskets
Tending the garden
The good news….While in town the other day we signed up to have an “inspection” which is necessary for hooking up to cable. Since we’re on the main road (ha!) and the line goes right by us it shouldn’t be a problem. But who knows……Anyway, it’s at least a month away. (I can’t wait to NOT complain about lousy wifi.)

Female red butts
Local restaurant - Gabby's















Toilet planter
Low tide



Adjusting Well
Anyway, I’ve obviously REALLY adjusted well to being here because we invited friends for dinner last week and I was a day behind. I finally realized it when I looked at my phone at dinner time and panicked. It said Thursday (all day I was on Wednesday time). After an apologetic call to them explaining the problem, I was relieved that they were quite understanding about postponing. (Now some of my good buddies will not be as surprised because I have been known for a few of these type of events in the US as well!). 

Briana comes for yoga

Launch Time
5:30 am: The ‘boys” across the street are launching one of their pangas for a fishing trip. There’s always a lot of macho yelling involved in rolling a 25 foot boat down the beach on balsa logs through the surf. Not easy! The whole family - Lalo, the dad, and his sons are beefy, strong guys (not to mention quite handsome) , who are accustomed to hauling these boats and their gear around. Because we are located at the mouth of the Golfo (gulf) it’s not far for them to reach schools of yellowfin tuna, mahi and other deep water fish. Aside from fishing, their other mainstay is taking surfers across the Golfo to an offshore rock at Matapolo. They include going shore for lunch and a swim, and possibly fishing and dolphin watching. It’s on my list, sans the surfing. I’ll let Ray do that part.

Cherries tanager - male
Hummingbird clean up


Birds Everywhere
A few days ago two families of house wrens fledged out. One family by the carport, and the other out back along the fence line. Young wrens and their parents were chattering and buzzing away for several days all around us. Meanwhile, some late fledgling “red butts” are still begging from their parents in the limon tree. Since the beach almonds are now mature, we have a steady stream of scarlet macaws that peruse the beach in search of their favorite treat. Yesterday, I watched one of the little hermit hummingbirds fly along each beam of the underside of our deck in search of a stray spider or insect we may not have cleared out on a recent cleaning frenzy. 


Cicada pee


March 1
Cicada Pee!
While taking an early morning hike up the mountain yesterday, K and I discovered a tree that appeared to be squirting water from its branches. Pretty amazing! It’s always a strenuous, but beautiful rainforest hike up the “ATV” trail. I probably sweated off a half gallon of water during the two and half hours! K checked it out online and discovered that the “rain” is actually cicada pee. These 2 inch long insects emerge from the ground and take to the trees in vast numbers at this time of year. They consume leaves and blossoms of trees. So, of course, their food being mainly water, is excreted back out. These suckers make a very loud kind of shrill buzzing in unison that rises to an almost deafening crescendo, then subsides, only to pulse back up again. These guys continue day and night, so it’s pretty noisy. The cicadas can actually drown out the howler monkeys at times! 
PS: We now have cicada pee in our trees, too!

The weekly tanker that
picks up the palm oil in Golfito


Signs of Progress?
Since I haven’t done that hike in almost a year I was surprised/ impressed/depressed to see the trail was now more of a road, and there were a number of newly cleared properties with magnificent views for whoever builds there. Speaking of…. there is definitely more traffic than last year. 
Signs are common - and we have once a week pickup!


Local farmers still dry their beans on the soccer field

The local lads are grown up now, and all driving motorcycles. More cars - some tourists, and more locals. And there is some major infrastructure going on with all the small bridges. They are getting new cement conduits, and actual concrete bridges - maybe with safety railings even! Lots of dump trucks and heavy equipment rumbling by. It’s been quite busy. It’s got to be nerve wracking for the truck drivers to negotiate some of these old bridges that are barely one lane and always steep downhills and sharp curves. Still, 15+ years ago there were no bridges, you just drove across the rivers. And….. if it was the rainy season with high waters, you stayed put. Only 25 years ago there were four telephones in town, and no cell phones! Also, I watched a really large (Carnival type) cruise ship enter the Golfo last week presumably to go to Golfito. Ughhh!

Cruise ship coming into the Golfo


Another by product of more traffic is accidents such as the kid who wiped out on his motorcycle last week, and had to be towed away by his friend’s motorbike in the middle of the night. Also, Zsa Zsa, one of “the girls,” got clipped by a motorbike this afternoon. (She’s OK)

Original bridge made from old Banana Company
train rails









Can’t Get Away From Raking 
Unlike NY, when we rake dry leaves in the fall, here, many trees lose their leaves during the dry season, before sprouting new growth from the spring rains. We spent yesterday raking not only the yard, but some of our many roofs. 

After the clean
Before the clean

Not only was there is a large accumulation of twigs, branches, dead flowers, But lots of monkey and iguana poop! Thank goodness for a leafblower. which made lighter work. The dogs thought the leaf piles were great for their doggy siestas. They spent the afternoon trying out the different piles like Goldilocks. Boquette, our shaggy dog, ended up covered in bits of leaves and branches, looking even more unkempt than usual. It was quite reminiscent of fall yard maintenance in NY, except the temperature and humidity is considerably higher.


Newly painted bathroom

Painting Frenzy
We never quite finished painting the guest container two years ago so I decided to tackle the walls and shelves of the bathroom. Pink and orange - quite colorful! Today, our little five-year old friend, Briana came for the day. She joined us early for yoga, stayed for breakfast, helped me water plants, did some cleaning (she loves to clean - and use gallons of soap!). After lunch she hung out with me as I painted, and we finally sent her off at 5 o’clock. The whole day she never stopped chattering and singing. Pretty cute. She’s very proud of herself for writing her own, and her parents’ names!

Dogs enjoy the leaf piles

Nocturnal Stirrings
A few nights ago, we had a couple of evening showers. Possibly the rains and/or a new moon brought out an explosion of very colorful land crabs. Around eight in the evening I heard a lot of crackling, rattling sounds, and there were the dogs lying in their beds surrounded by crabs marching past them. I would guess at least 50, emerging from under the container and cruising around the patio and walkway. The crustaceans didn’t seem to faze the dogs, and neither did the 4-5 giant toads hopping among the crabs. 








More Housework 
A pretty pathetic story - Ray decided to clean the main fan we use regularly located between the kitchen and bedroom areas…… I thought that our floor fan was dark grey or black. Well, after he pulled it apart for a thorough cleaning, it magically turned light blue and grey. Yuchhh! And incredibly - it works much more efficiently! 

Boatyard Blues
We visit Golfito regularly a couple of times a week now to check in on Ray’s boat. Eli and his son, Josue, have been replacing the teak cap rail with fiberglass - a much more practical solution here, where the wood takes a beating from the sun and rain. The teak planking on the cabin top and the last of the wood decking is gone and repaired, where the old fastenings had decayed and leaked into the cab below. All the deck hardware is off, along with the rear pushpit and associated rigging. The engine is out and will be replaced. 

Restored cabin top - no more leaking fasteners














Last of the cap rail repair

The restoration is a huge undertaking, but the boat has “good bones,” so Ray feels it’s worth the effort. It’s very familiar for me to be a “boatyard rat” again, as I have spent lots of time restoring and working on boats, both wooden and fiberglass. It’s a much more pleasant experience now just showing up to help supervise and provide materials, and let someone else do the actual work! 

Meanwhile, last week a beautiful old wooden sailboat was towed over to the yard the day before we visited Ray’s boat, then sunk (accidentally) at the dock. The boat had been moored for many years across the Golfo in increasingly disrepair. The owner’s daughter had been living aboard for some time, and had not really kept up on maintenance. Not that keeping a 55 foot, 80 year old wooden boat is easy, or cheap, especially in the tropics!! 


Nevertheless, it was sad to see her underwater, and when we returned the other day, it was being stripped out for salvage. Built in 1941, she was recruited by the US Navy in WWII as a troop carrier in the South Pacific, and eventually ran charters in the Islands. I had a chance to roam around the hulk and admire the construction. Once her engine, tanks and salvageable hardware are removed she will be towed offshore and sunk. 

Photo of her better days

Also, condemned to a final resting place undersea were two decrepit school buses that had served first in the States, then revived for another career transporting Tico students. 

School bus's last journey


March 7

The Rodeo
A big event for Punta Banco, the next (even smaller town) from us was a three day rodeo. A makeshift arena, complete with bleachers, was erected at the soccer field in the middle of town next to the beach. Food, beer and T-shirt vendors (only one of each) were available, and a large mobile disco truck provided dancing and more partying after the rodeo finished. 

The festivities began mid afternoon with lots of socalizing, eating and beer drinking. At dusk the rodeo began with lots of music blaring from the huge speakers, and a beautiful horse that “danced” around the arena to the music. Then a contest of sorts involving the audience in the bleachers throwing their shoes, then belts, into the ring where groups of boys and girls, then men and women collected as many as they could to win a prize???? I think I missed something here….  This was followed by another contest to see which testosterone filled local youth (the young “studleys” - my name for them) could remain the longest on a spinning saddle. The saddle was mounted on a rickety cart connected to its axle, so the faster the cart was pulled the faster the saddle spun. So the “spinner” and the cart puller studley had quite a physical challenge. 
The "disco" truck













The main event was the bull riding, where professional riders hung bareback onto the bucking animal as long as possible. Once the bull dumped the rider, it was free to try and charge the cadre of young “studleys” ( pretty much the same group of guys - only fueled by much more beer by this time) who were egging the poor confused animal on. It was pretty funny to see these macho guys daring the bull to charge them, only to scatter and scamper up the railings when the bull came anywhere near. The announcer’s comments, the music blaring and the audience cheering made it quite chaotic.  
The spinning saddle ride
A good crowd of several hundred



One poor bull, once freed of its rider, calmly started munching on the grass, totally ignoring the studleys, who edged increasingly nearer trying to get him to charge. The rodeo wound down around 8:30 as the disco lights and music started cranking up nearby. This was our opportunity to head home for some peace and quiet.  It was well past nine after driving the bumpy, dusty road - way past our bedtime!

The "young studleys" try to antagonize the bull
This guy just wanted to be left alone and chow down















A Health Note:
The news here is obsessed (as everywhere in the world) with the Corona virus. Yesterday’s news reported that all large public functions ( festivals, concerts, sporting events, even religious events) are canceled indefinitely. Schools and universities are closing left and right, and government and other employees are being urged to telecommute whenever possible. I believe there are only a handful of confirmed cases in CR and supposedly connected to an American tourist. So, even though we are pretty remote here, the virus is taking its toll. And because CR relies heavily on tourism it will have a big economic effect. Meanwhile, I’m sure this weekend was the last rodeo for a while, also.  

Score: Bugs - 1 (or is it “won?”)  Gill - 0
Leafcutters
To live here in the jungle is a constant battle to stay on top of mildew and insects. We’ve got the dog’s wildlife under control with worming, flea and tick medicine. Vigilant sweeping and wiping down with bleach and soap keeps the mildew and dust at bay. We try and ensure no mosquitoes have a chance to breed in water containers and the sitting pool. But controlling ants and termites is another story. 



During my gardening I recently discovered a considerably large nest of leaf cutter ants. In their own environment these fascinating recyclers carefully harvest leaves and farm a particular fungus which serves to keep the ecosystem of the forest happy. However, as more and more of my plants ended up leafless, I started my elimination campaign. First, I tried environmentally safe silica powder - supposed to break their skin down and kill’em. No good.  After a few weeks with no success, I succumbed to using a pretty nasty chemical which I poured down each anthole. So far, it seems to be working….. But, time will tell. 
The leafcutters have been working on my little tree


Termitos
Meanwhile, another decomposer - the termite - seems determined to outdo us. Two weeks ago I found a good sized nest just above out upstairs bedroom on the cocobolo tree which we built our deck around. In just a couple of weeks it doubled in size, so I sprang into action. I traced numerous trails from the ground along our container supports and running up to the nest. Once again, I got out the nasty chemical and spent yesterday morning crawling around underneath the deck and container scraping the trails, and slathering the base of the supports with the poison.

Vespers
We are also hosting quite a variety of wasps, who luckily leave us alone, as we do them. One pair of yellow booted mud dabber wasps in particular, have created several mud tubes for their nest on the wall of the kitchen. They navigate carefully around us as they go about their business, barely cruising past us at times. A number of paper wasp nests hang above the carport and a few more can be found on the outside of the guest container and even behind a curtain. As long as they do not pose a threat I don’t mind them staying. Our hive of tiny honey bees is still intact in the palm trunk holding up the carport. They recently swarmed meaning some were off to find another home, perhaps. 

Ray caught me removing termite trails under the container

And, Ray’s Favorite….
Someone’s been eating my clothes!! My most comfortable “housedress” first had an inch diameter hole in it. A couple of days later, a few more. Then another dress. Although I’ve never caught one in the act, the only bug capable of the dirty deed seems to be the lowly cockroach. We don’t have many, but every few days we catch a good 1 1/2’er  incher skittering around. And since we are pretty careful about leaving food around, I guess clothes are a second best. Anyway, my clothes are now safely tucked away in zip lock bags containing a bar of soap and silica gel packs. 

March 10
I think I’ll be able to get this out today, at a friend’s house. Stay safe and well!

Yellow flowers that have been showering our driveway from a nearby tree

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