OK...here goes another one....
Two days ago we moved into our new house...very exciting! Itīs a one bedroom house (which Eric and I share- Jeff and Adam sleep in the dining room turned bedroom) with bathroom and kitchen. Itīs simple but good enough for us! The best part about it is that thereīs a huge garden behind the house filled with flowers and fruit trees. Itīs really beautiful. The landlord is a real Tico (costa rican) and puts me on edge...but him and his wife are really friendly. We even have two dogs as pets! The only bad thing about living off-site is that our new house is about a ten minute walk from the comador. Not bad in itself but thereīs a killer hill in between which when going down on a bike is close to suicidal!
Last night we had a manakin dinner on the patio. Itīs a large dinner table surrounded by loads of flowers...beautiful! We invited two other manakin researchers so there were 6 of us in total. We ordered pizza and had wine and beer. We talked about a variety of things yet somehow those lovely manakins just kept creeping back into the conversation! After dinner we went to the beach (about a 15 minute walk) and started a big bonfire. This event had been planned weeks ago and so everyone had great expectations....and ofcourse just as the fire was starting, the skies opened up and gave us everything they had to offer. We were soaked immediately. Yet miraculously the bonfire managed to keep going (albeit weakly) and we managed to revive it to its former glory after the rain stopped pouring! We made smores (Iīm turning into a real american!)...and drank beer. It was a great night! And to top it off Adam gave us today off! We even got to sleep in - until about 6 when we were woken up by the Howler monkeys and roosters!
I forgot to mention that about two weeks ago Adam got really sick so we couldnīt get much work done (as we were all still pretty much clueless as to what we were supposed to do!)...so Adam, the nice man he is, gave us two full days off. The three of us decided to go to Tortugeuro which is a national park by the beach, reknowned for itīs turtle conservation projects. It took us three buses, one boat and 5 hours to get there (not bad if you get up at 6 in the mornings!)...at least we get to see the country this way! The first thing we did once settled in was go swimming in the sea. Itīs a beautiful sea but rough with huge waves. I almost drowned a couple of times! Later that evening I read in the guidebook that the sea is not recommended for swimming due to the strong rip tides and infestion of sharks. That evening we bought some wine and enjoyed the sea breeze. The next day we hired a canoe and paddled ourselves through the small canals of the national park. Itīs a beautiful forest and we saw lots of little turtles, some monkeys and loads of other animals! By the end of it though, my arms were about to fall off (and I was just pretending to row most of the time!). The afternoon we spent in a small cafe overlooking the scattered palmtrees on the beach while drinking the best daiquiris iīve ever tasted! What a life. Unfortunately we had to return to La Selva that evening...but it was nice to go back home!
The project is starting to make some headway and most of the prelimenary planning and organising has been done so that we can now start collecting the real data. This means that our days are less hectic and more routine. It also means that we can have a social ife outside of TEAM MANAKIN since i donīt need to be in bed by 8:30! Our mornings consist of checking the cameras that weīve set up (which film the males dance), which takes a little over an hour. And then we set up the mistnets to catch females for the telemetry. This is the difficult part as these females are hard to ctahc. So far weīve caught 3...about one every two days! One person follows these birds....and this job is rotated as itīs a 13 hour work day. Itīs my turn tomorrow! The others do behaviour observation from about 11-3. Ofcourse every so often things go wrong so we have to do something not planned.
Last monday, Eic and I had to go to San Jose to pick up some more batteries and an AC adapter. We were there around ten so we decided to get to know the city. Eric wanted to go to a huge park on the outskirts so we decided to go there (why he wanted to see a park when he lives in one of the most beautiful parks of the country is beyond me!). It was a nice woodland park with a big lake. Then we decided to have lunch at a Mexican restaurant.....we had the best tacos iīve eve had...mmm...just thinking about it is making my mouth water and stomach rumble! Finally around 1 we decided to go get the stuff we were sent to the big city for, thinking it was an easy job. We ended up having to visit about 6 different stores sprawled throughout the city and didnīt get back to La Selva until around 19:30. We were scared Adam wasnīt gonna be pleased but he was just so happy we got all the gear that nothing else mattered!
A few days ago, Eric and I discovered that the Peurto Viejo (our town) is only a ten minute bike ride away...so from now on we can just ride our bikes into town and get cakes from the bakery or some fried chicken....or ice cream...mmm! Although we have to ride on the main road where huge trucks and buses just storm by. A little scary!
At the moment thereīs a french film crew filming several types of birds...including our manakins. Theyīre making a film called "animals in love" which should come out in December some time in Europe. Itīs more or less the same film crew that made "microcosmos" and "winged migration". How exciting! So soon everyoe will be able to see our manakin males in action!
Well, iīm off home t get changed because weīre goig to float down the river later this afternoon. Hope I dont get attacked by a crocodile!
galderweireldt

dag Kaat
het lijkt me echt tof om daar te werken (en te drinken).
kun je eens foto's doorsturen, als je tijd vindt tenminste.
Geniet van de zon, hier is het nog altijd grijs en koud maar morgen begint de lente.
groetjes
ginette