12.29.2008

Soccer in the Street

Last weekend the national championships in futbol were held... and we watched in the street.  We brought our couch and cooler into the middle of main street, facing the large projection screen they had set up attached to the antenna that was hooked to a car.  100 of Sierpe's finest gathered around for game two of the annual Saprissa versus La Leagua battle.  (The two teams ALWAYS make the championships.)  La Leagua had won the first game 2-0 so Saprissa had to win 3-0 to win the national title.  



And sure enough, they did!  It was a great game and the best part of it was being a part of the community.  We didn't just watch from the sidelines, we got right into the center of the action.  As police showed up, they didn't clear the obstruction of traffic but rather watched the game with us.  And when 7 year old Santiago took it upon himself to light a Roman Candle shooting out upwards of 10 full sized, 4th of July fireworks the police stood by and watched.  Only in Costa Rica.
Our living room couch later made it into Bar Esquina, literally translated as "the corner bar" and came home with a big hole permanently dented into the center of it where someone a little too heavy was sitting!  What a memory!








Belated but Never-the-Less Funny


Translation:  The Black Won
Lesson: Costa Rican's don't sugar coat it. 

If you are of any asian decent or even look asian you are called "Chino" in Costa Rica.  
People also have nicknames of "Flaco" (skinny), "Negro" (black),  "Pato" (duck),  "Huevo" (egg), "Pindeco" (the top, spikey part of a pineapple), and all sorts of other crazy things you might think are people's real names.



12.22.2008

Sierpe Sunrise Newsletter

I started Sierpe's first newsletter!!!  It includes all kinds of fun stuff about our community.  If you're interested click here to view it in a google doc.: http://docs.google.com/gview?attid=0.1&thid=11e5f739cdbf74f1&a=v

The Christmas Tree Story

Last night I found out our Christmas tree is actually a shrub/bush shaped into a triangle.  It's been bone dry for a couple weeks now but it's still green, that was the first clue.  


I tried to save it.  After realizing that Trevor had plunked the tree into a big tub of water without removing the wooden stand that was nailed into it I went through this whole fiasco of sawing off the wood with an old rickety saw that turned out to be a metal saw.  I found this out when the saw actually broke mid trunk.  

So I borrowed a wood saw and was back to work.  The next speed bump was when I realized that the nail drivin up the trunk was 5 inches long and I was trying to saw through it, I guess the metal saw wasn't such a bad idea afterall.  

Once I had a fresh cut on the tree trunk (and many little cuts all over my hands, arms and legs from the tree poking me) I put the tree trunk into an icechest filled with water and rocks. 

Trevor and I happily and carefully decorated it, not wanting to get more scratches.  We enjoyed hot chocolate while we blasted our AC.  

The next day I came home from work to find it lying in the middle of the living room floor.  I guess we should have stuck to Trevor's plan and left the nail in it!  

Now our wonderful Christmas tree is propped in the corner of the living room without it's star treetopper.  Our first Christmas tree in Costa Rica was a great learning experience, needless to say, we'll do it differently next year.

12.20.2008

Ugliest Christmas Tree Contest

The Costa Ricans definitely have us outdone!

12.10.2008

Afternoon on the Ocean

The day after Thanksgiving Trevor, his best friend who lives down here, Cass, Cass' girlfriend Julia and I went to the beach house and took an afternoon to fish the Pacific.

We rigged up ballihoo, had lunch packed in the cooler, applied sunscreen and were counting on some catch for dinner!  About twenty miles later when we had passed Isla Cano the dolphins came out!  There were spotted and spinner and bottle nosed dolphins of all shapes and sizes.  They all swam with the boat, gave us a show and totally distracted us from the fact that we hadn't caught any fish yet.  
Next were the whales.  Apparently it is very special to come upon a whale doing a headstand.  They're not sure why they do it but for up to an hour they position themselves completely vertically and upside down.  Just their tale pops out of the water.  So when we saw it in the distance we were able to cruise on over and get pretty close.  It was gorgeous, the tale is SO BIG!  We stayed for a while and noticed that it had a baby with it too.  They swam off together so big and so strong and so serene.  
On our way to catching fish we saw a total of five sea turtles which are an excellent find since they're tough to spot.  Then finally, we got a bite and Julia landed a dorado or dolphin fish or mahi mahi, whatever you want to call it.  Next was Jerry's turn.  He got a black tuna, a bait fish. 
 

Then it was my turn...

In less than two minutes from getting the fish on I had landed an 18 pound mahi mahi all by myself.  No one was even ready for it I got it in so quick.  Trevor gaffed it and we quickly threw it in the fish box...it was still a little too lively!  Dorado are so fun to catch because they dive then come up and jump out of the water!  They're excellent to eat and GORGEOUS colors!  


We had our fish so we headed in and enjoyed a lovely evening at the beach house with good friends.  All in a days work.  Pura Vida.












Snake Hunting

First a little information on the snake of interest:

"Terciopelos are often called the most feared animal in Latin America. They are in the viper family and are fairly excitable as snakes go, stories of them attacking rather than retreating are not uncommon. They are rather large too, the females on this coast average 66 inches (over a metre and a half), maximum recorded length is 97 inches. They have long hinged fangs which lie against the roof of the mouth. When they bite the fangs rotate forward into a stabbing position and their hypodermic needle fineness directs venom deep into the tissue. The venom is full of tissue destroying chemicals and digestive enzymes: when a human is bitten up to a third of the blood supply leaves the system and floods extremities or the intestines, the resulting drop in pressure stops the heart. In non fatal bites there is often permanent damage to the kidneys or lungs and to the site of the bite. "


"This infamous viper's large size, long fangs, and high venom production and toxicity are paired with an active and edgy disposition, making it one of the most dangerous creatures one can encounter in Costa Rica. It is the most dangerous snake in Central America and causes the most snakebite-related deaths among humans in Costa Rica. Venom from this species contains an anticoagulant and causes hemorrhaging.  "



So now you may be wondering why myself, four men from Sweden and our Tico friend Pincho would spend hours scouring the palm plantations in the dark looking for them.  Well, the answer is, what else is there to do on Tuesday night?  

We turned off the road into the mysterious lines of date palms slowing our speed.  It was as if we were a search and rescue crew scanning the fields and the road with back and forth motions of flash lights.  We saw glowing eyes and raced ahead, it was a large rodent staring back at us.  Next we drove through a spider web, yes a web large enough to cross the road.  Then we found it.  It was at the end of a dead end road.  It was amazing.  To be so near such a poisonous snake.  Its fangs are so long it actually bit through its own mouth and was bleeding.  The guys from Sweden were handling it, holding it behind the head.  I finally creeped out of the truck and inched closer, but not as close as them.



After letting it go we found a few other snakes.  One a vine snake crossing the road that I spotted and another tiny little snake which I forget the name to now.  At one point we backed into a tree turning around, that was kind of funny.  


After returning from the miles and miles of palm tree forests we went to the Las Vegas for a beer.  It had been a successful snake hunting evening.  Next these guys were off to Isla Violin (right across the mouth of the river from the beach house) to camp out for a few nights.  They ended up seeing plenty of snakes there too!

The moral of the story is, there's always something exciting to do in Sierpe!  Come down and visit! 

Here is their account of the story:  

"We ate pizza at 6 p.m. and were waiting for Pincho, the owner of Poorman's Paradise, to turn up since we had planned to have dinner with him. Pincho turned up after dinner but a quite charming girl called Chelsea turned up instead. She wanted to go with us when she heard that we were going to look for snakes in the plantation. Pincho drove the car and she sat beside him. I, Andreas and Rickard sat in the backseat. Fredrik, David and Max sat outside in the back of the car.

The first thing we did was to get stuck with the car in a mudpole. Fredrik jumped down and tried to push the car backwards. He didn't succeed. Luckily the car had 4 wheels drive but you had to switch it on at the front wheels outside the car. Fredrik switched over to 4-wheel drive and then we managed to back out from the mud.

The first thing we saw was couple of eyes glowing in the dark some distance in front of the car. Pincho stepped on the gas and in a few seconds we reached the place where the animal had been seen. It was an opossum. We saw glowing eyes a couple of times more and Pincho stepped on the gas both times. It was just a small kitten. Luckily I was sitting comfortable in the backseat since the guys outside had it quite ruff when Pincho stepped on the gas and the car drove at full speed on the bad road.

We drove on the small roads in the plantation while our headlamps searched the ground on both sides of the car. A couple of times someone at the back banked on the car roof and shouted snake. We found one smaller snake and one fer-de-lance. We also saw one dead snake which had been killed by a car. It was a boa. Max and Andreas, I think, went away when we took some photos of the fer-de-lance. They told us that they had seen a coati family up in a palm.

After our tour in the plantation we went directly to the nearby bar, dirty with rubber boots on. We sat and talked during some time. I ordered a Cuba Libre and got it on a can. I and Fredrik remained at the bar a little longer than David, Max, Rickard and Andreas. Chelsea, the American girl, asked us if we would like to follow her home together with some other guys when the bar closed. She wanted to play some kind of Nintendo game if I got it right. Some game where you sang and played a guitar. We followed her to her house but didn't go inside when the others went in. Her boyfriend was at home and I wonder what he thought when she came home with a bunch of guys.

Talk about a good feeling

Today the woman who cleans our house, Anna, came into the office to say hello.  She is more like a member of our extended family, really, along with her two children, Nicole and Antony.  She came to see how I was feeling since I was a little under the weather yesterday and actually started crying saying that when Jodi (another American woman she cleans for) and I are sick or sad that she gets really sad.  She cares so much about her friends that she was crying for us!  Talk about a big heart!  I just thought it was really sweet and that it shows what great people Costa Ricans are.  

Another sweet moment from today was when my Costa Rican partner Sonia called me over to her desk to sit down.  She said, in Spainish, "You know those rice and beans that Anya (her cleaning lady) made that Trevor's eating?... Do you want some?"  It wasn't so much about the rice and beans as it was about the deal she made out of it.  Such wonderful women.