Stand back, I’m going to try science!

Not only is the Costa Rican life pretty sweet – work actually gets done too!  My two experiements (Leaf packs to measure decomposition rate, and communities to measure effects of diversity on predation and decomposition) are all up and running! I’ve claimed nearly every bromeliad within a 1 km radius of the station to stick experiments in.  Now back to searching for more critters so I can replenish things in 2 weeks. 

I was going to include a picture of my experiment, but it actually looks identical to the header photo of this blog! A common site here at Pitilla – bromeliads with plastic tubes with mesh hats sticking out of them. Field ecology is weird.

ALSO – I’m very curious about what is happening back in Vancouver! Have Jana and I suddenly become the sole members of the Srivastava lab?? Where are the posts from home?

What a morning!

When Diane asked if I wanted to go down to Santa Cecilia this morning to pick up the *new ATV’s* (!) I obviously jumped at the chance! (You mean I get to go ATVing for half the day and still count it as field work??) So off we went, both on the old ATV that I can’t change gears properly and takes herculean strength to turn right. After a very bumpy 25 min ride into town, we pulled into Cali and Petrona’s housed to see 2 gorgeous new Yamaha ATVs parked in the yard. What a beautiful sight! The ride back up to town was one of the funnest things I have done in a long time!  Racing up the dirt road which was bone dry after 3 days of no rain, plowing through mud puddles in 4 wheel drive…  WHEE!!  And that wasn’t even the highlight!

We stopped part way up to collect some dead leaves off a fallen tree for decomposition experiments and heard some grunting a little ways into the forest. That’s when we spotted the troupe of howler monkeys just 2 trees away! There were about 5 or 6 of them, including one youngster. We watched for about 10 minutes as they just hung out, moving between trees and munching away.  One of them came right out to the nearest tree and was watching us right back!

We finally tore ourselves away from the monkeys to return to the task of ripping down the dead branch.  Which involved climbing on a fallen log and jumping up and down, disturbing all the underbrush. After rather unceremoniously dismounting from the tree, I saw that we had disturbed a tarantula! It was actually pretty cute, about 5 cm long with brown furry body and black furry legs.

The rest of the ride up was uneventful in terms of wildlife, but what a ride! Under clear blue skies with a clear view of the volcanoes, tropical forest to the sides, and dry yet exciting roads – I was actually laughing to myself as we went and hoping that every day I find something to make me that happy!

Uncertainty in Costa Rica

“The latest bashing by Mother Nature left the country in a mess. Roads are blocked, some residents are homeless. Many more are in shelters. And transportation between the Central Valley and the rest of the country is hampered. A weather alert continues, and there is no sign rains will cease.”

~ A.M. Costa Rica

The good news is, we weren’t there to be caught in a landslide.  The bad news is, the latest Tropical Storm to hit Costa Rica has done severe damage to all infrastructure and pretty much all major roads, including the Interamerican highway (Hwy 1) are closed, and it’s still raining. Our fearless leader, who left yesterday morning, found herself stranded in San Jose with no way to get North to Santa Cecilia and Pitilla. Last report was that she was going to catch a plane to Liberia and meet us there tomorrow.

The upshot is… no new ATV (yet), and potentially no way of getting from Liberia (where we are flying in) to Santa Cecilia and our field site in Guanacaste. I guess we’ll just have to get there and find out!  T-1 day!

T-4 days!

Lisa!
Lisa!

I can’t believe it’s here.  After more than a year of anticipating this dream field season… we leave in 4 days.   Lisa (my friend from master’s degree and current field assistant ) just arrived in Vancouver and we spent the day meeting the lab, packing, and experimenting with new field equipment.  Last week, I told my boyfriend that it didn’t feel like we were leaving in a week!  And he said, it will when Lisa gets there. And he was right!  Our trunks – three 50 lb. trunks (one more than we expected!), plus leftovers now being crammed into our personal backpacks – are packed. When I introduded Lisa to Diane this morning, she said ‘I guess I’ll see you on Sunday!’.  She meant, meeting us in Santa Cecilia astride her brand new ATV, ready for us to load it up and head up to Pitilla!

Yes, I still have equipment that I haven’t built yet.  Yes, my rubber boots are still 2 sizes too big. Yes, my pack is still half full of my gear from my last camping trip, and I haven’t even made my ‘remember to pack’ list. And yes, I still have no form of currency valid in Costa Rica!  BUT, my field assistant is sleeping in my apartment, I have new batteries in my camera, I have my research questions firmly in mind, and I can almost SMELL the jungle!

And we leave in 4 days!!

Does anyone else feel that field biology is just an excuse for scientists to do arts and crafts?

Seriously – what are the main pieces of equipment you use in the field. I bet it involves hot glue, duct tape, and ziploc bags!