Trip to La Casona with Desafios Tours!/¡Viaje a la Casona con Desafíos Tours!

Sigue en espanol

Ancient petroglyph (photo by Monique Girard).

Ancient petroglyph (photo by Monique Girard).

On March 4 Henry Barrantes, owner of Desafios Tours, led the SVBC on a cultural visit to Reserva La Casona, home of the Ngabe-bugle Guaymi people. On the way into the reserve we stopped to view one of the area’s most beautiful petroglyphs that is fairly well hidden in a grove of vegetation. With Henry’s help, we were lucky to see this ancient artifact.

Accompanied by a local guide, we toured the village and were impressed with the new Ebais medical center buildings where we were fortunate, again, to have had a chance to speak with a traditional medical practitioner who works there in tandem with the Coto Brus regional health team.

Henry, Lydia and Jean hurry to join the dance (photo by Julie Girard).

Henry, Lydia and Jean hurry to join the dance (photo by Julie Girard).

Two traditional dances were performed, led by a village elder who is one of the last bastions of these events. The words to these dances are not exactly ‘song lyrics’ in our understanding of those words but speak more directly to and about the natural world of animals and plants in the surrounding forest.

After about a two-hour visit, we had much to think about. Henry explained the almost constant movement between Panama and southern Costa Rica of these indigenous people who are citizens of two countries and have special governmental status allowing them to move freely back and forth — unlike Costa Rican and Panamanian citizens or even tourists who are required to have passports, automobile documents, bus and plane tickets and proof of cash availability.

Participants included Monique Girard, Jean Schroeder, Lydia Vogt, Julie Girard, Alison Olivieri, Barbara Keeler-Barton, Judith and Joe Ippolito, Judy Richardson and Henry Barrantes.

Espanol aqui

El 4 marzo, el dueño de Desafíos Tours, Henry Barrantes, guió al SVBC en una visita cultural a la Reserva La Casona, hogar de las personas Ngabe-bugle Guaymi. De camino a la reserva, nos detuvimos para ver uno de los petroglifos más hermosos del área, que está bastante bien escondido en la vegetación. Con la ayuda de Henry, tuvimos suerte de ver este antiguo artefacto.

Anciano Ngabe dirigiendo el baile (Fotografía de Julie Girard).

Anciano Ngabe dirigiendo el baile (Fotografía de Julie Girard).

Acompañados por un guía local, recorrimos el poblado y nos impresionamos con los nuevos edificios del centro medico Ebais donde, nuevamente, fuimos afortunados de tener la oportunidad de hablar con un practicante de medicina tradicional que trabaja ahí en conjunto con el equipo de salud regional de Coto Brus.

Se realizaron dos bailes tradicionales, liderados por un anciano del pueblo quien es uno de los últimos bastiones de estos eventos. Las palabras para estos bailes no son exactamente “líricas” tal y como las entendemos. Estas palabras hablan más directamente al y sobre el mundo natural, los animales y las plantas del bosque circundante.

Estudiantes de La Casona (Fotografía de Monique Girard).

Estudiantes de La Casona (Fotografía de Monique Girard).

Después de una visita de cerca de dos horas, teníamos mucho en qué pensar. Henry nos explicó el movimiento casi constante, entre Panamá y el sur de Costa Rica, de estas personas indígenas; quienes poseen la ciudadanía de ambas naciones y un estatus gubernamental especial que les permite moverse libremente entre ambos países. Esto en contraposición con los ciudadanos costarricense o panameños, o incluso turistas, quienes están obligados a portar un pasaporte, documentos automovilísticos, pasajes de autobús o de avión y probar que disponen de efectivo.

Los participantes fueron Monique Girard, Jean Schroeder, Lydia Vogt, Julie Girard, Alison Olivieri, Barbara Keeler-Barton, Judith and Joe Ippolito, Judy Richardson y Henry Barrantes.

Jungle Pools and Rushing Water/Piscinas en la Selva y Agua Corriendo

Thermal pool soakers (photo by Julie Girard).

Thermal pool soakers (photo by Julie Girard).

The recent day trip with Desafios Tour to Aguas Calientes and Finca La Libertad was a “birdy” and watery wonderful time! Everyone succumbed to the beauty of the two main thermal pools, secluded in the forest next to the fast-moving water of the Rio Coto. Members enjoyed the morning soaking in the warm water, hiking further into the woods to find a third pool, photographing local flora and fauna and just sitting on the huge rocks, chatting and enjoying the scenic backdrop.

Our very first bird was an obligingly perched Purple Crowned Fairy, seen well and by everybody. Other avian highlights included a likewise perched Double-toothed Kite and a sweep of ‘pecho amarillos’: Great Kiskadee, Boat-billed Flycatcher, Social Flycatcher, Gray-capped Flycatcher and Tropical Kingbird.

Purple-crowned Fairy (photo by Jeff Worman).

Purple-crowned Fairy (photo by Jeff Worman).

 

Our leader from Desafios, Henry Barrantes, then led us to his family’s huge farm, Finca La Libertad, where we had a delicious lunch cooked by his wife, Francini, and served by his daughter Valeria who also accompanied us on our previous Desafios Tour at Los Chocuacos.

Espanol aqui

¡El reciente tour de un día con Desafíos Tour a Aguas Calientes y a la Finca La Libertad fue un “aviario” y acuoso momento increíble! Todo el mundo sucumbió a la belleza de las dos piscinas termales principales, aisladas en el bosque junto a la rápida corriente del Río Coto. Los miembros disfrutaron la mañana empapándose en el agua cálida, adentrándose en el bosque en busca de una tercera piscina, tomando fotografías de la flora y fauna locales y sentándose en las enormes rocas para hablar y observar el escénico ambiente.

Balancing act (photo by Julie Girard).

Balancing act (photo by Julie Girard).

Nuestro primer pájaro fue un colibrí picopunzón amablemente posado y visto fácilmente por todo el mundo. Otras aves destacables incluyeron un gavilán bidentado posado de la misma forma y  variedad de “pecho amarillos”: benteveo, mosquerón picudo, benteveo mediano, bienteveo cabecigrís y el benteveo real.

Nuestro líder de Desafíos, Henry Barrantes, nos guio luego a la enorme granja de su familia, Finca La Libertad, donde compartimos un delicioso almuerzo hecho por su esposa, Francini, y servido por su hija Valeria, quien nos acompañó también en nuestro tour con Desafíos a Los Chocuacos.

 

 

Trip to Aguas Calientes and Finca La Libertad on Thursday, February 12

Please join us Thursday, Feb. 12 for a day trip to Aguas Calientes and Finca La Libertad. Once again, we will meet at the cemetery in San Vito to consolidate car pooling. Please be there no later than 8:15 am.

Rufous-tailed Hummingbird in flight. Photo by Julie Girard.

Rufous-tailed Hummingbird in flight. Photo by Julie Girard.

Our first stop will be Aguas Calientes, a natural thermal pool near Gutierrez Braun on the way to Amistad Park. We will bird around the entrance and along the path to the pool. In the past we have seen many species of migrants there including American Redstarts, Ovenbirds, Black-and-white warblers, Kentucky Warblers, Northern Waterthrushes plus local hummingbirds and Sulphur-winged Parakeets. Please bring bathing suits and a towel if you’d like to take a dip in the pool!

We’ll travel from there to Finca La Libertad, a working farm belonging to the Barrantes family where we will have a tour of the fruit orchard and vegetable garden and do some birding on the forest edge. A tasty Tico lunch will be provided while we feast our eyes on the beautiful Talamanca Mountains.

At $25 per person, a minimum of six people will be needed to run the trip with a maximum of 12 as space is somewhat limited at the pool. Please let us know ASAP if you would like to attend by sending an email to: sanvitobirdclub@gmail.com  First come, first served!

This adventure is for members only so if you would like to participate but have not paid your dues for 2015, please bring them with you! Hope to see you there!

A Fine Foray to Los Chocuacos!/Una Buena Incursión a Los Chocuacos!

Sigue en espanol

Boat-billed Heron, un chocuaco (photo by Jeff Worman).

Boat-billed Heron, un chocuaco (photo by Jeff Worman).

Desafios Tour, a local company offering interesting tours in and around San Vito, helped us plan a great day trip to the Boat-billed Heron colony near Paso Real on Friday, January 23, 2015. We had two guides from Desafios, owner-operator Henry Barrantes and his assistant Justyn Rodriguez, who arranged trip details and helped our 14-member group see Red-eared Slider turtles, a Forest Giant dragonfly, Least Grebes, Purple Gallinules, Neotropical Cormorants, one Northern Jacana, Green Herons, Boat-billed Herons by the tree-full and the (surprise!) Bird of the Day: Sungrebe, found by Greg Homer!

SUNGREBE! (Photo by Jeff Worman)

SUNGREBE! (Photo by Jeff Worman)

Other notable “landlubber” birds included Olivaceous Piculet, Plain Xenops, molting Summer Tanager, duetting Riverside Wrens, and Steaked Flycatcher.

We have not visited Los Chocuacos in several years and the owner, Miguel Antonio Lopes, has made some improvements including a covered dock extending out onto the lake where we were able to set up our scope to get additional views of the Sungrebe. The two swimming pools were a nice attraction for some as was lunch: a fresh tilapia casado with patacones, rice, salad and a big shot of Rompopo for dessert.

P.S. Wally Barton gets a free beer next time for correctly answering an Avian Pop Quiz: what family of birds has the most feathers? Yes, penguins!

SVBC at Los Chocuacos (photo by Henry Barrantes).

SVBC at Los Chocuacos (photo by Henry Barrantes).

Participants: from left to right Jo Davidson, Terry Farling, Wendy Russell Bernstein, Julie Girard, Alison Olivieri, Wally Barton, Barbara Keeler Barton, kneeling Greg Homer, Helen LeVasseur, Portia Wilkinson, Roni Chernin, Denise Worman, Jeff Worman and Pat Morgan.

Espanol aqui

Desafíos Tour, una compañía local que ofrece tours interesantes en y alrededor de San Vito, nos ayudó a planear un grandioso viaje de un día a la colonia de garzas pico de bota cercana a Paso Real viernes, 23 enero 2015. Tuvimos dos guías de Desafíos, el dueño-operador Henry Barrantes y su asistente Justyn Rodriguez, quienes arreglaron los detalles del viaje y ayudaron a nuestro grupo de 14 miembros a ver tortugas de orejas rojas, una libélula gigante de bosque, zampullines macacitos, cormoranes neotropicales, una jacana del norte, garcitas verdosas, arzas pico de bota y (¡Sorpresa!) el Pájaro del Día: ¡El avesol americano, encontrado por Greg Homer!

Neotropical Cormorant (photo by Henry Barrantes).

Neotropical Cormorant (photo by Henry Barrantes).

Otros pájaros terrestres destacables incluyeron al carpinterito olivo, el picolezna menudo, una tangara veranera mudando, un dueto de soterreyes pechibarreteados y el bienteveo rayado.

No habíamos visitado Los Chocuacos en varios años y el dueño, Miguel Antonio Lopes, ha hecho unas lindas mejoras incluyendo un muelle cubierto que se extiende hacia dentro del lago donde pudimos establecer nuestro campo de visión con el fin de tener vistas adicionales del avesol americano. Las dos piscinas fueron un gran atractivo para algunos, al igual que el almuerzo: un casado de tilapia fresca con patacones, arroz, ensalada y un gran vaso de Rompope para el postre.

P.D. Wally Barton obtiene una cerveza gratis la próxima vez por responder correctamente el Examen sorpresa aviario: ¿Cuál familia de pájaros tiene la mayor cantidad de plumas? ¡Sí, los pingüinos!

A beautiful, birdy site -- Los Chocuacos is near Paso Real (photo by Henry Barrantes).

A beautiful, birdy site — Los Chocuacos is near Paso Real (photo by Henry Barrantes).

Participantes: Barb y Wally Barton, Roni Chernin, Jo Davidson, Terry Farling, Julie Girard, Helen y Greg Homer, Pat Morgan, Alison Olivieri, Wendy Russell Bernstein, Portia Wilkinson, Denise y Jeff Worman.

‘Butterflies and Spheres’ Trip Report

Written by Pat Morgan

Participants: Naturalist Guide Eugenio Garcia, Escort Guide Alison Olivieri, Judith and Joe Ippolito, Barbara Keeler and Wally Barton, Caroline Torres, Veronica Torres, Terry Farling, Pat Morgan and Steve Allen.

After a slightly disjointed start, with missed ‘rendezvouses’ in San Vito, our three­-car expedition finally met up at the Bomba in Palmar Norte. After filling up (on drinks and munchies), we set off for Big Wave Dave’s Butterfly Paradise in nearby Osa Mountain Village.  Getting there presented one minor obstacle for the Ippolito’s front­wheel drive van:  a mas empinada mountain road.  Spinning to a stop, unable to go further, passengers clambered into Wally’s truck and Alison’s SUV.  Not quite a Keystone Cops scene, but a little touch and go as we watched Wally “try” to slide into a ditch and then slip and slide back toward Alison’s car. He finally prevailed in moving uphill and forward without further incident and we sallied forth juntos.

Butterfly Paradise (Photo by Pat Morgan)

Butterfly Paradise (Photo by Pat Morgan)

Big Wave Dave, a transplant from Ocean City, Maryland, has built Butterfly Paradise “from scratch.”  He now has about 30 species of butterflies in his enclosure, fed and nurtured by specific plant species. A talkative chap, Dave gave an excellent presentation, moving throughout the enclosure, showing Morpho pupae at their dinner leaves, pupae emerging from cocoons, along with an abundance of information on butterfly diets, habitat in the wild, and life cycles.  Eugenio and others also provided tidbits of information, i.e., the fact that only one group of butterflies — “cracker” or “brush-footed butterflies” (all in in the genus Hamadryas) — can make a clicking sound used in territorial displays. Dave, using dead and dried butterflies, explained and demonstrated their flight mechanism while some of us, ears still listening, were chasing butterflies with our cameras.

Dave in the Orchid Enclosure (Photo by Pat Morgan)

Dave in the Orchid Enclosure (Photo by Pat Morgan)

Several Scarlet Macaws, high up in the flaming yellow Colorados that had showered us with a flower storm of yellow petals, squawked a farewell before we departed back down the mountain to enjoy an excellent lunch at the Heladeria Diquis in Palmar Norte.

Afterwards, having lost a bit more time to chasing butterflies than anticipated, we chose to go to the close-by Parque de Esferas in Palma Sur to view a collection of Stone Spheres (instead of journeying further to Finca Seis closer to Sierpe where the giant spheres are allegedly left in situ). Eugenio Garcia shared all his archeological knowledge and experience about these mysterious rocks, suggesting a future trip to Bolas near Buenas Aires where it is believed the granite from which these stones were hand-chiseled was quarried some 1500 years ago.

Pat's Healing Ceremony (Photo by Barbara Keeler Barton)

Pat’s Healing Ceremony (Photo by Barbara Keeler Barton)

Also, Eugenio facilitated a healing ceremony on one of the spheres, Pat Morgan being the recipient, after explaining it is believed the spheres hold and channel a lot of power.  Whether it was the power of suggestion or the power of the spheres, Pat felt a little less pain afterwards.

Hot and sweaty after being down at sea level, the expeditioners returned to the fresh air of San Vito, all in agreement that it was indeed a fun and informative day of learning and camaraderie.  Those who did not jump on the invitation to come missed out on a great trip.

Spheres, Butterflies and Maybe a Bat Falcon

Heliconius erato petiverana

Heliconius erato petiverana. Photo by Harry Hull.

Please join us next Saturday, Jan. 4, for a Day Trip to nearby Palmar Sur and Palmar Norte. In Palmar Sur our leader, Eugenio Garcia, will show us a good spot to see the mysterious, ancient stone spheres of Costa Rica and discuss several current theories about their creation and use. We’ll also visit Butterfly Paradise at Osa Mountain Village and have lunch in Palmar Norte.

Although this is not a real ‘birding trip’, we could see some interesting species along the way. Frankly, we’re operating on the assumption that birders are curious folk and hope this trip will be of interest to many of you.

Costs include a $15 (or C7,500) per person admittance fee to the butterfly enclosure (children 5 and under are free) plus gas sharing, lunch money and an optional gift for Eugenio’s time and effort. Other necessities include binoculars, camera, sunscreen, water, etc.

Photo of stone spheres from www.templeilluminatus.com.

Photo of stone spheres from http://www.templeilluminatus.com.

The limit is 15 participants so please let us know ASAP if you would like to come along and if you are willing to drive by sending an email to: sanvitobirdclub@gmail.com. We’ll send out an itinerary and arrange carpooling. Hope to see you there!

If you have not renewed your membership or joined for 2014, this is perfect opportunity to do so! Resident Memberships are C10,000 per person; International Memberships are C7,500.