December 18, 2013

Things I will miss about Puerto Rico

1. The monkeys
2. The CPRC staff and boatmen
3. Tostones and mofongo
4. Medalla (I know, this one surprised me too. But, thanks to Puerto Rico, I can now say that I enjoy drinking beer and actually find it quite refreshing!)
5. Breathtaking beaches
6. Sunny but sometimes rainy winters

Things I will not miss about Puerto Rico
1. Trying to understand the Spanish here with all of the Puerto Rican slang

I found it with english subtitles so everyone could enjoy this!

December 17, 2013

Packing

Yet another trip has come and gone. I am packing up my room today and bequesting possessions/food that I don't want to bring home with me. It feels like I was just back at home, since I usually don't visit Nevada all too often and I was just there in September and my parents visited less than a month ago. This won't last long, though, as I will soon be jetting off to Costa Rica for the Biology Foreign Study Program. I've gotta say, it is starting to feel weirder for me to travel back to the states than for me to leave the country. But it's weird in a good way.

December 16, 2013

Back to the Monday Grind

After a busy weekend traveling around with Jane, I finally got the time to finish my painting! I can't post a photo yet though since the person who I am giving it to reads my blog. But I've found a new awesome use for my monkey photos! Here's a taste.



And the great part about these is that they can be very versatile! We don't need to be limited to just birthdays- graduations, weddings- the world is our oyster!

December 15, 2013

Skinny dipping at the most beautiful beach in Puerto Rico

Today Jane and I headed over to Fajardo early in the morning to catch the 9am ferry to Culebra, an island just off the coast. We missed the ferry by 10 minutes. We then caught the 10:30 ferry (tickets were $2.25) after some terrible tea and empanadillas at a nearby cafe, and enjoyed an hour long ferry ride two seats in front of a woman with terrible seasickness. To maybe give some perspective, at first I thought it was a man who was getting seasick. After arriving in Culebra, we were greeted by four different men holding up signs advertising rides to Playa Flamenco, the "most beautiful beach in Puerto Rico". I easily bargained us down from $3 a ride to $2 a ride using the men to bargain for us (It went like this: one man said "$3!" and the next man said "$2.50!" and I asked "$2?"). So we then went to Playa Flamenco and I got to understand why it is the most beautiful beach in Puerto Rico. Culebra has no rivers or streams on it; all of the rain water falls into lakes or ponds and just sits there. Therefore, there is no runoff. Therefore, the water is as clear as glass and the sand is as white as a bone. Pictures do not do this beach justice, but I still took some pics for kicks.




The snorkeling wasn't the best I've ever experienced, (see: Zanzibar two summers ago), but it was still great to see all the Caribbean reef fish. Jane and I then swam around for hours and I spotted three white angelfish following me around in the water. We think they were attracted to the gold ring on my bathing suit. Before leaving, I decided to add "skinny dipping in broad daylight at the most beautiful beach in Puerto Rico" to my list. We then headed back to the ferry terminal and back home.

On our way home, we took a detour to Las Piedras for the Festival de Lechon, a typical Puerto Rican pig roast accompanied with live music. Quickly after we arrived, it started pouring, so we didn't stay long. But it was a pretty neat experience and I wish we could have spent more time exploring!




Horse Racing at its finest

December 14, 2013

El Yunque Take Two

Jane, a new graduate student from University of Florida here for trapping, rented a car for the weekend. Today we headed off to El Yunque for some good quality hiking and bathing under a waterfall. Not ten minutes before we reached the entrance, it started pouring rain. We are both adventurous souls, however, and continued up to the trail entrances. Lucky for us, it quickly stopped raining and so we were able to stay dry as we made our way down to La Mina waterfall. I took a few pictures for Jane as she swam under the waterfall, and as we were hiking back up we took a dip in a pool upstream from the waterfall. It was awesome because the waterfall was packed with people, yet no one seemed to care that there were perfectly beautiful pools just upstream, so we were allowed to enjoy ourselves in peace. We then took a quick 20 minute trail and headed back to the car to catch the sunset on the beach.




View from the trail

Weird tourist shop on the road from El Yunque

On our way back into town, we passed by "The Rum Bar", a place advertising free rum tasting. Obviously we stopped. I gotta say, this place was better than the Bacardi factory tour with regards to the fact that you could get half-shots of any rum (or alcohol for that matter) they had, including mixed drinks with rum. So, if we really wanted to, we probably could have gotten very drunk without paying at all for the drinks. Jane had to drive and I didn't feel like getting drunk, so we headed to Luqillo for drinking beers while watching the sunset on the beach.



In Luqillo, I found "Cutis", an ice cream shop that sold home-made ice cream. This included "carrot cake", with chunks of real carrot cake. It was some of the best ice cream, and definitely the best carrot cake ice cream, I've ever had! After grabbing some ice cream, we went next door to "Guavas", a bar and restaurant that brews its own beer from, you guessed it, guava. I don't know how to describe beer, but it was bold (NOT keystone or corona) with a hint of fruitiness (but definitely not cruddy fruit beer you'd find in the states). To put it simply- this was a very good home brew. At Guavas, we talked to the owner and inventor of the guava beer, Freddy, an ex-air force turned USDA agent by day, bar owner/beer maker by night. It was some great conversation and some great beer to finish off a fantastic day.



Freddy also makes his own coconut moonshine!

Oh Puerto Rico

December 13, 2013

Free Day Friday

Since we didn't have any monkeys today, I got the day off! It was very "productive", catching up on The Daily Show, reading, and watching a few movies. I also finished a painting and started another! I'll post a photo when this new one is completed.

December 12, 2013

Lunch with the Boatmen

On the boat ride home from Cayo today, Danny, one of the boatmen, was on the phone with Daniels Seafood ordering lunch for all of the CPRC staff. I jokingly added that he should order an extra mofongo con ensalada and then all of a sudden I inadvertently invited myself to lunch with the boatmen. It ended up being a lovely lunch filled with conversation (huzzah for practicing spanish!) and jokes about how I would be paying for the meal. I learned that it is a custom that the first person who eats after they are served have to pay for the meal. Thus, I got out of paying for everyone's lunch because William was so hungry he couldn't wait. I ended up not paying for my lunch in reality because Miguel insisted that he pay for my meal. It was a very kind gesture!

Since I can't really take photos of the trapping area, I am all out of new photos for the blog. And this is my blog now that I think about it- I can post anything I want! Thus I am officially dubbing my blog from here on out "a music a day". It probably won't be every day, but to get the ball rolling here's a song I've been listening to while relaxing after a long day on Cayo! Disfrutala (enjoy).

December 9, 2013

Papaya, Zucchini, and Monkey Chow

Trapping has been stupendous. Not because we are getting the monkeys high on ketamine and then taking their blood and measurements, but because I am able to help take the monkey's blood and measurements, then watch them come down from their drugs as I shove all the papaya and zucchini and chow that they can eat into their cages. To put it simply, I am very happy to finally be busy all day! Also it's very entertaining to watch drugged up monkeys munch on papaya as if it is the only food they've eaten in weeks. Which is actually half-true, since for the past two weeks most of them haven't been able to stuff their faces as they usually do.

December 2, 2013

Trapping

Trapping season has arrived and my days collecting behavioral data and hanging out with monkeys in the field is over. Thus, my 'monkey a day' has also come to a close. From here on out, I will be performing laboratory work taking morphometrics, helping with blood draws, and taking care of the monkeys when they wake up. I won't be posting every day, but I will give updates if anything interesting happens! And to commemorate my time in the field, I've compiled a bunch of monkey head shots I've taken on Cayo over the past 11 weeks.

I call it "Monkeys of Cayo"

December 1, 2013

Homework

I spent a few hours on the beach today doing some reading for the Biology Foreign Study Program in Costa Rica next winter. It was a very relaxing Sunday!