25 marzo 2006

Beautiful Jungle Waterfall

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV06182.MPG

Huge Trees

Kids say "OLA" by the Huge Tree

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV06170.MPG

What a trunk!

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV06217.MPG

Amazing Animal Footage

Crocodile Up Close

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV06134.MPG

Wild Pig (?) Eating

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV06224.MPG

Driving and Hiking Through Costa Rica

Bus driver narrates the trip

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV06122.MPG

Kids do their usual complaining during hiking

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV06180.MPG

Let's Go Surfing

Ben & Becky Surfing in the Pacific

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV06251.MPG

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV06242.MPG

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV06236.MPG

A few beach shots from today Saturday




We spent so much time today surfing, playing soccer on the beach, and getting burned that your faithful vacationers didn't take that many photographs. These are a few that we have from today. We do have video of the kids surfing and other folks will eventually be able to add some better beach shots to do justice to it all. pero manana.

Half Day at the Falls



We hiked in about an hour or 2, depending if you were trying to keep up with Ross Moore, or just traveling at the pace of the typical human. The hike was amazing as you traveled through high savanah farm country, into jungle, out of jungle back into remote high open savannah, back into jungle, past massive strangler trees, back into open, sunny and hot plains, where massive agave grew, back into jungle, including a very quiet and eerie area that felt like an ancient burial grounds, across streams, across Indiana Jones style bridges, down some very rocky trail, and into the jungle engulfed water fall. There we saw snakes, butterflies, crabs, and other tourists, but not too many. The kids swam, dove into the water, sunbathed, ate lunch, and tried to shoot some nature shots. Alexis droped her camera in the river, we changed Joel's bandage for his finger, we loaded up and went on more hikes, to steam vents, mud pits, and other waterfalls.

best

Robert

Animals wild pig


this little guy awaited us as we entered the jungle. I don't have my trusty field guide handy with me here in the internet cafe, so I'll just call him a wild pig.

Animals iguana and bird



We have iguanas and birds that hangout at our hotel in Tamarindo.

2nd Round Student/Parent/Teacher Posts

Champaign High Costa Rican Stories

Having been in Costa Rica for more than half of our allotted time here, I feel that I am making a good judgment in saying that it is one of the most amazing places I have ever seen. That being said it is reasonable, if not expected, that I get a bit homesick for friends, family, pets, etc. This dull ache in my heart paved the way for a beginning of a truly special relationship between myself and a certain Costa Rican named Pablo. Monday night, exhausted from a full day of traveling, I was feeling a bit lonely as I walked down the path to my assigned bungalow. Just as I felt that my heart would burst with sadness,I was startled by a movement on the steps. There, a mere three feet away from my door, lay a small starving dog, just barely hanging on to life. I immediately went into survival mode. With amazing speed I unlocked our door and sprinted to the food stash. After two seconds, I had managed to grab a trail mix bar and a couple of crackers and I was back outside, sitting next to my new found love. In my first ten minutes with Pablo (the name seemed to fit him well), I laughed, cried, and everything in between. The time after those few minutes was to say the least, less magical. Boys from our group came and coaxed Pablo away from my side with promises of paradise and better food. I was sad for a while but I refused to let it ruin my trip. Those precious few minutes with that stray dog will be held in my heart for the rest of my life.

Alexsis Johnson





It was the fourth day of our 10 day adventure that I found the most enjoyable. We started out going to a man made lake with a beautiful view of an erupting volcano. We got to go swimming in the lake and the water felt so good. After lunch most of us walked about a mile to a waterfall. We climbed down about 150 yards to the bottom of the waterfall where we went swimming. Some of us , Ross, Becky and myself, went climbing downstream saying “ lets just go to that next big rock and then stop.” The problem was that every time we got to the next rock there was another rock to climb to. In the end we probably climbed about a half mile downstream. If they would not have told us to come back I could have gone all day. It was so pretty and so much fun. On another note one of the funniest things I have seen so far was Libby busting her stuff in 120 degree water. The memories made here will last a life time.

Liam Slesinski




We Got Lost
The End

Burrito y Humberto

Oleshia Lee

So far, the highlight of my trip was at the Hot Springs. Libby fell into the hottest spring..

Lisa L Clark



This has been a trip of a lifetime so far with my oldest child. One I know I could not afford to give her. It is awesome to see all of the students helping the aldults with their communication of Spanish.
We went on the Canopy tour yesterday I had every intention of jumping, but when my mom got stuck in the middle all my confidence wenrt out throough my feet so I chickened out. Coming from a parents point of view this trip is great.
Faye Catchings,


How about this? Three generations of the Sugg Catchings family out of the U.S. together in Central America (Costa Rica). I went on the ride of my life, usually I am afraid of heights but, after my daughter Lisa chickened out I let them hook me up and wouldn’t you know it I got stuck in mid-air, God and I really had a long talk at that point.He told me to finish the Canopy Tour and remember except for plane rides my place was on the ground.This has been another thrill of a lifetime for me. As a co-teacher in social studies this trip is awesome!!!!

So far out of all the things we have done so far on this trip my favorite was the waterfalls. It’s so hard to pinpoint one thing I liked the best, we have done so many amazing things. This group is great, I know whenever I think back to this trip I’ll have the biggest grin on my face, these people are so crazy and absolutely hilarious!


Lindsey Hallett

The whole trip has been awesome! My favorite experience was the experience I was dreading, the Canopy tour. I believe I would go on it again.

Kitty Hallett


Day 6 and the kids haven’t killed me yet. Evey day is a new adventure in the fearlessness of the teenage mind. From sliding down the slides in scalding hot water or racing through 120 degree water to letting a giant bug crawl up one’s arm (all for 100 colognes or best offer) the kids are crazy. Third trip to Costa Rica and definitely the most adventurous. Of course a few of the “adults” are no brighter. No names but the leader is fearless.

Roger Webber













My name is Joel Thompson (age 9). I got stitches after putting my finger in the gear of an old grass cutter (not on purpose). I also lost my fingernail in the gear. The good news is it was the index finger of my right hand. I’m a lefty. I’m still having fun but will have to miss out on some fun swimming in the ocean and below waterfalls.
Still having fun, Joel


You will not recognize me upon our return because I have all gray hairs. Losing four kids on a taxi, losing two kids at an art fair, rashes, diarrhea, fevers, delayed planes, lost passports and wallets, stolen money and ipod, tico raccoons entering a room and eating all of someone’s food (and trashing it), blistering feet (from the hot springs), bug bites, bloody nosed canopy guide (given to him by one of ours), fifteen people in one single shower, a trip to the emergency room for stitches …. Well, all I can say is I can’t wait to plan the next one! My greatest satisfaction is hearing our kids communicate in Spanish and seeing them not be afraid to immerse themselves with their surroundings. Reading their postings on this blog says it all! Pura vida and we don’t want to come home

J Sra. T.

PS Good job Central on winning your first two baseball games!

Animals Bugs



We've seen lots of animals you won't see in Champaign/Urbana. These guys were caught right outside our cabins when we stayed in the mountains. The rhino beetle was very strong.

Dispatch From the Beach Town

Tamarindo is a dusty, hot, funky, hippieish, one-road town with a lovely, expansive beach, and waves that sustain 10-year-olds to 60-somethings with their long, roiling advance. Numerous surf, t-shirt, and trinket shops, old and new hotels, up-scale crafts and art boutiques, are home to an international cast of tanned expatriots, funky locals, enthusiastic tourists, dogs on the beach and in the bars and iguanas crawling through the landscaping.

Our hotel offers nice cabanas, a small bar and restaurant near a small, cold swiming pool, and quick access to the beach. Our kids have swam, surfed, boogie-boarded, sun-bathed, hunted for shells, danced to Brazilian music, eaten grilled sea bass (and Subway sandwiches), bought yet more souvenirs, and lamented the fact that the trip is soon coming to an end. Indeed, we end tonight with dinner, cards by the pool, a birthday party for Cheryl (with cake supplied by the French bakery down the road), packing and loading of the bus, and leaving by 4am to drive down the bumpy savannah road back to Liberia for an 8am flight out to Houston.

Did we mention the bumpy roads of Costa Rica--apparently the country has a very high fuel tax that should pay for massive road improvements, but a large percentage of the money is still going toward other services. We have bounced and bumped our way through most of the country--only the famous Pan American Highway has offered speeds over 50mph.

If I can gather enough energy to return to the hotel, fighting sunburn, jungle bites & vacation fatique, I will return to this air-conditioned internet cafe to post pictures and some more stories from the kids.

best

Robert

23 marzo 2006

Short Update from the National Park Rincon de la Vieja

Just talked to Robert on Instant Messenger for about 5 minutes. They had gone to the National Park at 8:00 a.m. and were just coming out at around 6:00 p.m. They were going to go to Liberia to eat at Pizza Hut. (Yes, Pizza Hut - they all apparently want American food). But before they got on the bus, they heard live marimba music playing from a nearby hotel. They went in and there was some type of live marimba band playing. Robert said that all the kids were dancing and that he had just finished dancing the macarena with Becky. Ben went up and did a timbales solo with the band. It seemed that they were all having a blast.

From the very brief update, I got that they had a GREAT time in the jungle. The National Park was more remote than the area where the Canopy tour was. They saw steam vents, mud pits, waterfalls, tapirs, snakes, and monkeys.

They head for the beach tomorrow and hope to have internet access at that hotel.

Cathy

22 marzo 2006

Ben & Robert on the Zip Line

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/zip_trip.mov

This short movie plays very small on the screen, but it's fun anyway.

You need Quicktime to view this movie. If you don't have it, you can download it from here.

http://www.apple.com/quicktime/download/win.html

21 marzo 2006

Bob and Jesus at the San Jose Market

We visited the San Jose indoor market and walked through what seemed like blocks of stalls, selling everything from fine leather to fish heads. This is Bob, looking over his shoulder.

San Jose Contrasts


These two shots were taken on our first day in San Jose. It's amazing the bold colors used throughout the region and also the contrasts between old and new.

Girls in the Jungle

This video is too cute not to post!

Brooke, Janelle, Alexis and Libby entertain the "zip-line" line.

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV06107.MPG

Bike Transport in Costa Rica

Ok, I really like bikes, all kinds of bikes, so this is one of my favorite pictures so far on the trip, taken when we first got into San Jose. These 3-wheelers are used throughout Latin America as good, cheap, no-pollution transport. Ok, I know you are saying 5 dozen eggs isn't very impressive. Let me tell you another story. This same night your intrepid reporter was sent on a journalistic mission to a local tavern known for playing old 70s and 80s US Rock n Roll: Led Zeppelin, Foghat, CCR, and others even we've forgotten about in the States. Imperial Beer was the beverage of choice for one and all at this bar. At one point, a beer delievery came in via one of these 3-wheelers, in the night, hills, traffic. The brought in about 8 cases of bottles on the front of one of these things! This had to weigh nearly 300 pounds. If that wasn't amazing enough, you should have seen 35 Ticos singing Born to Be Wild, verbatim, perfectly. This was a pretty tough bar, and I'm certain we survived since we came from the land of Rock n Roll.

Robert

Random Zip Line Photos




Helpful Zip Line Guy


As your humble narrator was blogging from his hotel bed, he overheard some of the girls explaining why they were going to marry a Tico--could it be that all the zip line crew were young, strong, handsome, helpful, and exceedingly complimentary as our girls zipped across 15 different lines?"

La Fortuna Waterfall Video

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV05975.MPG

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV05976.MPG

https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/r-baird/costarica/MOV05979.MPG



Video from La Fortuna Falls. These are short videos, but they may take a minute to load.

Getting Ready for Zip Line Tours

As we prepared for the canopy tour Matt and Ross tested the helmets by head butting, about 24 times. This might have been annoying to the 48 people waiting in line, but it was a necessary and rigorous test of the safety equipment.


Some of our seniors, now confident in the strength of their helmets as we get ready to start our zip trip.

Cowboy Leaving La Fortuna


I passed this cowboy as I was walking into La Fortuna in the morning. I wasn't able to catch his little dog in the shot--the little dog was walking point.

Volcano View From Hotel

This was the view from our hotel.

La Fortuna Main St. With Volcano

A little better view at the end of La Fortuna's main street than Champaign or Urbana--of course if the volcano blows, well, then. . . .

Real Jungle in the Canopy Walk


Before the canopy tour I walked up and tooks some pictures of real jungle. This isn't Disney or a Hollywood set--these trees are 100s of feet tall, and one tree hold more bromeliads and other plants than an entire zoo back in the states.

Racoons, Costa Rican Style




On the bus ride to the canopy trip we ran into some Costa Rican racoons,

My Top Decided Not to Agree with Me

Hey all! I hope Champaign is exceedingly wonderful like Costa Rica. Everything here is beautiful. Except for really hot springs. I guess it was an initiation to do something stupid at the hot springs. Don't ask me what we were initiated into. But the deal was to run through the hottest hot spring there was and since I have so much common sense, I decided to do it. Twice. The first time I burned my shins and it hurt so badly. Then the second time I guess I didn't pick up my feet enough so I fell. Oh my goodness, it was like hell on earth. My top decided not to agree with me so during my rapid attempt to get up I got slowed down because I had to pull my top down. The things I said afterward were pretty inappropriate, so the video of it will be covered with music. It was a pretty exciting experience. Well, I miss everyone and I hope everyone is having a wonderful spring break. With love,

Libby.

Me Gustan Los Ticos

Hola familia y amigos! Gracias Para me permite ir a Costa Rica! Yo quiere vivir aqui. Me gustan los ticos y el sol. Espanol es una idioma magnifica; los ticos piensan es gracioso cuando yo trato hablar en espanol porque yo hablo gracioso. Me encantan mi familia y amigos y claro que si Costa Rica! Pura Vida! - la chica mas bonita de Costa Rica

-- Janelle

Pura Vida everyone!

Pura Vida everyone! Everything is amazing in Costa Rica, even the food! Everyday is filled with so much to do, and I think I'm going to come home a few pounds lighter from all of the walking and hiking. I'm also going to come home a few shades different, but lets just not tan. Lets just say I decided it would be okay to go the first two whole days without wearing sunscreen, and now I am in excruciating pain. I'm just glad my mom is not here to scold me about not wearing sun tan lotion. I'm having a great time and I miss everyone back home! Hasta Luego!

~Brooke McMahon

The Market

The Market - Ben Donaldson

The second day here in Costa Rica, the plan is to go to a gold museum and then go shopping at the San Jose. We get to the gold museum, and it has these insane hardcore guards walking around with sawed-off shotguns strapped to their backs and the gates had locks consisting of retina scans, fingerprint scans, voice recognition and everywhere we looked were vaults of 2 ft. thick steel with laser gates that would saw off your leg like a light saber…so we decide maybe we should spend no more than an hour in this museum…of death. Everyone makes it out okay, except for this poor, poor, girl named Alexis Johnson. The story is too gruesome to recollect, so I'll move on. We get done mourning Alexis's fate and decide it's time to do some shopping! Woot! We get to the market and find out that this so-called “market” is actually a warehouse with stands EVERYWHERE creating tiny three-foot wide pathways that weaved around through this place. The stands consisted of souvenir stands, meat vendors, counterfeit backpack makers (Katie and Jacqueline actually found one with “Dansport” instead of “Jansport” and bought it for Katie's boo, Dan), knife makers, glass blowers, hit man hiring booths, places to hire the guards from the gold museum, and a hello kitty/my little pony stand overflowing with rainbows and happiness. Oh yeah, one had to watch where one stepped in the place because there would randomly be traps such as blow darts, endless pits, and saws coming out from the walls that were triggered by stepping on a small switch on the ground. Our entire group made it through this market alive and we travel back to our hotel and on the way, a flock of pigeons attack us and force us to run the boiling hot 4 miles back to our hotel, uphill both ways. Then Alexis came back to life (?) and she, Libby, Liam, Brooke, Janelle, and I went and got some Pizza Hut. Oh P.S. the food down here is absolutely amazing along with the coffee, candy, and everything else. Basically we are all having an amazing time on this ten-day adventure into a foreign land.

-Ben'

Costa Rica: It's Pretty Cool

Costa Rica: It's Pretty Cool
It's the 5th day of our trip and we're having the best time ever. Yesterday we went to a waterfall and got to explore the rapids below which was really tiring, but that's okay because afterwards we got to go to a hot springs resort place. It had man made pools but naturally heated water from the volcano that was only a few miles away. We relaxed in the hot springs sipping our pina colas and pineapple daiquiris. It was exactly what you think of when you think of a paradise vacation. There have been some really funny moments too. The first night in one of our hotels Matt R. was so excited about the lamp in his room that you turned on just by touching, that he came to our room to show us ours. He plugged it in and got really upset when it didn't work. When we say upset we mean he started screaming like a girl and rolling around on the bed. It's fitting that he screamed like a girl because here all the boys have taken forever to get ready to go places which is supposed to be a girl thing. Right now we are on our way to the canopy tour and can't wait to ride on the zip line. It's going to be a little scary but a whole lot of fun. The whole trip has been a lot of fun so we expect no less. Hi to people at home in the cold. :
-Katie and Jacqueline

A List of the Strange/Stupid Things I've Seen/Heard About

A List of the Strange/Stupid Things I've Seen/Heard About. -Stan Wojnar

1.) Matt Kresca reading Cosmo magazine at the airport.
2.) Ross Moore and Matt Kresca having a bucket of water dumped on them by Canadians in the hotel in San Jose.
3.) A dead/unconscious (not sure) man laying in the gutter in San Jose.
4.) Costa Rican kids staring at the sunbathers in our group at the park in San Jose. There was also a man selling sunglasses standing there the whole time.
5.) Luke Matthews and Matt Kresca holding their eyes open to the sulfuric steam coming out of the volcano crater.
6.) Ross Moore giving Alexis an asthma attack by cutting off the power to her room and then banging on the door after dark.
7.) Several people jumping into the scolding hot waterslide at the hot springs.
8.) After seeing Luke Matthews and Matt Kresca do it, more than half of our group decided to run across the steaming hot pool at the hot springs, which Libby fell into.
9.) People walking in on other people in the bathrooms because they a lot of them didn't have locks.
10.) Matt Kresca letting a giant beetle crawl up his arm and bite him, all for 1500 colones from Mrs. Thompson.
11.) Luke Matthews and Ross Moore eating spaghetti with their hands because they didn't have any silverware.
12.) Matt Kresca singing in the shower.
13.) Luke Matthews singing “Los Pollitos” on microphone in the bus as well as the microphone on our boat one day when we had another tour group with us.
14.) Trying to get Mr. Baird to stop playing soccer with the local kids in Alajuela.
15.) Mrs. Thompson breaking a chair during breakfast one day.
16.) Mrs. Thompson putting us all in taxi cabs one day. We had about half of the people go to the wrong place.
17.) Our tour guide making fun of our political system in a very humorous way.
18.) Our tour guide trying to sing “Los Pollitos” in the same manner as Luke Matthews.
Well that's all that I can think of at the moment, I'm sure I have missed something. I hope I haven't embarrassed anybody too much. I hope you people at home enjoy reading this. ------Stan Wojnar

Hot Springs

Hot springs- Matt Kresca

The most noticeable thing about the second city we visited, La Fortuna, was the giant Volcano dangerously located right next to our hotel or resort or whatever it is called. This breathtaking sight was accompanied with a fear that this volcano would massively erupt killing everything in sight. Luckily, for us, this never happened. However, the hot springs came awfully close to experiences molten lava. Luke Mathews and I had the ingenious idea of running through then hottest lava at these “springs.” Seeing our bravery, others tried to match this amazing feat, but miserably failed. One person, without mentioning names, failed the worst. This person, Libby Beck (Did I say I wasn't going to mention names) fell directly into the current of lava. Her words following this experience sum it up best. She said,“* Holy Sh** Oh my * Crap** Fu** A** !!” Sounds like she had an awesome experience at the Hot “Springs”…if you can even call it springs. All I can say is that I haven't heard an array of cuss words like that since Vietnam. I can only hope to have as much fun as Libby did at the hot springs by the end of this trip.

The Infinite Hike

The Infinite Hike
By Ross Moore

The moment had finally come where only the EF strongest would survive. I had been training months for the trek and no matter how many laps I swam in the pool I knew the hike would still be the most strenuous physical activity known to man. I would have to eat a hearty breakfast if I wanted to survive the treacherous journey so I ate thirty-two raw eggs. After breakfast I stretched for an hour because I did not want to pull a muscle, and it was time to head for the summit of La Fortuna waterfall. The starting group consisted of about twenty brave warriors, however even the strongest perish under conditions such as these. We left at 4:00 A.M. and had a fourteen-hour hike ahead of us without food, water, or bathroom facilities. An hour into the hike a hearse came by to pick up any bodies that had ceased to meet the demanding level of intensity it took to accomplish the task. Six warriors had perished by that point in time and others were still dropping like flies. On the side of the road skeletons could be seen from others that had tried the feat and failed miserably. Ten hours into the hike I could feel the fatigue set in and my legs were burning, I was suffering from severe dehydration and felt as if I would no longer go on. Then Sir Brunsington gave me a sip of liquid gold from his holy grail and I felt like I could bench press the world. I ran the next four hours powering up the seventy percent gradient incline averaging twelve miles an hour. When I had finally reached the top I knew that all of my intense training of waking up every morning at 5:00 A.M. and running multiple marathons had paid off. In the end only four survived the intense hike and around fifteen died of dehydration or were victims of cannibalism. All I can say is Costa Rica is tight…pura vida baby.

Luke's Story

Luke's Story-by…Luke

The day began like any other would here in Costa Rica. William (our guide) was cracking chistes left and right and Geovanny (our bus driver) was pounding fists. We made our 2-hour Mecca to the Poas volcano and upon arrival we vigorously hiked for 2 days to reach the summit. It was pure blood and tears. Some struggled to continue but we pushed them on. Matt “Big Leslie” kresca even shed a few tears of sorrow from the extreme pain. Once we reached the summit, we had the most amazing view of….lots of clouds and burning sulfuric air. Our eyes watered once again, but this time it wasn't from the emotional feelings we got. It was pure sulfuric agony. Ross, Matt, and I (Luke) had the genius idea of seeing who could withstand the most pain without blinding themselves. We pinned our eyes open for a good 10 minutes and let the sulfur-filled air fill our eyes. We teared, tourists were snapping pictures. And our guide (William) told us that we were the first to ever take on the task of putting ourselves through extreme matters of pain in that way. Presently, Matt has lost his eyesight temporarily and we are hoping that his father, who is an “eye doctor”, can repair the damages. Actually he is fine and so are the rest of us. Pura Vida…Para Servir-Luke Mathews

The Human Sacrifice

The Human Sacrifice
By Brooke McMahon and Janelle Yambert

Climbing up to the top of a foreign structure at the Hot Springs, Janelle, Becky, and Brooke helplessly look up to see Ross jump back with the reaction of almost peeing his pants. An Australian accented man, whom we shall call “The Virginian”, who turned out to have a comedian type personality, jumped at Ross in attempt to scare him; he was successful. After we all reach the top of this foreign structure, we converse with The Virginian about volcanoes, details about the trip, Costa Rica in general, and ultimately he comments about how this foreign structures purpose is meant for human sacrificing. Upon hearing the words “human sacrifice,” Janelle, Becky, and Ross decide Brooke would be the perfect candidate for such an idea to perform on this foreign structure. The Virginian, proud of his idea for the sacrifice, decided to get the footage of this activity on camera. While the Virginian found the perfect angle to capture the footage, we prepared our sacrifice. Ross began the human sacrifice by carrying Brooke in-between Becky and Janelle while they did the tribal song and dance. Once Brooke was on the ground dead, Ross reached for her heart, grabbed it, and took a bite out of it. After finishing up the sacrifice with bowing to Brooke's sacrificed body…we will always have this memory.

20 marzo 2006

La Fortuna Falls



Some pictures. I have some video, but can't figure out how to post it. When Robert checks in tomorrow, hopefully he'll fix it.

Random Photos




Per Robert's descriptions -

#1 - Soccer stadium

#2 - Park in San Jose

#3 - Caballero

#4 - Market in the park

Cataratas Resort








Considering that we are looking at up to 8 inches of snow in Champaign, it seems kind of cruel to post these, but here you go. This is the hotel they stayed at last night and are staying at tonight.

Botos Lake


A happy group at the top of Botos Lake

The Walk to Poas Volcano and Botos Lake






The group hiked through the jungle to view Poas Volcano and Botos Lake

Update on Sunday - 3/19/06

From: Robert Thomas Baird
Sent: Mon 3/20/2006 12:54 PM
To: Robert Thomas Baird
Subject: from costa rica




It has been only 3 days in Costa Rica, but yesterday, Sunday, seemed like a week of living all packed into a day that covered a lot of ground. A few of us began with Mass in San Jose in a very old church, back to breakfast at the Grand hotel, a bus ride through San Jose and then a long walk through the grand park in San Jose, where 1000s of ticos play soccer on ground that might be rough for motorcross events. The park was beautiful with massive trees--the trees in Costa Rica apparently just keep growing for 100s of years, and have no qualms about reaching 100s of feet. The park was very busy as an arts festival was in session and we walked through 100s of stalls looking for deals on crafts and items. Many folks at home will be receiving some nice gifts upon our return--handmade silver jewelery, intricate wooden boxes, leather work, and on and on. We kept walking through a lake and on to the national soccer stadium, where our own U.S. team recently played in a World Cup qualification match. There we caught our bus, but not before we were able to visit with our guide William´s son, who plays soccer for a 2nd division professional team, who were playing in the practice field next to the national stadium.

We then continued on to lunch, after driving through the Costa Rican countryside, mountains, coffee, strawberry, flower plantations. Every small town had a soccer field and since it was Sunday, every town had a game going. For lunch we ate traditional Costa Rican, beans chicken or beef, rice, plantains, fresh strawberries with milk (think fruit smoothie). Both of the lunch spots we have eaten at on the road serve many tourists, but there are locals crammed in eating, so the food is the real thing and filling. After that we went on to the Poas Volcano and Botos Lake. the volcano was not only shrouded in mist, but we were shrouded in fog at the viewing station-our trip to Botos lake was our first walk-via trail-through real jungle, and the pictures reveal that. Botos was clear and the view was nice from there. On the walk back down, the jungle trail offered shafts of light, provided by the water vapor of Poas.

We then pushed on to La Fortuna falls. We arrived and 20 Costa Ricans on motorbikes--a major form of transport here--were reving up and blasting away. After they left it was a bit more quiet and we enjoyed a spectacular waterfall, being able to walk up behind the falls. Next stop on our journey--remember, I said it was a long day--we stopped at a great road-side shop, where we ate fresh strawberries and bought homemade candies and water and drank coffee.

On the last leg of our bus ride to hotel de Cataratas we had to stop because we smelled something burning. Our trusty driver Geovani determined it was one of our air conditioners, so we turned it off (it was only about 60 degrees anyway) and headed on as darkness fell. We arrived at the hotel Cataratas and it is very large and has many bungalows and a nice pool, miniature golf, good coffee and food. That night our guide, William, played his guitar for us by the poolside and we rested after a very long day. We had a minor theft about 10 minutes after moving into our bungalows and we were a bit worried about what that might entail for the rest of our stay. Within an hour or so the local sheriff had already captured two guys and retrieved some of our cash and goods. As events unfolded we began to feel much more comfortable as it became apparent that not much happens around here without the locals hearing about it and setting things straight.

When we woke this morning we were surprised to see that our hotel was at the foot of two volancos, which towered over us like something out of Jurassic Park, it being dark last night when we arrived.

best

Roberto

Pictures from Heredia





#1 - Gardens in the Church behind the soccer field

#2 - Police station

#3 - Janelle does some shopping.

Soccer in Heredia



Coming to you via the wonders of technology. Apparently there is no internet at the hotel. Robert walked into town and went to an internet cafe, but the connection was poor and he couldn't get anything loaded on the blog. He got on Instant Messenger, started to talk to his secretary at the U of I, who then called me on my cell-phone and told me to get on AIM. I did & now I'm downloading pictures for him & he's giving me instructions over Instant Messenger. Whew. It's a crazy world.

Cathy

#1 - Local boys play some soccer on a court behind the church


#2 - Matt & Robert played soccer with them too, then posed for this picture.