Sunday, June 14, 2009

Phew!



After an unexpected stop in Baltimore (Newark airport was closed due to thunderstorms so we had to land at BWI to re-fuel and wait... the kids were seemingly unfazed by the whole saga), all 35 of us made it back to WCCS at about 8:30 last night! Here are some final images and video clips of the trip. It was a pretty unforgettable week.

Swimming, snorkeling and hiking in Manzanillo Refuge:








Riding the waves later that same afternoon at the beach across the street from our hotel in Puerto Viejo:




Waving goodbye to Costa Rica, San Jose at 5 am down the hill behind him...



Saturday, June 13, 2009

Rafting

Hey everyone! Long time no post-- we spent our last few days in a pretty rustic (and beautiful) beach area near Puerto Viejo, very close to the border with Panama, and there was no internet access at our hotel. Now we are back at the San Jose airport (safe and sound and with plenty of time to spare, thank goodness, after a 4 am wake-up call) and so I'm trying to play catch-up a bit before we board.
Here are some highlight pictures picking up where we left off-- first, the dance class at the Sarapiqui Conservation Learning Center:
And then, on Wednesday, white water rafting, a definite high point of the trip for many of the kids based on our final meeting together last night:




And afterwards, many of us were wiped out... some slept with their Costa Rica stuffed monkeys on the bus-- ah, Cuenca...


They are calling us to board right now, so those will be the last pictures I can share from Costa Rica-- I'll do a final post from back in New York! The snorkeling photos are really something worth waiting for...
Parents, best case scenario (if the plane is on time, Customs and baggage claim go smoothly and traffic isn't too bad) we'll see you back at WCCS at 5 pm. Fingers crossed! Kids, though wishing they could stay in Costa Rica longer, are very excited to see you again!

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Day #2 at the Farm

Somehow the kids were even more impressive in the heat today! We met back up with David, Alfredo and their dad at the farm and grabbed our shovels again. This time we also carried big plastic trays of trees to plant, and trekked out deep into their farm. They showed us their pepper crops and explained how the berry-like bunches growing on the trees get roasted and ground into black or white pepper to put on your food. We tasted it too-- seriously bitter. We planted on a steep hill, because they have to save their flat land as pastures for their cows. Kids dug in despite the conditions and planted away.



After another great lunch in the home of the neighbors, we headed into the little town nearby. Alfredo and David toured us around their school-- where their classes have been cancelled for the last week because their teacher had a baby and there is no system for substitute teachers in the Costa Rica public schools (Rosie, the neighbor, told us that the 11th grade at the regional high school was actually cancelled from January until May because they had no teacher, until the 11th graders protested in the street and they finally got a teacher). We peeked into their classrooms and then some of the kids joined us for a soccer game and an impromptu dance-off in the field across the street.


I'm writing from the porch of the hotel, and this is the view right this minute as I type. The kids are really psyched about all the pools!


Tonight we've got dinner and then our dance-- I'm sure I'll get some good pictures there, and hope there'll be time to post some before we leave Sarapiqui. We are officially halfway done with the trip at this point and tomorrow morning we head out bright and early for a much-anticipated day of whitewater rafting! Then it's off to our final Costa Rican destination before we leave out of San Jose. We're not sure if that last hotel has internet access, so posts may be winding down soon, but hope you've gotten a pretty good sense of what we've been up to! So far, it's been a pretty fantastic experience, and we remain incredibly proud of the Class of 2013, the very cool young adults they are becoming and the way they've represented WCCS on our first experience abroad.

Service Day #1

Yesterday was a long day of really hard work under very hot sun, and the WCCS-ers pulled through with impressive persistence. The theme of the day was: "Costa Rica has already given us so many incredible experiences and memories; we should try to give something back." Maren and Mane got us connected up with the Sarapiqui Conservation Learning Center, whose mission is to get the community members of Chilamate (the area of Costa Rica we're in) involved in conservation projects and environmental education and to provide eco-tourism opportunities for folks like us. After watching a video (in Spanish, translated for the group by a bunch of our proudly Spanish-speaking students...) about how to make a biodigester (which can be done in one day, costs only $120 in supplies and can provide 16 hours of methane gas per load of excrement and water in a 13-meter plastic tank), we talked about the benefits of making one. In addition to providing gas for the family at no cost to the family indefinitely, the leftover liquid produced by the biodigester in addition to the gas can be used as fertilizer for crops on the farm, combats global warming by keeping the family from relying on a wood-burning stove and decreases water pollution because the waste from the animals is not running into the rivers. Then we headed out to the farm that needed a biodigester and met the awesome family who lived there, including their 8- and 10-year old boys, Alfredo and David, who worked all day barefoot seemingly without taking breaks and told us stories of their 24 cows who all have names. Below are pictures of the whole process-- which we got to see and help make happen pretty much from start to finish!
Here's their house and kids getting started on digging the ditch in which we later buried the PVC pipe that will bring the gas from the biodigester straight to their kitchen to power the stove.

Another big part of the project was shoveling dirt out of the enormous hole we needed for the actual biodigester and moving that dirt to the other side of the barn to be spread out.



In the middle of the day, we took a break and went down the neighbors' house for lunch. We hung out with Ronny, the little grandson of the neighbor, listened to music, ate a yummy homecooked meal, sampled "ice cream beans" that Maren found growing outside and enjoyed a break from the heat.


Then it was back to work! We buried the pipe in the ditch, finished moving what at one point had seemed like an endless pile of dirt, and watched as the head of the project inflated the plastic bag with exhaust to start the system. Success!


Some of the kids really shined in particular yesterday and were given Shout Outs by their peers at our meeting (after our cooking class back at the Learning Center where we made tostones and bean and cheese empanadas, dinner at the hotel and a surprise birthday cake for Alenson!) Super notable Shout Outs included Daysha, who seemingly never took a break from her dirt-spreading job, Kelvin who not only worked really hard with shoveling but cracked pretty hilarious jokes throughout the process, and Joemi and Kevin who just kept going the whole time with incredibly positive energy.
Today we are headed back to the same farm, where we're aiming to plant 400 trees in the forested section of their property. The reforestation project is about creating habitats for endangered bird species like the green macaw, preventing erosion and producing more oxygen. The kids are psyched about seeing the family again, checking out the family's cows and pepper crops and the idea that planting trees will probably not be quite as hard as the ditch-digging! And then later today, a soccer game in town, some time at the hotel pool, dinner and then back to the Learning Center for a dance lesson! Also, we're trying to make sure that all the kids have called home by this morning-- it's been a little tough since each of our hotel's has had just one public phone to use! Thanks for being patient and trusting all is well if you haven't heard from your student just yet.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Okay, so this will be the last post until later tonight... but I couldn't keep the video footage of Christopher & our snake friend from you. Maren, our guide, just reminded me that Eliza is not a boa constrictor, but rather a python. Either way, this lovely snake was wrapped around many of our kids. They totally shocked us by lining up waiting to have a python draped around them. This was at the same place where we were watching lava flow down the volcano from the porch at night after dinner... all before heading to the hot springs, where we took the pictures below.

We just finished breakfast (on Alenson's 14th birthday!) in Sarapiqui, where our hotel is pretty awesome yet again. Deep green lush forest every direction you look with bright red, pink and orange flowers popping up every so often and a babbling stream right next to us. Then there are paths covered by thatched rooves heading out in every direction to the rooms. Each of our rooms has a patio with a hammock-- seeing kids lounging around debriefing the day in hammocks is a funny sight for sure. Pretty different in every way from Brooklyn.

In a few minutes, we'll head out to the Sarapiqui Conservation Learning Center, where we'll be building a biodigester for a family's farm-- basically a way for them to use their cow, pig and horse livestock's excrement to emit methane gas that they can then pipe into their house to use for their stoves and lights, therefore not having to pay for electricity. Talk about hands-on experiences of renewable energy! We're all really excited. In the afternoon, we're getting a cooking class!

Good morning! More pics!

Very cool tree frog at the Serpentarium. And Eliza, the boa!!



The gentlemen trying to be hot, at the hot springs...

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Pictures, cont.

Cheers to the beginning of our second day in Costa Rica (feels like weeks ago now at 11:47 pm...)

Mr. Miller & the gang make it to the bottom of the Arenal Waterfall

The first of many pictures to come of us swimming in the river at the bottom of the waterfall.