April 08, 2008

Kiki Corridor Progress-April 7, 2008

    Work began on the Kiki biological corridor the 27th of March, only 12 days after the big fundraising dinner on March 15th. The topographical survey was done on the 27th, as well. With the stakes in the ground to mark the boundary lines we could start planting the living fence posts and stringing up the wire to prevent the livestock from getting in there and eating the seedlings after they are planted.

    Below are photos showing the entire process from cutting the branches out of the trees for living fence posts to planting them in the ground at the corridor site. We used a big variety of tree limbs giving an almost immediate source of fruits for the birds and flowers for the insects and hummers. This all took place since April 1st and the workers are putting up the wire right now as I write.

A huge thank you to Sandra Shaw and Roger Eichholz for donating their worker Koki  to help out for several days. Thank you to Doug Ward for his donation of 70 tree limbs from his farm and allowing his worker, Vallarta, to come and help plant and haul for 2 days. Thank you, although none of them will ever read this, to Omar and Oscar Muñoz Arguero, Koki and Vallarta for your back breaking work and enthusiastic attitudes about the entire project.

Kiki_corridor_2

  Oscar cutting Jinocuabe limbs up high.








Kiki_corridor_1_2

Omar and Koki stacking them.


Kiki_corridor_3
Oscar and Omar planting and Vallarta hauling the living posts on down the line.


Kiki_corridor_4
Far off look at the corridor but it reaches over 750 meters long.


    Here are photos of the wildlife in attendance on this day. One gets the feeling they are just waiting for the corridor to be finished so they can move in. What do you think?

Kiki_corridor_5_2
Orange Butterfly having a sunbath.


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Mantled Howler Monkey, male, having a cool nap on this hot day.


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  Mother and baby watching.

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Flowering vine.

Kiki_corridor_9_2


Dusky-capped Flycatcher.

   

    The fence will be finished day after tomorrow. There it will sit until the dependable rains come. When we are sure that we will get rain everyday we will give the call to all of our hard working, tree planting volunteers to…


                                                        LET’S GET PLANTING !!

Stay tuned to the blog for more photos and news.


March 24, 2008

LRFF Costa Rica, Fundraiser 2008

Chrisbernarddan
    On March 15, 2008 a fund raising dinner was held to benefit the creation of a new biological corridor. We call it the Kiki corridor because the owner’s name is Kiki and he has signed on to participate in La Reserva’s forest regeneration project.
   
    Thanks to Jim and Rene Aoki the fundraiser was a complete success. They let us use their beautiful indoor/outdoor restaurant, the Five Corners Grill, with the most excellent accommodations this side of the old United States. Thank you so much Ichiban and Curly. Without your generous input the party wouldn’t have happened.Over 125 people were in attendance to bid on the silent auction, put on by Mike and Marcy Wagner. Many beautiful items were donated to be sold at the auction. There was a 50/50 raffle and Barbara Beeres won 50,000 colones ($100). She said that she only bought 10 tickets so she quadrupled her investment. Music was provided, beautifully, by the “no name’ band made up of Chris and Sonia Sullivan on guitars, harmonica and vocals, Daniel Spreen on bass, Bernard Hudson singing the bluesy lead vocals and Gary Graham on the rhythm guitar. When they all played together the room really rocked. But the big attraction was the delicious Mexican food cooked and served by Mary Blizzard who is also Secretary on the Board of La Reserva U.S. There was Chicken Mole, enchiladas, guacamole (tons of it, a rarity), many different salsas some provided by Pura Comida S.A. of Quebrada Grande, refried beans, rice, many different salads and fruits. Everyone who bought a ticket for the dinner received all the Mexican food they could eat and one free Margarita.

    Mike Wagner and his friend Tom Wilkinson did the bartending and had a tough time keeping up with all the Margaritas. In fact, they ran out of Margarita mix early on but there was still plenty of wine, beer and tequila.

    The budget for the approximately 4 meter by 1000 meter corridor for the 5 year contract came to $1604.00 US. At the end of the night everyone gathered up the money collected and Dan, Richard and I counted it. As we kept counting I had to swallow the great joy and appreciation that welled up within me so that I wouldn’t burst out crying or jumping up and down. The final count came to over $2000 and some more donations came in afterward to make the grand total $2500.

    First thing Monday morning I was on the phone to the topographer to have him come and make the map of the area and plant the stakes so that we can start cutting the branches from the Pochote, Higueron, Jinocuabe and Jocote trees in the next 2 weeks and get them planted during the waning moon. Afterward, we will string up the wire and wait until the rains begin so that we can plant the 600+ native seedlings from our nursery to fill it all up. The seedlings that we will be using come from all the hats and t-shirts that we have sold in the past 6 months. There will still be a surplus of trees available from these sales so we plan to get those in the ground at La Reserva when the rains begin.

    Thank you to everyone, and especially you Mary, for all the selfless hard work and intention that went into this party. It was all of that positive energy involved in the planning and manifestation of the party that made it the great success it was. Remember, this corridor and every other one that we create is ALL of ours, because we are all working toward the same goal, healing our Earth for the good of all life upon her.

    Many people, especially children, have expressed interest in doing the planting of the Kiki corridor. I am taking everyone’s names and will call you when it is time to plant. We will do it on a Saturday so that everyone can participate. As an army we shall descend upon Kiki’s barren pastures and we will all heed the call on that particular day…….


                                                                LET’S GET PLANTING!!

March 03, 2008

What’s up at LRFF

    Whew! We’ve been really busy here in Costa Rica. The LRFF was invited to participate in the Wetlands Day celebration here in our town of Tilarán, Guanacaste, Costa Rica with an exhibit in the park for 3 days, February 15 – 17. Here are a couple of photos of our booth and the interested passersby.
Expositiontilaran
    Here are three of us manning the booth early in the morning, before all of the people began to show up. Gary Graham, Betsy Whyte and me.

Expositiontilaran1    
Body language tells the story in this photo, with everyone leaning in to see what we are all about.

    We sold $280.00 worth of caps and t-shirts, bringing the grand total of trees to be planted when the rains begin to over 600. This will be just about enough to plant in the new biological corridor we are working on now that will connect the La Reserva forest island with the next large forest to the west via a 4 meter by 1000+ meter long strip.

Thank you to all of you who were there to help us with the exhibit. Namely:

•    Helen Hollenbeck for the great artwork, donation of maps and materials.
•    Gary Graham for his endless help manning the booth and transporting all of the contents thereof twice a day.
•    Mary Blizzard/Kelly for the help with the storyboards and manning the booth.
•    Betsy and David Whyte, Sandra Shaw, Wally Razanauskas and Michelle and Tim for the help with manning the booth each day and for enduring the super loud music coming from the huge speakers directly behind our exhibit.

Without all of you the exhibit wouldn’t have been such a success or even happened at all. We sure are all lucky to be working together.

    The most exciting news from those three days is the signing up of over 200 hectares of lands by owners, promising to participate with all or part of their properties in the La Reserva forest regeneration project. Two owners expressed interest in the foundation buying their entirely forested (primary) properties for perpetual ly protected status.

    Our newly elected President and second term Treasurer, Fran Sheets, from the LRFF in the United States came for a visit and to get caught up on all of the business that has taken place in this past year. She brought her friend, Don Roper, an economist from the University of Colorado.

    We worked hard planning the tree corridor that will be planted when the rains begin in June, connecting the La Reserva forest island to the next large forest to the west. Worked out a budget and work plan, had meetings here and as a conference to the U.S., worked with David on our website and inspected a large primary forest area that is being offered to LRFF for conservation.  Don worked on a new photo album at www.picasaweb.google.com under La Reserva Forest Foundation.  We will be adding more photos as time goes on, but be sure to check it out and let us know what you think of it.

   It was a busy 5 days and we finished it off with a very mellow dinner party in Fran’s honor at Mike and Marcy Wagner’s cozy lakeside home.

Bored_members
This is titled the Bored Members, from left, Don Roper, Fran Sheets and Daniel Spreen. That’s me up top.

And finally, a new photo of Sandra and Roger’s private reforestation area this month. Included are all of the photos taken there since August of 2006 so that you can all see the progress of their little forest. Remember this is less than 2 years since it was planted.

         

Srsreforestation806 August 2006





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March 2007



Srsreforestation1007 October 2007



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February 2008


    This is the dry season so in this last photo the foliage isn’t as full but they are growing taller virtually every day. We will post another photo this rainy season again. This progress should convince even the toughest cynic. Come on, everybody and..

                                                            LET’S GET PLANTING, NOW!!

January 29, 2008

Positivism, Negativism and Succession

            

Winddamage1     This past January 2nd we were hit by the strongest windstorm anyone has ever seen here in the Lake Arenal area. The photos here are of 2 different areas in the La Reserva forest showing the damage it caused. It almost looks like a slash and burn logging area, before the burn. It is as if a tornado hit in these small (1/2 hectare) areas, because it caused all of the trees to twist and snap in half, no matter how big    
                          they were.
Winddamage2
    My first reaction was to mourn the loss of my old friends. I’ve admired those huge old trees for many years and am always pointing them out to the people who go on our forest tours, telling of their names and qualities.

    My second reaction was a deep understanding of the way the universe works and an awareness of just how interesting it will be for all of us to watch the progress of all the small, pioneer trees who have lived in the shadow of these giant's canopies. These areas, before the storm, were in complete shade.

    The symbol here, for me, is positive change from negative events. Creation from destruction, yin and yang, all of the opposites we read about in the spiritual literature. Achieving the balance between these two forces is what is needed in the world now to solve the environmental crisis we all face.

    The Earth is saturated and we are at the lowest level of the negative cycle that we’ve been on for these past centuries (like that evil wind). NOW is the time for positive action to bring about positive results. Rebuilding, restoring, replanting, regenerating, reforesting, recycling…….you know all those famous R words, the positive verbs (actions). Fussing, fighting, fretting, foul mouthing, futility, friction……..those F words are and cause negative consequences.

    Recently I’ve had many opportunities to observe this negativity and it’s effect. Many well meaning, good-hearted people who are deeply concerned with the state of our world are angry, even militant, about what needs to be done to solve the endless issues. Stopping all development (closing the door behind us), lawsuits against violators of environmental laws, reporting violations to the proper authorities, violent or non-violent action against others is negative, no matter how you look at it. The key word here is against. THIS RIPS US APART EVEN THOUGH, DOWN DEEP, WE ALL WANT THE SAME THING. Can you ignore what you dislike and rather than be against it, take positive action to counteract it?

    We are the generation to start the positive, upward swing. This is our destiny as a whole. If we do it now, it will be followed for centuries on end. The negative, downward cycle will return someday, I’m sure, because this is the nature of our universe, but, at least, WE THE PEOPLE, now, made this positive change.

    I will post photos of these same areas of the forest each year so that we can all observe the amazing process of succession. Until next time,

                                                            LET’S GET PLANTING!









December 13, 2007

Happy Solstice from the La Reserva Forest Foundation

Yellowflordeundia   
    These photos are only one of the gifts that we offer to you all, at the end of the year, holiday time. It always seems that we get some really excellent photos at this time of year. The natural world is in attunement with the natural cycles and this is a time of contraction and dying off. The animals come closer and this orchid the, Flor
                          de Un Dia is in splendor right now.
Toucansam
    While we humans scurry around looking for material gifts to give each other, lighting up the world with even more of the Earth’s precious resources, and consuming more than at any other time, the rest of the world is finished with their material storing and are resting and rejuvenating for the coming cycle, Spring.

     Our greatest gift to you this holiday season is our unending perseverance in making this project a reality, planting over 5000 trees this year in the Arenal Lake area, expanding the awareness of just how easily this work of natural, forest regeneration can take place through our forest tours and presentations, and giving all of our life to this work for the good of our Mother Earth and all life upon her.

    The gift you can give us is to be just a little more aware of what you are consuming and try in this coming year to use just a LITTLE less and offset what you do use. By offsetting you will give someone like us the funding to replace what you are consuming, by planting trees in the tropics. Remember we call it “oxygen farming”!

    Thank you for your continued support throughout this year. Thank you to the volunteers who have helped us with all of the planting, administration, secretarial work, seed and seedling collecting, technical support,  etc.  Everything that is done here, is done by you.

    We hope that you will all have a very prosperous and happy New Year. Only our best wishes for success and satisfaction go out to you. And so, this next year, 2008…..



                                                    LET’S GET PLANTING!!

                                                       Even more than 2007
                                                (this would be the greatest gift)





November 24, 2007

Student Tree Planting at Mindy Feldman’s

Mindysplanting2    Thank you to Mindy Feldman for her support of the La Reserva Forest Foundation. She ordered some trees while visiting her second home nearby in Chimurria. She set it all up for the children from the nearby school to plant the new seedlings giving them each a chance to adopt a tree by planting and watching it grow over the next few years.

Mindysplanting3     We arrived at her property at 10am to set the trees out in the places we felt were appropriate for each species and began to dig the holes, so that when the children arrived they would only need to remove the plastic bags, place them in the holes and cover them over with dirt.  They had to walk up to the property and arrived a little before 11 am.

Mindysplanting7    

    I showed them how to plant each seedling, stressing the importance of collecting all of the used plastic bags when we were finished, to be discarded properly, and then stomping the ground down around each tree.


Mindysplanting8     No one complained and, one little guy even got stung by a wasp, but he didn’t say a thing. Mindy took him to the house and made up some baking soda paste and applied it. His eye got swollen but as you can see from his photo he is happy to be out planting, proud of the work he is doing.

  Mindysplanting5
    On the walk back to the house we were all talking about how beautiful it was to have such a nice creek running through Mindy’s property. Since all of the children are really neighbors of Mindy’s they all talked about how that same creek flows through all of    their places as well, and they all have one or more springs (nacientos) coming out of the ground. I missed my big chance at that time to remind them that the trees that they planted today, and in the future will only add to the clean, fresh waters coming off of the Chimurria mountain. I didn’t think of it until later, but one can’t always remember the right thing to say at the right moment all of the time. I will save it for next time.

Mindysplanting6     Thank you, Mindy and all of you kids who were there to help. You did a great work to help our environment to heal. Every little positive effort is felt and will be rewarded a little later with water, fresher air and homes for the myriad creatures that depend on the forest trees for homes.


Mindysplanting1
    Here we all are afterwards in front of Mindy’s beautiful Poinsettia bush. We all called it the “mata de Navidad”. Come on everybody….


                                           Let’s Get Planting!!


 







November 09, 2007

LRFF In Bend, Oregon

Maryshouse
    Thanks to our friend and associate, Mary Blizzard-Kelly, we were invited to give a presentation on October 22, 2007 in Bend, Oregon at the Central Oregon Environmental Center. We arrived two days early because there was to be a party given at Mary and Richard’s beautiful home in our honor, as well as a radio interview at KLOV, the local station on the 21st.

Moonmountainramblers
    Travis of KPOV interviewed us on Sunday morning and early that evening the great party began. The five person group, Moon Mountain Ramblers, who have what I call a bluegrass/jazz/alternative style, played their EXCELLENT music for everyone’s enjoyment. The wine flowed, the great local, micro-brewerie' s beers were quaffed, the delicious foods that Mary prepared were dished up helping after helping and there was much talk and dancing.

    We found the majority of the guest very receptive to what the La Reserva project is trying to accomplish and why. In fact, we talked so much there wasn’t much chance for us to heap our plates or enjoy too many beers.

Mtn    This area of central Oregon is a high desert that is extremely dry and cold, yet clear and sunny. The large, western facing windows of Mary and Richard’s house give a incredible view of ALL the famous mountains in this section of the Cascade range. The first snow had fallen the night before and their tops were pure white. At dawn every morning the rising sun shone it’s rays upon them causing their tops to turn pink. Mary said that this is called the alpenglow. This environment, it’s vastness, the cold, dry climate, the people we met and their open-hearted acceptance of us, which includes a TRUE desire to help our environment, was an inspiration.

    Monday we went to the Environmental Center early to clear up any glitches that might exist with the computer/projector compatibility, and of course there were some. The local coffee store, “Strictly Organic”, donated the coffee in big silver urns for the presentation and the cookies came from none other that our friend Mary. The presentation went very well. I spoke from my heart the words I had written for them. The people responded to them and the slides we showed as illustrations. We also showed a movie that our friend, Chris Sullivan (the blues man) created of the La Reserva forest tour. There were many questions and we spoke individually with everyone afterward. They all said they are planning or want to come visit La Reserva in the very near future. One young man, Ryan, who is the president of the local high school’s “Roots and Shoots” club was enthused about the possibility of the club sponsoring one hectare of land for five years. He said this would be a great legacy for him to leave when he graduates this coming year, and they already have most of the funds saved. He was sure that this could be done by the end of this year.

    Thanks to all of these wonderful, sincere people, we collected some donation, sold a few of the new, La Reserva Forest Foundation “Let’s Get Planting” caps ($20/cap plants 10 trees in the tropics), but most importantly, we put the LRFF’s plan and philosophy directly into the consciousness of all the people we came in contact with on our travels. We did reach many people and felt that our biggest accomplishment was beginning to build the positive, human network that will work as one to heal our ailing Earth.

    Upon or return to Costa Rica my dear friend, Elena, said to me, “Roberta, what are we going to do here, there is so much rain. Many people have died, many others in the city have lost their homes and the mosquito borne Dengue fever is in epidemic proportions?”

    It was raining non-stop torrents when we left on October 15th, it rained here the entire two weeks of our trip and has continued to rain since our return. There is so much suffering in all the rest of this world, yet in my perception of the general attitude we encountered in the United States, they are semi-oblivious to all of it. As I wrestled with the reasons for these contradicting lifestyles yesterday this revelation came from within.

Highway    In the United States, and I can’t speak of the other developed countries because of my complete ignorance, mundane life is almost effortless. Gas prices and cars are less than half the price than in Costa Rica. Their dirt roads, streets and super highways are unblemished with ample shoulders allowing them to drive fast in a carefree and one-handed manner while eating or drinking at the same time. In Costa Rica, being alert for holes, slides and big trucks is a life and death necessity for pedestrians, bicyclers and motorists alike. We wouldn’t dare go over 50 miles per hour here and that seems very fast. If a person steps off the curb in Bend, Oregon all traffic stops in both directions.Consumerism_2 The enormous variety of goods and services are in abundance and virtually at the tips of one’s fingers because of the qualities mentioned above. The list could go on, but this is not the point.

    The point is that the majority of the people are asleep to what is happening to our Earth. In the United States there are signs of the environmental crisis, i.e. whole evergreen forests dying, drought, glacial melting etc, but it is hidden behind this façade of easy living and media hype. While here, in the developing world, we struggle with sharply rising petroleum prices, topped by an horrendous % of taxes, that not only hurts the gas consumer but the poorest of the poor most drastically. Everything goes up because of the transportation costs, all the way down to the price of a cracker in the neighborhood “pulperia”.

    I looked at my friend, Elena, and felt her desperation. This is something all of us Tico’s share, although in a a good-hearted way. The only answer I could think of came into my head, that ringing motto that you have all heard time and again, and I said…



                                                            

                                                            LET’S GET PLANTING!!

Duaneplanting



   



This poem showed up for me on this exact day, today. I think it  fits in right here very well.

Wings of Desire

People are distracted by objects of desire,
And afterward repent of the lust they’ve
   indulged,
Because they have indulged with a phantom
And are left even farther from Reality than
  before.
Your desire for the illusory could be a wing,
By means of which a seeker might ascend to
  Reality.
When you have indulged a lust, your wing drops
  off;
You become lame, abandoned by a fantasy.
Preserve the wing and don’t indulge such lust,
So that the wing of desire may bear you to
  Paradise.
People fancy they are enjoying themselves,
But they are really tearing out their wings
For the sake of an illusion.

Mevlana Jalaludden Rumi
Mathnawi III, 2133-2138
(translated by Kabir Helminski and
                        Camille Helminski)
The Rumi Collection

Dratdenas

October 06, 2007

Tree Planting Day at La Reserve

Treeplantingoctober5200
Today, October 6, 2007 we had another tree planting session Many volunteers showed up to plant an approximately 1 hectare (2 1/2 acres) field. Becky, Betsy, Michele and Tim, Omar and Oscar Munoz, and our daughter Toni and son-in-law Duane Hinkle, who are visiting from Oregon. We started at 7 am and were all finished planting close to 300 seedlings by 9:30 am. It was a very hot day, but looks like we will have a nice rain this afternoon so the babies will have a good drink.

Treeplanters61007 Everyone posed for this last shot when we were all done, then Toni and Duane made Margaritas for all of us. WHEW!! They really hit the spot, but we all felt a little guilty about the hour. Toni said, "don't worry, it's five o'clock somewhere in the world, right?"

Thanks to all of you who helped get that field planted today and to Toni and Duane for the family support and the GREAT Margaritas.

We will be sure to post more photos on the website this coming year of these 2 planting day fields (Environment Day and today) so that you can all see the progress of the baby trees. And remember to click on the photos if you want to see them enlarged.

But in the meantime, everyone else.....

                                                     LET'S GET PLANTING!!

September 10, 2007

Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes

Purplelluviadeoro

    This year at the La Reserva Forest Foundation’s headquarters and private reserve we have been observing some important changes in the natural cycles. As I watch I am reminded of the urgency with which we began this indigenous tropical forest regeneration project. The indigenous plants (orchids, trees, shrubs etc.) are extremely late in their behavior compared with past years, yet the introduced species (citrus trees and ornamentals) are extremely early in their fruiting and flowering or are dying off. Normally the grapefruits are falling off the tree in January but this year they have already fallen in August and our beautiful orange tree is almost dead. The climate change is upon us and we are feeling it all around the world, much faster than the scientists calculated.

    Please, if you cannot help either by donating your time as a volunteer here at La Reserva or some funds to help us do it for you, then speak to everyone you know and send them to our website. Time is of the essence now as you can all see and the more of us that are working on healing the environment the better our chances of getting a foot hold and conquering the rapidly changing effects of global warming.

    Have faith, be fearless and,



                                                          LET'S GET PLANTING!


What’s Up at the La Reserva Forest Foundation

    This past week we received the commitment from two neighbors who share  Dog Creek (Quebrada de Perros) with the La Reserva forest reserve, to participate in our native forest regeneration project. In short, the LRFF will pay each of the land participants $300/hectare/year on a 5 year contract to regenerate forest on all or part of their cattle farms. In this case they have each agreed to fence off 50 meters on their side of the creek running through our reserve along the entire length of their properties (about 7 hectares). This will allow us all to create a “tree bridge” from the La Reserva forest to the next primary forest to the west of us and expand the reserves habitat, as well, along the creek.

    One neighbor in between will not listen, and is actually quite hostile. It’s unbelievable that people can react in this way, especially when we all KNOW we must begin to act NOW with urgency to heal our ailing environment.
                                              Nisperosmonkey




   As disappointed as I was with his reaction, on my walk home I found a Nispero tree in ripe fruit with a large Mantled Howler Monkey group feeding in it (see photo). I ate some fruits with them, collected the seeds to germinate in our nursery (a new species to add to our 70+ native species now) and photographed them as I laughed. I also spotted another way around this surly neighbor, containing existing forest, to connect up to that western forest still.

Marioscreek_2
    Here is a photograph of this neighbor’s creek bed with not one tree along its banks. He poisons with herbicides along the edge to kill any native growth. This is illegal, but we can’t dwell on that because it would detract from the positive action we stand for at the LRFF, PLANTING WHERE WE CAN HELP!

    We sent a grant proposal last week to cover this first “tree bridge” project for the next 5 years. It only came to $21,500, which includes fencing, the seedlings to be planted (1000/hectare), labor, surveying and the land owners yearly payments. Even without the grant we will be able to accomplish this with the cooperation of THE PEOPLE, who want to see this work done and will pay us through donations to do the work needed.

    In the meantime, though, wish us luck and,


                                                                  LET'S GET PLANTING!

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