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Trapezeist

1/29/2016

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Believe it or not we became trapeze artists Sunday.  We had to wake up early and drive an hour away to get to our trapeze school.  The place was small but pretty amazing.  Imagine just one trapeze net with two bars and a great view.  It was about halfway up a mountain plus you had a perfect view of the tallest waterfall in Costa Rica right across the valley.

We started off learning some basic skills like changing from hands to feet while hanging on the bar.  Mom was the first one to try it and she made it half way.  It took us all several tries and about an hour later every one of us were able to swing upside-down and catch our instructor who was on the second swing.  So far it has been the favorite thing that we all have done in Costa Rica.

Monday it was time to go back to Spanish school.  It was also the last day in the house we were staying in.  We didn't do much besides swimming and homework.

Tuesday morning we had all our things packed and sitting by the door.  We did go to Spanish school and afterwards Dad invited Anna, our instructor, out for lunch with us.  There is a great fish taco place right down the street.  As soon as we arrived back at the house we loaded as much as we could into the car and drove three minutes to the next house.  The house itself is based on a courtyard style and focuses on a large circular living room which overlooks a 180 degree view of the ocean.  My favorite part is that the road leading in is on top of a ridge line so the house ends on a cliff.  The house is rather run-down and looks about thirty years old, but the view and all the wildlife make it amazing.

As it was becoming dark we saw two large toucans and a bunch of smaller ones in front and behind the house.  We also found a colony of about thirty tent-builder bats under the eaves in the courtyard.  The sunset is unbelievable with the view.  We ended up going back to the hotel restaurant right down the road and it is still as good as the first time we went.

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Wednesday we had Spanish school like usual but on our way home we stopped on the side of the road because we heard rumors of a sloth in the area.  We were lucky enough to spot it climbing up a tree.  It was faster than I thought it would be, but it was still slow.  For some reason it kept climbing up this one branch that was becoming skinnier and skinnier.  At one point when it was close to the end we could hear the branch cracking a little.  Right after Dad exclaimed, "I think its going to break!" of course it broke.  The sloth and branch fell about twenty five feet into the bushes below.  It didn't move for several minutes and we thought it could be seriously hurt, but it slowly made its way back to what it thought was a tree but was really a stump.  When it realized it couldn't go any farther it just stayed in place and reached out toward us.  We took some really good pictures.  Later when we showed them to a local they said we were really lucky to be there at that moment.  It was an amazing experience for us, but probably not for the sloth!
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More Monkeys Than the Zoo!

1/25/2016

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Thursday we had school as usual.  The only thing out of the ordinary that we did was to walk on the beach after we went for sushi.  At the end of the beach some locals were fishing which inspired Dad and me to try it there.  We have yet to do so but hopefully I can convince him to go!

On Friday we did not go to the Spanish school.  Dad and I did our pool work for scuba.  The plan is to become certified while we are in Dominical.  This required all day in a pool practicing different skills and safety things.  Regrettably, we started at 12:30 PM and ended at 5:30 PM.  However, it was awesome!  My only complaint was that the deepest part of the pool was 5' 6" so my head was  above the water when standing.

Dad woke me up at 7:30 AM on Saturday so we could be at the scuba shop by 8:30 AM.  We had our first open water dive planned!  The boat ride to the dive spot, which was right off an island called Caño, was an hour long.    The ocean was very calm and we were lucky enough to see dolphins!  The boat was quite full.  There were two captains, two dive masters, a snorkeling guide, three other divers, two snorkelers and all the gear in a twenty foot boat.

Unfortunately when we got in the water, I discovered that I could not go past 15 feet because my ears would not equalize.  In scuba diving you have to clear or "equalize" your sinuses every couple of feet as you go down because the pressure can mess up your ears.  I think my allergies are the cause.  Next time we go I will take a Sutafed before the dive.

After realizing that there was no way to fix the problem easily, I decided to join with the snorkelers.  It turns out that I made the right choice because the other scuba divers said that the water was extra cold and the visibility was very bad where they went.  Where we snorkeled the water was warm, the visibility was good, and we got to see a sea turtle up close!  Our snorkeling guide even said that he heard a whale while he was going under to point stuff out for us!

When we arrived back at the house it was already close to dinner time.  The hotel right down the road from our house has a restaurant so we decided to walk over to make reservations.  On our way to the restaurant we found a group of over twenty white-faced monkeys that were jumping from tree to tree.  If there was a monkey jumping contest these guys would win!  The farthest recorded jump a white-faced monkey has ever done is twenty two feet.  We threw a couple of bananas up to them and they became instant friends with us.  They never came all the way to the ground but they did come down to the lower trees and followed us.  When we got to the hotel we found a group of fifteen howler monkeys that were right next to the pool.  The friendly monkey (that Kylie mentioned) was there and even came down to the guests which made their day!

Everything except the main courses of the dinner was amazing.  Kylie ordered a mushroom soup that Dad thinks is the best he has ever had.  We all ordered our steaks medium rare which was a mistake because here that means raw.  The dessert redeemed the dinner because each one we ordered tasted amazing and Dad's came with a fire show.  We are definitely going back to that restaurant!

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Spanish School

1/22/2016

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The last two days we have been busting our butts learning Spanish!  It's not too hard, but there are so many words I have yet to learn.

We have mostly settled into our routine now.  Mom wakes the family up around 7:20 AM.  Next, Dad makes Kylie and me café con leche.  Then we have breakfast and make sandwiches for lunch.  Finally, we're in the car by 8:45 AM and off to school.  

For me café con leche has become necessary otherwise I dose off around 11:00 AM!  I look forward to when we get home because we usually eat a mango or two and jump into the pool.  The toucans show up around 5:00 PM so we make sure that we're out of the pool by then.  

For dinner we have been going out a lot because the food is so inexpensive here.  

The only thing out of the ordinary that happened the other day was that we saw two different types of wild monkeys.  One white-headed capuchin and four mantled howlers.  Mantled howlers are the most seen and heard species of wild monkeys in Central America.

Before we left for school in the morning, we found another mantled howler in front of the house.  Earlier in the morning he was howling like crazy and woke all of us up.  If you didn't know that monkeys howled, you'd think that a monster lived in the forest!

After class Dad and I went fishing.  We found a guide that would take us out in kayaks and show us the ropes of the local fishing.  Our guide, Jimmy, picked us up from our house at 2:00 PM and we drove thirty minutes south to the Terraba River.  We loaded into a boat, that had the layout of a river cruise boat, which took us another twenty minutes up the river.  The ride there was my favorite part because the river looked similar to the Amazon River.  There were crocodiles and the shoreline was made up of sand and mangroves.  The best part of the ride was that we were lucky enough to see four scarlet macaws flying over us!  We spent several hours floating back down the river in the kayaks fishing, but only had two fish.  Dad caught a small snapper and the guide caught a medium snook.  It was a great experience though!
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The Not-So-Sanctuary Sanctuary

1/19/2016

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We saw our first wild monkeys yesterday!  Mom and Dad ditched us in the morning and went to the grocery store.  When they got back Dad took Kylie and me to a restaurant for lunch.  It was really cool because it was a large open-air sports bar.  It is high up on the mountain, has great views, and is where the American tourists and expats hang out.

After lunch we went to the Alturas Wildlife Sanctuary.  I was expecting a large, fenced in piece of jungle with different species living in it.  Surprisingly, there were many separate cages of different sizes.  In each cage there were either hurt or disabled animals.  Some of them were being rehabilitated and some have to live there permanently.  We saw three different types of monkeys, several types of parrots and parakeets, baby sloths, a coati, raccoons, squirrels, a nocturnal squirrel-like animal called a Kinkajou and an anteater.

In the middle of the tour, when our tour guide was showing us the baby sloths, four wild white-headed monkeys swung into the trees overhead and started harassing the monkeys in the cages.  Our tour guide said, "The only reason they are here is because I am giving a tour.  Usually they wouldn't dare get so close because I throw rocks at them."  They went so far as to jump onto the other monkeys' cage which really stirred them up.  By then our tour guide had had enough and threw several decent sized stones at them.  The wild monkeys were immediately scared off and we continued with our tour.  It turns out white-headed monkeys are extremely evil, mean and are very cannibalistic.  The cage of monkeys they were harassing were there own kind too!

The next morning we woke up early so we could get to our Spanish class by eight thirty.  Mom, Dad and I are in a class together with our own teacher and Kylie gets to share a teacher with another little girl almost her age.  The class is about four and a half hours long but has two, fifteen minute breaks.  Each classroom is a small, screened in gazebo that has only a table, four seats and a whiteboard.  The hardest part for me is that our instructor teaches Spanish completely in Spanish!  Wish me luck!

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Costa Rican Adventure

1/17/2016

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We are back on the road! It has been awhile but traveling already feels normal.  Our flight to San Jose was on time and the airport wasn't crowded.  As soon as we stepped outside of the airport though it was a completely different world.  People were yelling at us left and right in Spanish asking if we needed a taxi.  The man who helped us with our luggage found us an official taxi that took us to a hotel.  Apparently only the orange taxis are registered and the other ones are illegal.  The next morning a rental car was delivered to us and we were off (after shopping for groceries of course)!

Originally we thought the drive to Dominical was only a couple hours, but it took over four.  When we did arrive we were pleasantly surprised by the house Dad had rented for us.  It has an amazing view and a pool!  As the caretaker was showing us around, two toucans flew up into the tree that is right in front of the porch!  A few minutes later two more flew up and they started talking to each other.  It was so cool!  Because it was getting late, we got dinner to go then went to bed.

I woke up to the sound of birds, which are very loud and repetitive here, which was amazing!  The first thing we did was go to a farmers market five minutes down the road then we stopped by another grocery store.  When we got back it was close to lunch time, so we grabbed a couple mangos and jumped in the pool.  We spent most of the day chilling by the pool and went to a sushi place for dinner.  Just before dinner we decided to go on a walk down a path that we found close to our house.  It took us into the jungle and then to the ocean.  We were hoping to see monkeys and sloths but we had no such luck.  We did see lots of birds and carpenter ants though!

I had forgotten to mention how hot and humid it is here.  In Moorea it is just as hot, and probably even more humid, but at least there is a constant breeze there!

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    I'm 15 years old.  I like to fish, play soccer, poker and paintball.

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