south of the loop

Panama: Day Three, Morning

Day Three. 18 September 2007.

Our departure from Gamboa to the regional airport was early so that we could catch the 8:15am flight, the earliest of the day—which apparently meant that it could leave at 8:15 or anytime thereafter. By taking the earliest flight, padding our itinerary, and hoping for the best, we were able to get to the city of Davíd in the Chiriquí highlands later that morning. We then climbed into a small 25-person bus with our carry-on luggage. Our large baggage rode separately, piled high in the back of a 4×4.

We got to our next hotel, Los Quetzales, before noon. Los Quetzales is named for the Resplendent Quetzal, a bird with brilliant green plumage and tail feathers several feet long. It can be found throughout Panama in certain times of the year, but if you’re lucky and have a good bird guide, you might see them in Chiriquí year-round. (Spoiler: we had a good bird guide, but weren’t lucky).

Los Quetzales was a modest hotel near the town of Cerro Punta built to look like—seriously—a Swiss château. Our rooms were tiny, just room enough for a double bed, a twin bed, a small wardrobe, and sink. (I took the twin bed since I can sleep anywhere if I’m tired enough). The attached bathroom had only a toilet and shower, with barely enough room to turn around in. The linens were clean but the bedspreads were faded and didn’t match. It was kind of nice to be in a place that didn’t feel like a hotel, even if the pervasive humidity burrowed deep into our sheets.

Violet-Eared Green Wing Hummingbird at Los QuetzalesLunch was buffet style and followed by more café con leche. Several hummingbird feeders hung directly outside the window—and so many hummingbirds! My dad always had hummingbird feeders, but I’ve never seen any whirring little birds like these. Magnificent Hummingbirds, dark-colored but easily twice the size of typical hummingbirds, chased off smaller, more brilliantly colored birds. Roberto, our local guide whom we’d met that morning, could hardly eat he was so busy naming the birds and answering questions about them. Roberto, I think, knows everything: how to identify the tiniest hummingbird and whether it’s territorial or friendly, green-eared or ruby-throated.

Our Panamanian colleagues joined us for lunch, and afterwards, we all we went to Parque Internacional La Amistad (PILA). La Amistad is a binational park straddling Panama and Costa Rica, and is a whopping five times larger than Yellowstone. Although two of Panama’s seven indigenous tribes live within the depths of the park, it is for the most part uninhabited and unexplored. To get there, we took our bus about a mile down the road from Los Quetzales. There, the road became less a road and more a beaten path of large rocks. We had to take two 4×4s and an SUV to make it up the steep, rocky paths. (I wasn’t feeling very adventurous, so I rode in the SUV rather than take my chances on getting pitched from the bed of a 4×4. Also during this ride I told the story of jaq being pitched, inside a cardboard box, from the bed of an El Camino when she was a kid).

Once at PILA, we talked some more with the Panamanian conservationists. Although the majority of PILA is wild and pristine, the buffer zones are in great danger. Panamanian law allowed farmers already living within the boundaries of PILA (which was formed in the late 1980s) to keep their farmland. This wouldn’t be a problem if slash-and-burn agriculture wasn’t so widely practiced, if farmers weren’t relying so heavily on pesticides, if they weren’t planting crops up steep hillsides, contributing to erosion. One thing Organization and its partners are trying to do is teach those farmers how to better their crops (and their livelihoods) without wreaking such destruction on the lands. Since Panamanian laws aren’t necessarily being enforced, there’s really very little to protect the land against farmers who further denude the landscape with each crop.

We only took a 15-minute hike into the wilds of PILA—not because we were tired or out of time, but because only a tiny portion has any semblance of trails. We met Señor Buendía, a fit, upright man who looked to be in his early 40s, who was preparing for a 22-day hike into PILA to monitor and police it. He had just recovered from a serious leg injury incurred on a recent PILA hike, in which he had to be airlifted out of the dense forest. So dense is this forest that on his 22-day hike, Sr. Buendía would not pass through the same place twice—and he was just staying on the Panamanian side of the park.

The hike itself, although barely penetrating into the forest, felt wild, even with the occasional bridge or terraced footholds. The forest canopy left us in greater darkness than I had expected, but the plants and trees were brilliant and bright. The light beneath the canopy is like that brief time immediately before a tornado, when everything is very still and somehow looks greener. Everything inside the rainforest was comically oversized—umbrella-sized leaves, red bromeliads sprouting off tree trunks, the sound, but not sight, of birds around us.

To be continued…

We Interrupt this Travelogue for a Sob Story

I forgot to mention a very sad thing that happened as soon as I hit Panama: my digital camera broke. I’d taken my mom’s digital camera with me, because it holds 500+ high quality pictures (as opposed to my camera, which is three times larger but holds only 50 high quality pictures). Something was wrong with the battery, however, and it wouldn’t hold a charge. It was kind of heartbreaking. I did have my old manual camera with me, but I hadn’t used it in years, and I only had a zoom lens with me (and limited film). So there’s not much diversity in these pictures, but until I get copies of my colleagues’ pics, it’s all I’ve got. I should get more pictures early next week. In the meantime: a few Panama pics.

Panama: Day Two, Afternoon

Day Two. 17 September 2007.

After birding, I had breakfast (and many cups of coffee) at Gamboa with my colleagues, and then I had the rest of the day to myself. The remainder of people were to arrive between 2 and 3pm that afternoon, with the first group session to start at 5pm. Having run 20 miles the day before I left, I felt pretty justified in kicking back and not doing anything. I went for a swim in the pool beneath palm trees and waterfalls. I showered and took a nap in the hammock on my sleeping porch. I got a massage at the hotel spa. Paradiso.

I met my roommate later that afternoon, a lovely British woman who works in the worldwide office. The introductory session began at 5pm, which was basically an overview of the Panama conservation program. Panama is a literal bridge between North and South America, and, as such, it holds several important ecosystems and copious wildlife. For example, the Darién region contains some of Panama’s wildest lands, thousands of acres of pristine forest land. The Darién lies on the eastern part of Panama and borders Colombia. There are diseases that have never made it through this dense forest—hoof and mouth disease, which doesn’t exist north of Colombia, and several strains of malaria. To destroy that forest wouldn’t just impact a few species of rare birds or mammals, it could have potentially devastating results for humans, too. I’d never thought of forest in human terms, and I’m fascinated that there’s a forest so dense it protects, in a sense, all of North America.

After dinner, another session before bed. There were the requisite icebreakers, including one where we had to write down a little-known fact about ourselves on a piece of paper, which would then be read aloud at the end of the week so we could guess who was who. I couldn’t decide what to put down. Obviously there are tons of quirky things about me—check out the “100 Things About Me” tab above—but I wasn’t sure how much I wanted these people to know about me. So I wrote down that my cats were named for characters from a Western B-movie from the 1940s… foolishly thinking I could go a week without talking about my cats. I did try not to talk about them. They just sort of come up.

The next morning, we were to leave Gamboa bright and early (this is a recurring theme throughout the week) for the regional airport, where we would fly to Davíd and then take a bus to the town of Cerro Punta.

To be continued…

Panama: Day Two, Morning

Day Two. 17 September 2007.

My alarm went off at 5:45, and I stumbled onto the sleeping porch to do some yoga, trying to unravel the kinks and stitches my body was harboring after a long day of travel. I got dressed, grabbed the borrowed pair of binoculars I’d packed in my carry-on bag, and headed downstairs to see what this birding business was all about. We were supposed to meet downstairs at the ungodly hour of 6:30am, so I hoped it would be worth not sleeping in for.

There was a bushy-eyebrowed guy in the lobby carrying a telescope and dressed in khaki safari-ready vest. I introduced myself. I’d guessed right—this was our bird guide, Hernan, who was supposedly the best birder in the country. We waited for the rest of the early arrivers to come downstairs and piled into Hernan’s silver Honda CR-V. I knew this was going to be good when Hernan pointed to the sky as we walked across the parking lot, noting the plentiful Red-lored Amazon parrots flying above. We drove to a place known as Pipeline Road. Pipeline Road, now a famed birdwatching location, was named for the now-decrepit pipeline that runs along it, that I believe was built during World War II.

We got to a clearing at Pipeline Road and got out of the car with our gear. Hernan immediately went into action, setting up his telescope and focusing it in one quick movement. I put my eye to the scope. Holy shit—toucans. Keel-billed toucans, actually, and several of them! Hernan told us that they are the national bird of Belize, and described the marks that distinguish keel-bills from other toucans (it has to do with the colors on their beaks). We spent a couple hours trekking down Pipeline Road with Hernan moving ahead of us, sensitive to every movement. With his guidance, I saw white-tailed trogons, black-throated trogons, slaty-tailed trogons, a lineated woodpecker, a crimson-crested woodpecker, checker-throated antwrens, white-flanked antwrens, dot-winged antwrens, blue-crowned manakins, a Philadelphia vireo, lesser greenlets, olive-sided flycatchers, and yellow-rumped caciques. All of this in about two hours. Hernan mimicked bird calls, seducing them toward us so we could see them. He had an eerie sense for when and where the bird would land, and set up his telescope almost instantly. The birds there are difficult to see because of the forest canopy, but when you do! They’re so brightly colored, so different from anything I’m used to. Es increible.

Hernan also pointed out other things happening around us. He saw a tiny frog, barely the size of my thumbnail, hopping along side of the road. He heard the howler monkeys in the distance (they elicited a WOW! from me every time they spoke. I mean… howler monkeys!!! My colleagues were most amused with me and my constant stream of excitement). He pointed out the enormous nest—easily twice the size of a standard office cubicle—of something called a leafcutter ant. I’m not much of a bug person, but it was pretty incredible—huge ants with crablike pinchers walking in neat lines over fallen tree limbs, creating a huge pile of dirt that was swarming and vibrating with life. Two of my colleagues held a warrior ant—who rather amusingly shook his pinchers at me—as well as a pile of the moving dirt. I did neither, although I did succeed in not screaming like a big girl, a success in and of itself. There are boundaries to my sense of wonderment, you know.

And this only brings me to about 8:30 in the morning. To be continued…

Panama: Day One

I spent all of last week in Panama on an employee training trip for work. We got to know some of our international colleagues, the myriad challenges they face, and the people and ecosystems they support. Rather than spending time waxing eloquent, I’m trying to get everything into writing while it’s still fresh. I’ll have to do a write up later for work purposes, and presumably they’ll want something well-written, so stay tuned.

Day One. 16 September 2007.

I flew into Tocumen International Airport on Sunday, September 16, arriving at nearly 9:00pm local time (which is, thankfully, also local time in Chicago) after a full day of travel. (You have to fly either through Miami or Houston to get to Panama—I went through Miami—and, with the requisite three-hour layover, my whole trip was a good nine hours.) I got my bag and walked downstairs, where a crush of people were all flooding into customs at once. It took nearly an hour to get through customs, and since I’d somehow forgotten to bring a pen with me (and they think I’m a writer!), I had to borrow one from the nice Swiss woman in front of me—three different times. There were customs forms, $5 tourist card applications, the works. But for all this, they didn’t care much when I walked through customs, and off I went. I met one of my colleagues who had arrived about an hour before me, and we split a prearranged shuttle to our hotel at the Gamboa Resort, about 45 minutes away. My colleague happened to speak quite good Spanish, so he kept up a conversation with Mari, our driver, about the local wildlife, about Noriega, about her family. I could catch bits and pieces of it, but it’s been a good 10 years since I used any Spanish whatsoever, so I couldn’t make too much sense out of it.

We arrived at Gamboa Resort, which is, frankly, a little over the top—Spanish colonial architecture rises from the jungle amidst a small neighborhood of historic homes, and although Gamboa promises to set you (comfortably, of course) right in the midst of nature, apparently they aren’t really all that eco-sensitive, even going as far as promoting their wildlife tours with pictures of animals that don’t actually live in Panama. Whoops?

The bellhop showed me to my room, which featured a sleeping porch. A sleeping porch! With a hammock! He suggested not using it because of the mosquitoes, but it was still a little tempting. But I decided I didn’t want to be eaten alive on my first night in Latin America, so I fell into a dead slumber inside on my bed, but not before setting my alarm for 5:45 the next morning. I was told upon arrival that our tour guide had arranged an optional bird watching tour for the early arrivers the following morning. I’ve never been birding before, and still find it awkward to use as a verb, but when I was younger, I always loved identifying the birds that came to my dad’s birdfeeders. The colleague with whom I shared the shuttle with highly recommended it, and I figured I didn’t have any other plans, so I decided to suffer another early morning in the name of birding.

to be continued…

It’s Almost Funny

Almost. In the ongoing saga of Things Going Wrong, and in the spirit of using my blog to bitch unreservedly about my personal life, I add the following complaints:

  • my management company has not returned any of my three phone calls about the “fix-it” list. On this list includes the fact that I have no mail key (and I’m expecting the security deposit from my last apartment) and a faucet that drips hot water at an alarming rate.
  • apparently I have the worst management company ever. Note to apartment-hunters: poke around online first. Don’t let this happen to you.
  • I just got my vaccinations for my upcoming Panama trip. Do you know how much vaccinations cost? Do you know you could just buy an iPhone instead? I did not. And iPhones don’t make your arm sore.
  • I have to give my cat an enema tonight. We’re both really looking forward to it.

Culture Shock

I’m experimenting with my public transportation options this week, trying to find the best way of getting to and from work. This morning I walked to the seedy Wilson Red Line—12 minute walk, 35 minute El ride, 10 minute walk on the other end—which worked out fine. But I wanted to take the Metra home to see how that worked. The Metra is generally cheaper and nicer than the El; there’s only one stop between me and downtown; the ride is smooth enough that I can read without fear of motion sickness or headaches. As long as the weather is temperate, I really don’t mind the walking. It just means I can drink another beer at the end of the day (seriously—who the fuck am I?!).

I used to take the Metra to and from Hyde Park, but it is housed in an entirely different station than the northbound trains. And now I know why—the North Siders get all the good trains, the ones with the seat backs that slide so that you can always face the direction of travel, the ones with the doors that open by simply pushing a button and don’t require your entire weight be thrown against them. Do the South Siders know about this? Because there is seriously one good train on the southbound route. Most of them are holdovers from the 70s, as evidenced by their bright yellow and orange seats.

Six of the eight people near me on the Metra today were reading the Wall Street Journal (the remaining two were reading the Financial Times). Not a single Triple Crown book in sight. Weird.

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current book: Am just sitting down to write this damn Museum book review.

current music: Yeah right. I’m so freakin’ busy at work right now I don’t even have time to pull up last.fm or listen to my iPod. My boss swore to me today that it would get better.

current socks: My apartment is precisely 84.9 degrees Fahrenheit. I am wearing very little right now.

Factorytourpalooza: The Aftermath

I walked over to the nearby liquor store yesterday to buy beer, knowing I would have a few guests later in the day. I was thrilled to discover that they carried New Belgium beers—since touring the New Belgium Brewery a few weeks ago, I’ve been planning on stocking my new fridge with their brews. They are employee owned, wind powered, environmentally friendly, and I like many of their beers (my beer palate is pretty unsophisticated—my go-to beer has long been the champagne of beers—although I have usually had a much easier time with Belgian-style beers, something I discovered at a gastropub in Indy, where they put a two-drink limit on some of their beers). My neighborhood liquor store—I can’t remember its name—had Fat Tire, 1554, Mothership Wit, and Skinny Dip in stock. I bought a six pack each of Fat Tire and Skinny Dip, and, after my guests left yesterday, was left with only five bottles.

So I went back today for more. I’ve never been a huge beer drinker, but the lack of air conditioning in my new place is kind of driving me to it, and since I’m now totally enamored of New Belgium, I’m all about supporting them. I told the owner that he should carry New Belgium’s Sunshine Wheat, which is so lovely and light that it could become the new Miller High Life (this is a much higher compliment than what it sounds). “You live in the neighborhood?” he asked. I told him I’d just moved in. “We’ll have it on Wednesday,” he said. Really?!?! The owner said he’d talk to his distributor tomorrow, and that if it was available, he’d get it in the Wednesday shipment. Wahoo!

If you live nearby, please stop by for a beer or three. I have a lot.

Moved!

I’ve been in my new apartment for three days now. Considering that just about everything leading up to this move went wrong, I’m just glad it’s over. I spent waaaaay more money than I’d wanted to; one bookshelf plunged to its death from the third floor balcony into the alley; the movers were an hour and a half late; the apartment wasn’t the one I thought it would be… but it’s done. The cats adjusted almost immediately, although they are a little suspicious of their new self-cleaning litterbox (not so much that they aren’t using it, thank GOD). It will take me longer to adjust: I now have access to all kinds of restaurants and cafes and public transportation options (options!!), which is a kind of muted culture shock. I have no central air, no washer/dryer, no nice kitchen, and that will all take a little time to adjust to. The windows are open all the time and the kitties loooooove the fresh air (I do too, but I do miss the a/c in the middle of the day). I’m a little nervous that they’ll rip open the screens to get at the pigeons who come to the window to taunt them, though.

I’ve gotten enough unpacked that I can live–the bathroom and bedroom are in functioning order, and the living room and kitchen are unpacked just enough–and it’s probably going to stay like this for a few more weeks, I’m afraid. Work is going to be really busy the next few weeks, and then I’ll be in Panama a week, and then I’ll be home for two weeks before I run the Chicago Marathon. I’ll resurface again sometime mid-October, perhaps…

* * *

current book: Just a few pages left in Museum, and then I’ve got to write that book review on it… like, yesterday.

current music: My stereo system and CDs are in boxes, as is my home computer/iTunes (I’m writing on my work laptop right now).

current socks: Barefoot, which is kinda gross since my new floors realllly need to be mopped.