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While along the Yorkin River in a Bribri indigenous people village I captured several shots of the forest & its textures. East of Puerto Viejo, Costa Rica |
― Gustave Flaubert, November
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While along the Yorkin River in a Bribri indigenous people village I captured several shots of the forest & its textures. East of Puerto Viejo, Costa Rica |
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Strangler Fig Tree by the road in front yard. |
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Palm Tree behind my Guarumo Tree in side yard which is my front yard, balcony |
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Guarumo Tree leaf, up close. This is a type of cecropia tree. Leaves are the favorite food of sloths, and the seeds of Keel-billed Toucans! Mine has to get a lot larger for animals though! |
Yellow Bell Tree is the name I choose from many it is called. My front yard will be beautiful with 4 of them come February-March! |
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Ylang-Ylang Tree, is known for its wonderful smell or aroma! Mine is new, but hope for the aroma before a year is up! A source of perfumes! |
Unknown Tree (for now) I see out my kitchen window. |
Want to improve your health? Go Live Near Trees says an article in The Washington Post.
A tree says: My strength is trust. I know nothing about my fathers, I know nothing about the thousand children that every year spring out of me. I live out the secret of my seed to the very end, and I care for nothing else. I trust that God is in me. I trust that my labor is holy. Out of this trust I live.
~Hermann Hesse, Bäume. Betrachtungen und Gedichte
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Pixie Cup Fungi, Carara National Park, Costa Rica |
Ceiba Tree, Carra National Park, Costa Rica Also called Kapok or Silk Cotton Tree In all tropical forests I’ve seen, Africa, South America |
The back side of the above Ceiba has a “cave” |
Rain forests have an incredible variety of trees and plants. My guide Victor leads the way down and old road used as trail now. |
One of the several varieties of Cecropia Trees, similar to my Guarumo but not the same. Cousins! This whole family of trees has multiple medicinal uses. |
Rare plant that only grows in this particular transitional forest and only in the shade. Has medicinal uses. |
And another fungus! 🙂 |
“The clearest way to the Universe is through a forest wilderness.”
— John Muir
After checking in my jungle hotel Thursday, I drove 6 km up the dirt road to a beautiful garden:
Gardens carved out of the rainforest, overlooking the Pacific Ocean and threatening rain, near my hotel on a dirt road buena vista |
Miles of paved or maintained trails with every tropical plant imaginable! sendero del jardín |
What I hope my “Maraca Plant” will look like in a year or two! Also called “Shampoo Ginger” or in Spanish plantas jengibre But local Ticos call it the Maraca Plant which is the name I’m using. |
And hoping I get several blooms like this next year! flores jengibre |
Many unknown to me flowers like this and too many to show here! Desconocido para mí |
A Water Hyacinth like we had in The Gambia Eichhornia crassipes |
On the edge of Carara National Park just like my hotel grounds. Tomorrow’s post! Parque Nacional Carara |
And a view of Manantial de Agua Viva Waterfalls, one of tallest in Costa Rica. I was going to hike to bottom, but decided safer to not do it solo! Maybe later! |
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Rufous-naped Wren, Atenas, Costa Rica (On the back of the couch in my living room! Looking out the screen window.) |
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Rufous-naped Wren, Atenas, Costa Rica Making himself at home on a drink coaster. This is what happens with doors left open. |
Beside them the birds of the heavens dwell; they sing among the branches.
~Psalm 104:12 ESV
See my CR Birds Galleries or specifically this bird with a new name: Rufous-backed Wren (my gallery link). Updated note made in 2025, 11 years later. 🙂
Guarumo Cecropia tree in my front yard |
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Guarumo leaves are some of the most interesting in the tropics. |
When my personal gardener told me the Guarumo tree would attract Toucans with the seeds, I told him I wanted one! And I have it! It grows naturally only in Central America and is one of several kinds of Cecropia trees. I panicked this week when I saw a stream of tiny ants crawling up and down the trunk of the tree and called Cristian for help! He stopped by after another job today and explained that this ant is the friend of this tree. They help each other in a symbiotic relationship, providing food and housing for the ants who in turn protect the tree from leaf-eating predators. It was also used by Amerindians for medicinal purposes and is now used by pharmaceutical companies.
A sustainable world means working together to create prosperity for all.
~Jacqueline Novogratz
And by the way, I just this moment realized that today is my 6 month anniversary in Costa Rica! I moved here December 24, 2014. I’m glad I came! Maybe I will eventually figure out a symbiotic relationship with Costa Rica. 🙂
“Red sky at night, Sailor’s delight. Red sky in morning, sailor’s warning.” Last nigh’t sky from west end of my balcony through the trees. |
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Last night’s sky from the driveway above my roof a few minutes later. |
Well, sure enough, it did not rain yesterday and has not so far today and it is after 4:00! I have to go water the new plants! I was enjoying the rainy season shower every afternoon! But regardless, I’ll keep my new trees and flowers alive with hose water! 🙂 And then look at this beautiful image:
And looking northwest toward Central Atenas a gorgeous pink & blue! I love seeing what God creates! |
– Navajo Poem
All of nature is beauty to me and in Costa Rica I feel like I am surrounded by nature more than anywhere else I have ever been. And as a walker, I truly walk in beauty! (You see more walking!)
You have already seen my new entry garden, but we planted ground cover today that should spread fast. |
Tomorrow I’ll show you around inside the house as it is now decorated. My art may arrive this week, but I will probably add only a few pieces around a well decorated house! Buenas Noches!
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Tonight’s sunset colored the clouds in the north. Beautiful! Each evening a new surprise! How did I ever live without a balcony? This is my cathedral! |
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Yellow Bells Trees Shedding Blooms Sunny Sidewalk in Atenas |
I walk in the sunshine under the Yellow Bell trees for a late lunch and early dinner out to try the ribs at the Don Yayo Chicharonerra Cafe. Beautiful day with some rain clouds in the sky like we’ve had for weeks with no rain, so of course it will not rain. Well, while eating we got our first rain of the year (not counting one little shower) and it was a “gully washer” as we would say back in Arkansas. I took a photo but rain doesn’t seem to show up in my photos. The streams and canyons were gushing as I walked home.
We were very dry and having grass fires, so we really needed the rain! But it was so unexpected that I left my apartment windows open AND my laundry drying out on the balcony! Guess what? Some floors got mopped and my clothes went back through the spin cycle with hopefully some sun tomorrow. This is a case for the electric dryer in my new house and almost reason enough by itself for the move! 🙂 Can hardly wait!
Then after clean up of the rain, I got this “After the Rain” photo of rain fog on the horizon. Hope I get as many photo ops from the new balcony! I just love nature, even in the middle of a town.
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“After the Rain” from my balcony, Hacienda La Jacaranda, Atenas, Costa Rica |