New Flowerpots
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The greenery by the rocking chairs looks much better in new pot! |
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And the living room plant looks better in the new pot also! I think. |
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My newest indoor plant is this palm in my bedroom with philodendron ivy at base. |
I may have told you that my artist friend Anthony has returned from 9 months of traveling in Spain and Morocco and has moved into the house next door that was occupied by Don & Lynda who moved back to Oregon. Before traveling, Anthony lived on the other side of me in someone else’s casita (a small house most big house owners have for guests or rental.). He is the one who made my garden art bird sculpture. He really decorates well with a lot of plants and that motivated me to spruce mine up a little.
Rainy Season Starting!
Atenas Oxcart Parade Today!
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And this small child stole the show as she led her toy oxen in pulling a toy oxcart! |
In fact there seemed to be more of an emphasis on the children this year in what has always been a family affair to celebrate and remember the important part boyeros (oxcart drivers) played in the history of Costa Rica as the first land shippers of coffee and bananas to the two big port cities for shipment to the U.S. and Europe.
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The parade still had the colorful oxcarts! And the big oxen! |
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And most included the whole family as usual. A Family farm affair! |
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But many were led by children this year as the Oxcart Leader or Boyero. |
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And a few even had young oxen! |
While others had their hands full! |
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But all accepted their responsibility with pride! |
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Goat Carts were in parade this year for the first time, led by kids of course! Pun intended! |
And there are more Women Boyeros each year! |
And the whole time the Central Park is filled with tents, entertainers, arts & crafts, food & drink vendors, a playground, and plenty to do if you get bored with the parade.
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A Rooster on Stilts! and . . . |
. . . and another on foot, representing Gollo, a big furniture/appliance store. |
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Someone leading the children in games before the parade started. And of course all the food, drink, balloons, etc. available to buy! |
The parade always starts with police and horses, one carrying the Costa Rica Flag: |
Red, white and blue patriotism! |
I watched the parade with 3 friends, Anthony, Jean and Carolyn and then afterwards we went to La Finca for pizza and pasta. A fun day! And if you want to see photos of the bigger oxen being led by men and other views, see my photos from last year’s parade at: 2015 Oxcart Parade on this blog.
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Another happy day in Costa Rica! |
A Walk In the Garden!
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Step into my main garden from the driveway or back door of house. Surrounded by the trees and other flowers of neighbors. You know you are in a tropical place! |
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One is a Nance Tree which by July will have little yellow fruits I can eat! |
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The largest of my 4 Heliconia plants. |
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The brightest of my Heliconia plants. |
The smallest of my Heliconia plants. |
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And the most prolific of the 4 Heliconia plants. It greets you at the driveway next to the Plumbago. |
Red Ginger is all over my garden & prolific. |
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Lantanas are my border and called multiple things here. Grow fast! I have to cut them back regularly or they become shrubs! That is something like a Florida White Butterfly here today. |
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A type of Petunia that blooms abundantly every morning, then by mid-afternoon the blooms have all dropped to the ground. More the next morning! Year-around. |
Flame Vine in English or Triquitraque in Spanish which literally means “firecracker” in Spanish |
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Flame Vine or Triquitraque |
“Crown of Thorns” is what Lynda called it. I bought at Don & Lynda’s Moving Sale. |
Aloe Vera – I’m always ready for burn! 🙂 |
Sorry I made so many photos this morning! And that is not all of my garden! 🙂 I love it!
Atenas Climate Fair Started Today
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Daytime boring music with the old men playing the Marimba or . . . |
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One of the small rhythm and brass bands playing traditional music. The park is a lot livelier at night with rock, pop and lots of dancing. |
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And midday Sunday is our famous annual Oxcart Parade which I will see and photograph again this year. This is a photo from last year. |
I can hear the high school marching band practicing tonight, so I guess they will be in the parade Sunday. And I can hear the lively pop music from the Central Park stage that attracts the young people and those who love to dance. There are lots of “happy sounds” around here most weekend nights and occasionally on a weeknight.
Butterflies Returning to My Garden!
Atenas Central Gets Street Signs!
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The center of town! Corner of 0 & 0! |
UNBELIEVABLE! Or at least “un-Tico” to have street signs! My goodness! What will they think of next? House numbers?
I have traveled all over Costa Rica and the only place with street signs so far is downtown San Jose that I have noticed. The Tico way to give directions is by using obvious landmarks with a number of meters from it to the next landmark or the destination. For example if you need to get to my house and are driving from Alajuela:
On Ruta 3 drive past La Coope Gasolinera to the first legal left turn or second street after the traffic light. Drive 500 meters to the end of road at Escuela Central and turn left. Go 100 meters to El Pinguino shop and turn right. Then in 100 meters, turn left and go 600 meters to the Roca Verde sign on the right. Inside the gate go 200 meters to the third black gate on left numbered 105. Only some developments like ours have house numbers.
Now read under the second photo the directions to my house from Central Atenas with street signs and it is not much shorter!
Of course that needs to be in Spanish. And if you don’t know, a city block is approximately 100 meters, but “blocks” are not generally used for directions here.
And I must add that I am glad my bank fees are at least partially going to help the community. The little logo at the bottom of each street sign is for Banco Nacional.
For those who still think I live in the jungle, see what modern progress we are making down here!? And this was a big surprise to everyone! Most did not know the names of the streets, so I figure 4 or 5 years to get used to the street names, then maybe house numbers!
And for anyone who cares, Calles run north-south and Avenidas east-west. East of Calle 0 are odd numbered Calles and west even numbered. North of Avenida 0 are odd numbered and south even numbered. I wonder how many have figured that out yet? 🙂
We’ve actually had these street names for awhile, though the only place I have seen them is on a paper map from a real estate company and on the Google Map. But it is a rare Tico who knows the name of any street in town! And the sign at right, 3rd & 8th is the last street sign before my house. They have signed what is generally called “Central Atenas” or the core of downtown.
The city is hard at work making improvements. In Central Park a children’s playground has been added with swings, slides and climbing things. Can the kids still climb the trees? Also, there are new brighter street lights in park for night events.
Chachalaca in My Garden & Cousin in Nicaragua
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Gray-headed Chachalaca, in my garden, Atenas Costa Rica Possibly a juvenile since a little smaller than some I’ve seen |
This turkey-sized bird is a cousin to the guans which we also have all over Central America. I saw a similar Plain Chachalaca at Montibelli in Nicaragua high in a tree behind a lot of limbs, so no good photo. But I did get several good photos of the Highland Guan while at El Jaguar and here are two of those photos. Guans and Chachalacas are in the same family with similar size and look.
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Highland Guan, El Jaguar Nature Reserve, Nicaragua |
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Highland Guan, El Jaguar Nature Reserve, Nicaragua |
In my Costa Rica Birds photo gallery see my photos of a Black Guan at Monteverde, Costa Rica; a Gray-headed Chachalaca at Turrialba, Costa Rica; Great Curassows (another cousin) from different places in Costa Rica; and in separate travel galleries a Crested Guan at Isla Barro Colorado, Panama; and a Gray-headed Chachalaca in the Gamboa Rainforest of Panama. I’ve also seen Chachalacas in Guatemala and Mexico, but I will stop with these as a fun set of birds!
Rufous-naped Wren, God’s Creation!
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Rufous-naped Wren in Yellow Bell Tree off my Terrace |
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Rufous-naped Wren |
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Rufous-naped Wren with his feathers ruffled – possibly a juvenile |
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Rufous-naped Wren posing by one of the few lingering flowers |
You probably don’t remember that last July 2015 I reported here about one of these inside my house.
RAIN IN THE DRY SEASON?
A surprise light shower or sprinkle on this Sunday afternoon, March 6, 2016. It is dry season in the central valley with no rain since October, and this one lasted maybe 10 minutes, getting everything wet, but not soaking my flowers and trees – a reminder that it will start raining again for real in May. And tomorrow night I will continue my every two day watering routine.
If you follow all my adventures you may remember that we had rain stop us from seeing Poas Volcano two weeks ago, but it is at a high altitude, “The Cloud Forest,” that has rain year around as does the coastal lowland rainforest such as Tortuguero where we had a little bit of rain on each of our two nights/3 days there. But the rest of Costa Rica is in the Dry Season until May. Read about the WEATHER in Costa Rica.
Genesis 1:20-23The Message (MSG)
Birds, fly through the sky over Earth!”
God created the huge whales,
all the swarm of life in the waters,
And every kind and species of flying birds.
God saw that it was good.
God blessed them: “Prosper! Reproduce! Fill Ocean!
Birds, reproduce on Earth!”
It was evening, it was morning—
Day Five.