Saturday, September 27, 2014

Steve "Messi" Blatt's Amazing Goal!

Jaws dropped at the Country Day School family picnic today, as we were witness to a sleekly executed header into the goal by none other than Mr. Steve Blatt!  The varsity girls and boys soccer teams played against their same-gender teachers, but even we oldsters still had some tricks up our sleeves.  The games were surprisingly well matched!



 We played with youthful vigor, but Steve and I got home and muttered a chorus of "Ow my hip,"  and "Yowch, my knee kinda hurts."  I'm just glad I still have all of my limbs intact.

Later, Benji, camouflaged on his bed.




Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Manzanas y Miel (Apples and Honey)

L'Shana tova.   Here in Costa Rica (along with our fellow menschen all over the world) we are ringing in Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish new year.  We dipped apples and challah in honey, lit the candles,and enjoyed a delicious meal (made even sweeter by the fact that I did not cook it myself).
Those funky glasses make the candles look like Jewish stars!


We were joined by David, a fellow math teacher at our school.   As a bonus, Marina got some special help on her math homework after dinner!

Everything was going just swell until Benji took us all down in a rousing game of Texas Hold 'Em.  I've got to stop betting against my 11 year olds!


Tomorrow, we head to shul (synagogue) at Congregacion B'nei Israel, where the kids are studying Hebrew and Jewish culture, and are beginning preparations for their  not-so-soon- that-you-should-make-plane-reservations B'nai Mitzvot.  Happy new year!



Sunday, September 21, 2014

Bumper Cars and Busty Broads after Church

The carnival rides are located in the park outside the church, but you can't buy your tokens until mass is out.  Then, the streaming masses (pun intended) pour out onto the precariously designed pirate ship and the carousel.   Ice cream and cotton candy flow freely.  At noon, school children parade around the plaza inside of gigantic, creepy costumed characters.  (At which point Marina commented, "Let's go home!") The heads of the grotesque caricatures are paper mache and kids' actual heads pop out where a stomach would be.  Very "Alien II".


Not my photo, but this is the carnival and our local church!
I wish I had a camera with me, because the juxtaposition of the church crowd walking past the carnival ride decorated with an airbrushed bombshell sporting only suspenders and tight shorts was really a great contradiction of terms. 

We certainly enjoyed the bumper cars, despite the near-whiplash that Steve inflicted upon his wife and children.  

Monday, September 15, 2014

Sloths and Monkeying Around: Wildly Up-Close at Jaguar Rescue Center, Puerto Viejo

One of the perks of hanging out in Costa Rica:  getting a chance to play around with sweet, rescued, baby monkeys!

Put it on the "must visit" list!   No jaguars here now, but local rescues of all kinds: snakes, toucans, frogs, owls, deer, monkeys and sloths!  Basically, the animals are recuperating and some even wander around the grounds.

We got eye-to-eye with sloths, and even got a chance to play inside a cozy enclosure with baby monkeys: Squirrel monkeys, baby howlers and an infant capuchin were climbing all over us! They sure can grab on with those prehensile tails.  It really was an experience we'll never forget. Don' miss it!






Exploring Cahuita National Park


 The white sand beach stretched for miles. Ticos and tourists alike flocked to the shore on this holiday weekend.  Along the trail, we spotted monkeys and snakes and a distant sloth!   After a three and a half hour drive from San Jose, we were happy to soak ourselves in the warm ocean.  We had arrived at Cahuita, on the Carribbean coast of Costa Rica.


 The undertow is super strong and unpredictable here.  Our attempt at snorkeling was quickly halted as Benji, Steve and I felt like we were being dragged out to sea.  Marina had the good sense to watch from the shoreline.


Cahuita is a lovely, sleepy town, and we enjoyed eating the local catch cooked over a wood fire, and staying at Willie's cabina where we had a cute house to ourselves.


 It was Independence Day weekend, and in the evening, the school kids marched through town with homemade lanterns to the beat of a raucous, booming, drummng band.

We will certainly go back!








Friday, September 12, 2014

Dia de Independencia - Costa Rica's Independence Day

On Monday, Costa Rica will celebrate its independence from Spain.  In 1948, Costa Rica wrote their constitution and is one of 25 nations around the world that lives peacefully without an armed forces.

 The celebration at school was fabulous.   Students dressed in typical costumes and sang and danced folk songs.  These lovely young women dressed in costumes typical of the seven regions of Costa Rica.
Steve posed in front of these beautiful students.

Benji and the student council kids marched in with the Costa Rican flag, and sang the national anthem.
One teacher, a professional singer, graced us with a rendition of a traditional folk song, and Steve and I got to participate in the show by interjecting "bombas" :  funny phrases in Spanish that punctuated the dancing.  The students really enjoyed watching their teachers say crazy things in Spanish. 

A typical feast followed!
 


"Si Se Puede!" - Benji's Bid for Student Government

Benji's bid for 6th Grade Representative in Student Council has come to fruition!   Not bad for the new kid at school.  After his announcement that he would run as an independent, the student body began to chant, "Si se puede!"  (It can be done!!)  

His speech was confident, funny and sensible.  He ended with "Don't vote for me because I'm very handsome and extremely tall. Vote for me because I'm approachable, hard-working, and a good choice for 6th grade representative."  Who wouldn't?

His landslide win has made him a household name in the middle school!  (Okay, perhaps we're just proud parents...)


Sunday, September 7, 2014

Capuchins and Howlers and Squirrel Monkeys--Oh My! ...at Manuel Antonio

When living in Costa Rica, any weekend can be a mini-vacation.  So we packed up the monster SUV and headed to Manuel Antonio National Park on the Pacific coast.  It's the country's most popular "attraction", and we can see why!  Coastline, jungle, flora, fauna, and a really nice pool at the hotel, and frankly, it's "Tuanis, Mai!" (Costa Rican for "Awesome, dude!")

Upon arriving, we hit up the grocery story for chicharrones (basically fried pork bits with extra fat) and yucca fries.  Our hearts did not stop beating immediately, so we headed to the national park. 

It was there in Manuel Antonio, walking down the path, that we had our first encounter with the monos carra blanca  - white-faced Capuchin monkeys.   We were amazed that these creatures were playfully hopping along the roof of the restroom.  Minutes later,  as we pulled out our picnic lunch on the beach, two Capuchins stalked us from the tree.  As we looked around, no kidding, we saw a couple of iguanas, an agouti, and a couple of racoons ripping into a tortilla package.  The racoons were so brazen, that later on, we saw one steal a bag of clothes from some tourist while she showered!

The tide was in at Playa Espadrilla, but we still enjoyed the views.  As many park visitors began to slip out of the park, we stayed and wandered to Playa Gemelos.  In the trees above us, we heard hooting and howling.  Looking up, a troop of Howler Monkeys hung over our heads.  As they jumped from tree to tree, we grabbed the binoculars and the camera.

Shortly after, Marina spotted the squirrel monkeys, or mono titi, tiny brown monkeys hopping in the branches.  We had happened upon all three types of monkeys that inhabit the park.  Lucky us!

Spent and satisfied, we left the park and headed into town, where we had flavorful marlin and patacones (fried, unripe plantain) freshly prepared by Tiquicia at Soda Sanchez in the small town of Quepos.  Fantastic, delicious and very reasonable!!


The next morning, we played at the pool and had a lovely breakfast at Hotel California.  As we dined on omelets and fresh pineapple, squirrel monkeys bounded from tree to tree in front of the expansive ocean vista. 

What a weekend!  Pura vida!
Marina having a ball


Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Botanical Beauty at Jardin de Lankester Near Cartago (and the ghost of a headless priest)


This weekend, we visited the lovely Lankester Gardens, less than an hour away from San Jose.  Orchid gardens, bromeliads, cactus gardens, strange and exotic flowers wind along paths.  We spent several lazy hours here, breathing in the floral scents and absorbing a paint box full of color!




Clearly a staged photo.  Benji has the wrong eye closed!






Watch out for that cactus!
"Traveler's Plants" hold tons of scented (drinkable?) water!

It's like National Geographic around here!



Near Cartago, we read the legend of a headless priest at an ancient monastery.