Tuesday, January 31, 2012

The Embera Drua Village:Two Thumbs Up!





























Today students visited an indigenous Embera Drua village where the people live in harmony with nature.  “The Embera Drua community is located on the Upper Chagres River. A dam built on the river in 1924 produced Lake Alajuela, the main water supply to the Panama Canal. The village is four miles upriver from the lake and encircled by a 129.000 hectare National Park of primary tropical rainforest.”  On the way to the village students had the opportunity to swim in a waterfall before reaching their final destination to learn about the lifestyle and traditions of the Embera Drua. During the boat ride to and from the village students were able to spot Little Blue and Green Herons, Great Egrets, Amazon, Ringed and Green Kingfishers.  Students were sad to leave because the wanted to spend more time in this very peaceful village.
For more information about the Embera Drua please go to this link:
Please remember that we leave for Cocobolo on Tuesday and we will not be able to communicate with you for the next seven days.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Tiger Rat Snakes, Crocodiles, Monkeys...Oh My!


















BCI Group
            The first full day in Panama was thrilling. My group and I visited BCI, a Smithsonian Research Station located on Barro Colorado Island. Our informative and adventurous tour led us to see many animals and massive trees.  There were howler monkeys, Keel-Billed toucans and even a tiger rat snake (Which Twan wrestled so students could get a better look at this interesting snake. Dont worry we were instructed not to try this on our own!)  We saw a 600 year old tree that was really awesome, especially the bats clinging to the bark.  The leaf cutter ants captured our attention for several minutes and are the major herbivore in the rainforest.  We learned about the strange social behavior of ocelots at their latrines and Bryn and I are now on the lookout for Ocelot latrines in Cocobolo Nature Reserve to set-up our camera traps to capture this behavior. Overall the first day, has been a blast. I look forward to visiting the Embera village tomorrow.
Birds
Slaty-tailed Trogon
Violacious Trogon
Crested Guan
Scissor-Tailed Flycatcher
Gray B Martin
Great Kiskadee
Crimson-Crested Woodpecker
Tinamou
Magnificent Frigatebird
Agoti
Mantled Howler Monkey
Red-Capped Manakin
Amphibians
Leaf Frog
Green and Black Poison Dart Frog
Blue Morpho Butterflies
Glasswing Butterfly
Tiger Rat Snake
Leaf Cutter Ants

Other
Saddle moth caterpillar



Canal Tour and Miraflores Locks
Today, the other half of the group, Alec, Forrest, Zachary, Sean, Erin and I went on a boat ride on the Chagres River and Gatun Lake.  We saw lots of wildlife. The highlights of the trip were seeing the American Crocodile from the shore and learning about how Aztec ants can be crushed and used as insect repllent.  Here is a list of the wildlife we saw:
Reptiles
American Crocodile
Green Iguana
Common Basilisk
White-lipped mud turtle

Mammals
White-faced capuchin
Mantled Howler Monkeys (Heard)

Birds
Brown Pelican
Anhinga
Magnificent Friget Bird
Great Blue Heron
Black Vulture
Turkey Vulture
Osprey
Snail Kite
Common Moorhen
Wattled Jacana
Pale vented pigeon
Amazon Kingfisher
Keel billed Toucan
Social Flycatcher
Tropical Kingbird
Mangrove Swallow
Yellow-rumped cacique
Yellow-crowned Euphonia

After we had lunch on a small island, we then traveled to the Miraflores Locks and saw a movie about the Panama Canal, toured the museum and watched the ships go through the locks.  It was a great first day for the second group as well.
The entire group came together at the end of the day to enjoy dinner at Miraflores Locks where boats passed through the locks as we enjoyed a hearty dinner.

Blog Entry by: Raymond Tinglin & Alex Kricheff
Photos by:Alex Kricheff, An Wang, Erin O'Connell and Laurie Doss