Monday, October 29, 2007

Cost Rica: Beginnings, bumps and San Jose impressions

It seemed a long two weeks of waiting between the drive home from California and the getting packed up for our Costa Rica trip out of Houston. Prepping for a six month trip seemed to cause our mother an inordinate amount of worry directly inproportionate to the amount of input we wanted her to have in the process. I was lucky to escape most of mom’s stress and worry over the trip by slipping off to New York for the three days immediately preceding our departure. Highlights included Sutton Court tennis, Laura’s 25th birthday dinner and subsequent Antarctic shenanigans, and a Sunday football BBQ at Frank, LT, and Hart’s new place. Thank you guys for a great weekend and sendoff!

When my sister and I finally escaped US airspace and touched down in San Jose on Oct. 23, however, we were anxious to immediately head down south to the surf and rainforest of the Osa Peninsula. We decided to spend only one night in San Jose simply to secure the rental car, gather info on the upcoming drive, and to do a tad bit of city exploring. If we found out there was a lot to see in San Jose we could always return later in the trip after we had quelled our anxiety to be off and running with our outdoor adventures.

With the gringos San Jose is probably most renowned for its whore houses and casinos, which are coincidently most often housed in the same complex. This impression is based mostly off eavesdropping into the conversations of those dining and drinking around us at the downstairs café of the Hotel Presidente where we were staying. Here businessmen, real estate developers and speculators, tourists, surfers, ex-patriots, and local Ticos (Costa Ricans) sat at open air tables looking out over a short wall at the Avenue Central in the heart of downtown. From many of these tables we caught wind of late nights spent at the famous/infamous Hotel Del Ray, gambling away all but enough colones to allow a late night tour of the locally euphemized “petting zoo”.

At the café drinking at the table next to us, Laura and I met Steve, an ex-patriot developer who had been living south of Dominical for 8 years. He was staying there after having brought his wife to a hospital in San Jose for the birth of their fourth child. Characteristic of most ex-pats, Steve was outgoing, from California, had been originally attracted to Costa Rica by the surfing, and had stayed after finding a welcoming and relaxed Tico culture rife with opportunities through cheap land and an expanding tourist industry. Over the course of a number of hours and Imperial drafts, he helped give us an initial feel for life in Costa Rica, where to go, what to avoid, and how to experience the most. Maybe it is something about the experience of having just seen his new child enter the world, but we were lucky that Steve was willing to sit a share with us about his life for most of that afternoon. We plan to visit him later in our trip.

Our wandering sightseeing was predominately along the Avenue Central, the main east-west thoroughfare in the city. The most characteristic element of the street was the ubiquitous lotteria tables selling tickets for some unknown drawing. Apparently even one table per block was not enough to oversaturate the market, as all the vendors seemed to be doing at least some business. Apparently gringos aren’t the only ones who enjoy gambling in San Jose. There was also a healthy amount of pedestrian traffic. We noticed students with backpacks, some office looking suits, young people in sun glasses, the homeless and the crazy, some street kids addicted to glue sniffing, and most obviously a menagerie of street performers, tourist scammers, shoe polishers, and impromptu tour guides all vying for our attention. Though believing myself above such obvious ploys, I was briefly inticed into following around a guy who claimed to be buddies with Warren Moon and promised me he could set me up with a local phone chip for my blackberry that would make phone calls much cheaper. Ten dollars and a stern warning from Steve later, I recognized there was no way I was going to get the elusive local phone chip and wrote it off as a learning experience into the art of the street scam. But, god, did he ever have me going by dropping the Warren Moon bomb.

That night, of course at the suggestion of Steve, we went to dinner at San Jose’s most famous Asian cuisine restaurant Tin Jo. The food was amazing and showed the city does have more to offer then seedy casinos and crowded streets. We had eaten gourmet quality haute-couture food at one of San Jose’s finest restaurant and spent only $30 between the two of us.

The next day we picked up our car at the rental car office, loaded up our luggage, and then looked blankly at the crowded and unmarked San Jose streets as we tried to orient ourselves to getting on the road to San Isidro- our halfway point for the drive to the southern Osa peninsula. As I sat in the driver seat of my Dihatzou BeGo in the parking lot of the EuropaRenta Car, silently congratulating myself on securing both a good rate on the vehicle and my surf board safely to its top, I realized to my horror that I was staring at a manual transmission. I had only driven a manual once before in my life, and that was only for a total of about eight days. Looking into the morass of San Jose traffic, honking horns, roundabouts, and unmarked roads, I recognized I was approaching a trial by fire. I took a deep breath and engaged the clutch.

In the first 10 minutes of driving down Avenue Colon I must have stalled the car 8 times, been cussed out in Spanish 20 times, and been laughed at as an idiot gringo unable to drive his own bright red rental car pretty much constantly. The traffic was all stop and go, so I was constantly having to transition into first gear without lurching into the car ahead. Things seemed to be looking up as a gained some degree of comfort with the clutch, when a Tico on the side of the rode ran to our car and began pointing at the back tire. I had written of the bumpy feel as due to the roads and my poor driving, but indeed we had managed to get a flat tire less than 5 miles into our trip.

We were profoundly lucky in the man who stopped to help us. The tire was changed and EuropoRenta car brought us a new spare within 40 minutes. I say profoundly lucky because, as we were told, tire slashing is usually part of a larger scam in San Jose where thieves slash the tires of obvious tourists and swarm in when they pull over, initially offering to help but really looking to distract the distraught motorists and rob them of their belongings. Somehow we must have driven either too far past our slashers (our tires had indeed been knifed) and been stopped by a true good Samaritan or possibly we were simply not distracted enough and the area was to public for the scam to be pulled off. I suspect the former as the man did an amazing job changing the tire and was so sincerely nice and helpful to two obviously out-of-their-element gringos. Nothing was stolen and we were back on the road. What a lucky break.

The rest of the drive to San Isidro consisted of lots of attempts to ask directions in broken Spanish, climbing up and out of the mountains bordering the San Jose central valley, pleading with local cops to let us through a road block only passable for local residents and official vehicles, and finally cruising through the rainforest jungle road at night for the last 50 kilometers into San Isidro. The road block had been set up because the main road, Calle 2, had become impassible due to a mudslide and the detour around it was a dirt road through a hilly valley that could only accommodate limited traffic. However, fearing that by turning around and trying to find an alternate route would surely only get us lost, we begged the cop to let us through and to pass the mudslide using the backroad detour. I soon learned the other challenge of navigating a manual transmission was in climbing wet and muddy hills at 45 degree angles. I stalled out numerous times on such hills and terrifyingly was unable to execute a mid-hill re-start and was forced to roll in neutral back down to the bottom in order to restart. This must have been extremely disconcerting to the other traffic, which was forced to dodge the fire red tourist rent-a-car hopelessly sliding down the muddy hills.

We eventually did make it to San Isidro that night and by the next day were cruising through the rain to the Pacific Coast and Dominical. There by eight, we got breakfast, checked the surf, and then drove the last leg of the drive down to the Osa Peninsula. The road down the peninsula is all dirt and rock and cuts right through the rainforest of Corcavado National Park. To the left and the east is the water of the Gulfa Dulce which separates the Osa Peninsual from the Costa Rican mainland. We reached the main town on the Osa, Puerto Jimenez by 1:00, and by 2:00 were at our hotel at the far southwestern tip of the Peninsula in a collection of houses called Matapalo. I had stayed here, at the Encanta La Vida, twice before and arriving felt like a homecoming after our long trip from San Jose. Laura and I are looking for some relaxing days of three cooked meals a day, surfing at three walking distance breaks, and jungle monkey watching which can be done right from the wooden rockers on the front porch of our cabin.





Sunday, October 14, 2007

Grand Canyon



The road trip back from Catalina Island to Houston included two amazing stops over three days of driving. The first was the Hampton Inn in Barstow, CA where we got hot showers, free wireless high speed, two amazing plush queen size beds, and were able to watch the end of the Colorado / Arizona NLCS championship.

The second cool stop was the Grand Canyon. We were originally thinking about bagging the South Rim Grand Canyon National Park scene and instead camping at Havasu Falls- just to the southeast. You don't get the great canyon views at Havasu Falls but apparently the swimming holes have amazing turquoise water.

Well anyway, we ended up deciding to just go to the park at South Rim because we wanted to drive some more miles later that evening instead of camping. Our short Grand Canyon stop involved walking around the South Rim path and then eating a 4:30 dinner at the Arizona Room in the Bright Angel lodge, which overlooks the canyon rim. Since we came at such an early hour we got a table by the window and surprisingly the food was almost as good as the view. After dinner, a cactus margarita, and a pint beer we were back on the road.

By the way the official language of the Grand Canyon is anything but English. As US tourists we were definintely in the minority.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Catalina Island

Before starting our 1500 mile drive from Los Angeles to Houston, Laura and I decided to spend a little time camping on Catalina Island- a 20 mile ferry ride due west into the Pacific from the Port of Los Angeles in Long Beach.

Santa Catalina Island is about 22 miles long, rarely more than 5 miles across, and has a resident population of about 3,000. While around 1 million people visit the island each year most never travel beyond Avalon, its only significant town. About 15 miles northwest of Avalon along the coast is the port of Two Harbors, which with a robust population of 298 residents, is the second most populous settlement on the island. The bay at Two Harbors juts inland a significant distance slimming the island briefly into a "neck" section. North of the neck the land widens to from the Northwestern "head" section of the island, which with its manageable size and remote location Laura and I choose to camp in and explore.

Map of Catalina showing Avalon, Two Harbors, and Parson's Landing

Laura and I took the ferry directly to Two Harbors and rented two kayaks, loaded them up with our camping gear, and spent our first afternoon paddling 5 miles up the coast to Parson's Landing, an uninhabited beach campground just shy of the island's western apex. We camped at here all three nights. Amazingly, despite being less then 25 miles from greater Orange County and its 10 million inhabitants, we were totally alone our first two days and got to enjoy the beachfront in the absolute peace and solitude usually only provided by remote wilderness.

Laura on the beach at Two Harbors where we rented the kayaks

Parson's Landing not only offered refreshing afternoon swims, picturesque ocean vistas, and camping right on the sand but also clean toilet facilities, which were set back behind the beach camping area. You make reservations and get a permit to camp at Parsons at the Ranger station in Two Harbors and when you reach the site (either via a backcountry hiking trail or via kayak) that $12 permit also provides you a combination to a locker which contains 2.5 gallons of fresh water and a bundle of firewood. Not having to pack in all your fresh water, not having to search for firewood, and having access to restrooms are three luxuries which made the fact we had the site all to ourselves all the more remarkable.
View of Parson's Landing Beach from western edge ridge

Our two full days at Parsons followed a similar pattern. We woke up around 6:30 and read in our tent for an hour as the sun would not have yet risen above the eastern wall of the cove and the beach would remain cold in the non-direct morning light. As the sun emerged we made breakfast and ate it at the campsite's wooden table looking out across the ocean to California coast and trying to identify Hermosa Beach where we had been living the previous two months. Around 8:00 on both days we went on a hike; one up the coastand the otherup to the trans-Catalina trail along the mid-island ridge from which we could see the ocean on both sides of the island. While hiking the first day we saw the deposited evidence of Catalina's buffalo population which we had read about in a blurb on our trail map. After being transported to the island for the filming of a movie during the 1920s, the buffalo had been left and survived as a resident herd. On the second hike we turned a corner and found one of these magnificent American Bison (what a "Buffalo" really is) munching on his grass breakfast out in the sun.
Hunched before my buddy the Bison
After the hikes we returned to our campsite for a snack and then some swimming. Catalina's coast is known for its kelp forest ecosystem which is the home to a wide variety of aquatic life. The protected cove at Parson's landing was no exception. Kelp is an underwater sea plant which grows anchored to rocks on the seabed and stretches upward along a thick stalk with broad bushy leaves. Giant kelp "trees" have been known to reach from 250 feet down at the ocean bed all the way to the surface.

The kelp tree forests around Catalina where we did most of our swimming and diving ranged from the shallows of 8 feet to depths of perhaps 60. Swimming amongst the kelp and seagrass covered rocks we saw numerous fish- perch, bass, opaleyes. giribaldis, barracuda, and massive schools of small anchovies and topsmelt called "baitballs". We also saw bat rays, guitarfish, jelly fish, star fish, sea urchins, and most magnificently a four foot leopard shark.

Diving down, weaving the underwater forest, and then looking up for a break in the tangled kelp masses to navigate to and surface through was an otherworldly experience. The underwater world is remarkably still and quiet, seemingly suspended in a smooth blue medium which absorbs both sound and movement. The green colors of the kelp, ranging from florescent slime to deep forest depending on the light, stand out against the blue. Along the bottom rocks provide blue-grays and purples, with large ones rising to create walls teaming with aquatic life and covered in whitish sea grasses. Amidst this forest are patches of pure white sandy bottom with nothing growing which occur seemingly at random. Here the water is a lighter, brighter blue as the lack of kelp covering at the surface allows the sun to shine right through it.
A black and white polka-dotted starfish

It was in this world thatLaura and I would snorkel in the afternoons after our hike. The water temperature was around 65 and we both wore wetsuits and weightbelts to stay down when diving. I also swam with a pole spear, which is simply a 5 foot long aluminum shaft with a sharp tip propelled by a heavy rubber band loop which is attached to its base. By grabbing the rubber band loop by its free end, pulling it up and holding it at the top of the spear, the stretched band creates a lot of tension wanting to propel the shaft forward. When you release the shaft the tensed band anchored to the spears base shoots the spear forward as it contracts.

I had just bought my polespear and the Catalina trip was my first chance to try my hand at free-dive spearfishing. The primary targets are large kelp bass, a fish called sheepshead, and halibut which live along the bottom like flounder but are very hard to spot. Around Parson's I did not see many of these particular gamefish (I did see some bass but they were small). I did, however, hone my skills by shooting some larger perch, opaleye, and a bottom dwelling ray-like fish known as the guitarfish.

Spearing the guitar fish right in front of my sister was probably a funny site. I had noticed three large fish laying flat along the bottom and at first had hoped they were halibut. The seemed too ray like- with their wide triangular heads and long tails- however, I did not want to take a chance and miss a tasty kill. I pulled my spear band tight, dived down to about 15 feet where I knew my shot would reach them, and then, hoping for the best, let go. The fish shot up off the bottom thrashing at the end of the tri tipped spear sending my arm, which still gripped the spear's base, into wild undulations. The tips had gone through the fish's large flat head but it did not appear to be rapidly dying. I remembered the advice from the guy who had sold me the spear, and reached down for the dive knife strapped to my calf. After struggling to free the knife from its sheaf, and trying to ignore my bodies increasing insistence to surface for air, I pulled the speared fish towards me and delivered two knife stabs below the its eyes. Its thrashing stopped and I swam up and broke the surface. Laura was waiting for me up there a bit wide-eyed but laughing at the whole scene.

The guitarfish poses after being speared

As I mentioned the fish did not end up being halibut, but instead a guitarfish which was indeed a member of the ray family. Luckily, however, the fish/ray's tail yielded some meaty filets, which after some googling on my blackberry (all of Catalina has cell coverage) were found to be edible. We cooked the fish over an open wood fire along with the perch and served it with rice for dinner.

Cleaning the guitarfish with my dive knife

When not swimming and hiking, we spent our downtime at Parson's campsite reading, napping, and- for Laura- painting in the cool beach cove. The wooden table provided a great platform for her to do her water color paintings from. While she painted, I slept or read the biography of Ghengis Khan I had brought along. At night after dinner we built a fire on the beach and sat out under the stars before bed.

View looking over our tent at sunset
We left Parson's beach on the third day and paddled back to Two Harbors to catch our ferry. The afternoon before we had been joined by two other sets of backpackers who had arrived at the campsite from the trail. We felt lucky to have had the site to ourselves and were happy to share the beach that night and leave it to them the next day. At least a few other people in the vast expanse of greater LA area had recognized that such a magical spot existed right under their nose.

Thursday, October 4, 2007

Hasta LAvista

Laura and I are sadly almost through our last week in the LA Southbay area. Living in Hermosa Beach has been a great transition between NYC and our upcoming trip to Latin America, but I think we are both ready to get to traveling and escape our computers, cellphones, and their related stress. It is always a relief to escape the perceived obligations that our phenomenally interconnected technology can create. There is peace in knowing that you simply can not be reached, it reduces distractions and refocuses one's mental energy on living in the moment.

Our flights to San Jose, Costa Rica are booked for October 23 out of Houston. Between the 7th, when we move out LA, and the 23rd we are going camping in Catalina Island for three days and driving back to Houston with a camping stop in the Grand Canyon area for another three days on the way home.

Surfing has been a focus, despite the lack of consistent swells, over the past two weeks. I have surfed breaks in Hermosa Beach, Manhattan Beach, San Onofre, Malibu, and Santa Barbara. The waves around Manhattan and Hermosa Beach are all from the beach break and tend to close out (when the wave breaks all down its length at once). These can be tough waves to learn on but I still probably feel most at home here, since its where I surf the most. The water is still in the mid 60s making it still possible to surf without a wetsuit. The rides on these waves are anything but picturesque, I am rarely up for more than a few seconds, but just getting out into the water and catching a few of these steep, quick breaking waves challenges and refreshes me. Hopefully in Costa Rica I will get into some of the longer rides and deeper barrels that one sees in surfing videos and I dream about.


San Onofre State Park


Laura spreads out her reading at San Onofre Beach


Always wanted to throw up the surf sign


Malibu Pier, home of a famous right point break and some dirty water


The lineup at Malibu waiting for the yet unseen wave to arrive