A Traveler's Log


Toucans and Hornbills represent the unexpected in travel, wildness, delight, and surprise. Where they live, other wonderful animals and plants flourish.

Travel entails new experiences - new sounds, different smells, surprises, sensations not like those at home. Some ideas, feelings, and impressions must be recorded immediately or they are lost; others are best recollected in tranquility (with a nod to Wordsworth).


Bethought: to think; to remind (oneself); to remember
Images and scenes bethought - evoking the moment and reliving it.
Why in the World? Where in the World?

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Bubble

Earth may be near tipping point, scientists warn

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-0607-global-tipping-20120607,0,4125302.story

"We have created a bubble of human population and economy … that is totally unsustainable and is either going to have to deflate gradually or is going to burst," said co-author James Brown, a distinguished professor of biology at the University of New Mexico. "If it's going to burst, the consequences are really going to be grim for people as well as biodiversity and the rest of the planet."

My take: 

Bubble 

Bubbles burst
Tulips
Silver
Gold
Real Estate
They all explode in our faces
More or less of us are hurt

The biggest bubble of all
Has yet to go
Mother Nature (anthropomorphically speaking)
will explode 
It will hurt all of us
And rightly so.

Of our own making
We always fail to recognize them
Until, proverbially, it is too late.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

5 Fruits


5 Fruits: 2 to love; 2 to try - at least once (maybe); 1 to admire

Some fruits just don’t travel. For the most part, if you live in the continental U.S., you won’t see any of these in your local markets.  You must taste them where they live and grow.  These five truly deserve the title “exotic.” Try them all, some I can guarantee you will love.

Two To Love:
 Mangosteens, the most delicious
Mangosteens. These are from Bali.
The edible wedges are succulent,  sweet,  tangy, and indescribable


There are never many Mangosteens in the markets, so watch
 for small piles of them as you wander. A small mound of
Mangosteens (right side of the image) in an open air market on Bali.
Passion Fruit comes in a close second in the delectable category

The outer skin is tough;  crack it open with your
fingernails or open with a knife.
Don't be put off by the frog-egg-look of the fruit.



Just spoon it out and enjoy. Northern Territory, Australia
Two To Try:
Rambutan, the fiercest looking but the red spines are soft

Rambutans tied up for sale.
Rambutans displayed on a Sri Lankan roadside.

Very sweet and slick.


Buying Rambutans from a street vendor in
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. 
Durian, the smelliest.  Durian is an acquired taste, so they say, with a cult-like following; I am not a member of the club. What's not to like? the texture, the color, the smell, the taste - all were definitely off-putting. The odor is so strong the fruit is barred from certain hotels and public transportation in
Southeast Asia.

Durian and other fruits for sale at a gas station in Malaysia.
Mangosteens in the white crate; yellow Rambutans on the red crate.

Gloves are needed to get at the Durian interior;
JP enjoys and records the experience.

Maybe it's the color...or everything.  Try it just to say
you did. I did, and never again.
One To Admire:
Dragon Fruit or Pitaya, the most beautiful, lovely color inside and out--unfortunately it is bland, bland. It is the fruit of a variety of cactus. Admire them wherever you see them. We bought one in Hawaii and found it lovely, but bland. It looked best as decoration on the table.

In a market in Vietnam alongside Durian.


Even the inside is striking, but still bland.


Travel involves new sights, new smells, and new tastes. Since these 5 can't be found at home, seek them out and try them; they will tantalize your taste buds.  Three of the five are native to Southeast Asia; two are indigenous to tropical America but have spread throughout the tropics and sub-tropics of the world.

Interestingly, all of these fruits need peeling; the skins are not edible and in some cases are downright off-putting in appearance. Don't be discouraged.

The scientific low down:
Common Name                 Genus Species                                     Family
Mangosteen                     Garcinia mangostana                         Clusiaceae
Passion Fruit                   Passiflora edulis                                   Passifloraceae
Rambutan                         Nephelium lappaceum                         Sapindaceae
Durian                             Durio spp.                                             Malvaceae
Dragon Fruit                   Hylocereus         

Mangosteens come from a tropical evergreen tree believed to have originated in the Sunda Islands and the Moluccas of Indonesia. It is found throughout Southeast Asia.


The edible Passion Fruits (there are many inedible species) come from vines native to Paraguay, Brazil, and northern Argentina.  They are cultivated commercially in warmer, frost-free areas for their fruit and are widely grown in India, Sri Lanka, New Zealand, the Caribbean, Brazil, Colombia, Bolivia, Ecuador, Indonesia, Peru, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, California, Florida, Haiti, Hawaii, Argentina, Australia, East Africa, Mexico, Israel, Costa Rica, South Africa, and Portugal. (They may be grown in California but I don't think I've ever seen them. I'll have to look.)  


Rambutan fruits come from a medium-sized tropical tree. It is native to Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, and elsewhere in Southeast Asia.


Durian is native to Brunei, Indonesia, Philippines and Malaysia, and has been known to the Western world for about 600 years.


Dragon Fruit is the fruit of several cactus species, most importantly of the genus Hylocereus (sweet pitayas). They are native to Mexico, Central America, and South America. Currently, they are also cultivated in East Asian and Southeast Asian countries such as Indonesia (especially in western Java), Taiwan, Vietnam,Thailand, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, and more recently Bangladesh. They are also found in Okinawa, Hawaii, Israel, Palestine, northern Australia, and southern China.


J & K enjoying tropical fruits at breakfast in Bangkok. Note the Passion Fruit on my plate. 


 Thank as always to my traveling companion, JPD. Also to Wikipedia, the source of information.
 





      








Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Last Seen?


Rufous Antpitta. This is not the bird we saw and is
undoubtedly not the Cajamarca race but it would look much
like this. We, unfortunately,  did not get a picture of our
Antpitta in its tiny patch of forest. ( Photo by Janos Olah, Jr.)

Last Seen?

In today’s parlance we’re Birders, but I’m probably more accurately described by the older, less fashionable descriptor, bird watcher. I don’t keep a list and I have a faulty memory for the myriad of birds I have seen. I just like seeing them; I like the chase; and I love being where they live. There are over 8000 bird species in the world and although it seems highly unlikely we’ll see them all, we travel to places where birds new to us may still be seen.

Birding today often consists of visiting wonderful pristine habitats that have been preserved by individuals, conservations organizations, and governments. In recognition of biological realities, large swaths of land have been set aside to protect all the plants and animals within its borders. But not all species live in these circumscribed, protected areas. Some persist in tiny fragments surrounded by farmers and their farms. Birds are picky, having evolved in a particular area, they don’t move when their homes are first isolated, then destroyed. So birders also seek out—hoping against hope—that tiny bit of wilderness that allows a stranded bird to survive.  It becomes a gesture of faith.

Our latest gesture of faith trip was to Peru, with its many diverse habitats: coastal scrub, wetlands, lowland jungles, highland forests, cloud forests, and grasslands above timberline. It is home to over a ¼ of all the bird species on the earth.  For 20 days we focused on a triangle of habitats in Northern Peru, driving from Chiclayo to Cajamarca.

The road between Celendín and Cajamarca winds through the broad, now mainly agricultural Maranon valley in the Northern Andes. Our itinerary called for “early morning birding in remnant humid forest and Polylepis scrub…We’ll make a special effort for the Cajamarca race of the Rufous Antpitta.” This charming plump, long-legged bird loves deep underbrush; it skulks, it hides, it flits quickly from twig to twig. It is hard to see, but fortunately for birders, it responds to previously taped recordings of its species’ call. 

 A remnant of forest, home to the Cajamarca race
 of the Rufous Antpitta, logged off. (Photo by Jane Bridges)
Our van dropped us off on the road and we slowly walked along the verge of the road, looking, listening, enjoying the cool morning. We rounded a curve and our bird guide, Silverio, a mild mannered man given to such strong language as “Oh Gosh” when we missed a bird, spit out an expletive in Spanish and stopped. The hillside, where our target bird the Cajamarca race of the Rufous Antpitta, was last seen was being logged off, clear cut, as we watched. The big trees were lying in a pile on the road; the dense tangle essential for the Antpitta was gone.  We continued down the road past the scalped slope to a tiny fragment of forest.  It hadn’t been cleared yet but it was riven with burro or cow sized tunnels making it easy for us to penetrate into the underbrush. Silverio played the tape and an Antpitta responded and very briefly popped into view.  Male birds respond to taped calls because they think a rival is invading their territory, but they call to attract females.  Our Antpitta continued to call as we moved away.  There was really no threat and no reason to scare away a rival, but I fear he would continue to call in his little fragment of forest and there would be no response—ever.

The next available bit of forest seemed too far away for this particular individual to pick up and move.

Other birders will look for this secretive bird, but given the minuscule size of his forest patch, our sighting may be noted in reports as “last seen on November 10, 2011.”