Just Some Scenery

I always take a camera when I go biking because there is usually something beautiful along the way!

On my route northwest of town you have to cross this beautiful little stream.

On my route northwest of town you have to cross this beautiful little stream.

 

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As I left the neighborhood, I saw these two birds with the really long tails sitting on the utility lines. I believe they are fork-tailed flycatchers.

I think we were driving to town when I saw these spectacular clouds, and had to ask Joel to stop so I could snap a photo.

We were driving to town when I saw these spectacular clouds.

This is the river before Guarumal on the way to La Barqueta beach

This is the river before Guarumal on the way to La Barqueta beach

This is the same river looking in the other direction from the bridge. It must not be very deep because this man easily walked across it.

This is the same river looking in the other direction from the bridge. It must not be very deep because this man easily walked across it.

Just a bit of countryside with some living fence trees, hay bales, and a field of beans

Just a bit of countryside with some living fence trees, hay bales, and a field of beans

A bit more countryside on the way to La Barqueta beach - living fences, sugar cane fields, and Volcan Baru in the distance

A bit more countryside on the way to La Barqueta beach – living fences, sugar cane fields, and Volcan Baru in the distance

On that same route is the beautiful, tranquil pond. I'm told there are alligators there but I've never seen one.

On that same route is this beautiful, tranquil pond. I’m told there are alligators there but I’ve never seen one.

There was something fairly large that kept surfacing but it looked like a turtle.

There was something fairly large that kept surfacing but it looked like a turtle.

Across from the site for the new sports complex on the way back to town is a nice shady spot good for a rest and a drink of water. I love this beautiful tree!

Across from the site for the new sports complex is one of my favorite rest spots. I love this beautiful tree!

Coming back through town, the red/orange part of this banana flower caught my eye.

Coming back through town, the red/orange part of this banana flower caught my eye.

Posted in Panama, photography | Tagged , | 6 Comments

A Strange Iguana Experience

Yesterday afternoon I went out to putter around in the yard. When I looked across the street, this is what I saw.

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My neighbor was watering an iguana! Of course I grabbed my camera and went over to see what was going on. It was very strange that the iguana was just sitting there. Usually, if they see a person, they are gone!

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My neighbor said he thought the iguana was very hot out there in the sun on the dirt and needed some water. He was afraid a dog had gotten it and it was hurt. The iguana was missing the tip of its tail but otherwise, we couldn’t see any injuries. We were worried though about the dogs, so we decided to try and get the iguana into my fenced yard where it would be protected and safe.

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I came over with a trash can, put it in front of the iguana and used my shoe to try and coax it into the can. It didn’t move a bit! I figured if it was that inactive I would take a chance and pick it up, which would be less traumatic than pushing it into the trash can. I gently picked it up, one hand under the chest and the other near the back feet and the iguana still didn’t move a bit!

I carried it across the street and by the time I got into my yard it looked back, opened its mouth, and tried to push its feet against my arm like it wanted to get away. (those claws are very sharp! I did get a scratch before I moved my arm out of range). I gently put the iguana on the ground next to my back terrace and left it alone. I still didn’t see or feel any evidence of injury except for the tail.

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I came back a while later and it had moved about 8 yards into the back yard, but it was again sitting still and didn’t react when I came close.

When I came back to look again it had moved another 8-10 yards and was sitting under one of my banana trees. I got some papaya from my fridge and put it nearby, and again left the iguana alone. When I came back later the papaya was untouched and the iguana was nowhere to be seen.

My neighbors think the iguana was just stunned and would be fine with some time to regroup. It should be small enough to make it through our fence and into the woods if it wanted to leave. I was encouraged to see no visible injuries, and to see the iguana was able to move about the yard. Hopefully it’s doing better now and is back to living its normal life. It was very cool though to have it in my hands for a moment!

You just never know what is going to go on around here 😀

Posted in Panama, wildlife | Tagged , | 16 Comments

A Fun Night in Boquete and Pollera Dancers

Last Friday there was a benefit evening for the upcoming Jazz and Blues Festival. It was held at the beautiful Oasis Hotel. It included dinner, the dance demonstration by the Pollera Dancers, and then dancing and music by Yella Fever.

The grounds of the hotel are beautiful so we couldn’t resist taking a short walk around.

Then came the Pollera Dancers doing traditional Panamanian dances. It was very fun and interesting to see them, so check out the video to see a bit of the dancing.

Their dress, especially the woman’s Pollera is a very beautiful, intricate, and labor intensive traditional dress.

It’s not only the dress though. Look closely and you will see that the lady also wears a lot of jewelry and her hair is done in a very special way. My friend and fellow blogger wrote a very interesting post about the Pollera which includes an excellent video, so be sure to check it out.

I also found this charming video of another women getting dressed in all the parts that make up the pollera.

The Panamanian women are very beautiful, and when they get dressed in pollera they are stunning indeed!

Posted in culture, Panama | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

A Couple Critters

There always seems to be something new and interesting around here. I never promised to stop with the bugs and critters, so here are a couple new ones.

One night this bug showed up in our outside laundry/storage room. It was one of the biggest bugs I’d seen! It was very shy though and ran behind the air compressor so I was lucky to get this photo. You can see probably less than half of it peeking out from under the air hose.

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A wild orchid started growing in one of the orange trees, and I noticed it had some flowers. They aren’t anything spectacular but I think they are pretty and sweet.

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This critter is one of the most interesting I have come across in a while. I saw this very furry caterpillar munching on my bijao leaves. (those big leaf clumps of plants that are used for the outer wrappings of tamales). I think I have identified it – the puss caterpillar (because it’s furry like a cat), or the tree asp, or the asp caterpillar, or my favorite, the Trump caterpillar 😀 In its adult form it is the very pretty Southern Flannel Moth. But, this caterpillar is a very bad guy. There are stingers hiding in that fur which will cause intense pain that lasts for hours. The pain may radiate up the limb and cause nausea, swelling, headache, and a number of other effects that land some people in the hospital. If you want to know more, google puss caterpillar or here is a Wikipedia article on Megalopyge Opercularis, it’s scientific name.

Never touch anything! I’ll look, take photos, and in this case even nudge with a stick to be sure it was something living (since it wasn’t moving at all when I found it), but no touching, no walking in the yard barefoot, no putting fingers or hands in somewhere you can’t see, no putting on clothes or shoes without shaking them out first…. you get the general idea. We share our world here with some very interesting, beautiful, fascinating, and also dangerous wildlife. I love it and wouldn’t trade it for anything, but some common sense precautions are necessary to live together peacefully. Thankfully (knock on wood) in the 3+ years I have lived here I haven’t had any significant problems with anything, which is more than I could say for my years in Florida.

Posted in Panama, wildlife | Tagged , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

What Do You Want?

If you ask someone this question, the answers are usually fairly predictable – I want to be happy. I want good relationships. I want a good job. I want more money. I want all the things (whatever they are in their opinion) that will make life happy.

This article by Mark Manson has been making the rounds lately – You probably know to ask yourself, “What do I want?” Here’s a way better question.   The question is – What do you want to suffer? What do you want to struggle for? His opinion is that if you want a good job, you need to struggle through the work it will take to qualify for and land that job. If you want a good relationship, you have to suffer through the dating, the failed relationships, and the work it takes to build a good relationship. You can want more money, but if you aren’t willing to do what it takes to get more money, do you really want it? It’s what you are willing to struggle for that tells what you really want.

I’m not sure I agree with this. I think if you are on the right path, it shouldn’t feel like a struggle, and it shouldn’t feel like suffering. If it does, maybe it isn’t the path for you.

Take expatiating to another country, like to Panama. This involves a process – researching your future location, making moving arrangements, wrapping up things in your former home, finding your future home, figuring out how to get things done in Panama, learning the rules and laws, the customs, the people, and the language, and building an entirely new life in your new environment.

Of course there are hassles but overall, it’s exciting and fun. You dream about your new home, your new life, and the welcome changes you expect it will bring. Finally, everything gets done and you arrive and reality sets in. How does that feel? Yes it’s hard to learn another language but it’s so cool when you communicate successfully, even if it’s only to buy a pineapple. Getting things done is a process, but each time you navigate through something you feel a bit more empowered and proud of yourself. Overall, the enjoyment and accomplishments outweigh the hassles and frustrations, and you are happy in your new life.

However, there are people who hate all this. They just want to settle in to that life they were promised – good living for less, paradise, eternal springtime, the house on the beach… whatever those publications and salesmen tell you to expect, or whatever others said it would be like. They don’t enjoy all the changes and challenges that come with moving. They don’t want to go to five people and make multiple copies to get something accomplished. They don’t want to deal with a new language and culture and customs. They want their familiar foods and habits, and lifestyle. If this is the case, maybe this isn’t the right path for them? We are all different and what makes me happy may not make you happy at all.

The failure rate of people expatriating to Panama is surprisingly high. Of course there are people who leave for health, family, or other reasons besides satisfaction with their lives in Panama. But, there are many, many people who move here and then find it isn’t want they wanted, and find that it isn’t going to make them happy. What a shame, and at what emotional and financial cost. Were they just not willing to suffer enough, or is the suffering an indication that they would be happier on another path?

We don’t need unhappy people in Panama. It isn’t good for them, for the country, or for the expat community. Of course I can’t evaluate who is a good candidate and who isn’t, but maybe I can toss out an idea now and then that can help people think about this for themselves.

 

Posted in culture, expatriate, Miscellaneous, moving, Panama | Tagged , , , | 18 Comments

Big Iguanas!

It’s the time of year when the iguanas tend to be out and about. It hasn’t been raining so they are looking for water, and they are also looking for each other because it’s time to lay eggs.

The other day an iguana was stuck in the neighbor’s yard behind the fence. Usually they just go through a chain link fence but this one was too big to fit through so he was having a problem. Thank goodness the neighbor dogs hadn’t spotted him or he would have had to climb the fence in a hurry!

The iguanas may look odd and clumsy, but they can move surprisingly fast. They can run well, and they are expert climbers. They can get up a tree very quickly and hide so well they are sometimes impossible to spot.

I don’t know if this is the same iguana, but the next day there was one in our yard in the same predicament. He had been visiting the compost pile to see if there was anything good to eat. When he saw us peek around the corner he took off at a run, trying to find a way out of the yard.

There is a spot a bit farther up the fence where the chain link is a bit open. He headed in that direction so we figured he’d find it and make his way out. Or, he’d use the vegetation to help climb the fence.

I love seeing these big lizards! They are so interesting looking, and it’s fun to have them outside in their natural state. People eat them and hunting has decreased the population but Panama is making an effort to protect them and take care of them. I’m glad there are enough that we see quite a few of them.

Posted in Panama, wildlife | Tagged | 2 Comments

Toucans in the Neighborhood

My neighbor across the street has some papaya trees in her yard and the toucans have been visiting in the mornings and late afternooons. She knows I love to see them so the other day she called me when they were visiting.

There is a family of three, parents and a youngster. Since they are known to stay fairly close to home we figure they must have a nest in the area.

Only one will come and eat at a time, and the others will wait hidden in the trees.

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She figured this was the youngster because the bill was smaller than on the others.

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It’s pretty cool to have these beautiful and exotic birds visiting our neighborhood on a regular basis!

Posted in bird watching, Panama, wildlife | Tagged , , | 28 Comments

Being Helpful

Most people find it natural to be helpful. This is very evident here in Panama where being helpful is an integral part of the culture and behavior.

But, my good friend Deb in Nicaragua recently wrote a post about being helpful which got me thinking a lot. Read her post here, please. It is worth the time. She talks about the Savior Complex, and about taking care of yourself. She says her choice of work and her activities in retirement demonstrate that she has this complex, and she has exercised it to the point where she feels very depleted. I have the complex too. I’m a nurse and I retired so burned out that I still think I can’t do any more care taking. But, when I look at my behavior here I do a lot of little things and random acts of generosity that aren’t medical, but still are forms of care taking.

Deb also had a very painful loss of a friendship, a long term friendship where she offered a lot of help and support in many ways over a long period of time. Through her story, others came forward with their stories about people who were helped and then became demanding, cold, or hurtful. I think this is also happening to me, and what I thought was a close friendship has gone silent and cold. Why do these painful things happen? Does helping your friend complicate the relationship? Does it alter the dynamics and balance of a friendship in ways that make it unsustainable?

It’s a complicated and difficult subject. How do you help appropriately? What we think is helpful may in fact not be helpful at all, and we may overlook other things that would be useful because we don’t know better. How do you know if your help is even welcomed? How do you help without making someone dependent or demanding, or without causing them to lose self respect or the motivation to help themselves? There are no easy answers in the best of situations, and when we are in another country and another culture it gets even more complicated.

Friendship can also be more complicated. Even in our own country of origin and culture, friendships often don’t work out. Complicate this with cultural differences, different behavior expectations and ways of dealing with conflict, a different language, an imbalance of resources, a helper/helpee dynamic, and who knows what other factors and it can be very challenging.

I don’t have any answers, just a lot of questions.

For me, I still don’t feel like I can help in any big way. I don’t have the knowledge, wisdom, energy, or inclination. I am happy to give some of my time in friendship or share a surplus of something (limons, anyone?). I have given small amounts of money and loaned money in amounts I could afford to lose, but I am starting to think even this isn’t a good idea. Maybe it is enough to be a good citizen, to interact with kindness, to observe and learn, and to just be.

When I was a nurse trying to convince a patient to accept much needed help from another, I used to tell them about the Buddhist monks and their begging bowls. Of course the monks needed the food, but their main purpose of begging was to give others the opportunity to give because giving is of much more benefit than receiving.

Often we aren’t good at taking our own advice and I am as guilty as anyone. Maybe it’s time I shift my thinking a bit and do more taking. I think as women, and as people in care taking professions it’s very hard for us to take. We have a double whammy of expectations that we give of ourselves, often neglecting our own needs in the process. Maybe the best thing we can do is take care of ourselves first, make ourselves the best we can be, and then hope we have the wisdom and insight to be a positive influence in our world.

The next good thing we can do is decide when there has been enough deep thinking for one day. Cerveza, anyone? 😀 I’m off to relax a bit and enjoy another beautiful Panama evening.

Posted in culture, Miscellaneous, Panama | 14 Comments

Feliz Año Nuevo

It’s 2016! Somehow the last year has flown by and another year has begun. New Year’s Eve was celebrated here by the usual festivities with fireworks, parties, music, food, and fun people. It’s been a good year overall with various activities, new and old, some travels, adventures, good friends, and of course the new baby girls in the family.

I don’t make New Years resolutions but I think it’s natural to think about the year ahead, things I would like to do and accomplish, and things I might want to change.

  • My blog had been a major focus in the past. It has grown into a resource for many people and I have come to think it is my job to share my life here. But, I don’t want a job, not this or anything else. Since I live in Panama there will be more stories from here of course. But this has also become my normal life now, and much of it doesn’t seem remarkable enough to talk about. I think it will be more fun if I also post “other stuff”, travels, art, thoughts, I don’t know exactly what but whatever I find interesting and exciting at the moment with less regard for it being useful.
  • I am contacted by many people with questions about Panama, or who want to meet while they are here. I enjoy meeting people and answering questions, but I think I need to feel less obligated. If I don’t know something, it’s OK to say “I don’t know” instead of researching the answer or suggesting various places to look. It’s OK for people to do their own research, and OK for me to not do it.
  • I arrived with a couple cameras and a huge interest in photography. I’m still interested but after starting painting classes, I am starting to feel the limitations of a camera. I have a lot to learn and explore with painting before I find my way, but I am finding the possibilities exciting. I still never leave home without a camera though, and I’ll probably still post photos of bugs 😀
  • I have big plans to go cycling again. I could go to the Seattle area, or even Vancouver and cycle down the west coast, visiting my daughters along the way, and then cycle through Mexico and Central America and back to Panama. People do it all the time so why not me? I just need to get myself back in shape. Coming home tired after less than 20 miles isn’t going to cut it so the next three months are going to be dedicated to getting myself ready. A number of people have told me that I should make it into an event of sorts, get sponsors, etc. because this will be such an inspirational thing. I don’t feel special or inspirational, maybe only a bit nuts, but I am giving this idea some thought. Maybe it could be something along the line of – solo senior ladies on the move, going for their dreams! Or, adventurous old ladies who are still young. (please share your suggestions in the comments)
  • I am going to quit fighting my weight. I’m just so tired of it and frustrated. I spent many months on HCG (google it, don’t ask me) back in the US and lost a significant amount of weight. Some of it has crept back over the years since I’ve been here though. I did a few weeks of Herbalife with no results. Some friends swore that Atkins is the thing, so I dove into that with much dedication and resolve and didn’t lose an ounce. I’m not willing to return to the HCG right now (the only thing that has ever worked for me besides starvation) because I won’t have the stamina for bike training. So, I am going to eat healthy, bike a lot of miles, and just be the fat old gal on a bike, kind of like the fat girl running. (Check out her blog if you want to be inspired by a really cool lady!) The quality of my day will no longer be dictated by the number on my scale, and I won’t feel guilty for everything I put in my mouth (or at least I’m going to try to shift my thinking).
  • I want to simplify my life and decrease the “stuff”. Moving here was a big step in that direction but I still have clothes I never wear, books I never open, and stuff I never use. I think all of us have found we don’t need what we thought we would, but it’s hard to know this until you experience your new life here for a while. Maybe I can spend a couple hours every weekend sorting and discarding. It’s such a feeling of freedom to have less.

I’ll have to look back here a year from now and see where I’m at with these ideas for 2016. With any luck I’ll be exploring new places with less stuff, and I’ll have pedaled myself into a strong and healthy body of whatever size, and had a ton of fun in the process!

And, speaking of talking with people and answering questions, I find myself becoming more lax about keeping up with correspondence and on line reading. If I put something aside “for later” sometimes it gets buried in my mailbox and totally lost. If you write me and I don’t answer in a few days, you probably need to poke me and remind me. I may not be able to answer every question but I think anyone who takes the time to write me deserves at least a polite response. And, I probably won’t remember who you are if we haven’t met in person. Names and words in black and white on my screen just all blur together in my mind. But, if we actually meet then you become “real” and I will probably remember you for a long time.

Posted in Miscellaneous, Panama | 17 Comments

Mighty Machines

They are building a new bus terminal not far from where I live, and there are plenty of mighty machines on the job. I learned about mighty machines from my grandson who loves big machines and his videos by that name, so I always think of him when I see the heavy equipment. He would have a great time on this construction site!

Other than looking over the barricade or holding my camera above it, there is only one opening where the trucks go in and out where you can see in. I have stopped there to take photos and I figure if anyone objects, I’ll just explain my grandson’s love of big machines and they will probably let me slide. So far though, no one has raised an eyebrow and the guards have been pleasant and chatty.

While we are on machines and things my grandson loves, I have seen a helicopter down north of the airport. It looks like it is for aerial spraying. Yesterday though, there were two helicopters. The dark one doesn’t have the spraying arms so I’m not sure what they do with it.

It may not be a machine and it may not be mighty, but it’s my mighty machine. I wanted these new yellow panniers but thought it was only an extravagance. Now that I have them though (thank you daughter and son in law for the great gift!) I can say they are a big step up from what I was using. They are much stronger and it’s so much easier to get things in and out of them.  This day they were full of lemons for a friend, and a couple young lemon trees for her garden. It’s so fun to do errands with the bike instead of the car, and I wouldn’t even know this friend if I hadn’t been biking by her house one day when she was out in her garden.

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Posted in Miscellaneous, Panama | Tagged , , , , , , , | 6 Comments