Sunday, February 5, 2012

Week One at the SFS in Atenas Costa Rica


           Good Morning! It’s nine am Sunday morning marking the end of my first week at School For Field Studies. I arrived here in Atenas Costa Rica after spending two weeks traveling through Nicaragua visiting various cities and attractions. I can say from the little time I have spent here in Costa Rica I can already tell huge difference in the two countries. Nicaragua is much less developed, and many of the people there are not as well off as those in Costa Rica. Nicaragua has no big chain restaurants, and no major have developed cites that I saw. Costa Rica is very different! Not in a better or worse way. Costa Rica has many more paved roads and in the capital San Jose they have just about everything that a big city in America might have. None to less walking around the capital is still a very cool cultural experience.

            In just one week I am already in love with my home at the SFS campus. It is dorm style living with about 34 other students, 28 of which of ladies (I am not complaining). On that note though it is a very cool thing to live, work, and studies with people that have the same environmental passion as I do. Here at the center everything is about conservation, and sustainability.  From the organic orchard of fruit (which we can pick from at our pleasure) to the food compost where all of our organic trash, and paper product go, everything is environmental friendly. The compost is very cool cycle and has many purposes. Besides the basic purpose of keeping some of our waste out of the dump it feeds 5 pigs, and is used as fertilizer in the orchard and garden.

            All of my classes (language culture and society of Costa Rica, Tropical ecology and sustainable development, Principles of resource management, and Economics & ethical issues in sustainable development) are taught outside either in the outside classroom, the form of a guess lecture, or on a hike through the various forests. At first I thought the campus would get boring after three months, but what I did not realize is that every Thursday, Friday, Saturday is spent on the road traveling to various parks, and learning environments. Everyday is pack full of activities and learning experiences. Also this is achievable because I am in class six days week, which is a blessing because each day of school is different, filled with new and exciting things.

            This past trip was to Barulio Carrillo National Park, an organic farm, and a Dole plantation. The trip served mostly as an introduction to the rainforest and to see and understand the differences between a small organic farm, and a mono-crop plantation.  Seeing the difference between the small organic farm, and the Dole plantation was truly an eye opening experience. The organic farm was completely off the grid, in no way shape or form where they connected. For power they had solar panels, a natural spring for water, and 80% of the food they ate was from the farm.  All 86 hectors (2.4 hectors to an acre) was maintained and farmed by the small family. They were truly on the cutting edge of sustainability and organic farming. The best part was that they learned much of this from a government program that was implement about 10 years ago. It’s awesome to know that the option is out there, and that the government is supporting the change. The issue is organic farming is much more labor intensive, more expensive, and harder to do on a large scale. If you are going to farm as they do you really need to be devoted and strong passion for the environment and doing what is right.

            This farm was a small slice of haven compared to the majority of farms in Costa Rica. The Dole plantation was also a cool experience, and it was clear that they were on the right track keeping the environment in mind. They were part of the Rainforest alliance, an organization working towards environmental, and social economic sustainability.

            Well that is it for know there will be posts evolving more leadership and culture to come. If you have any question please email me at bsn002@marietta.org, and I will post the question with an answer when I get the chance just keep in mind I am on the road a lot and even when I am at the center internet is far form reliable, and extremely slow when it is working.

A quick tidbit about the difference from Costa Rica and United States:
            Costa Rica and the United States have many differences besides just being miles away from each other. The differences go into culture, climate, economy and geography.  These differences create a distinct variation in the way Costa Ricans live and Americans live.  One of the largest differences in Costa Rica is the pace of life and the lack of willingness to confront an issue or topic. For instance many Costa Ricans will just delay, simply put off a deadline or task until the next day. Where as in the United States we Americans love to get right to the point, and rarely ever beat around the bush. Another cultural difference can maybe best summarized by the Costa Rican saying “Pura Vida” which literally can be translated into pure life. This Costa Rican motto is used often in day-to-day life, and the meaning goes much deeper than just pure life. The motto is an expression used to display several things such as strong community, perseverance, good spirit, and once again relating back to the differences in the pace of life “Pura Vida” also means enjoying life slowly.  This slow pace of life, which is strongly valued by so many Costa Ricans is very different from the United States where everyone seems to be trying to do a million things at once, and deadlines are firm.  The last major difference between Costa Rica and the United States is three fold: geography, climate, and the shire mass amount of species that reside here in Costa Rica. The temperature, differing elevation, and dense rainforests create the perfect environment for organisms to thrive.


5 comments:

  1. It seems like you and Lindsay had a very different view of the Dole plantation and their approach to ecological sustainability. I was wondering if you could go into this a bit more for us.

    Hope you are both well!

    Dr. McManus

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  2. Hey Brett!!! I love the fact that you included the saying "Pura Vida" in your note about US culture vs CR culture. It seems like life is more of a focus in CR where as work is more of a focus in the US. I found that there was more of a focus on life in Australia too. And its really great that you discovered this because it will really help you when you take LEAD-203. It seems like you are having a great time and I wish you all the best. Keep putting the pics up on FB! Love ya man and see you in August! -Dan

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  3. Hey! First, we miss you and hope you're having a blast! Our LEAD 203 readings in "When Cultures Collide" describe Costa Rica as a mulit-active culture. This means the people are generally extroverted, people-oriented, and have a laid-back view of time. I see you have seen some of this in your trip thus far...can you elaborate? Thanks so much!

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  4. Mary, thank you for your comment I will try to answer it to the best of my abilities. As I spoke about earlier they have saying down here called pura vida which literally pure life, but this saying is used multiple times a days in passing or when greeting someone just to express that you are living life slow, and going with the flow. This saying very much so embodies the idea of being laid-back and extroverted because it is said to everyone. That is another thing, I am not sure how it is throughout the whole country but at least where I have been and in the town that I am staying in everyone knows everyone. There fore people are always just taking the time catch up and say hello no matter where they are, whether its in the super market or at a stop light HOLDING UP traffic.
    Finally I think that this laid-back view of life is built into the culture because you cannot always get you want when you want. Things often get pushed off to the next day because they do not have the ability to do it then and there because of a lack of fully developed society. Examples of this could be supplies not arriving on time because a road was washed out, or the internet is down for the 1000th time that week. People are often just forced to go with the flow because it is out of their control.

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  5. Hi Brett,

    My name is Kay Johnson and I am a senior at MC. I've also spent a lot of time traveling abroad, and I found your tidbit about the differences between Costa Rica and the U.S. really interesting! One thing I wanted to know is what the general consensus was about Americans. I've found that people either like Americans or dislike and I was wondering what Costa Rica thought?

    Thanks :)

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