Tracy the Bug Lady

Spacey Tracy hands out head lamps and brings light to the creepy crawly dark.
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Tracy the Bug Lady meets her nightly bug tour group in the open living room of our lodge deep in the rain forest of Costa Rica. A moth is slamming spastically at the lamp shade. Spacey Tracy, as if in a trance, gets eye contact with the six of us, silently pulls out her keychain, and shakes it like a tambourine. The moth dives to the floor and freezes. Tracy says, “I didn’t know if this kind of moth had ears. It does. When it heard the ultrasound from my keys, it thought I was a bat honing in on it…and dove for cover.”

Looking at our no-longer-reluctant kids, and realizing we were in for an unusual experience, we embarked on a two-hour tour. Donning our headlamps, we followed Tracy through the ferns into the dark. She stopped, shone her light 20 meters down the trail, turned to us saying, “Check this spider out,” and walked over to a fallen leaf. She turned it over to reveal a spider. I asked how she knew it was there from such a distance. She said, “Eye shine…crushed-emerald eye shine.” The bugs and frogs that surround us all have mirrors at the backs of their eyes, so that when you shine a light on them, they shine back. Moths are gold. Frogs are orange. Spiders shine emerald-green. Looking around again, I saw crushed emeralds sprinkled through the jungle.

This spider was a tarantula. Picking him up, she said, “Not the tarantula of your imagination, just a small burrowing guy…mildly venomous. Who wants to hold him?” After a stunned pause from the group, I offered, and she placed him — half the size of my thumb — on my palm.

Farther down the trail, Tracy stopped at a moss-covered bank of red clay. She played with a tuft of moss with her pointer, and whispered, “If you count yourself as a spider enthusiast, we have here perhaps one of the five best in the world — the trap door spider. Right now he’s holding his hatch down with his fangs…14 ounces pull-down strength.” Later she got the hatch open, revealing a slick, round passage (about half an inch in diameter) and a sneaky spider waiting for his dinner.

Next we looked closely at a nearby spider web as Tracy said, “In nature, it’s the very rare insect that dies of old age.” What looked like a stick fallen on the web was a carefully gathered line of body parts — bits of critters the spider caught but chose not to eat. Tracy hit the fake stick and revealed part of it was the actual spider — patiently waiting to make his stick of victim debris a little longer.

On another web, a spider looked like a dew drop. As Tracy began pulling out an almost microscopic line of silk, she said, “I’m harvesting spider silk from a dew drop spider’s butt. This stuff is stronger than Teflon. The US military is the biggest researcher of this stuff. From it, they could make the ultimate light-and-comfortable bulletproof vests…perhaps even superlight airplanes.”

A bug landed on Tracy and crawled into her safari shirt. She pulled it out and revealed a tiny ladybug with a black-and-white Lego-man face on its back. Getting closer to her little Lego man, she pointed out how the wings came together to make a straight line. That means it’s a beetle, not a roach. If you lined up all the species of animals on earth, every fifth one would be a beetle. There are over 500,000 types. Rove beetles were used in China 2,000 years ago to remove unwanted tattoos. She looked at me and said, “Got a loved one with tattoos? Remember the Rove beetle.”

I walked back to our lodge with a new appreciation of the generally unseen side of life in the tropics…through a treacherous wonderland of crushed emeralds.

Wet Landings, Fruit Smoothies, and Patient Killers

Jackie is clipped on and ready to fly 400 meters through the jungle, 50 meters above the ravine, and a leather cable grip to slow her landing at the next platform.
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Keeping older kids happy on vacation is pretty easy in zippy Costa Rica. Here Andy enjoys a blitz tour of a plush jungle canopy.
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Walking through the tropical rainforest, I was mesmerized by vertical ropes thick and thin. It was a fecund free-for-all, with a humid scribble of plants and trees all reaching both high for the sun and low for the nutrients.

I couldn’t stop thinking of the whole thing powered by leafy solar panels as the tip-top of just about everything living jockeyed for a place in the sun. While the canopy is a commotion of God’s solar panels, the ground level is a greedy scramble for nutrients, with lots of clever ways for plants and trees to catch and funnel detritus into their roots.

The strangler fig — an impressively patient killer — winds like some Boy Scout decoration in a perfect spiral up a huge tree. Someday the host tree will be gone and the dainty, innocuous-looking fig vine will be a fat tree itself — with a hollow interior. Here in the jungle, eventually everything eats everything.

I asked my friend Kurt Kutay, who runs Wildland Adventures (www.wildland.com), to set up the best possible eight days in Costa Rica for a variety of experiences. This was a rare chance for our entire family to be together, and this jungle experience seemed the perfect way for all of us to recreate.

We split our time between two fine hotels: Arenas del Mar in Manuel Antonio had a great restaurant, golf carts to zip guests to and from the beach, and low-key elegance at the gateway to the Manuel Antonio National Park. La Paloma lodge on Drake Bay was extremely remote — a Robinson-Crusoe-wins-the-lottery kind of place — on the Osa Peninsula near the Corcovado National Park. We spent two days with nature guides in the two different parks (and liked Manual Antonio best — more first growth and animal variety). Between all the boogie-boarding in the surf and fruit smoothies, we had lots of exercise. In fact, the week reminded me how fun it is to be physical.

We got to our remote La Paloma lodge on a land rover — fording rivers and jolloping through miles of mammoth potholes past pigs striking piggy poses in mud puddles and humble tin-roof farms. At the end of the road, a boat was waiting to motor us to our lodge. For three days of coming and going, we had a new term: “wet landing” or “dry landing” (almost always wet — hop off the boat and walk through the surf to wherever we were bound).

Half of Costa Rica lives less muggy in its central plain. But we were where it’s maximum muggy. Here on the west coast, things don’t even dry when hung in the sun. The temperature is the same all year. Buildings are constructed with no windows. La Paloma lodge was off the grid, powered by its own generator — no air-con, just fans. Kayaking up the lazy lagoon that creeps mysterious inland from Drake Bay, daydreaming through a plush garden of sticky pistil flowers, learning the art of hammock, munching fresh-baked cookies, openly enjoying a little PDA with tiny lizards, and refining an appreciation of pico de gallo salsa, even a workaholic could be thoroughly on vacation here.

Our kids hiked, flashlights in hand, over the suspension bridge and into the village to celebrate New Year’s Eve with the local gang, while Anne and I hung out in the polished-wood-and-rattan public area of our lodge with the other parents. One by one, each couple turned in. Then, well before midnight, we too succumbed to jungle time as a roar of tiny creatures in the darkness all seemed to sing it’s time for bed. At 2:30, Jackie gently guided Andy home, encouraging him to follow the little circle the flashlight made and digging his shoe out of the mud when stuck.

The adrenaline experience of the trip was doing the Zip Line Canopy Tour — a Costa Rican tourism favorite. A family with a huge plot of jungle strung up platforms high in trees laced together by 13 cables, each 100 to 400 meters apart, as high as 60 meters above the ravines. They now earn a good living giving modern-day Tarzans the thrill of their dreams. With guides clipping us from one cable to the next, we couldn’t have fallen to our deaths if we tried. There were no lessons in nature here…just the smell of burning leather as we’d pull down on the cable with our hand guard to slow each landing. Coursing through the trees, this was thunderclaps of fun.

My favorite day was the “Campesinos Reserve Day” — an all-day hike crossing a Man Who Would Be King-style fantasy suspension bridge (the longest in CR), swimming in pools at the base of tropical waterfalls, accompanied by a farmer on a horse who let me walk and whack with his machete. We dropped in on his extremely remote farmhouse, where his wife ground up sugarcane for a refreshing drink as our kids got to see a family living in perfect tropical mountain simplicity.

Hopping a fast boat, we sped with the flying fish (stopping only for a little whale watching) to the distant Cano Island — a bushy green button in the middle of the Pacific famous for its fine snorkeling. Poking into a swirling school of big-eye fish, analyzing the churning patterns of sunlit bubbles as the surf crashed over the rocks, and marveling at the ability of huge stingrays to disappear into a muddy bottom, we enjoyed another world. During lunch at the island’s ranger station, we spied a crocodile perched still as a rock on a rock, waiting to knock a pelican silly, while six or eight children frolicked nearby in the surf.

The last morning finally arrived. I spent the hour before our departure time mostly face-down on a La Paloma massage table. With the soothing roar of the distant surf rather than New Age music setting the mood, I reviewed a wonderful week in my mind.

Then, wistfully, I strapped my wristwatch back on, and we headed for the airstrip. I mentioned there was no rush, as this was the first time in our lives the plane would wait for us. Jackie said she wanted to take flying lessons. Andy marveled at how he hadn’t held a cell phone in his hand for a week. Anne tidied up her list of 30 or so different birds spotted. And all of us began the day-long return: Drake’s Bay to San José to Houston to Seattle, where I’ll redirect my mind to a land where the flora and fauna is more…European.

Coming up: Our evening with spacey Tracy the bug lady and my attempt at surfing.

Blue Angels in Costa Rica

I like fancy culture: music, art, and history. For me (while I love being in and enjoying nature) learning about flora and fauna ranks near the bottom, just above geology and genealogy. But for 48 hours, I’ve been steep on the learning curve in the best classroom I can imagine for getting turned on to plants and critters: a remote national park on the Pacific Coast of Costa Rica. Charming, knowledgeable guides — like Pablo, who led us on a four-hour hike today — make exploring vivid and experiential.

Walking under a jungle canopy, I hear rustling and look up. A troop of white-faced Cappuccino monkeys swing by like a class of grade-school Tarzans out on a field trip, their tails gripping branches as dexterously as their arms. Suddenly, the “alpha male” breaks off a branch and throws it down as if to remind us, “No one has sex with any of these monkeys but me. Bop juh wah wah wah.”

Later, Pablo explains how termites contribute to the finely tuned ecosystem, eating only dead wood. (The bad news: houses are made out of dead wood — that’s a reason why you won’t find many old houses around here.) The termites’ smell keeps other insects away, so monkeys smear them on their fur — giving “bug juice” a whole new spin. Then, popping one into his mouth, Pablo reminds us that termites are also full of nutrition…if bitter.

Dark, furry balls hang like stuck basketballs high in the canopy. They are sloths, which literally sleep away most of their lives. They hang upside-down so well that they are even found dead just hanging from their favorite branch. Then Costa Rica’s second biggest rodent, the agouti, romps clumsily by. This is a “planter”: it steals fruits and nuts, digs a hole, and buries them. As they generally forget to come back to eat their stash, they spend their lives unknowingly planting lots of trees. That makes them everyone’s favorite rodent.

Nature here is great at deception and camouflage. A butterfly wing attracts a mate with a stunning, iridescent blue on one side, and scares away predators by looking like a snake’s head on the other. A plant called a rattlesnake tail is tastier than it looks. And lizards sit still as a knothole, looking like the bark of trees they hang out on. Many plants are nicknamed for what they look like: machete flowers, the bullhorn plant, parrots’ beak flowers, and even fruit that comes in pairs called the horse’s balls.

Here, in this narrow isthmus, in what locals call the healthiest ecosystem in Central America, this hemisphere’s vast variety of life is funneled and therefore condensed into a narrow stretch of land. The leading industry is tourists coming down here to enjoy the nature. Eco-friendly is wisely a big theme for tourism here. After jetting down with so many big-spending gringos, I think that eco-friendly is nice — but we’re not completely off the environmental hook.

After a great day out, we’re back at the lodge. I feel as if I’m living in a teak treehouse. Sitting on the deck, I enjoy the slightly burning reminder that I got a lot of sun today as I stretch tight muscles after lots of walking. The jungle tumbles to a green horizon — everything seems to reach for the sun. I think “plush” and feel thankful to be so alive. I look up and see a V-shaped line of birds. They’re in formation with Blue Angels-like precision, as if to remind human visitors — especially urbanites like me — that there is a powerful, all-knowing, and respect-deserving order in nature.

Stripping the Meat out of My Lobster Tail, I Prepare to Surf

Christmas already seems long ago, as our entire family is enjoying this year’s Christmas gift — a week in Costa Rica. I’m just relieved to be here, with the surf crashing outside of our dreamy hotel in the remote Pacific Coast beach resort of Manuel Antonio.

I was a bit edgy getting out of Seattle. Snow was stranding people wearing Santa caps at the airport. I had logged on to the airport website to check on parking, which told me that all parking lots in and near the airport were full — even people with reservations were being turned away. So, since we couldn’t drive ourselves, I had to scramble at the last minute to find a loved one to brave the icy roads to drive us there.

And that followed a bigger fright. Two days before Christmas, my daughter Jackie realized she left her passport back at her dorm in Washington DC. We scramble to get it FedExed — but had no assurance that it was actually sent, as much of the country is snowed in. So the day before Christmas, not about to risk our long-awaited family vacation over a passport stuck in a snowstorm somewhere, we spent hours in downtown Seattle getting an emergency replacement passport.

There was a long line of people, the computers were down, and snow was threatening to close the office. We were nervous, telling the woman at the counter, “This is a real emergency — our entire family vacation depends on Jackie getting her passport today.” The woman curtly responded, “It’s the day before Christmas — it’s an emergency for everybody in this line.” We do the paperwork, they declare Jackie’s existing passport lost and cancel it, and send us away for two hours while they issue the new passport — but they say that with more snow threatening, they don’t know how long they’ll be able to stay open.

Trying to relax, we got word that Jackie’s original passport is actually on its way via FedEx and should be in Seattle shortly. Then the irony sets in. If the snow closes down the passport agency office, we could actually have gone to heroics to get her existing passport to Seattle while simultaneously cancelling it, and be unable to pick up the newly issued one before we were to fly out. Thankfully, the snow held off and Jackie got her passport (which was good, since the FedExed passport never made it in time). Flying out at midnight on Christmas night worked great. A quarter tab of Ambien gets me three hours of good sleep to Houston (dreaming of a four-legged tree and two happy monkeys). We then grabbed a burrito breakfast and good coffee before catching a flight to San Jose, Costa Rica, where another quarter tab of Ambien gave me the second half of my Christmas night’s sleep. (Ambien meets Starbucks…and Ambien wins.)

I feel clueless about Costa Rica. I simply signed up for the best eight days that my friend’s Costa Rica tour company could offer. I can’t even find where we’re going on the map. It’s fun being clueless. I actually brought the last of our Christmas Satsuma oranges all the way to Costa Rica, where the customs official made me toss them out. Not knowing what plugs work here, I needlessly brought European adapters. I’m paranoid that our iPhone will be accidentally on, and we’ll be roaming 24/7, racking up a huge bill…we’d be sipping cheap drinks while going broke.

At the small San Jose airport, we climbed into a tiny six-seater plane for the herky-jerky ride over lush mountains to a jungle landing strip and a quick shuttle to the remote beach at Manuel Antonio. The flight seemed pretty dangerous, but I kept looking at the pilot and his young co-pilot, who were incredibly nonchalant as they motored their airborne jalopy into a dense cloud, managing to push the right little buttons and switches as the entire cockpit rattled away in a complete whiteout. Eventually, like a stray chunk of two-lane highway, our landing strip came into view.

The kids are into this vacation. Jackie spent much of the flight reading up on Costa Rica’s civil war, local gender issues, and lively bars near our hotel. Andy’s all for getting up early tomorrow for our guided nature walk through the national park.

I’ve never been to Central America to simply relax. As golf carts are ready to shuttle us down to the beach at a moment’s notice, I’ll do my best not to think about economic realities over the border in Nicaragua and El Salvador. Costa Rica is the Switzerland/Disneyland of Central America, and for the next week, it’s our rum/sun/fun-soaked play zone. Tonight, stripping the meat out of my lobster tail, I told my family I need to get in shape in a hurry. The day after tomorrow, I learn to surf.

Jetsam for All this Yuletide

Here are a bunch of paragraphs too precious and sentimental or weak to make the cut in my upcoming “Travel as a Political Act” book. I thought you might enjoy giving them a read before they are entirely zapped:

Being a traveler is fun because you can be both small and big in your outlook. As travelers safely back in our home port, we enjoy the best of both worlds — both small and big. The waitresses, newspapers, and barbers here are talking about a “World Series” which the world beyond our culture knows almost nothing of. I’m fine with that because we know there’s a “World Cup” about which my world is just as oblivious.

While I love the political fray in the USA, I lose more battles than I win. But, win or lose, I’m thankful. I know the winner will ascend smoothly to power and I’m respected (and safe) as part of the loyal opposition, while much of the world staggers politically from one bloody coup d’etat to the next.

Regardless of where I return from, my travels accentuate the many ways I’m thankful for the corner of the world I call home: from India — population sparsity; from Greece — trees; from El Salvador — affluence; from Iran — religious freedom; from Europe — a free-wheeling business environment; from China — civil liberties; from Bosnia — no heritage of ethnic strife and no risk of hosting a war; from Russia — respect for the law and those who enforce it; from Turkey — sidewalks without cars parked on them.

Across America, communities are struggling with immigrant labor issues. Because I sat with Beatrice in her hut in San Salvador, I know the importance of remittances to loved ones left behind by migrant workers. After seeing Beatrice’s love for her daughter, I know the consequences of a single mom losing her home because of medical expenses. With that empathy, supporting groups tackling structural poverty in my own community comes naturally.

Those who are well off have the most to conserve…and therefore, the most reason to be conservative. While I’m inclined to be conservative (and was before travels opened my perspective), my travels balance my political views. As our society struggles with conformity and freedom, I think of Denmark — that “most content” land with plenty of reason to be conservative. It’s a land of extremes — homogenous and so well-ordered, yet where people march with banners reading, “Live life artistically. Only dead fish follow the current.” In studying Denmark, I can see issues that challenge my society in high contrast and therefore more clearly.

I remember the first time I walked through Seattle’s Hemp Fest — a party of 80,000 far-out people filling a park, most of who, frankly, scared me. A man named Vivian in a utili-kilt and dreadlocks yelled “give it up” for a band whose music sounded only like noise to me, and people went wild. Then I got to know Vivian who explained to me that this is a subculture that once a year gets to come together here on Seattle’s waterfront. I walked through the crowd again, with a different attitude. I celebrated the freedom and tolerance that made that tribal gathering possible. Last year I noticed I got strangely emotional when talking with police who said they enjoy the Hemp Fest assignment as a two-way celebration of respect and tolerance.

Noisy citizens were expected of Greek democracy. Only today do we have professional politicians and professional talking heads hired to do our political thinking for us. Ancient Greeks considered the size of the early polis or city-states important. They were just big enough where you could walk across them in a day, populous enough so you’d have all the various talents to cover the needs of your society but not too big where everyone — as citizen politicians — couldn’t gather on the main square and vote by a show of hands (or swords) on the great issues of the day. Of course, with a political unit as large as today’s nations, that is not workable. But we can and should still be engaged.

We have extreme poverty. A billion people trying to exist on $1 a day is a humanitarian crisis and, one could argue, a threat to our national security — as miserable, uneducated worlds like these are fertile grounds for fanatics with nothing much to lose who blame the USA for their sorry lot in life. There’s the Iraq War and potentially failed states of Afghanistan and Pakistan. Islamic fundamentalism — like fundamentalism of any kind — is a threat. There are other challenges and, of course, global warming may very well make all other problems seem insignificant. I hate the thought that New Orleans is the first of many major cities inundated by violent weather and a rising sea. Those images of highways clogged by Americans fleeing the latest hurricane will pale in comparison to a future with literally hundreds of millions of climate refugees (half of Bangladesh, with a population of 140 million, is less than 3 feet above sea level).

Wisely or unwisely, sooner or later, we will address each of these issues. How we address them is shaped by our world view, and our world view is shaped by an interesting grab bag of influences. We each have a different approach to these problems because we each have a distinct world view shaped by our unique life experience. My mom’s world view is shaped by her husband. My sister’s world view is shaped by Support Our Troops. My neighbor’s world view is shaped by a potent cocktail of fear and patriotism. My uncle’s world view, what’s good for his investments. All of our world views to a great extent are shaped by commercial television. I’m thankful that my world is shaped to a large degree by my travels.

With globalization and our modern, efficient affluence, I see ideals, heritage, and cultural roots in danger of being paved over. As I strive to keep ritual and tradition in my life, I’m inspired by the strong cultural roots of places I visited like Turkey, where workers hold their chisels proudly in the sky and where shepherds still play the eagle bone flute.

By saying things that upset people so they can declare they’d fight and die for my right to be so stupid, I feel I’m contributing to the fabric of our democracy.