Showing posts with label sunset. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sunset. Show all posts

Friday, February 24, 2012

Waves!

Wow we had some big swells yesterday!  I am so glad I seem not to get seasick anymore.  The morning wasn't that bad, but by the afternoon it really felt like I was taking a class on a roller coaster!

weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!

Dinner was really fun.  There were things (and people) crashing about and lots of fun commotion.  I got some excellent video of the rocking boat and the accompanying crashes of cups and whatnot.  One of my fiends was sitting in a chair one minute and flung full on the ground the next minute!   Don't worry she is ok but may have a new unfortunate new nickname...

When I got back to my room, it was like a tiny war zone.  I went around cleaning things up only to have them crashing all around me when we hit the next big swell.  I finally decided that everything should stay at very low levels of potential energy (aka on the ground) even if it did give the room an unkempt feel.  



Sleeping was a treat.  I thought concentrating in class was difficult enough, but sleeping on what feels like a roller coaster is pretty much impossible.  I couldn't find my tape I had brought so our drawers were crashing back and forth too.  I guess I did manage some sleep because I woke up to a particularly large swell almost throwing me out of bed at around 5:30 this morning.  

It was an adventure though.  :0)  I hear it gets even worse between here and Mauritius!  I'm excited and dreading it at the same time.  

Also, cool clouds from three days ago:

And what was deemed "The Mufasa Sunset" by someone else taking pictures with me.  I am not sure about the thought process there, but the name has stuck. 

Monday, January 30, 2012

Cruisin' the Amazon!


You, whose day it is, 
get out your rainbow colors 
and make it beautiful.
-Nekoosa Indian Poem





Hello from the Amazon River!  When I first saw the itinerary for this trip so many months ago, I thought it was a typo when it said we would sail up the Amazon River.  No river I had ever seen could support the passing of a ship!  Turns out, they make rivers a bit different here.  When we first entered the river a few days ago no one would have  even known other than that the water turned from deep blue to chocolate milk brown and the captain made an announcement.  The river is so huge that we couldn't even see either shore the whole first day we were sailing on it!  Now that we are almost to Manaus, we can see the banks but it is still a huge river.  





I've been spending my days in class, resting, eating, or in talks and my evenings hanging out with people or staring out at the river and shore from the deck right outside my room.  I have been seeing some truly remarkable sunsets!  No wildlife to speak of yet other than some bugs that found their way to our ship, but I'm promised much to see once we are on land.  Another strange sight is to see what is floating past our boat in the river.  Since it is the rainy season here, a lot of the vegetation has gotten washed out of the rainforest to bob along in the river.  It's strange to be gazing at the mucky water and suddenly a whole tree taller than a house goes by!
Yesterday three people from the U.S.Embassy came aboard to give talks and lead Q & A sessions.  Even though one of them is a little goofy (and possibly a little too anglocentric) I've learned a lot from them!  So much so that it is a bit to much to process and share, but I will include highlights in the Fun Facts below. 







I am eagerly waiting my adventures in Brazil that will start tomorrow!  I am going to be quite busy with all-day field programs each day (and an extra one at nighttime tomorrow.)  I'm a little worried about the heat and humidity of course, but it really isn't that bad.  I am far irrationally fearful of the bugs!  I learned in global studies about all the heinous bugs and parasites here which freaks me out disproportionately to risk.  I will surely be lathering up with the bug spray!  From what I have learned in the pre-port sessions, I am really looking forward to meeting new people in Brazil and looking for non-bug critters in the rainforest.  Especially the monkeys!  

Fun Facts #3
-As recommended by a biology professor on the ship, "Definitely poop in the rainforest.  Then sit there and wait and you'll have dung beetles come and start rolling your poop away!  It will be neat!"  umm…ok?
-On an ocean voyage, you know you are getting close to shore when you start seeing smaller birds.
-Piranhas don't actually eat you if you swim in the Amazon and a case involving the "penis fish" has never been substantiated.
-Brazil is divided into states 
-A big mac will cost about $10 in Brazil!  (High prices are mostly due to high taxes and difficulty with transportation of goods)
-Brazil is undergoing lots of positive growth including a large and expanding middle class.
-Some federal government workers in Brazil 100% pay as their pension!
-Brazilians are traveling more and more.  When someone from Brazil travels to the U.S. they spend an average of $4000 while they are there.  
-Brazil gets most of the energy it needs from hydropower.