Saturday, February 19, 2011

Hello from Lusaka

I am in Zambia. Wow. This country is amazing. I am in a South African owned shopping mall at an internet cafe and have a few minutes to let everybody know that I'm here. Training has been very well organized so far. The people are incredibly nice here. I can't emphasize that enough. We are going out in the bush for 4 days tomorrow!! I won't have Internet access for a while after this, possibly a month. Anyway, things are great so far and I'm so happy and excited to be here. What a beautiful place. Haven't had time for much birding yet, but have seen some Pied Crows, Blue Waxbills, Masked Weavers, and Variable Sunbirds (look up a picture).  I am thinking of everyone back in the States. Much Love, Larry

Friday, February 11, 2011

It's time!

It’s finally time! I feel like I have waited so long for this time. I’m getting on the airplane in 3 days. I have been so happy to see so many friends and family in the last two months. Seeing all of you has really meant a lot to me, and has made me realize that it’s always worth making the effort to visit people you care about, even if it’s just for an hour. I’ll remember the times that I spent with everyone for a long time. I wish we could all be closer together. Keep up the good work everyone; that’s how we can stay close. If we all work toward the same thing, eventually, we’ll be back together again.

The best way to keep in touch with me while I’m in Zambia will be to write me. My mailing address will be:

Lawrence Maurin
Peace Corps
P.O. Box 50707
Lusaka, Zambia

Make sure you send letters via airmail. They should arrive in 2-4 weeks.
Right now I’m making final preparations: getting everything packed, getting my paperwork organized, getting anxious about travelling ( I don’t like airports for a lot of reasons), and trying to think of last minute things I need to bring. My bags are actually a lot lighter than I thought they might be. Plus, I can get almost everything I will need once I get to Zambia.

Yesterday, I got to go fishing with Scotty (the bro) and went out for some really good BBQ spare ribs at Robin’s in Pasadena. Tomorrow, I will have one last day of fun in the United States for a while! Birding in the AM, followed by beer and good, real Mexican food in the PM.

Thanks again for the support everyone. Make sure to become a follower of my blog, so you can be updated when a new post is up!

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Cypresses, Cacti, and Vorticies

On January 19th I got on the Amtrak at Union Station in Los Angeles. I was leaving for the first big train trip I'd ever taken in my life. I was going to visit Galen in New Orleans, a city I had never been to. I hadn't seen Galen since X-mas of 2009, just after I had moved to Portland. It was finally time for me to go visit people, and see some new sights along the way.
It took 2 days to get to New Orleans on the Sunset Limited. I was in coach and enjoyed the comforts of sleeping in my seat for 2 nights. I noticed that there were two types of people on the train ride. The grandpa in the sleeper car going to see his grandkids, and the guy who just got out of prison going to get his probation changed to a different state. I enjoyed talking to both, especially when the train was in west Texas. This is the second time I've crossed Texas, and now I remember how big it is. I also had lots of time to read, and I had Endgame by Derrick Jensen with me. I've heard so much about this book and finally decided I had to read it, especially because many of my motivations for going to Africa are discussed in the book. It's basically about how civilization is killing the planet, and what we need to do about it. It is a dark book. It made me realize how monumental our environmental problem is. I can't recommend this book enough. It really helps explain the psychology behind the widespread social and environmental abuses of our time.
I made it to New Orleans on Friday the 21st. Galen was kind enough to pick me up at the train station in his rental car. We ended up hanging out with Galen's friend, Khaled, who is a cab driver in New Orleans. He was nice enough to give us a tour of the city so to speak. We ended up going to Bourbon Street, the Bulldog Tavern, Lafitte's Blacksmith Shop, Cafe du Monde on Friday night. Saturday, Galen and I decided to rent a canoe and go on an alligator expedition. We learned later that alligators hibernate or are less active in the winter. Damn! Oh well, we still saw plenty of awesome creatures in the cypress swamps.

Galen and Larry prepare for the alligator expedition at Tickfaw SP
Stoked on cypress knees


What the hell do the Confederacy and Largemouth Bass have to do with one another?


We ended up paddling about two miles on the Blood River through some amazing cypress swamps. We saw a flock of about 600 Common Grackles fly around us. We had enough foresight to pack some beer for our lunch stop on a choice log.
On Monday, I got back on the train in New Orleans to head west back to Tucson, Arizona. There I was to meet up with Rose for a couple of days of birding in Cochise County, the birdiest inland county in the nation! There were bound to be tons of new birds for both of us and epic sparrow flocks. We stayed at my Aunt Sherri's friends Patty and Jim's place about 40 miles southeast of Tucson in St. David. Even Patty and Jim's yard had amazing birding including Inca Doves and Pyrrhuloxias in the yard, and Mississippi Kites and Green Kingfishers in the summer. We stayed in one of their guest houses. Jim and Patty were wonderful and extremely kind to us.

Rose and I at Karchner Caverns State Park near Sierra Vista
Larry looking for Rufous-winged Sparrows

Our guest house

Jim's man cave. Jim is a Packer fan at heart but he is also a Raider fan!


This was a Border Patrol Infra-red camera on Montezuma Pass overlooking the border. My theory was that there was a laser beam on this truck that could evaporate Mexicans instantly from a range of two miles. POOOOOOOFF! I never got to see the machine in action. The border patrol presence down there was ridiculous.

Scoping Sierra Vista Wetlands

Hundreds of Yellow-headed Blackbirds at Sierra Vista wetlands


Venturing into Montezuma Cave at Coronado National Memorial

The whole trip had amazing birding. We visited some world famous spots including Ramsey Canyon and the San Pedro River House. I ended up with 21 life birds on this whole trip: White Ibis, Black-bellied Whistling Duck, Tricolored Heron, Black Vulture, Eastern Bluebird, Red-bellied Woodpecker, Pine Warbler, Common Grackle, Laughing Gull, Boat-tailed Grackle, Anhinga, Gilded Flicker, Pyrrhuloxia, Canyon Towhee, Curve-billed Thrasher, Rufous-winged Sparrow, Inca Dove, Bridled Titmouse, Yellow-eyed Junco, Arizona Woodpecker, and Lark Bunting.
On Friday afternoon, Rose and I drove up to Flagstaff to visit Lisa. Lisa and Derrick just moved into a new house and the got some chickens! On our way up, we stopped in Sedona to see the sunset and go to Oak Creek Brewery. Oak Creek Brewery has some really good beer, but the brewery is a little weird. For those of you who don't know anything about Sedona, it's a bit of a New Age capital of the world. Basically it's filled with rich white tourists looking for spiritual energies, a massage with many colors of red dirt, and a ride in a pink jeep. It was really odd to be in a brewery and be the only person resembling a beer nerd. Seriously, though their beer is really good.

Sterling Pass Trail in Sedona

Larry and Lisa wait for it.

Rose and Larry have captured the vortex at Snoopy Rock. If you look very carefully, you can actually see it!

Lisa's chickens

After lots of beer drinking, cooking, and hiking in Flagstaff, Rose and I made one final stop on the way back to Los Angeles. We drove out into the desert to a place I've been only one before, about 4 years ago. The place is informally called Dante's Descent. It's a 400-foot deep sinkhole in the middle of the desert. I couldn't believe I remembered how to get there because there are absolutely no signs telling you how to get there.

Me at the sinkhole

Rose was brave enough to get a photo of the bottom of the sinkhole. This picture does it no justice!

A Mountain Bluebird that was in a huge flock near the sinkhole
It's now two weeks until I am off to Zambia. I booked my flight for February 14th. I'm so happy that I can have adventures like this with my best friends. This was absolutely one of the best vacations I have ever taken.