We finished-up by 1 in the afternoon but the day had been eventful, and was far from easy. A few days prior, our boss's adviser made a last-minute decision: in addition to our present workload, we would begin collecting vegetation data for Golden-winged Warblers banded in previous years. We had only a few weeks left to finish up the field project, and so we had to haul some ass, so to speak.
The three of us set off on a familiar trail towards Tonio's finca (farm) to conduct eight vegetation surveys. Last year, two male golden-wings were detected up in the hills we were strolling around in. According to the field protocol, four points are needed for each bird's territory. The first point at which we record vegetation data is where the bird was detected. From this hub three more points, 50 meters away, at 0, 120, and 240 degrees are surveyed.
So, we knew where we had to go, but, like most of our study sites, our destination lay deep within the confines of pre-montane rainforest. The majority of our "veg-points" required busting serious ass (so to speak) through primary and secondary forest - spelled Thick, Spiny, Dense, and Vine-y.
Cypress takes a GPS point next to one of the largest trees we had to measure |
Cypress and Jeffe disappear behind a wall of vegetation |
When we finished all eight points Jeffe led us out of the thick of the forest, back to the main trail that would take us back down the hill and to our field vehicle. We had back-tracked nearly thirty meters when all of the sudden Jeffe emitted a cry,
"Yeeeoooowwwww!"
We all stopped dead in our tracks.
"What?!" We cried back, hearts pounding.
"A snake!" Jeffe replied, breathless.
We pried our heads over one another, craning our necks to look in the direction of our boss's trembling gesture. And laying there, curled next to a log, was a Fer-de-Lance.
Property of www.hidephotography.com |
After the boys were finished poking and prodding the snake with the tips of very long sticks, and thus satisfied that the snake wasn't going to come after us, we hurried along the rest of the way, silently wondering at how many other vipers we had unknowingly brushed past. We found an open path that eventually led us to the main road. We paused near the end of the trail and focused our binoculars on a pair of White Hawks, that in turn, eyed us suspiciously as they perched high in a tree. They soon returned their twin gazes toward the grass, searching for prey, and we took our leave.
A bad photo of a beautiful bird: The White Hawk |
A Capuchin Monkey gives us a quick view before he too disappears into the thick of the forest |
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