Vijayapura, Karnataka
Conservation Tourism
Bird of the Day: Verditer Flycatcher
Bird of the Day: Spotted Owlet
Bird of the Day: Ruby-throated Bulbul
Bird of the Day: Eurasian Spoonbill Pair
Bird of the Day: Rufous-capped Warbler

Tacacori, Costa Rica
Pristine Nature
In writing about Belize recently, I had mentioned time spent with a tapir, favored in the diet of jaguar throughout Central America. The photo above was taken on property at the lodge my posts were referring to. Rule of thumb, it seems to me, is that a jaguar population requires relatively pristine nature to be sustainable, and that seems to be the case where this photo was taken. But what do I know, really? I am dedicated to entrepreneurial conservation but I am not a biologist so I depend on experts to inform my thinking, and to discipline it with a heavy dose of realism. In reading this post from earlier today I am better prepared to think about the mission of Chan Chich Lodge (more on which in a subsequent post), and the history of the 30,000 acre wilderness conservation area that it sits on:
Gallon Jug
At one time, the venerable 150 year old Belize Estates Company owned roughly one fifth of the entire country, about one million acres including much of the northwest corner of the country. From the turn of the century until the 1960’s, timber, mainly mahogany, cedar and santa maria, were selectively logged from this area. Gallon Jug, originally a logging camp located where the current GJ offices are, was named after a B.E.C. foreman, Austin Felix, discovered many discarded items from a Spanish camp, including a number of ceramic gallon jugs. Continue reading
Bird of the Day: Malabar Trogon
Bird of the Day: Malabar Trogon
Bird of the Day: Oriental Magpie-robin
Bird of the Day: Coppersmith Barbet
Bird of the Day: Black-rumped Flameback
Bird of the Day: Black-tailed Crake
Bird of the Day: Inca Dove

Tacacori, Costa Rica
Bird of the Day: Indian Pitta
Bird of the Day: Brahminy Starling
Forward To The Past

A few days ago I mentioned, in reference to my recent visit to Belize, an earlier visit to Tikal in Guatemala. In the photo above, taken in 1999, three future La Paz Group contributors (Seth Inman, me, and Milo Inman from left to right) were getting our “om” on in preparation to climb the stairs in the background.
Amie Inman, who took that photo, reminds me that she and I had been to Tikal earlier, without our two sons. On both occasions we had the kind of mystical experiences for which this location is known. We had climbed the temple in advance of sunrise, as recommended (no photos from that with us currently, so credit for the photo below goes to a fellow wordpress blogger; click the photo for attribution).
What we all remember about our visits to Tikal, and on a separate journey to Copan in Honduras we had the same sense, was how the archeologists and the relevant authorities in these particular national parks had done just the right amount of excavation. Some things were left to the imagination. Seth and Milo, in a conversation we overheard, said that Tikal was much better than Disney World, because it was real – it was like being Indian Jones. Our understanding of “real” was “unspoiled” in the sense that one could see plenty of uncovered evidence of Mayan culture, and also see that these artifacts of that culture eventually were swallowed by the jungle. Continue reading
Bird of the Day: Great Tit
Bird of the Day: Dalmatian Pelican
Bird of the Day: Gray-headed Chachalaca

Tacacori, Costa Rica
















