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Volunteer Stories and Reports
La Reserva
By Zach Chissell
My arrival to La Reserva came after being in Costa Rica for 2 months. Although I had seen a good bit of the country, the attitude and life style here is one of the few places I’d been to that embodies la PURA VIDA.
I stayed with Omar, the manager, and his family and they could not have been more welcoming. The food was hands down the most authentic, filling, and delicious of my stay and I did not speak a word of English while with them. My room had its own private entrance from the outside and I never felt like my privacy was invaded. On the other hand I also never felt like an exiled outsider and instead felt like a part of the family. For example, in the afternoons I often helped Omar’s daughters with their English homework after school and I’m pretty sure I met all of Omar’s siblings. Overall, my time with Omar’s family allowed me to truly immerse myself in Tico culture.

Each morning at dawn we walked an hour from his house to La Reserva and worked from 6 am to 2 pm. On the first day of work we walked around the reserve and transplanted Hibiscus stems along the fence in order to fortify the barriers. Unfortunately, there is a problem of poachers, not only of animals but also of plants. In fact, during my time here a rare Iris was stolen from La Reserva at night. In the afternoon of the first day, Omar and I worked in the nursery preparing the bags that serve to hold the young trees before they are big enough to be planted in the forest. Before my arrival, I had the idea that I was coming to plant trees. However, my time here opened my eyes to the fact that there is much more to “reforestation” than simply planting trees. Before leaving however, I made a point to plants some trees!
On the second day of work, what would become the main project of my stay started to take shape. While walking through the trails of La Reserva, Omar was constantly giving me information about different plants and animals - He is very knowledgeable and enthusiastic about his work. Without his information, I would not have gained as much from walking through La Reserva. In order to give visitors information, and help the tours that Roberta gives to guests, we decided to make informational signs along the two main trails. My goal was to ultimately increase the traffic to La Reserva in order to help them fund their ambitions.
The rest of my time at La Reserva was spent realizing this project. Omar and I harvested wood from an old milking barn and in the end did not buy a single piece of wood for the project. We cut the wood into appropriate sizes for the signs and the posts and painted them. Roberta wrote the text for each sign, and after printing and laminating the information, we put up the signs on my last day. Along with the informational signs, we installed a large welcome sign at the main entrance with a donation box.
It was an extremely rewarding experience to arrive here, create a project, and complete the project! I can only hope that I’ve helped La Reserva to realize its potential. The forest here is now a part of me, and I’m sure I will rely on it in the future when I find myself back in the bustle of life in the US. Endless thanks to Roberta and Daniel for giving me the chance to come here and being such wonderful friends- I hope to return soon.
Matt's UVolunteer Weekly Reports
Week 1:
My arrival to Costa Rica was warm and welcoming. I was well oriented to where I was and how to get safely from San Jose to my project site. Once I started working at La Reserva I became oriented to the forests and the mission of the project. On the first day of work, I was lead by Omar, one of the workers on the reserve, around the perimeter of half of the property, helping to clear trails and repair damaged fences. We repeated this the next morning for the second half of the reserve on the other side of the mountain. Over the course of the first week we worked on a variety of tasks on the farm, like feeding and watering the chickens and tending to the permaculture gardens. Omar and I helped to build sides to the raised beds where the vegetables are grown and also transplant some vegetable starts. Also during the week Omar and I walked through both sides of the reserve collecting tree seedlings that later in the day we transplanted in the nursery. In the middle of the week we went out to one of the biological corridors that the reserve created and maintains, to replace some of the dead components of the “living fences”. In between some of the tasks we would go into the forest and collect leaf litter to be used as mulch for the permaculture gardens. On the Sunday after my first week of work, a friend of the managers of the site, Roberta and Dan, threw a fundraiser fiesta/bbq to help raise money for the reserve. It was quite successful and a lot of fun with good food, live music and boat rides on Lake Arenal.
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My Story
By: Matt Lee
Day 1:
Monday was my first day of work on La Reserva. I followed Omar, who works at the reserve and I currently live with, as we made a trek around the perimeter of the forest, clearing trails and repairing fences. Omar would pause to point out some of the wildlife we would encounter. Once we finished we fed the chickens and the rest of the animals. Roberta, one of the project managers showed me her permaculture garden and explained some of the techniques she uses to maintain soil health and fertility. Omar and I worked in the garden applying mulch and transplanting vegetable plugs. The mulch we collected from the forest floor as leaf litter and small sticks. At the end of the day I got to meet another new member of the farm, besides myself. One day the week before I arrived, Omar came across a baby three-toed sloth that had fallen out of a tree. His mother lay nearby dead and Omar rescued the baby and brought him to the reserve. Roberta and Dan named him Peluchi, and when I met him he was hanging outside a small tree near their home. Omar picked some hibiscus flowers and gave them to him, which he gobbled up with relish. Needless to say he was incredibly cute and quite the stinker.
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My Time at La Reserva
By: Chris Long
Prologue:
It took a four and half hour flight, one night in San Jose and a four hour bus ride to Tilaran, but I finally made it! Forty-eight hours earlier, I was living in the hectic, fast-paced and insane life of New York City. Now, for the next month, I was to live in Costa Rica with a local family while working to help preserve the beauty and awe that this country’s rainforests provide. Let’s get started!
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Chris's uVolunteer Reports
Week 1:
My arrival in Costa Rica went smoothly and I was warmly welcomed at the airport by a uVolunteer representative. After an in depth discussion about the ins and outs of Costa Rica, I was given detailed instruction about how to get to my project site in Tilaran the following day. Upon arriving in Tilaran, I was greeted by Roberta who brought me to my host family’s house and helped me get settled in. On Monday, Omar, on of the workers at La Reserva, and I set out for our long walk to La Reserva at the early hour of 5 AM. It was truly an amazing site watching the sun rise over the mountains and seeing the reflection on Lake Arenal. Upon arrival at La Reserva, I worked with Omar to water newly planted seedlings in the nursery, to prepare guanacaste seeds for eventual planting and to care for the chickens. Later that week, we were tasked with the job of building a new pen for the baby chickens and mother to live in. It was really a great time building a whole new structure from scratch, using wood we recovered from around La Reserva and designing the new pen as we went along. The project took all day but when we finally put the family in their new home, I felt a true feeling of accomplishment and reward. Additionally, we worked on a variety of tasks throughout the week including clearing leaf litter from the trails and permaculture garden, planting new seedlings in the nursery and preparing compost for use in the garden.
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Story:
Brittany MacGillivray:
My name is Brittany and I am from Nova Scotia, Canada. I have recently taken an interest in environmental issues and wanted to gain some hands on experience working with the environment. After many hours spent perusing the different volunteer companies and the projects they had to offer, I stumbled upon Roberta’s and Daniel’s reforestation project in Costa Rica through Uvolunteer. I was immediately intrigued by this particular project as it was exactly what I was looking for. After arriving in Costa Rica and meeting Roberta, Daniel, Omar and his family, I realized I had made the right decision. For two weeks I helped Omar with various projects around La Reserva, which is located just outside of Tilaran, such as clearing long grass from around baby trees to help allow them to grow, planting seeds and baby trees in the nursery and preparing areas in the nursery for trees to be planted and later used for reforestation. As well, I participated in a couple reforestation events in two little towns outside of Tilaran, called Sabalito and Rio Piedras, where we planted approximately 3,000 trees. My experience here has been nothing short of incredible! This project has allowed me to gain some great friends and connections, have a great cultural experience after having lived with a Costa Rican family and allowed me to partake in a generally wonderful life experience.
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The earth and myself are of one mind.
Chief Joseph
We were taught to believe that the Great Spirit sees and hears everything, and that he never forgets, that hereafter he will give every man a spirit home according to his deserts; If he has been a good man, he will have a good home; if he has been a bad man, he will have a bad home.
Chief Joseph
He that plants trees loves others beside himself. Thomas Fuller
1654-1734
Everything that is contained within this body of ours is modeled after heaven and earth. The inhaling and exhaling of breath through our nose is like the wind that wafts through the mountains and valleys; the inhaling and exhaling of breath through our mouth is like the winds that course through the open skies. Our eyes are like the sun and the moon; their opening and closing is like day and night. The hair on our heads is like the stars; our eyebrows are like the northern dipper. Our blood flow is like rivers and streams, and our bones are like gems and stones. Our skin and o ur flesh are like the earth and soil, and the fine hairs on our body are the grasses and forests that cover the earth. The five major organs correspond to the five planets in the sky and the five sacred mountains on the earth.
Nichiren Daishonin, Gosho Zenshu, 567
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