Archive for June, 2009

Discovery A- Hola from Manuel Antonio!

Hola from Manuel Antonio! We just returned from an amazing and adventurous day at the beach! Most of us got the tan we had hoped for today after a fun-filled day in the water and on the sand. The day began with some lounging and hanging out and then the fun began when we started surf lessons. Caleb, Emily, Lilly and Molly could really ride those waves! We also played some beach volleyball where Brad and Brittanie showed off their athletic talent. The afternoon ended with some shopping at the markets, which were filled with homemade jewelry, pottery, wood trinkets and other cool accessories.

Last night we ran into another Walking Tree Group (Immersion A) group at the beach! We decided to get everyone together and had a big bonfire where the groups met and mingled and played a massive game of charades. It was a pretty neat experience for them to meet other young people and share their adventures with each other.

We spent the past week in Canaan, a small village of 150 people. While in Canaan, we worked on two specific projects: painting a school and mixing and laying cement for a community kitchen floor. The students worked really hard throughout the week and both projects were finished early! In addition to painting the school, we also added a large mural of a river scene with Costa Rican wildlife on the front wall and some smaller nature scenes on the classroom walls. Although no one claimed to be artistic, the murals turned out beautiful Nick sketched out a great scene and the local villagers loved the final products! Coral, Tess, Elizabeth, Karen and Jaya really added their artistic touches to the school mural.

The cement mixing was hard work and required a lot of muscle. From moving sand from the river bank to scooping rocks and mixing and moving cement in wheel burrows, it was a lot of labor but everyone worked hard without any complaints. Brad, Stephanie and Molly were real troopers!

The week ended with a big fiesta at the community salon where everyone shared a meal and had a dance party with both Costa Rican and American music. We even did the “train” through the salon and everyone joined in. In addition, it was Ann’s birthday so we sang “Feliz Cumpleanos” (Happy Birthday) and ate some homemade cake to celebrate!

Although a week seems like a short stay with our host families, we truly connected with the people there and some shed tears as we parted ways and drove down the road to begin a new adventure. Andrea and Brianna loved their host families so much they never complained about having to hike up a whole mountain to get home everyday! Courtney mentioned her home stay as being the most memorable event of the trip and Carson also bonded with her host siblings and raved about the food that her family made every day. The students loved their home stay experience and really learned about the day-to-day lifestyles of the people of Canaan. We even played a soccer game with the villagers and Lindsay helped show the Costa Ricans that soccer is not just a guy sport!

Tomorrow we head to the national park in Manuel Antonio where we hope to see lots of monkeys and wildlife! We have enjoyed our time together so far and cannot believe that it is coming to an end!

PURA VIDA!

Manuel Antonio!

Greetings from Manuel Antonio! In just one week, we have done so many amazing things and experienced so much. The first few days were spent getting to know each other, and establishing a solid group dynamic which will help to carry us through our exciting adventures and challenges ahead. The last few days, however, our focus has shifted and we are now taking advantage of every possible opportunity to interact with Costa Ricans, embrace their culture, and practice our Spanish. One of the most beloved members of our group has become William, our Costa Rican bus driver and someone who will be with us throughout the month that we are here. As William does not speak English, he has been a great resource for our students to practice Spanish. Last night at dinner, one of the students read on the menu that for someone’s birthday the restaurant would present a free dessert. The obvious choice was William. We all enjoyed watching him laugh as the waiters turned down the lights and sang happy birthday.

At Pura Suerte, we really got a first hand look at the beautiful Costa Rican jungles. Nestled in the mountains just off the coast, we were greeted by rainforest wildlife, the most prevalent being bugs. At night, rain pelted the roofs of Pura Suerte so hard that we could not hear each other speaking, and dawn was met by the sound of monkeys chattering away in the trees overhead. We hiked to the Nuayaca Waterfall on our second full day at Pura Suerte, and were blessed by beautiful weather for swimming in the small pools at the waterfall’s base. One of the highlights of Pura Suerte was the evening we walked up to a small hill on the farm to watch the sun set over the Pacific. We spread out on the grass of the small hill for personal reflection as we watched the sky light up into fiery reds and deep purples. With the ocean just beyond the hills, sky and sea met in a kaleidoscope of colors.

Now in Manuel Antonio, the group has had the chance to take advantage of the beautiful beaches of Costa Rica. The first afternoon, we charged down to the beach and threw ourselves into the Pacific. Soon thereafter, a warm tropical shower rained down on us as we frolicked on the beach. The next day we met with our friend Dante, who gave us first class surf lessons and a full day of relaxation on the beach. After several tries, many students really got the hang of it, and they rode in many waves. If we were to nominate a couple of students to represent our surfing skills it would have to be Dallas and Hilda who seemed to pick it up right away. When we weren’t surfing we shopped the local handicrafts on the boardwalk, played frisbee, and rode the banana boat. Today is our last day at the beach, but before we leave we will be visiting the National Park Manuel Antonio, where we will get to see sloths, monkeys, and other wildlife up close as well as visit the beautiful beaches within the park.

Right now on most people’s minds is the homestay experience. This afternoon we will drive to La Legua and meet our host families for the first time. Students are nervous and excited. Everyone wants to know what their family will be like, and is looking forward to being thrown into a language immersion. In a few days the bonds they form with these families will be strong and the work we will be doing will create a lasting impact on the village and its people.

Pura Vida!

I loved the surf lessons! I have always wanted to learn. Our day at the beach was really fun. Manuel Antonio is a beautiful place but I am ready to finally go to the village and meet my host family! -Jojo

The trip has been a very interesting experience so far. I have had lots of fun at the beach and I’m very excited to move on to my home stay. -Riley

The trip so far has been amazing. We had a perfect day at the beach yesterday and spent hours swimming and surfing. But my favorite thing so far was watching a gorgeous sunset on a hill at Pura Suerte -Meredith

This trip is starting to become more of a challenge with the coming of the homestay. However, I am pretty stoked to find out what it’s going to be like in such a new environment. So far, we’ve been doing some textbook tourist type things and I am totally ready to be immersed into a new culture and gain a new perspective in my lifestyle. – Camille “Cami-Cane” Henrot

Costa Rica Immersion A

Hola from Costa Rica!!!!

After weeks of anticipation, our Costa Rican adventure is finally in full swing!  Everyone arrived safe and sound, and we are so excited to be here together, building group bonds and exploring the unknown.  Our first two nights were spent in San José at our beautiful hotel where we adjusted to our new surroundings and got to know one another.  Just a few days into the trip, and we have already seen, heard, smelled and tasted things that we have never experienced before.

After a couple of days in the bustling capital city, we hopped on our bus with our driver William, who has been described by Dallas as having ¨heroic demeanor¨and ¨legendary driving skills,¨ and traveled through the beautifully lush countryside to Pura Suerte.  Here we have enjoyed delicious meals prepared with wholesome, fresh ingredients, as well as breathtaking views of the jungle.  Last night the group bonded with games and and group reflections over our experiences so far.  It´s so exciting to see everyone step out of their comfort zones and open themselves up to trying new things and establishing new friendships.

This morning we woke up and had a group yoga session on the balcony of our jungalow that overlooks the dense rainforest.    Today we are in San Isidro exploring a street market, and it has been a great opportunity for each and every one of the students to challenge themselves to interact in Spanish with the locals, buying fresh fruits and vegetables and other trinkets.  It is amazing  how quickly the students are taking in their surroundings and we can see growth in everyone already.  We are enjoying every moment we have in this amazing country, and can´t wait for what´s to come!

¨Costa Rica is phenomenal!!!  The views are breathtaking and the climate is amazing!¨ -Tim

¨The food here at this unforgettable location is the best so far.¨ -Dallas

¨I thank my parents, Walking Tree, and the Costa Rican people f0r the opportunity to experience this beautiful country.¨ -Benno

¨Today after sleeping in the jungalows I was awoken by the animals.  It was amazing.  All the people on the trip are so cool, and I have connected with them a lot.¨ -Andrew

¨Everyone on this trip is so amazing and unique in their own way.  We always have fun, no matter the situation.  For example, we (the guys) have named the huge bug in our jungalow ¨Barthalomeu¨. -Brent

¨I am so excited to be in the jungle, it is so peaceful.  Pretty much- Costa Rica rocks!¨- Hilda

¨I´m very excited for the market today, and I´ll get to use my Spanish.  I´m beginning to think that a month just isn´t long enough.¨ -Cory

¨I am sooo crazy happy to have been able to go on this trip.  At night you can hear the rain and all the sounds of the forest.¨ -Katy

¨It has been so great being here, already there have been so many opportunities to get out of my comfort zone.  It has been fabulous, truly fabulous.¨ -Gracie

China’s got great surfing… who knew?

The Surf’s Always Up in the Chinese Hawaii

Christie Johnston for The New York Times

Tianya Haijiao, a beach depicted on the Chinese two-yuan note, is a popular attraction on Hainan Island


Published: March 15, 2009

THE sun is out, the sand gleaming white, the waves rolling toward shore in clean, regular sets. At the edge of this palm-fringed paradise, the sea is a pale, minty hue and empty of people. Launching my surfboard from the beach on Hainan Island, I paddle out to catch a wave.

Hainan Island has often been called the Chinese Hawaii, and indeed, it is the only tropical beach destination in China. With coasts on the South China Sea and the Gulf of Tonkin, about a 90-minute flight southwest of Hong Kong, this island, slightly bigger than Maryland, is attracting hordes of Chinese in the market for a little sun and fun.

The warm, sandy south coast around the port city of Sanya is experiencing a luxury hotel boom: Ritz-Carlton, Banyan Tree, Le Méridien and Mandarin Oriental have all opened resorts there in the last year, with Fairmont and Raffles properties also in the pipeline. Look around, and you’ll encounter weekend warriors from Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong and Guangzhou, all seeking to escape the crush of big-city life for a quiet stretch of beach and a frozen cocktail.

In the past, Hainan had a romantic, Wild West frontier air about it; as the southernmost point in China, it served for centuries as a place of banishment for criminals, exiled poets and political undesirables. Thirty minutes from Sanya is the famously scenic Tianya Haijiao, a k a the Edge of the Sky and the Rim of the Sea, a boulder-strewn beach depicted on the Chinese two-yuan note. Today, it is an immensely popular tourist attraction.

After Hainan separated from Guangdong to become its own province in 1988, a development boom was quickly followed by a bust that left many building projects on the island half-finished. In the last few years, Hainan has welcomed back investors and become a fashionable draw for Russian tourists looking to escape winter — entire blocks in Sanya have signs lettered in Russian for their benefit.

More recently, Hainan has attracted younger international travelers like Drew Aras and Catherine Forman, both 24 and from Melbourne, Australia. Mr. Aras, a physical therapist, first heard about the island while watching the Beijing Olympics, since it was where organizers obtained the 17,000 tons of sand for the Games’ beach volleyball courts.

“Usually, when we travel together, we negotiate a place that is both interesting to travel to and has the added bonus of offering some surf time for me,” said Mr. Aras, who has been surfing since he was 5. “We thought we’d find a nice place to relax by the beach and maybe catch a few waves between cocktails.”

What they found were uncrowded waves, cheap and delicious seafood and a quirky landscape that skipped from isolated coastline to spots jammed with mainland package tourists outfitted in matching head-to-toe Hawaiian prints.

The couple were introduced to the island by Brendan Sheridan of Surfing Hainan, a small local company that leads surfing expeditions and rents surfboards to visitors. Mr. Sheridan, 29, attended high school in Hong Kong and learned to surf while at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Two years ago, he made it his mission to bring surfing to the Chinese people.

“It’s the right time for the Chinese to get into surfing,” Mr. Sheridan told me as we set out to surf at Riyuewan, a picturesque bay about an hour and a half northeast of Sanya. “There’s an emerging middle class that is finally learning how to spend their money and have some fun in life.”

Most of his customers are foreigners, as many Chinese have an aversion to the sun — having a tan still denotes “farmer” — and don’t have much experience with the ocean. But Mr. Sheridan, who speaks Mandarin, finds that more and more Chinese are interested in the culture of surfing, including his two Chinese staff members, who are both in their 30s and have taken to the sport with a vengeance.

Around Hainan, the surf is up pretty much year round. Between April and September, waves tend to come from the south, while October to March brings a northeastern winter swell.

It can be somewhat expensive to be an independent traveler exploring the island beyond Sanya — public buses are infrequent, and a one-way taxi ride from Riyuewan to Sanya, for example, can run upwards of 300 yuan, about $43 at 7 yuan to the dollar. But Mr. Aras thought it added to the sense of adventure.

“It was refreshing to go somewhere not set up for Western tourists,” he said. “My parents, who live in Hong Kong, already plan to go back to Hainan, and they know of other Aussie and Hong Kong expats who visit frequently. I don’t think it’ll take long for surfers to catch on.”

Development is already fast and furious. The economic downturn may have lessened visitor numbers, but the hotels, with their glass-tiled pools and grand marble staircases, keep coming.

Along Yalong Bay, a lovely four-and-a-half-mile stretch of beach about 15 miles east of Sanya that was developed as a national resort district, the new Ritz-Carlton sits at the end of a long string of resorts that went up before it, including the Hilton, Marriott, Sheraton and Crowne Plaza. Overlooking the water, the Yalong Bay Golf Club, designed by Robert Trent Jones Jr., is shaped like a dragon’s claw and has hosted tournaments on the European and Asian Tours. There are now 16 courses on the island, with a couple more in the works.

The sheer numbers of Chinese mean that remote, once-unspoiled locations like Tianya Haijiao (on the two-yuan note), Wuzhi Shan (the “five finger mountain” in the center of Hainan), and Wuzhizhou (a tiny, white-sand island just offshore northeast of Yalong Bay) have been developed with Disney-like fervor to entertain the throngs of flamboyantly dressed tourists who want to view them on a package tour (ferries every 10 minutes, waterfall rides, horse treks). In these places, the Chinese Hawaii more closely resembles a Chinese Miami, full of shiny resorts and artificial attractions.

But stretches of green, mist-covered mountain slopes do remain. The warm, humid climate makes Hainan a bounty of tropical crops — the island is an important producer of pineapples, coconuts, mangoes, sugar cane, coffee and rubber trees. On a drive I took north out of Sanya last November, the countryside quickly retreated from apartment and hotel blocks to hillsides heavy with mango trees and rice paddies worked by teams of farmers and water buffalo.

Of all the new high-end resorts I visited, Le Méridien Shimei Bay, about an hour and a half northeast of Sanya’s airport, had the most authentic sense of place, with lush forests, a pristine, white sand beach and no other development around as yet, though an adjacent series of hotels is planned by Starwood Hotels and Resorts.

Changes are happening all over China, and Hainan Island exemplifies this moment. The boom in tourism there is exposing mainland travelers to a foreign beach culture in new and interesting ways.

One afternoon, when Mr. Sheridan took two young Chinese couples out for a surf lesson in Sanya, he got an unusual request from one of the women. “Can I take this umbrella with me onto the surfboard?” she asked. Mr. Sheridan fought off laughter and soberly told her that he didn’t think it was a good idea.

But he did admire her effort. He said, “Why not have it both ways?”

LUXURY HOTELS AND LONGBOARDS

Hainan is an easy flight from any major Chinese city; Sanya is about 90 minutes from Hong Kong and Guangzhou and about three hours from Shanghai. China Southern (www.cs-air.com/en), Dragon Air (www.dragonair.com) and Air China (www.airchina.com.cn/en/index.jsp) offer frequent flights. You can fly to Haikou in the north of the island, but it is several hours from the southern beaches.

Of the many new hotels on Hainan, the most secluded is Le Méridien Shimei Bay (Shimei Bay, Wanning; 86-898-6252-8888; www.starwoodhotels.com/lemeridien; doubles from 1,040 yuan, about $149 at 7 yuan to the dollar). The infinity pool and open atrium are stunning, and the 275 rooms, including 25 villas, feature polished wood and indigenous motifs. There is excellent hiking nearby and exclusive access to an offshore island.

In Luhuitou Bay, the Banyan Tree Sanya (6 Luling Road, Sanya; 800-591-0439 in America; www.banyantree.com/en/sanya/index.html; from 3,100 yuan) is closer to the action, but the 61 pool villas make privacy and spa indulgence the priority.

Between Luhuitou and Yalong Bay is the Mandarin Oriental Hotel Sanya (12 Yuhai Road, Sanya; 86-898-8820-9999; www.mandarinoriental.com/sanya; from 1,600 yuan), where all 297 rooms have views of the sea.

To surf several breaks, rent a board or take a lesson with Surfing Hainan (8 Huayun Road, Sanya; 86-135-1980-0103; www.surfinghainan.com; from 350 yuan a person, with transportation and equipment).

http://travel.nytimes.com/2009/03/15/travel/15next.html

CA China Group Picture at the Olympic Stadium

CA China Birds Nest

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