Tag Archives: Mayaguez

Tropical Agriculture Research Station

TARS

This past week our new friends Missy and Ben invited us to visit the Tropical Agriculture Research Station (TARS) in Mayaguez with their family.

Four at fountain

Ben is a professor of botany at the University of Mayaguez and had told us about this great place. We were very interested in checking it out.

TARS is a research center of the USDA and not considered a botanical garden though it certainly had a garden feel to it. And while not very well advertised as open to the public, it is open to visitors. We signed in as visitors in the main old building that was built in 1909 in the mission architectural style.

Arbol Campeon

We walked around nearly the whole area and found quite a few great varieties of exotic tropicals that we are looking forward to growing ourselves. There were a few Arboles Campeones (Champion Trees) also that are the largest known specimen on the island as well as some very strange and funny trees like the sausage trees.

Sausage tree

The landscaping is beautiful and sweeping with some trees that reached heights of at least 70-80 feet.

Royal Palm with Monstera

It was really cool to see large healthy specimens of many of our small little plants and trees and what they could potentially be in the future. We are looking forward to another visit soon!

Mangosteen
Exotic and delicious mangosteens littered the ground!

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Leaving the Compound AKA Our Trip to Mayaguez

We enjoy people and like to get out and be social occasionally, but are perfectly content hanging out with each other on the property much of the time. We have plenty to do and enough space to stretch our legs and go for a walk even if it is just a hike through the lower jungle.

When our friends stayed with us a few weeks ago they remarked as we did all our farm chores we would need to do in order to leave like loading up the turkeys, locking up everything, feeding and checking on the chickens, watering the gardens and grabbing something to eat, “You really don’t leave very much do you?” And we replied, “Nope…I guess not!”

From fire pit up at house
View from halfway down the hill looking up

It’s pretty cool just hanging out on the property what with all that we have set in motion with the plants, animals and projects, but sometimes we do have to go out and face society/civilization again. Usually it is to restock on some supplies. As the list grows and grows, it finally comes to a point where we need to “go in to town.”

For instance today’s list for the trip to Mayaguez looked a little like this:

Walkie-talkies
Golf Balls
Bags of Cement
Toilet Paper
Posts
Screws
Nails
Screen doors
Fishing Line
Watch battery
Gear Shift Boot
Binoculars

Some of these are not for what you might think. The walkie-talkies are for communicating with each other when one of us is in one part of the property and the other is somewhere else, though we had a lot of fun messing with them while we were in the Mayaguez Mall sending out random “Código Rojo” calls.

Kitty and walkies
Kitty and the walkie-talkies

The golf balls were the hardest of all to find! We went to three stores looking for them! And we did not go on this crazy scavenger hunt because we are huge golf fans. (We in fact are laughably horrible at golf, but we have fun trying.) It is because we needed to use them as egg decoys to encourage the chickens to use the new nesting boxes.

golf ball
Golf ball in the nesting box!

The fishing line, similarly, is not for fishing but rather to keep the hawks away. Apparently from what we have read, hawks are reticent to enter any area that seems like a trap and so stringing fishing line is a deterrent. The binoculars are also to keep an eye out for hawks and iguanas in the trees as well as to bird watch. We have seen a little pitirre nest in the algarroba tree right above the chicken coop which is great because these little birds have been dive bombing the hawks left and right! Another great deterrent!

We ended up going to so many stores in order to get these and other items: Wal-Mart, Marshall’s, a watch repair kiosk, a fruit stand (inside the mall), a papa asada lunch cart, Radio Shack, Home Depot, Sports Connection, Triangle Motors, K-Mart, and Sam’s. After about 5 hours of running all around we were totally worn out by the time we got home.

We should be good now for a couple of weeks before we need to go back to Mayaguez for a supply run. We are in the early stages of building a turkey coop, so we needed some materials for that as well. We are going to re-use as much material as possible including some wood from the deck.

The turkeys are growing a lot and we know they will need a coop soon. They are so sweet and a lot different from chickens in how they respond to us. They like to sit in our laps and just be pet. They also just follow us around everywhere and always want to be near us when we take them on walks.  Something we could not have done with chickens at this age.

Britton Turkey walk
Taking the turkeys on a walk

All the running around in town with traffic, lines and people is such a drastic contrast to what we do most of the time, but it is fun in its own way. We are reminded of the larger area in which we live and all the vibrant characters all around and we are able to bring back supplies to keep our favorite things going and growing back at the finca.

chicken and pineapple These are a few of our favorite things!

 

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Flashback to Puerto Rico: August 12-14, 2005

This is the 5th Part in the Honeymoon Flashback Series. I would like to finish sharing this whole journal that we wrote on our honeymoon in 2005 before we leave to start our new Puerto Rico life adventure this fall 2013. Go here for Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4.

The Mofongo/Mango Mishap and Great Hunt for Chili’s

Friday we decided to stay another night in Rincon; we took a long walk down the beach barefoot and ran into some rocks that we had to walk up or swim around. It was fun, but with Britton’s sunburn he was a little sore and had to wear a shirt. After a nap we went up to a surfer bar called Calypso. It was somewhat expensive but fun -a lot of gringos apparently have bought in Rincon -some surfers, some investors, some snow birds, some retirees.


Rincon Sunset
Beautiful Sunsets in Rincon!

We slept in late Saturday and checked out of Coconut Palms -we decided since had slept so late that we would make a late night out of Saturday. We drove into Mayaguez, one of the bigger cities on this west side. We looked in a tourist magazine and saw that there was a Chili’s restaurant and since we had received a Chili’s gift card as a wedding gift, we drove around and around and around looking for that darn Chili’s!

We got caught in a huge rainstorm as we were looking. The rain looked like it was peeing from the buildings, people were putting whatever they could on their heads from boxes to plastic bags and the begging people in the middle of the street ran for shelter.

Since it was raining so bad we couldn’t find Chili’s and instead decided to go see a movie. I wanted to see The Island (since we were on an island) but it didn’t start until later so we saw Deuce Bigalow European Gigalow with Spanish subtitles which was more interesting than the movie itself.

We left and kept an eye out for Chili’s and tried to stop for gas at a gas station. I had started to feel really sick to my stomach. Maybe it was the mofongos we had eaten or maybe a mango from an Econo grocery store, but the navigator (me) was out of commission. I didn’t know whether I had nausea, diarrhea or just a weird hunger, but I felt horrible.

We continued on with me just sitting miserably in the passenger seat and Britton went to another gas station because the previous gas station had been flooded with water. At the new gas station I told Britton I had to use the bathroom one way or another or both.

So I very sickly got out of the car and looked inside the station. I asked in Spanish for the bathroom but the guy behind the glass just strangely looked at me. So I went back to the car and before we could drive away I opened the door and puked it all out -mangos, mofongos and all.

I felt a little better but I knew it wasn’t over. So we went to a nearby Baskin-Robbins and shared a banana split and I spent some time in the bathroom.

The kids that worked in Baskin Robbins said Chili’s was at a mall by Wendy’s and Church’s Chicken, but by then we were so spent driving around in circles that we just left Mayaguez and drove on to Cabo Rojo. We took a country dirt road around to an old water tower. We saw a little birthday party in progress. Since we never did find Chili’s we just stopped at a Little Caesar’s pizza place. They have no sales taxes here which is pretty cool. (Editor’s note: PR instituted a sales tax not long after we visited in 2005.)

We decided to drive back to Mayaguez and found the mall AND Chili’s! The mall, apparentely, is the place to be on a Saturday night. Everyone was out and they had some cool stores too. But it was closing so we decided to see a late movie -again! Wedding Crashers at 12:10am. It got out at 2am so we drove off to some neighborhood and just slept in the car. Well, it saved us at least $75-$100 in hotel costs! The first place we parked to sleep we were busted by a security guard, but then we found a nice quiet neighborhood. It was pretty fun as we settled in to our dreams to sounds of chirping frogs and insects.

100_1860
Deserted Beach somewhere in western PR (photo taken from top of car)

We woke up at about 6am to rooster crows and dogs barking. And so we drove down to a deserted beach. I don’t know how we found this beach but we slept some more and then went for a swim. The water was so clear. After a while we got moving and found ourselves at the Salt Bay -Bahia Salinas- and another dirt road that led to a beach right by the Cabo Rojo Lighthouse/Faro. It was really cool -we swam again for about an hour and we checked out the huge pile of salt that Morton’s Salt Co collects.

 100_1864100_1866One of the most beautiful beaches and water we saw near a salt collection site

 

We then drove to Parguera where we are now. The dock area was really neat and we ate Pinchos which are meat kabobs with bread on the end and a really good Pina Colada. We are now at a little guest house where we actually had to wake up the owner (in the middle of the day) to get a room. Well, we are up to date now. Tomorrow off to Ponce and the south of Puerto Rico.

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