Category Archives: Pets and Animals

Bare-Handed Green Iguana Hunting and Catching

I had briefly mentioned it before, but one of my new pastimes is hunting and catching small green iguanas. Britton thinks I am crazy, but I really do like to do it. So far this has just been a catch and release practice, but maybe someday we will grill up some iguana tail pinchos (kabobs). These lizards are invasive to the island and are everywhere! There is hardly a day that goes by that we don’t see them on the ground or in the trees! So I have plenty of opportunities for the hunt.

Catching iguanas
An iguana and his tail

The key to catching these iguanas is to be quick and to divert their attention. You can’t be timid. You must strike like a ninja. I watched the white Garza (cattle egret) birds hunting for the geckos and found that they strike once and don’t waver.

Garza bird cattle egret
Watching these birds taught me a thing or two about lizard hunting. I can even catch the little gecko lizards as well

So I grab at the tail and hold on for dear life. They will twist and twist and try and snap at your fingers, but if you hang on to the top of the tail you will have him for as long as you want him. If he twists too much, he will break away the tail and run off. It is really weird when this happens because the tail keeps twitching and moving around like a snake for about 5 minutes! In this video, I had caught him but the tail twisted off so I tried again and scored!

The next level up would be to catch the big guys, but I am not sure I am quite ready to be grabbing at these ones just yet!

Lizard close up
A little meaner looking, doncha think?

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Cool Sights: Golden Basilica, Lightning Show and a Gecko with Chrysalis

We have seen some interesting and strange sights lately, but they are all sort of random. So, rather than making a separate post for each one, I thought I would just share the photos of them in this post.

The first sight was of a golden domed building off in the distance as we were driving to the nursery in Cabo Rojo. I asked Britton to go off track and so we checked it out.

Basilica small

It turned out that it was called Basilica Menor: Nuestra Señora de la Monserrate in Homigueros, Puerto Rico. We climbed the numerous steps to the top and looked out over the city and beyond. It was a beautiful little detour.

Jesus Hormigueros

The next cool sight was an awesome lightning show over Aguadilla bay one  night. I probably snapped about 100 photos before getting the timing right for this one.

Lightning
Lightning show

And finally, we were walking around checking on all the plants when I noticed a big green worm on the underside of a papaya leaf. We fed it to a turkey who had fun running around with it like it was a football. Then we looked under some other leaves and saw this fluffy chrysalis. We weren’t the only one to be interested in it. One of our ever-present gecko friends was checking it out as well.

Gecko and crysalis small
Gecko lizard and Chrysalis

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The Tortoise and the Pear

Here’s a little story about two new life forms in our little slice of jungle.

The first one was the “pear”. For the longest time we had never quite figured out what type of mystery fruit one of the trees up front was bearing. Whenever we would pick one of the kiwi looking fruits, it would start weeping lots of latex white sap. We tasted it and it was very astringent/bitter and super sticky.

What fruit

What in the world could it be? We recently started noticing a few of the fruits on the ground had been chewed on, we assume, by rats. So we looked in the tree and found that some of the fruits were actually soft! We picked some of them and cut them open.

Sapodilla nispero

They had about 3 shiny black seeds in each little fruit.  They smelled very sweet and no longer had the bitter taste or white sap leaking from them. I tasted it and the first thing I thought was that it tasted like a brown-sugar flavored pear. The skin was soft enough to eat and like a pear it had a sort of grainy, sandy quality to it. I was so excited about my find that I took a few slices down to Britton where he was chopping down some weedy trees. When he tasted it, he also exclaimed that this was probably our favorite “exotic” or new-to-us fruit we had ever tasted.

So I looked it up because we had heard from various visitors on the property (anyone and everyone, what type of tree is this??!) that it could be a mamey, a sapote or a nispero. I searched and searched and finally found what I believe it is. A manilkara zapota, commonly called sapodilla or nispero in Puerto Rico! Yum. Now we just have to figure out how to harvest them when they are ripe enough to pick, but not so ripe that the birds and rats eat them first.

turkeys and turtle

Our second find of the jungle recently was a big surprise! We were working down below in the quebrada (gulley). The turkeys were of course with us, as they always are when we are outside. I heard them making their bubble sounds which mean that they have found something they don’t understand but that it isn’t something dangerous to them. I looked where they were beeping and found…a beautiful turtle!

Tortoise

I was so happy about finding the turtle (well, ok, the turkeys found it) that I again had to yell and show Britton. We both enjoyed looking at and holding him.

Cassie and Turtle

I am still not exactly sure what type it is but I think I have narrowed it down to an Eastern Box Turtle. I didn’t even know that Puerto Rico had wild land turtles! So cool! I hope we see him and his family down in the quebrada again.

We live in such a magical place. We absolutely love it.

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Completion of a Turkey Coop!

Cassie and I worked all day yesterday to get the turkey coop painted using up the existing paint we had on hand, framing/cutting out the windows and putting up the final touches including the trim.  It was a pretty long day, we started working ~9am and didn’t finish until around 4 in the afternoon.

Again, a lot of time working on the coop has been spent reusing old materials which adds a lot of work but saves a lot of money.  In the end it is worth it to us.

Turkey Coop Finished (2)

We built this coop to have a similar design to our chicken coop as that design has worked out well.  This coop has a screen door to add a bit more airflow and we didn’t have an extra door laying around. There is also a trap door on the floor of this coop so that we can someday enclose the base with chicken wire and have the turkeys raise their poults underneath without fear of the hawks.  They will still need to sleep in the coop due to rats, but they will have space to dust bathe in and peck around.

We used materials from the wood house’s deck as that deck will be replaced with new lumber, and I even grabbed T-111 sheets from the upstairs bedroom.  The paint for the turkey coop was leftover from painting our cabana and the blue trim leftover from the chicken coop.  All in all we spent less than $100 on the new coop.  In new materials we estimate it would have cost close to $1000 which would have been waaayyy too much for us to spend on a coop.

Paint makes such a difference.  We know this as we have done many a remodel project but yet it still amazes us.  Before painting the coop it looked like a true to life hillbilly shack complete with a hillbilly.
BK Turkey Coop

The Turkeys are now moved in which is great because they are growing fast and have outgrown the turkey cage/tractor we had them in.  They were having to crouch to get around and there wasn’t adequate space to keep a full size feeder and waterer so we were having to check on them multiple times a day.  The coop will not only make the turkeys happier but also will be less work.

Turkey Coop Chicken Coop
Space Between (click to enlarge)

We left quite a bit of tree nursery space between the two coops.  We haven’t ever raised turkeys so we actually weren’t too sure how much space if any was needed.  It is possible to have them co-exist in the same coop but there are chicken to turkey diseases that can be transmitted.

We are happy with the results and figure for a turkey coop, the turkeys have a pretty nice crib.
Turkey Coop Finished

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