Nicaragua Kayaks, Tours, & Culture

Nicaragua Kayaks, Tours, & Culture
Tortuga Booluda, Leon

La Griteria - Leon, Nicaragua

Tonight was the night to arrive in Leon, Nicaragua. Tonight it was better to forget about hollow responsibilities and to instead surrender to the finer things in life. It was the celebration of “La Griteria”, Mother Mary, the Virgin. Maybe I just really appreciate that it is all about “The Lady”. Maybe I am just looking for something bigger than myself. With so many things that leave a feeling hollow and empty, what do I want to believe in?

For the next two days, the people of Nicaragua will believe in La Griteria. They are celebrating Her miracles and all other things feminine and “purissima”. Generosity, consideration, sympathy, and gratitude.

I do not know about organized religion, but I do feel the power of ideals, community, and traditions. Come with me….

At noon today, there were seven minutes of uninterrupted fireworks. Preparations were underway. In case you don’t know the practical use of fireworks, other than the celebration of a nation’s independence, the sparkles and chimes are to gain the attention of Mother Mary herself. We can all imagine that she is very busy, the ultimate multi-tasker, and we must ask her to focus on Mother Earth for at least this one moment in time….so that we can give our thanks.

As darkness fell, hundreds of people gathered in El Parque Central. The grand exterior, peeling with the passage of time, was lit in white and bled with song. The anticipation thick in the streets did not go unanswered.

 
As if according to the celestial clock of Mary herself, the fireworks launched themselves throughout the city, over the cathedral, simultaneous with the six o’clock bell. I mean, these flashes and bursts were everywhere, small and unyielding, constant, unbelievable, even to themselves. Two men swung from ropes ringing the church bells, oscillating up and down like a cartoon animation. It was so loud, and it seemed endless, but how else can we communicate with Her on a night just like any other, according to Her grand scheme?

A man leaps in the air just outside of the cathedral, inside a wooden dragon (shaped more like a soap box derby race sled), which is upside down on his head, littered with sparklers and live firecrackers. The fires spew into the crowd, arousing squeals and yelps as actual flames land throughout the audience. This escapade lasts for more than thirty minutes, and the chaos of fire and flight creates a scene of almost comic benevolence. Everyone moves closer towards the light.

Ten more minutes of booming illumination, as the parade of patrons begins to wander, first to the alter just inside the cathedral, where Mary is surrounded by flowers, candles, and a musical rendition of the sort crossed between a carousel soundtrack and a toy store.  Mary has a giant, bloody heart above her golden crown.

The parade moves onward to home after building for the rest of the night - past two o’clock in the morning from what I've been told.  Imagine a Christian version of our more hedonistic celebration of Halloween.  Churches, general stores, private homes, sheds, and cyber-cafes have been decorated individually and together with similar themes and detailed variation.  Mother Mary is the star, surrounded by flowers, candles, and handmade adornments.

 

Children, the poor, loved ones, and community members charge the stations of "La Griteria". They gritan - or yell - "Quien causa tanta alegria?" (Who is the cause of so much happiness?), and are promptly answered by "La Concepcion de Maria!"

For songs and screams by the mob of patrons spew fruit, candy, tupperware, the traditional foods, soap, glassware, autographed copies of a Mary poster limited edition, chewing gum, toys, and noisy, handcrafted instruments. Children wear crowns that suspiciously resemble the feathers of an Indian chief headdress. It goes around and around like a record on the wrong speed. The fireworks boom overhead, and whisps of colorful lights flicker incongruent to the grandeur of the scene.

Remember that we are giving and consuming here. I mean, the streets are packed!
Just before midnight, the neighborhoods have not dwindled in their pluck and energy. (In fact, it is somehow even more alive than before). With this heightened force of fervor and life comes an unspoken need for some giant release.
At the strike of the hour, the gong of the cathedral bells answer this plea for liberation, and the lights and sounds of pyrotechnics emit thanks with fury and passion for longer than I know.


The streets everywhere in a community of 180,000 are filled with smoke, on every corner, and in every barrio. I can taste it, smell it, and feel it burning my eyes. Visionless, there is no longer room to startle. Only to persevere, like the fires and sparks. Whispy and colorful, jousting with the endless night sky.

The people light firecrackers on the streets in every neighborhood, in and amongst traffic and crowds and small children. In no way is this experience OSHA approved. They behave as if this is their very last chance to gain the attention of Our Lady, because they do not stop, against the odds of poverty and the limitations of a developing world. Persistent and hopeful.

Yet it is also never an exorbitant spectacle.

I can not help but think of the United States’ CIA and Marine Corps versus Augusto Cesar Sandino and the campesinos. I mean, I can watch the young man light the spark and throw the rocket and return to the next before reveling in the first. It’s happening on every street corner for miles. This display of faith and passion does not entail mile-long, comet trails via remote-sensing, target acquisitions weapons software. This is not a disney display with synchronized, orchestral, technicolor dreams. This spectacle somehow maintains a powerful intimacy…small, whispy and colorful. But pounding, repetitive, and steady. Invigorating because of its duration and spirit.

I wonder if I can feel something different in the air. Mary, are you listening? Because this all must be ending soon. I mean, the people here have so little.

But for endless moments, the light show does not stop. And the people are staring with their eyes to the sky, and rocking on their porch, and kissing their sweethearts, and thanking Mary for her kindness and love. The dogs on the street only wish for peace to rest their skeleton frames.

I can only thank Mary, for all of Her blessed miracles.

Nicaragua Tours in Pacific Coast Mangroves

Kayaking in the mangroves of the Padre Ramos Nature Reserve on the Pacific Coast of Nicaragua is special to me. When I silently pass dugout canoes and 'lanchas' with waves and smiles, I note the coolers full of red snapper on their way to market in Managua, the United States, and Japan. This enormous estuary and nature reserve is very special because of the fish, birds, crabs, shrimp, sea turtles, caimans, and fishing communities that intrinsically rely on the mangrove ecosystem for their survival.


Did you know that 75% of all tropical commercial fish species pass part of their lives in the mangroves for shelter and food? (At least 50% of my life is there too!)

I am a wildlife biologist, so I highly recommend you visit the Mangrove Action Project for information about mangrove biology and conservation. They have recommendations for conserving these precious places, and they share incredible truths too. For example...

Traditional and indigenous coastal populations have found sustenance from mangroves for thousands of years, collecting products and resources in a sustainable manner. Mangroves are useful for firewood, medicinces, fibers, dyes, food, charcoal, and construction materials.


In the federally protected Estero Padre Ramos Nature Reserve, people are not permitted to harvest wood from mangroves for any reason. However, there is no funding for enforcing the federal laws, so some 'poaching' is inevitable.

We are all very much connected to the survival of these healthy and wild places! I would love to show you around my neighborhood anytime! http://www.ibiskayaking.com/

Nicaragua Sea Turtles & Conservation

Three species of endangered sea turtles nest and forage in the waters of the Estero Padre Ramos Nature Reserve. They dine on the fish, shrimp, anemones, and jellyfish in the salty waters of the Pacific and rely on the sandy beaches to lay their precious eggs between July and November. Eggs hatch and tortugitas scramble for the ocean in November and December. Leatherbacks are the most highly endangered of all the species, with fewer than 2000 nesting females remaining in the entire Pacific Ocean.

Sea turtles are threatened from industrial fishing fleets off the coast of Central America in search of tuna, shark and swordfish. These ships directly catch and kill tens of thousands of individuals every year with their hooks and nets. Sea turtle eggs are also a precious commodity in local coastal communities, where locals harvest the eggs illegally for sale and consumption.
Leatherback Sea Turtle - Common Name
Tortuga Tora - Spanish Name

Hawksbill Sea Turtle - Common Name
Tortuga Carey - Spanish Name

Olive Ridley Sea Turtle - Common Name
Tortuga Paslama - Spanish Name

Most commonly, we see adult and juvenile hawksbill sea turtles swimming in the estuary.

A Life & Kayak in Nicaragua, Central America

My home is the Estero Padre Ramos Nature Reserve, one of the most ecologically important natural areas in Nicaragua and one of the largest mangrove estuaries left in Central America.  There are more than 200 species of birds, 3 species of sea turtles, iguanas, conch, mollusks, crabs, caimans, crocodiles, butterflies, tubeworms, and fish galore. The locals call it “la cuna” or the cradle, because it is home to an abundance of young and small creatures in its shallow, saline waters.


The estuary and nature reserve are mi "casa-sweet-casa" on the Pacific Coast. For the past four California winters, I have lived kayaking in a rural fishing village with little to no electricity, running water, and refrigeration. The land is rich to grow food, and the estuary is abundant for small-scale fishing practices. When I am paddling, I am passing hand-carved dugout canoes and young people swimming along the shore. Or an occasional heron, ibis, or jumping fish. The vista varies from overhanging channels deep in the mangroves to long coastal stretches with only sand and surf. It is dry tropical, welcoming, and my own version of a real paradise.

* The Nature Reserve includes >22,500 acres or 9000 hectares of mangrove forest, mudflat, sandy beach, rocky reef, and estuarine water. It measures between 3 to 5 miles across and is 18 miles long. That’s a lot of kayaking.

* The Estero’s shoreline is home to approximately 150 dispersed families who rely on the local, natural resources for their livelihoods. Fishing, clamming, and harvesting wood is crucial to the survival of the rural community.http://www.ibiskayaking.com/