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Showing posts with label Lower Mainland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lower Mainland. Show all posts

Sunday, January 12, 2020

Eyes on Costa Rica and Weather Records - December 2019

During December, visits to this blog were received from the following 15 countries:


The total number of countries from which visits have been received increased to 129 in December, the most recent being Seychelles identified above.  Seychelles is a group of islands in the Indian Ocean off the coast of East Africa. The location of the visit from that country was Victoria (the capital city).

The following is a summary of weather for the month in the area where we live:


When you have lived in Costa Rica for as long as we have, you become acclimatized. Higher outdoor temperatures such as 85°F and above are not as uncomfortable as they felt "up north" where we once lived. Conversely, lower outdoor temperatures such as 60°F and below now feel outright cold in Costa Rica. Up north, such temperatures often felt mild and refreshing, particularly after a long winter.

One of the most miserable weather days that we encountered so far in Costa Rica was in early December. There was 24 hour cloud cover and drizzling rain all day. The high temperature was only 70°F (rare at our altitude). With some big differences, this was reminiscent of experiences with December weather in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia, Canada and the Pacific Northwest in the U.S. The differences were that it was happily a one off day. Up north, this kind of weather can prevail day after day ad nauseam in the winter. Also, the high temperatures up north in December can often be very near or below freezing.

With regard to rain, we have now clearly entered the throes of the dry season. There were only a few days in December with measurable rain. In the coming months, that few will likely become less or none at all. The following is a summary of the rainfall amounts in our area for the entire year 2019:


A treat at this time of year is to see the poro trees blooming with their bright orange flowers.


Friday, March 25, 2011

Tools Going to Fiji

Can you believe it? All our tools and related thingies (as I call them) are headed to Fiji.

I threw everything remotely connected to manly building activities in a big plastic bin, threw two tool chests on top of it and posted it on CraigsList. I stressed that everything had to be taken - no rooting through the bin and selecting some, discarding others, then offering me ten bucks.

The nice fellow who took it all comes from Fiji and is returning there with his family. He has been in Canada for 18 years and is fed up with the congestion of people and traffic in the Lower Mainland. Pollution is also a factor for him. We can relate to how he is feeling.

He has a big container that he's shipping to Fiji but it is only half full right now so adding tools is no problem. Apparently tools are rather expensive to buy there - I suppose because such things have to be imported.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Stuff Finds Ideal Home

Our friends, Maeghan and Jim, live in the Okanagan area of British Columbia on a lovely piece of country property. What a perfect home for our gardening tools and related items. Maeghan also inherited a lot of stuff that, technically, really didn't come under the heading of "gardening".

Ah well, that's what happens when a woman isn't there to take control of what her husband is putting into his truck and I am there to dictate what is going into the truck.

Here are some pictures of Jim putting on a smiling face after we rousted him up bright and early on a Saturday morning. He had driven all the way down from the Interior to the Lower Mainland the day before. Thanks, Jim and Maeghan!