Sunday, August 10

as in sky, so too at sea



The crows’ circling pattern,
high above us over the jungle-covered cliffs,
grew frenzied as the boat approached,
sea-faring visitors encroaching upon our horizon,
airborne strangers attacking their promised land in the sky.

As usual, they arrived in packs of pairs,
unmistakable squawks announcing their presence from afar.

Observed in isolation, their colors feel brilliant:
fiery red spicy, royal blue magnificent, 
glimmering gold and green in life's always celebration;
but outside their natural habitat,
inserted in our adopted seas,
all charm is lost
to their inability
to play by our rules of the game.

So don’t let their fancy-free feathers fool you,
these visitors are not your friends;
they have come to poach what’s yours,
and to re-poach each other’s prize,
stolen from our well-kept nest.

Black in solidarity,
the crows vied for position,
uncomfortable in the aggressive presence
of their unpredictable, non-native invaders.

The waves carried on below the birds,
perfect, inconsistent,
as we negotiated with the enemy
in glares and paddle-strokes;
waiting in baited breath
against their incessant chatter,
dissonant to our sacred space,
otherwise harmonious in silence,
the unspoken rule.

And finally,
with earsplitting croaks of defeat,
they left,
in the same packs of pairs as when they arrived;
the crows victorious in defending
their territory in the sky.

And once they’d gotten what they came for,
our poachers left, too,
back on their boat
in search of another spot to spoil,
just by being themselves
in our home away from home.

Scarlet macaws,
the Brazilian surfers of the sky.  

Saturday, August 2

the politics of surfing

finally, a guide to surfing etiquette we can trust.


designed by Ryland Cleveland and Rad Brosius for the Anthropology of Surfing, a 3-credit field course offered by the University of Georgia's Environmental Anthropology in Costa Rica Program. copyright 2014.