Archive for August, 2009

Discounted Spanish Classes in Costa Rica

Monday, August 31st, 2009

costaricaInstituto de Español Costa Rica (IECR) has just launched a discount campaign for all accredited participants (promotional code given in our volunteer guides) of Volunteer Latin America. They are offering a 25% discount on all their Spanish programmes for the months of October and November.

IECR organizes short and long term, intensive, language immersion programmes for people interested in studying Spanish. They offer individual or group classes combined with cultural activities such as Latin dance and Costa Rican cooking. They also offer specialised programmes designed for professionals and students with particular needs (business people, sales representatives, medical students, doctors, missionaries, foreign language teachers, lawyers, attorneys, etc).

Discounted Spanish Classes in Ecuador

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

cotopaxiAndean Global Studies is offering scholarship support for our volunteers. They are offering a 40% discount on Spanish immersion classes in 2009 and a 30% discount in 2010. The offer only applies to their school in Quito for a duration of 2 to 5 weeks. You need to send them an email stating you are an accredited participant (promotional code given in our volunteer guides) of Volunteer Latin America and are interested in attaining a scholarship. Andean Global Studies is also offering volunteers a 10% discount for their programmes in Cuenca, Manta and Montañita.

Andean Global Studies is an official institution recognized by the Ecuadorian Ministry of Education, with a highly professional team of Spanish instructors with many years of teaching experience. Andean Global Studies (AGS) is widely recognized throughout the internet and within international guidebooks. They are recommended by organizations such as South American Explorers Club and the Empresa Metropolitana de Turismo de Quito (Governmental and Official Tourism Developer Institution), and are member and founder of the Ecuadorian Association of Spanish Language Centres (AECEE).

Next Solar Eclipse: Argentina, Chile and Easter Island

Friday, August 21st, 2009

solareclipseThe next total solar eclipse will occur on 11th July 2010 and the umbral shadow will pass mostly through the Pacific Ocean. The total solar eclipse will begin at 18.15.15 GMT in the Pacific Ocean, north-east of New Zealand, will travel across the ocean and ultimately will end in Patagonia which is the southernmost part of South America, at 20.51.42 GMT. Thus, the eclipse can be viewed from several small islands in French Polynesia like the Tuamotu and Easter Island. The eclipse will end just off the coast of Southern Argentina and Chile, as the sun will set in a spectacular ‘Black Sunset.’ Black Sunset because exactly at the time of the sunset, the Moon will cover the almighty Sun completely. So make your plans for a trip to Argentina, Chile or Easter Island and experience the beauty of an eclipse.

New Monkey Discovered In Brazil

Friday, August 21st, 2009

newmonkeyA new monkey has been discovered in a remote region of the Amazon in Brazil, according to the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) .

The monkey is related to saddleback tamarins, which include several species of monkeys known for their distinctively marked backs. The newly described distinct subspecies was first seen by scientists on a 2007 expedition into the state of Amazonas in northwestern Brazil.

Researchers have dubbed the monkey Mura’s saddleback tamarin (saguinus fuscicollis mura) named after the Mura Indians, the ethnic group of Amerindians of the Purus and Madeira river basins where the monkey was found. Historically this tribe was spread through the largest territory of any of the Amazonian Indigenous peoples, extending from the Peruvian frontier today (Rio Yavari) east to the Rio Trombetas.

The saguinus fuscicollis mura saddleback tamarin is mostly gray and dark brown in color, with a distinctly mottled “saddle.” It weighs 213 grams (less than ¾ of a pound) and is 240 millimeters (9 inches tall) with a 320 millimeter (12.6 inch) tail.

“The Wildlife Conservation Society is extremely proud to be part of this exciting discovery in the Amazon,” said Dr. Avecita Chicchon, Director of WCS’s Latin America Programs. “We hope that the discovery will draw attention to conservation in this very fragile but biodiverse region.”

According to the study’s authors, the Mura’s saddleback tamarin is threatened by several planned development projects in the region, particularly a major highway cutting through the Amazon that is currently being paved. Conservationists fear the highway could fuel wider deforestation in the Amazon over the next two decades. Other threats to the region include a proposed gas pipeline and two hydroelectric dams currently in the beginning stages of construction.

“This newly described monkey shows that even today there are still major wildlife discoveries to be made,” said the study’s lead author, Fabio Röhe of the Wildlife Conservation Society. “This discovery should serve as a wake-up call that there is still so much to learn from the world’s wild places, yet humans continue to threaten these areas with destruction.”

The saguinus fuscicollis mura discovery was published in the June online edition of the International Journal of Primatology. Authors of the study include Fabio Röhe of the Wildlife Conservation Society, José de Sousa e Silva Jr. of Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Ricardo Sampaio of the Instituto Nacional de Parquisas de Amaozônia, and Anthony B. Rylands of Conservation International.

Mosquitoes threaten Galapagos Islands

Friday, August 21st, 2009

mosquitoA mosquito that has lived on the Galapagos Islands for thousands of years is emerging as a potential threat to the archipelago’s wildlife, because of an increase in tourism.

Scientists fear the endemic insect could pick up diseases from other mainland mosquitoes brought to the Galapagos as stowaways on tourist ships and planes and then transmit the infections to the rare collection of indigenous animals on the islands.

The black salt marsh mosquito distributed throughout the Galapagos is highly unusual because it can feed on the blood of reptiles as well as mammals and birds. But its diverse diet means it could transmit introduced diseases such as West Nile fever to the islands’ rare birds and reptiles which include the giant tortoise, the marine iguana and the flightless cormorant.

One of the greatest fears is that with a boom in tourism to the region, mosquitoes infected with West Nile fever could be introduced to the islands, where they might infect local animals to create a reservoir of disease that the black salt marsh mosquito could then spread throughout the archipelago.

Analysis of the black salt marsh mosquito’s DNA found it must have lived on the islands for about 200,000 years.

On the mainland, the same species of mosquito lives on the blood of birds and mammals but in the Galapagos it has evolved to also live on a diet of reptilian blood, presumably because of the relative shortage of birds, said Arnaud Bataille, from the University of Leeds and the Zoological Society of London. “When we started the work we thought that this species was also introduced by humans [about 200 years ago], so it was a surprise that it turned out to be so ancient,” Dr Bataille said.

“The genetic differences of the Galapagos mosquitoes from their mainland relatives are as large as those between different species, suggesting that the mosquito in Galapagos may be in the process of evolving into a new species.”

The scientists also found that the mosquito, unlike its mainland counterpart which is normally confined to mangroves and coastal salt marshes, has also become adapted to living and breeding in inland sites and at relatively high altitudes, making it widespread throughout the archipelago.

Two other species of mosquito are found in the Galapagos but both are recent introductions and do not seem to live outside of the main centres, suggesting that they are less of a threat to wildlife, Dr Bataille said.

“They are limited to where you find humans and they don’t move much away from humans, so they won’t have as big an impact on spreading disease on to wildlife,” he said.

The study, which is published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, concluded that the growth in the number of people visiting the Galapagos Islands as tourists raises the likelihood of mainland mosquitoes infected with wildlife diseases such as avian malaria and West Nile fever making it to the archipelago, accompanied by tourists. West Nile fever has already spread across North America and South America.

“With tourism growing so rapidly, the chance of a disease-carrying mosquito hitching a ride from the mainland on a plane is also increasing, since the number of flights grows in line with visitor numbers,” said Andrew Cunningham, from the Zoological Society of London, the co-author of the study.

“If a new disease arrives via this route, the fear is that the Galapagos’ own mosquitoes would pick it up and spread it throughout the archipelago.”

The scientists said that rather than controlling the islands’ own mosquito, there should be a concerted effort to stop mainland mosquitoes being carried on ships and planes.

Lion’s Den (Leonera)

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

lionsdenLion’s Den (Argentina), Pablo Trapero’s strongly sympathetic story of an imprisoned young mother struggling to keep custody of her newborn son and free them both, is our ‘one to watch’ for August.

Tragic and ill-fated Julia awakens on a bloodstained pillow with no memory of the murder she may or may not have committed the night before. Tried for the brutal stabbing of her lover and his cohort, the newly pregnant protagonist of Pablo Trapero’s fifth feature must wait out a complicated trial process in prison custody, confined to a specialized ward for expectant women, mothers and their children. Offering a stark glimpse into the harsh struggle to raise and maintain a child in the Argentine prison system, Lion’s Den follows Julia’s transformation over a period of years from vulnerable and damaged youth to a loving mother determined to nourish and protect her innocent offspring in an environment of unimaginable squalor.

Argentine writer/director Trapero crafts a vigorously raw yet ultimately redemptive tale of the tenderness that can triumph and bloom in the most harrowing circumstances and hardship, anchored by a stunningly ferocious performance from Martina Gusman who brings a rich intensity to the victimized Julia. With skilled precision and sobering focus, Trapero elevates the female prison picture into a work of remarkable sensitivity. Much of Lion’s Den was shot in maximum security prisons, utilizing staff and inmates in supporting roles.

Andy Palacio & The Garifuna Collective – Wátina

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

andypalacioA stunning album featuring a multigenerational, all-star lineup of musicians from the African-Amerindian Garifuna communities of Belize, Guatemala, and Honduras. Filled with enchanting rhythms, powerful melodies and a deep soulfulness that recalls Cape Verdean or Afro-Peruvian music, Wátina has been praised by media worldwide as one of the best world music albums in recent memory, Wátina is the masterwork of the late Andy Palacio, whose sudden death in January 2008 shocked his homeland of Belize and the international music community.

Support Brands Not Tested on Animals

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

vivisectionIn 1988, I chose to spend an evening viewing Victor Schonfeld’s “The Animals Film.” This was a strange and revelatory experience. Sitting in front of a small screen, the history of animal exploitation flickered before my eyes. From the first steps in the 1930’s when farm animals were crowded indoors for reasons other than winter, to dog and cock fighting, bear baiting, fox hunting and hare coursing, to name but a few. I already knew of this – who doesn’t – but I wasn’t prepared for one of the most disturbing examples of humanities grim cruelty toward animals, vivisection. Until then, I had an image of science as a dynamic, progressive, frontier-expanding activity, and of its practitioners as dedicated teams of rational, open-minded professionals whose motivation was highly moral and whose concern was to benefit humanity. Much of the evidence presented in this film suggested quite the contrary, with the main beneficiary of these tests being the company profit margin.

It is not difficult to understand why animals are treated so indifferently in a society where the powerful minority holds the majority in similar contempt. What is hard is to break the circle of unthinking cruelty, and this can only be done as people begin to question the accepted values of our way of life and the grim fact of our endemic destructiveness. Here, as with other conflicts, we must build our conceptual bridges with the resources of our age. Puzzling and agonizing though these clashes often are, we know we must somehow deal with them by working out; how we should ideally think about the world and relate to animals.

The way we think about the world has a fundamental impact on decisions concerning the treatment of animals and our relationship with them. Given the importance of this, it is somewhat surprising to contemplate that the majority of people never question the way they think about the world. In many cases the world is a place where everything is ‘natural’ and ‘inevitable.’ We seem to have an astonishing ability to close our eyes to the truth, to live in a world of delusions and make-believe. These characteristics, shared to a greater or lesser extent by all of us, have helped to create a sick planet and a great deal of suffering to animals.

If everybody showed respect and had compassion for the nonhuman world, the earth would then undoubtedly become a more balanced and healthier place to live. Furthermore, if people maintain that compassion they will automatically free themselves from their mental patterns of ignorance. Knowing what is beneficial to yourself and others, and being able to do it, is wisdom, which cuts through our fundamental ignorance. Indeed, “The greatest knowledge we can posses, Socrates maintained, the only knowledge that matters a damn, is the awareness of our boundless, fathomless ignorance.”

Essentially, what needs to be done is not that particularly difficult, it is just a matter of a simple turn-around in attitude. Just because the way we think about animals has been inoculated culturally (and not programmed into us genetically as those who take part in blood sports occasionally claim), does not mean the disease is not treatable. If changed attitudes then lead not only changes in our personal lives but also to policy changes at the corporate and government level, indeed we have cause for hope. As civilisations advance, the trend must always be toward increasing humanity and compassion, and deceasing cruelty and exploitation.

People need to educate themselves about vivisection and pass on this information to friends and family. It is only our ignorance on the issue that perpetuates this cruel and barbaric practice. Something can always be done if the will of the majority dictates it. You can find out more about vivisection on the following websites:

  • British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (www.buav.org)
  • Dr Hadwen Trust (www.drhadwentrust.org)
  • Doctors and Lawyers for Responsible Medicine (www.dlrm.org)
  • FRAME (www.frame.org.uk)
  • National Anti-Vivisection Society (www.navs.org.uk)
  • People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (www.peta.org.uk)
  • The Humane Research Trust (www.humaneresearch.org.uk)
  • Uncaged (www.uncaged.co.uk).

There is also a selection of informative short videos on You Tube, just enter vivisection or animal testing/experimentation.

One of the most effective ways of turning changed attitudes into positive, concrete actions is by buying products not tested on animals. The grim fact is that all too many companies still test their final products and ingredients on live animals. Buying products that are cruelty free demonstrates to those companies that continue to test that you will not be supporting them. Nowadays, it’s very easy to find products not tested on animals and these can easily be found on the internet, in whole-food and ‘alternative’ shops, and increasingly in some supermarkets (i.e. all Co-op own brands are not tested on animals).

  • Caring Consumer (www.caringconsumer.com)
  • Go Crulety Free (www.gocrueltyfree.org)
  • Leaping Bunny (www.leapingbunny.org)
  • Uncaged (www.uncaged.co.uk/crueltyfree.htm)

Unlike so many other animal abuses, the issue of using animals in product testing is one that ultimately rests with consumers. Reliance on animal testing methods for cosmetic and household products will continue unless concerned citizens speak out with their purchasing power. By making informed humane choices and encouraging others to do the same, individuals can push for an end to product testing and stop the needless suffering of countless animals each year.

Laboratory animals do not have a voice, so we must use our purchasing power to speak out for them.

Music of Latin America

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

gotanprojectMusic is unavoidable in Latin America and this is great news for world music aficionados. We have added many gems to our collection over the years such as ‘Magalenha’ by Sergio Mendes and ‘Gracias a la Vida’ by Mercedes Sosa. From the beautiful and complex sound of tango, to the pulsating sound of samba, to the distinctive and haunting sound of traditional Andean music, you are sure to find some good tunes if you look hard enough.

Every month, we’ll select an album from our collection for your listening pleasure.