Cayo Scoop! The Ecology of Cayo Culture
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Cayo Scoop!  The Ecology of Cayo Culture
All the positive news and events from Cayo, with a special focus on culture, past, present, and future.
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Camp Macaw - Protecting the Chiquibul

Camp Macaw - Protecting the Chiquibul | Cayo Scoop!  The Ecology of Cayo Culture | Scoop.it

The Magazine of the Audubon Society has an article about Scarlet Six, and their efforts to protect the Scarlet Macaws throughout the Chiquibul.  Great story, with vivid pictures. 

 

"Meet the Brave Bodyguards Protecting Belize’s Scarlet Macaws From Poachers  To keep macaw chicks safe, a team of rangers spends night and day watching over the birds’ nests and homes.   The Scarlet Macaw’s last, best defense against wildlife poachers doesn’t look like much: just a ramshackle collection of tarps, makeshift tables, plastic five-gallon buckets, jungle hammocks, and a cook fire, hidden in the dense understory of a tropical hardwood forest near the fraught and uncomfortably porous border between Belize and Guatemala...

 

Scarlet Six Biomonitoring Team is a group of roughly a dozen conservation-minded Belizeans (and one American) who are bent on protecting Belize’s Scarlet Macaw from the illegal pet trade. To deter poachers—and monitor the nests for productivity data—the Scarlet Six rangers set up camps in the Chiquibul Forest, right under the trees where macaws nest. There they live for the five months of chick-rearing season, roughly late April through September. If it sounds slightly nuts, it’s because it is—one of the purest distillations of brute-force conservation imaginable. But apparently it’s also not nuts, because it works: Macaw nests are no longer being poached in the areas where the rangers roost."

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Scarlet Macaws Taking Flight

Scarlet Macaws Taking Flight | Cayo Scoop!  The Ecology of Cayo Culture | Scoop.it

Nature news of the day.  Some of the scarlet macaws have left their nests.to go out and start a family of their own.  Big up to Scarlet Six, FCD, and the BWRC, whose update says it all. 


"Two weeks ago we went in with Dr. Isabelle Paquet-Durand of the Belize Wildlife and Referral Clinic and our colleagues from FCD for a health check on our chicks at Scarlet Creek.  They looked really healthy and sharp and close to fledging.  Well, first one left the nest on Tuesday and the second one fledged on Wednesday!  This is what real conservation can do for endangered species.  Thanks again to our colleagues at FCD and BWRC.  5 more chicks to go!

"

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Scarlet Six Crowdfunding Campaign

Scarlet Six Crowdfunding Campaign | Cayo Scoop!  The Ecology of Cayo Culture | Scoop.it


The Scarlet Six Biomonitoring Team is trying to raise money to help save the Scarlet Macaws in the Chiquibul National Park.  Check out their crowdfunding page, and help them if you can. 


"Scarlet Six Biomonitoring Team is a small but dedicated group of Belizeans working to save the last remaining Scarlet Macaws in the remote Maya Mountains of Belize.  Help us raise money for a long-range radio communication system which will enable the team to quickly and effectively communicate in cases of medical emergencies and poacher activity in these remote areas.  This radio system will include a base radio, car battery, extendable antenna, programming, and hand held units for the field crew."


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BWRC Hangs Out

BWRC Hangs Out | Cayo Scoop!  The Ecology of Cayo Culture | Scoop.it

The Belize Wildlife Referral Clinic crew practiced with the tree climbing equipment in order to prepare for the climb up to the nests of some of their 'patients.'  The BWRC works with Scarlet 6, and monitors and does check ups on Scarlet Macaws, which can have nests located high up.  Looks like they had fun during their practice.


"There is rarely time for boredom at BWRC.  But thanks to our friends Charles Britt and Kristi Drexler the entire staff and intern crew (including even Dr. I, only missing Dr. Z who joined the students at CBS and the Belize Zoo VIP tour) had an awesome morning practicing with tree climbing equipment!  We will go wherever we need to go to come to the rescue, thanks to our friends, staff and other supporters.  More pictures to follow later..."

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BWRC and Chiquibul Scarlet Macaws

BWRC and Chiquibul Scarlet Macaws | Cayo Scoop!  The Ecology of Cayo Culture | Scoop.it

Feelgood news of the day.  The BWRC teamed up with Scarlet Six and FCD to go check on the Scarlet Macaws in the Chiquibul Forest.  Dr. Isabelle Pacquet Durand gives a wonderful account of the trip to do some check ups.

 

"Muddy holidays with grey skies in Belize aside... 2013 has been an incredible year!  One blog could not summarize it.  So, as done in many regards during this year, I shall focus on individual, positive activities.  The world seems full of bad news and negativity and I believe this rarely leads to positive outcomes.  I prefer positive news, in order to hopefully inspire more of you to join in and to help one of the many individuals and organizations protecting nature, and wildlife, and ultimately your own existence."

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Volunteering with S6 in the Chiquibul

Volunteering with S6 in the Chiquibul | Cayo Scoop!  The Ecology of Cayo Culture | Scoop.it

Eco Camino has a great article about spending time with the Scarlet Six Biomonitoring Team in the Chiquibul Forest Reserve.  They got some amazing pictures from the journey.  Keep up the great work!  Protect the Chiquibul!


"Eco Camino is proud to say that it was a nice opportunity to volunteer with S6 -Scarlet Six, during two consecutive weeks in the Chiquibul Forest Reserve.  I had never seen Scarlet Macaws in the wild and the most amazing thing was, first to see 16 of them all at once, second to see them flying over my head while bathing in the Raspaculo River, a branch of the Macal River.  The Macaws generally come in the Chiquibul during the breeding season which extends from April to September.  The rest of the year, they migrate to Red Bank, in the Stann Creek district from early January to March.  The reason of this migration is to feed on the clay where they can extract minerals from it.  This will further help with the development of calcium for their eggs.  It usually takes 12 to 13 weeks before a chick can fledge from its nest -the nest being a cavity in a Quam trees."

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Scarlet Six Checks Chiquibul

Scarlet Six Checks Chiquibul | Cayo Scoop!  The Ecology of Cayo Culture | Scoop.it

The Scarlet Six have been in the Chiquibul to check up on some of the scarlet macaws.  Cuteness follows.


"The S6 Crew came out today after two weeks of monitoring in the depths of the Chiquibul.  Good and bad news.  BAD first - One chick which is the furthest out of our protection grid was poached.  GOOD - Two chicks at Scarlet Creek are almost ready to fledge, these would be the first for the season, while another two fully developed, follow close behind."

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Cayo International Film Festival

Cayo International Film Festival | Cayo Scoop!  The Ecology of Cayo Culture | Scoop.it

The Cayo Film Festival was this weekend, and it was another impressive cultural event at the Cayo Welcome Center.  They screened the documentaries from the Belize Documentary Film Field Course, along with Kurse a di Ixtabi, it's documentary, Creative Kaos, and many more. 


"Check this out!  First ever CAYO FILM Festival.  Great job Daniel Velazquez!  Short films from Richard and Carol Farneti Foster and Ilana Lapid's NMSU's Creative Media students are being shown - as well as other films like Charles Britt and Roni Martinez' Scarlet Six project, Isabelle Paquet-Durand's wildlife medicine clinic, and Matt's feature-length "Curse of the Ixtabi".  So...incredibly...cool. "

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Scarlet Six in the Chiquibul

Wondering about what the Scarlet Six Biomonitoring Team?  Here's a great video documentary from Daniel Velazquez about the project. 

 

"A documentary about the Chiquibul national park in Belize, and the people protecting it from poachers , a look at conservation today with Scarlet Macaw protection, and a short look back on Challilo Dam issue, and environmental destruction, with Sharon Matola, Greg Cho and people in Cayo.  Film is produced by Roni Matinez, Charles Britt and Filmmaker Daniel Velazquez active wildlife conservationist in Belize, this is also a creative art media project, in wish we gave cameras to the protection crew, and they took part in documenting."

 

"This year was a REAL collaboration between many organizations and individuals to save our dwindling population of scarlet macaws in this little patch of our Jewel.  We now have solid partners and concrete determination.  Over 50 volunteers from Belize, US, Spain, Switzerland, Guatemala and other countries, joined us this year in our stand to protect a declining species in a remote corner of the massive Chiquibul.  Want to join the Scarlet Six Biomonitoring Team in 2014 as we continue our struggle?  We promise you an adventure you will not soon forget.  Thanks a million to the Belize Forest Department, Friends for Conservation and Development - FCD Belize, Blancaneaux Lodge, WCS-Guatemala, Daniel Velazquez, Belize Wildlife & Referral Clinic, LoraKim Joyner, Rainforest Restoration Foundation, Loro Parque Fundacion, Tony Rath Photography and Tony Rath plus the rest of the army of collaborators, volunteers and donors who lent us that helping hand this year."

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Scarlet Six Biomonitoring Team

Scarlet Six Biomonitoring Team | Cayo Scoop!  The Ecology of Cayo Culture | Scoop.it

Tony Rath uploaded some more great pictures from the trip the Scarlet Six Biomonitoring team took through the Chiquibul Forest Reserve. 

 

http://scarlet-macaws.blogspot.com/

 

"This final Album from the Chiquibul documents the process these dedicated researchers go through to safe guard and learn about the scarlet macaws nesting in the Chiquibul Forest Reserve, Belize."

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