Once again I (Jake) have been away for work and return with stories and pictures from abroad. Well, sort of. If by stories you mean 'work talk' and if by pictures you mean the 5 grainy pictures I took on the few days out of 46 that I was gone, and if by abroad you mean a commonwealth of the US. Apparently I am becoming somewhat jaded to travel and the common sights of my job, as I take less pictures each trip. It also doesn't help that my camera is a 4 mega pixel dinosaur. Fear not, for an upgrade is in the works. Anyway, here is what I was up to for the last month plus.

I returned to Puerto Rico for another restoration project (same island, different species). I had been working with the project manager in PR remotely since about October, striving for mobilization and implementation of the project in March. By early February it became evident that I needed to physically be in PR to finalize the aspects I was working on and help make the project happen on time. So on February 13th I headed down, leaving the cold wet Portland winter for...not cold wet weather. Most of the first couple weeks were spent working behind a desk, super exciting. During this time I stayed in a rental house in Cabo Rojo (southwest PR) complete with a convenient siesta hammock.

The little house turned into 'Jake's Bed and Breakfast' as we rotated personnel through for deployments in the field and preparation for the main part of the project, but I was a mainstay. By early March everything was coming together and the majority of the project personnel began to arrive. I moved north to Rincon, where we would base the operation. Our house had a nice view of the island we were restoring.

This project was a little different than usual, as we did the main part of the operation from the mainland, with only a small field team on island. I didn't even overnight in the field the whole trip, which felt weird. My role during the implementation was aerial operations supervisor. I oversaw the helicopter operations, and managed the LZ and associated personnel. Overall, our project came together well, our team was great and everyone worked hard. We nailed our timeline, had good luck with the weather, and did it all without any injuries. I don't think we could have asked for a better outcome. A field team will remain on island for another week or so, then we wait. By the end of next year monitoring of the island ecosystem will confirm if we were successful or not, but confidence is high as all went very well.
For my parting shot I leave you with 2-charlie-alpha. Big boy toys are
fun. Now if only I could find an excuse to rappel for 'conservation
benefit'....