As an undergraduate at the university of Aberdeen I was one member of
a four man expedition to Trinidad. As far as I know we still hold the UK
record for a student expedition to be the furthest away from the location
we got funding to be.
We travelled across Venezuela before entering the Amazon rainforest
along the Orinoco River. Well and truly bitten by the travel bug, not to
mention hordes of Trinidadian black flies, I travelled to Costa Rica in
1995 after finishing my degree.
There I worked as a conservation volunteer for Steve and Paula Friedman
of Genesis 2 Cloudforest Preserve. I undertook studies of seedling survival
and growth rate in relation to soil and shade conditions in the genesis
2 reafforestation project.
Still in Costa Rica, but further north, I did some soil surveying at
Ecolodge San Luis in the Monteverde area.
Peru
Tanzania
Following the completion of my M.Sc., and narrowly missing out on a conservation job in Kenya, I returned to guiding in the Amazon, this time in Ecuador.
Ecuador
I spent the next four years as a bilingual naturalist guide at Sacha
Lodge. I was spoiled with the biodiversity of the Napo Region- some of
my top sightings, forgive me for boasting, were: Harpy Eagle, Anaconda,
Giant Anteater, Giant Armadillo and Giant Otter.
The tremendous knowledge of the indigenous quichua guides inspired
me to research the medicinal uses of the local flora. This painstaking
process eventually culminated in a booklet covering the indigenous uses
of plants of Sacha Lodge.
While I was minging my own business guiding i met the love of my life.
Kristen and I met in July 1999 and continued a long, long distance relationship
until I left Ecuador in 2001 so that we could be together.
California
I came to the USA in May 2002.