I have been thinking about finding some type of active involvement with the communities that we will be visiting. Teaching music in Majahual is definitely along those lines, and I will also look into collecting used instruments to fill a box for the school. But this is more my own project, and the school is 65km from our little beach home on a little sandy road, which makes it more of a weekly commitment.
While trying to learn more about the area in general, I came upon a Facebook page about the sightings of the first lion fish along the Costa Maya. It is a fairly alarming situation, and I think this is a cause that we can embrace as a family.
The lion fish is a fierce coral reef predator. It has no known natural enemies (except humans), it can wipe a reef of its fish population by 80% in about five weeks, and they reproduce at a rate of up to 30,000 eggs per cycle with a few cycles per year. Here is a very informative piece on the subject : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ar0CX8dj948
Our little house is located inside the Xcalak National Reef Park, and this puts us literally in the heart of the matter. For a prime diving destination like the Costa Maya, the local economy relies on the preservation of that section of the reef barrier, as well as the Chinchorro banks located a couple of hours off shore from Majahual. Chinchorro is known as one of the last coral reef garden in the caribbean, take a look at this arial photo : http://www.locogringo.com/maps/tour/P1010093a-t.html . I really want us to go out there, it would be amazing.
So... a lion fish safari? Hey why not! After all that's what they do in the Bahamas, and they end it with a feast of fried lion fish on the beach. Now we're talking !
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