News from the Cloud Forest
José DeCoux, September 11th, 2008

New Bus Station

No Road From Otavalo to Chontal

Orchid Project Returns in Janurary

Price Increases for 2009

There is a new bus station for all transport to NW Pichincha that is located in the Ofelia area in the far north of Quito.   There are no longer busses from downtown.  The departue time is also changing in some cases but there is still a 6:00am bus which will get you to Chontal in time to get to Los Cedros in one day.   10:00am 12:30pm and 3.00pm are good but there is a new bus to Cielo Verde that passes through Chontal that leaves around 5:00pm.  Telefone for Trans Minas 08-594-5827 to check this out.

There has been a nice new edition of some of the guide books which claim that the road from Otavalo to Chontal is open with bus service.  This entry is two years ahead of reality and I do not expect this road or probable bus service to be useful until 2010.   It does not exsist today so  you have to return to Quito to get here.

We need some volunteers as for some reason people who have reciently been in contact sort have been dropping off our comunications system and disappearing for some reason.   Well despite the great references to our program in the new guides few people are actually arriving all the way here.   This is a remote station with plenty for people interested in nature and hiking so keep on writing.  We have had a bad telephone conection which has interfeared with our comunications for the last month or so but things are definatly better and it seems that the regurlar phone is now working so try our 286-5176 number sometimes.

The orchid polinator fungus investigation continues this coming Janurary for a month and more so pótential volunteers should get in contact.

With the aproach of the new road to Magdalena Alto there has been a resurgence of interest from an unwanted sector know as land trafficers.   Anyone interested in the hard edge of conservation would be welcome to come help us out at present as the next couple of months will be interesting.  The authorities are going to be visiting the local communites to remind people that invasions of state protected areas are being discouraged by police interventions.    We expect no danger but we may lose a few trees.

The worldwide  increase in basic food and grain prices has affected Ecuador  creating 10% inflacion for this year so far and the government has decreed a 10% increase in government salarys to match.

Los Cedros has been working at a loss for most of this year so in order to keep up the fine dining standards here and raise wages again the rates will be raised for 2009.

Volunteers   450$us a month for room and board.

Scientists and Students  30$us per day all inclusive for prearranged projects

Tourists and General Nature Visitors   50$us a day for > 3 nights.

For all projects and students we will listen to any reasonable proposal 

2008 Orchid Research Project
José DeCoux, November 11th, 2007

In the first days of January a group of 5 botanists from Canada, US, Argentina, Colombia and Ecuador will be collecting data about the relationship between Dracula genus orchids, thier polinators and fungus here at the Bosque Protector Los Cedros

Research is expected to continue untill the middle of Feburary financed by the National Geographic Society. There are still a few volunteer positions available here at the reserve to help in this study.

Also Ms. Sable Rose Regalia is returning to the reserve this Janurary bringing her very personal style of conservation back fill to a timless void left through her absence.

Looks like New Years will also be lively.

Comunities Stand Up To Defend BP Los Cedros
José DeCoux, October 7th, 2007

During the past week there have been important developments in the ongoing efforts to prevent a massive invasion of National Protected Forest in Northwest Ecuador.

During the last week of September an inspection was organized by Fundacion Los Cedros personel and the Ministry of Environment acompanied by police from the Garcia Moreno station of the invasion by topographers and land speculators in the Manduriaco Alto sector of Bosque Protector Los Cedros.

While logistical problems delayed the inspection untill the group had actually left the reserve area, tecnical personel from the Ibarra office of the Environment Minstry we able to find suficente evidence to qualify the intrusion.

More importantly all along the route the inspection team, some 10 people all together, was met by local residents who manifested thier support for the protected area and oppostion to the land speculators.

A suprising coalition of land owners, people who support the presence of mining companies and ordinary small holders were coming together to defend the reserve from any type of take over of what people described as their reserve.

By the time the inspection team returned to the town of Chontal after three days in the bush we were met in the evening by a group representing a broad range of local interest including comunity development organizations and workers for mining companies. They were returning from a Paroquial Govermnment meeting where they had set the date and called for a general community meeting on protecting the reserve called for by the president of the parroquial council.

On Friday 5 of October the meeting was set for the community of Magdalena Bajo as several local community members involved with the invasion plans were residing there.

10 police officers of the Judicial Police, including chief of the JP Major Baez, investigative branch of the police, were present in representation of the Governers office in Ibarra and the Ministry of Government from Quito.

The president and 4 council members from Garcia Moreno attended along with the presidents of 8 communites and over 60 interested citizens.

Presentations were made by Fundación Los Cedros personel and Ministry of Environment staff about the history and legal status of Bosque Protector Los Cedros after which the meeting opened for all to voice their opinions.

Resolutions taken by this community forum included total rejection of plans to colonize Los Cedros, demands for an investigation of the national land grant agency and police action to prevent any further incursions into the reserve. If these mesures proved to be inefective then the communites themselves left no doubt that they were comited to intervene on a defensive level and engage in direct action.

Major Baez asked for some time to organize regular patroling of the area around Bosque Protector Los Cedros and some time to infiltrate the organizaion behind the invasion plans so as direct action could be taken against the leaders. But from now on the invaders were to be notified that they were no longer welcome in this area and police would be present when ever they held meetings they would be disbursed in order to make clear they were involved in illegal activity that would send them to jail if they continued.

If it proved that this was insuficent to discourage the invasion plans, direct action against the invaders on a community level would be supported by the Judical Police.

The level of cooperation being given by the Goveners office of Imbabura Province in Ibarra has to be aknowledged a the key factor in providing a law enforcement presence at this critical time for the conservation of Los Cedros. While some logistical support will be necessary to provide for patroling in the reserve area by no means is this support to excede basic food and ocasional lodging for patrols called to discourage invader activity.

But many thanks also have to be given to the organizations and people of the communities surrounding the reserve for coming together when the reserve is under extreme pressure.

Also it must be said after years of division planted for the benfit of extractive industries in the Parroquia of Garcia Moreno the communites from both sides of an artificial divide have come together over a more important issue.

Cautious Young Website Released Into the Wild
Hugh Stimson, July 12th, 2007

After many years of service the old Los Cedros website has been retired, and replaced by the splendor you see before you now. The original website was hacked together up at the reserve using a creaky laptop and an early digital camera. The new site is dynamically driven by open-source software and should allow easier creation and maintenance of content. Non-techies will hopefully find it relatively easy to write content directly into the site. Easier than before, anyway. Los Cedros is a dynamic reserve and it needs a website that can keep up.

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Back in 2001, reserve inhabitants Sabel Rose Regalia, Gretchen Ferrell, and Michel Trommelen all helped write the first website, along with Jose and myself. Thanks again for doing that guys. Big chunks of the new site are in fact copied over from the old, so your work lives on. Also thanks to Edmundo Gooden, many of whose photos have also transcended the molting of the old site’s skin.

Many of photos featured on the new site come from Jonathan Spangler, who visited the Reserve in 2004 and has left a photographic legacy. Thanks Jonathan.

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If you haven’t visited the photo gallery yet, I recommend it. In addition to Jonathan’s work there are lots of other great pictures from one of the most photogenic places on the planet. And if you have any photos from the reserve you would like to see added, the new system allows direct uploading. Just email me for an account and have at ‘er.

One of the cooler (and buggier) new features is support for multiple translations. See up there at the top, where there is a list of languages? Clicking on one of them should regenerate the site showing those pages that have content in your language of choice. Unfortunately we don’t have much content in languages other than english, yet. We need volunteer translators! Los Cedros is a truly multicultural, multilingual place. It needs a multilingual website.

There remains a lot of wrinkles to be ironed out, and a lot of fresh content to be created and translated, but the new website is born and released from the nest and crawling towards the light. Flourish young website! Welcome to the wild.

Land Speculation Threatens Reserve
José DeCoux, June 16th, 2007

Fraudsters and Land Speculators convince many to Invade Reserve to cash in on unheard of offers from new mining company.

I could start this new tale by stating that being a buffer area to national protected areas is becoming a tough job. There are so many factors involved that I hope to get them all in one short article.

In general the presence of international mining interests in Ecuador has been a disaster for the areas that interest these rapacious companies. With the new mining law that the World Bank imposed on Ecuador, that eliminated any percentage of product for the benefit of this country, that money has been employed to manipulate and divide the communities affected. Where elected governments have been opposed to this extractive industry, Mining companies have openly supported opposition parties during political campaigns. Where environmentalists have opposed mining projects they have been targeted for police harassment and intimidation. In all phases of project development money that should be paid to governments for mining privileges and obligations, these “investments” instead has been used undermine the local political process. In the case of Cotacachi, which has always been one of the poorest jurisdictions coupled with a recognized progressive participatory political process, this is an unjust situation. It is traditional in Ecuador’s politics that politicians receive payment from extractive industry and since this does not happen in this municipality these funds are employed to finance the opposition. Didn’t the World Bank have a campaign against corruption? Someone must have wolfed their witz.

Read the rest of this entry »

Fundacíon Los Cedros Recognized by Ministry
José DeCoux, June 16th, 2007

First of all let me apologize for the delay in getting any new information published on this site. There have been some unfortunate delays in getting access to the account with my usual lackadaisical approach to public access.

Having said that there has been a lot to keep people informed about. To start the new foundation has been recognized by the ministry of environment, which means we have legal status for managing the reserve. This also means we have to arrange for some office space to have an address that will allow us to get a tax registry number and then open a bank account. This process is under way with discussions taking place on the new address.

The new board of the reserve is comprised of some new community reps along side some people from CIBT. Here is a brief summary of this group.

Fabian Hernandez- Founder of the community eco tourism project Comite de Ecoturismo de Manduracos.

Jose Cueva- Commercial organic vegetable producer who also works in certification of organic produce. Jose also is an organizer of community participation in protected areas with the El Chontal protected forest and the Cambugan project.

Ximena Mina- Member of the ecotourism project and elected member of the Paroquial council here in our area.

Maritza Cifuentes- Secretarial/Administrative manager of CIBT who continues with this new organization in an administrative role well learned from Marta Mondragon.

Timoteo Metz- Founder of Restoration Forestry and member of directory of Ancient Forests International.

Jose DeCoux- Los Cedros organizer and resident.

We need some suggestions on where to look for support for this new organizational structure. The first task for the FLC will be to get the tax, bank affairs in order and the management plan updated and re-approved by the Ministry of Environment.

Changes @ Los Cedros
José DeCoux, January 2nd, 2007

There is some good news and some bad so I guess we start with the bad.

It has become necessary to raise our prices in light of new organizational obligations and to compensate the staff for thier work. Since Ecuador renounced its own monitary system and adopted the dollar as its medium of exchange there has been a constant increase in the cost of living where it is considered that a basic income necessary to supply a family is well over 400$ a month. Currently the reserve has been paying between 6 and 7 dollars US a day in wages and considering we need to feed all the staff here an aditional 3 dollars a day for prep and food could be considered as part of this wage.

This wage is being raised progressivly in the case of kitchen staff but has been raised definativly for machete and transport based labour to 10$ p/d plus food.

I know it is not much. These new prices to cover this additional expence will take effect on the 1 of March 2007.

On the positive side we have received recognition from the Ministry of Environment for the new Fundacíon Los Cedros which is the legally recognized organization that is responsible for the protection of Bosque Protector Los Cedros.

This status will allow us to receive funding for project management and subsequently entail bookeeping expences. The new foundation has incorporated several new community members and some CIBT people as well.

Fabian Hernandez- Founder of the community eco tourism project Comite de Ecoturismo de Manduracos.

Jose Cueva- Comercial organic vegetable producer who also works in certification of organic produce. Jose also is an organizer of comunity participation in protected areas with the El Chontal protected forest and the Cambugan project.

Ximena Mina- Member of the ecotourism project and member of the Paroquial council here in our area.

Maritza Cifuentes- Secretarial/Administrative manager of CIBT who continues with this new organization.

Timoteo Metz- Founder of Restoration Forestry and member of directorat of Ancient Forests International.

Jose DeCoux- Long time Los Cedros organizer and resident.

We need some sugestions on where to look for support for this new orgainzational structure. The first task for the FLC will be to get the management plan updated and aproved by the Ministry of Environment.

Josef DeCoux
Executive Director
Fundacíon Los Cedros

Primenet Class of 2006
Hugh Stimson, December 19th, 2006

In September, the PRIMENET project ran a training workshop at Los Cedros for community-based parabiologists.

Sara Richard created a video of the training, a short version of which is below. Much more information is available at the PRIMENET website.

Biologist in bid to save rainforest’s rare monkey
José DeCoux, November 4th, 2005

Scientists at the University of Sussex are working with local communities in Ecuador to help save one of the world’s rarest species of monkey - and the endangered rainforest where it lives.
The Brown-headed Spider Monkey (Ateles fusciceps) is “critically endangered”, which means that without urgent action to protect the 50 known breeding pairs still in the wild, the species could become extinct. The spider monkey - unusual in that it is exclusively a fruit-eater - is under threat because up to 80 per cent of the dense rainforest that it depends on for food has been destroyed.

Read the rest of this entry »

Primate Conservation Network
José DeCoux, April 9th, 2005

The Los Cedros Reserve received news today that an important project has been approved for financing through the Darwin Initiative, one of the United Kingdoms important contributions to fulfill obligations under the terms of the Kyoto Treaty.

The project is to create a network for the conservation of the critically endangered Brown Headed Spider Monkey, a primate endemic to Northwest Ecuador. Though the details of the financing approved are pending, the Los Cedros Reserve will be the center for collection of primate data and host to the training facilities for training community based primate monitors.

This project will provide the reserve with a defined direction in a much neglected area of scientific study. Other participants in this project include the National Herbarium which will conduct habitat studies and the Museo de Ciencias Naturales which will coordinate primate data collection.

Training will be initiated at this reserve for selected individuals, who actually live in areas where this now difficult to encounter primate is found, to create this community based network of monitors and data collectors.

This project will also provide many new opportunities for volunteer placement.

Reserve Battles Greedy Land Speculators in Ecuador
José DeCoux, November 2nd, 2003

This is just a little update on what has been happening at Los Cedros and to start out here is the run down on the constant legal battles that are being waged against the greedy and corrupt.

The Los Cedros reserve has been challenged from it’s inception by some members of a group of land speculators known as Association La Florida or Madrigal and known among the farmers and villagers as Los Calleros, surname of one of their first unpopular agents who worked in the communities.

The core group seems to be related to the Ecuadorian Chancelery or Ministery of Foreign Relations and in 1994 they received a land grant that superimposed itself on 400 hectares of the Los Cedros Reserve.

Since 1996 we have been aware of this problem and have made many petitions to the land grant agency for the rectification of this error on the agency’s part.

We have received no answer to any of the complaints we filed over the years but instead received notification after two years of administrative silence from the land grant agency that our entire land title was being challenged by some members of this same group of land speculators.

Today after changing the name of the organization and reason for incorporation they have newly emerged as the Corporacion Rio Manduraco, environmental organization dedicated to conservation and construction of the Choco/Manabi ecological corridor.

This new image is hard to reconcile with their efforts to destroy the Los Cedros Reserve unseals the objective is to increase the land under their control. Supposedly 3 members of Corp Rio Mandu need the 400 hectares of the Reserve to include it in the conservation strategy of the Corp. This is patently a land grab not conservation. To accomplish their aims they have gone to the extent of nullifying the entire reserve title.

So friends and neighbors we will be calling on you to help with your e-mails and pressure on the politicians of your country to support the Reserve before this travesty. Please get in contact with me here at the reserve if you have any ideas about how we could raise some funds to stop this or apply political pressure.

We have assembled a legal team that will go into action if the first notification of title annulment is ratified and executed. Then we will need your help and the help of your contacts to pressure the often mercuric government ministries.

On the bright side the community tourism program is growing with each passing year and we are training the first group of local mountain guides with the help of the master of community tourism, Sir Randolph Smith,KBS,. The first two 3 day workshops have been held in Los Cedros and Chontal. The Alberge Neotropical, a community based hostal and tourism office is under construction in Chontal and will soon be the information and coordination center for visitors to Los Cedros.

The community health center is now open with the attention 20 days a month by a licensed nurse. The community radio program is about to be implemented and this will provide radio communications between the municipality, hospital, police, Los Cedros and the distant communities surrounding the reserve. We do need some help with the funding for this program and owe 1.500$ as part of the contribution of Los Cedros.

The new bridge crossing the Guayabamba river at Chontal has now had all of it’s cement laid by a huge 400 person work day and will soon provide direct access to town from Quito.

The volunteer program could use some stimulation if any one has any good ideas. We had to raise our prices because of the inflation since dolarization and there are fewer people traveling here for the bargain travel Ecuador once was. Schools or programs out there looking for where to go?

See you around

jose

good geek news
Hugh Stimson, July 31st, 2003

After a lot of hoop-jumping and considerable waiting, the Los Cedros website is now recognized by the Google search engine. Searching for either “los cedros” or “reserva los cedros” returns this page as the #1 suggestion; entering “los cedros reserve” results in it showing up as #3. Pretty good. Reservaloscedros.org is now also now the #2 response on AllTheWeb.com - another big search engine - when you ask that search engine for “los cedros” or “los cedros reserve”.

What all that means is www.reservaloscedros.org is now easily accessible to anyone searching the web for information about the reserve. Yay!

This is posted direct from the reserve.
José DeCoux, April 13th, 2003

Hello there from downtown Los Cedros and I just want to let all know that though the phone is working it does not yet receive calls, as of yet, with any consistancy so please dial several times to get through. Otherwise what we really needed, the E-mail ,is working quite well and we can even bring down web pages here. loscedros@ecuanex.net.ec

So lets hear from sombody.

Jose

El telefono esta ya trabajando pero no entra bien las llamadas de afuera. El correro electronico esta de maravilla y pdremos bajar paginas web entonces escribanos a nuestra nueva direcion loscedros@ecuanex.net.ec

welcome to the new and improved newsletter
Hugh Stimson, April 9th, 2003

The new Los Cedros Newsletter system is now live. Watch this space for updates and happenings.

The first posting is news from Edmundo Gooden, who earlier emailed myself and other Los Cedrosites with the following raft of good news:

“To you all, I have just received some new news which I would love to pass on to you.

At the reserve itself Sulma has openly declared her future commitment to assisting the Reserve so she is playing the lead role in coordinating the gourmet food side of things at present. Martine has been also getting involved by taking on the postion of Volunteer coordinator as well as acting as a guide to those that require it (What a dream come true). Some of you may also know Manuel who lived next to the volley ball corts at Magdalena Alto, he also is married to one of Martines sisters. Well he is also assisting allot more with coordinating the volunteers I am sure that that could well be running those beautifull farting, running into Banana Patch and/or the forest Mules.

The new kitchen and the volunteer quarters are in full swing so many big thanks to those realy special players in this campaign.

You may remmember word about making the official office for Los Cedros at Chontal well it is getting built as we speak complete with operational phones and radio, oh! not to mention a car port for the mighty Jose Mobil. There is also a community radio station which will beam it’s signal through the Chontal Valley so the communication links are well and truly under way. The email side and phone at the reserve is a little bit sadder, Jose has done absolutley everything reqiured however the Government department for communications has sat on it for four months so far, let’s hope they put the neccessary stamp on that sheet of A4 paper.

The tourism commission is going to instruct and issue official Ecuadorian Tourism workers certification to all those that may need it so naturally Martine, Manuel and Sulma will be in as well as numerous people from the Chontal / Brilla Sol and Sahaungal Pueblos oh! Magdalena Abajo as well.

Fabians work with Jose and the development of the Cotocachi /Cayapis Tourism concept is becoming a reality, there is already six groups from Spain ready to go.

So I hope this finds you well and lets you know that you have all played an important part towards the development of allowing Los Cedros protect that insanley beautifull symphony of nature. Now as you read this you may feel that you are not able to be involved with Los Cedros as much as you may wish, no matter where are, we are all linked, this time is crucial that we are commited to our resolve to preserve and protect our BIRTH RIGHT!

CON MUCHISIMO AMOR PARA TI! del Edmundo XOXOXOXOXOXOXOXO

P.s there are people who I do not have there email address so could you please send it on, thankyou.”

Thank you Edmundo, keep updating us as you go.

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