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My experience this summer,
an experience I may never have had a chance to experience
without you,
changed my life in so many ways. I truly don’t
know where to begin. With your help I was able to stay
2 months in South East Sulawesi, Indonesia, working
together with scientists researching terrestrial and
marine organisms and their habitat for an international
volunteer conservation organization called Operation
Wallacea. Currently studying wildlife biology at the
University of Vermont, I feel absolutely privileged
to have had this once in a life time chance getting
hands on experience working with animal data collection
in a biodiversity hot spot: the Wallace line. Taking
my studies outside the classroom and into the ocean
or jungle gave me skills and knowledge I know will
help me advance in my field of wildlife biology. I
also just had the most exciting, amazing time. I can
now say that I have been chased out of a river by a
python, scuba dived beside gliding gentle green turtles,
caught and held giant fruit bats, and lived and dived
on a boat for a week. I jumped from waterfalls, hiked
deep into the jungle, and tested tree frogs for a dangerous
virus (chytrid fungus) that has been killing frogs
across the world. I sat in a giant, hollow strangler
fig tree until the sun set and listened to endemic
Tarsier monkey mating calls. I fell silent for days
as I followed, studied, and tested my limits with a
troop of Macaque monkeys that had been raiding local
farms. I saw beautiful sunrises and sunsets from the
forest I was helping to conserve. I saw the Milky Way
for the first real time: a ribbon of bright light stretching
in a great horseshoe across the night sky. On top of
all this I have been inspired. I have been inspired
by this beautiful life I have seen and only described
a small slice to you. More than this though, I have
been inspired and deeply touched by the Indonesian
people that I met on my adventure to the other side
of the world. Going into this trip I felt a bit nervous
as I prepared to live in an all-Muslim village. Now
though, looking back, I can only smile and remember
my peaceful melodic morning wake up call of chanting
coming from the mosque and all the friends I have made.
These happy smiling people have taught me that all
people are just…people. Most are very kind and
welcoming. Most will go out of their way if you do
the same for them. These people are not trying to degrade
their environment. They heavily depend on it to survive
and know much more about it than the western scientists
who get jetted in and claim to be the specialists.
The Indonesians I stayed with showed me the power of
community and that a simpler life does not mean a life
of poverty and hunger: it means a life full of happiness.
I am striving now to live as the Indonesians do, putting
community and family first and just being happy. It
is this combination of people and nature that interests
me now. My trip has inspired me to steer a bit away
from wildlife data collection and instead to animal
human relations. I want to help people harmoniously
live with nature and all her organisms instead of destroying
or exploiting them. This trip helped me discover my
future plans, the world outside my little comfort zone,
and myself. I thank you deeply for all of this. You
have changed my life. I write you this letter from
a year abroad in New Zealand. Another adventure I am
not sure I would be having if I had not learned so
much about myself in Indonesia. Thank you from the
very bottom of my heart.
Sincerely,
Sam Manetti
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