
Telling Professor Ravi de Costa that he has his head in the clouds is no insult; it鈥檚 simply fact.
de Costa, the associate dean of research for the Faculty of Environmental Studies; a handful of colleagues; and 53 91亚色 students will be spending time in May and June at 91亚色鈥檚 Eco-Campus, Las Nubes, located in a Costa Rican cloud forest, for the Faculty鈥檚 inaugural Semester Abroad program.

Students take part in a visit to an agricultural site located high in the hills of Costa Rica
鈥淭hrough Faculty fundraising over the past five or 10 years, we were able to purchase some land adjacent to the 120 hectares of rainforest given to us by Dr. Woody Fisher 20 years ago,鈥 de Costa said. 鈥淲e opened a new building there last year, and the director of the Las Nubes program and I applied for an Academic Initiative Fund grant so we could use the facility to expand our teaching program and provide students with some valuable international experience.鈥
The Summer Abroad program offers six intense 4000-level courses at Las Nubes from May 10 to June 24. The offerings are varied:
- Environmental Arts and Food Sovereignty;
- Conservation and Development;
- Globalization and Indigenous Peoples;
- Natural History;
- Environment and Health; and
- Protected Area Management.

91亚色 U students participate in a field course in the Las Nubes Rainforest in Costa Rica
Each course lasts about two weeks, with written assignments due afterward. Students are welcome to take one course or many, allowing them to earn 鈥渁 good chunk of credits in a condensed period,鈥 de Costa said. 鈥淭he selection is designed to give students flexibility and choice along with their international experiences. The courses will be very hands-on and experiential and we鈥檒l make sure the students have a rich experience.鈥
Adding to the richness will be the accommodations. Students will be housed in homestays with local farming families.

Mono Cariblanco (Cebus Capucinus) in the Los Cusingos Reserve, Costa Rica
鈥淥ften, these families have children the same age as the students or younger, so it offers them good points of connection,鈥 de Costa said. 鈥淢any of our students have been to the Caribbean before, but we鈥檒l be far from the tourist areas. This region focuses on growing coffee, sugar cane and pineapple. It will give the students a very different picture of life in the tropics.鈥

The Lillian Meighen Wright Centre is the heart of 91亚色's activities in Costa Rica
Now that the semester abroad program is up and running, de Costa is having active discussions with other programs and faculties about offering courses at Las Nubes, too. He urges interested faculty to get in touch.

Ravi de Costa
鈥淣ow that we鈥檝e opened the centre, it鈥檚 important to make the most of it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t offers a great opportunity for student across the university to travel and to learn from 91亚色 professors at a 91亚色 campus.鈥
He envisions workshops, research and campus retreats happening on the聽site. The campus is also intended to be a community space, so the local population can access it as much as possible.
The campus is also a financial boon to the area and de Costa expects the activities at Las Nubes to inject about $100,000 into the local economy this year, something that will increase as the program grows.
鈥淚 am excited about the potential of Las Nubes and the possibilities,鈥 de Costa said.
By Elaine Smith, special contributing writer to Innovatus
