Archive for the 'South Pacific Real Estate' Category

Dec 24 2008

Activities in Southern Costa Rica

Between Uvita, Dominical and Ojochal things are not boring on the South Pacific Coast of Costa Rica. There is something for everyone!  Please check out the list of activities below:

ACTIVITIES

 

1) Challenging

2) Fun

3) Clubs & Events

Waterfall rappelling

Horseback

Yoga / Pilates

Surfing

Jungle hiking

Meditation

Bull riding

Reptilandia

Badminton

Horseback Comp

Tennis

_______

Deep Sea Fish

Golfing

Women’s club

Indoor and outdoor soccer

Live music

Garden club

Diving

Island picnics

Environ

Mountain climbing

Snorkeling

Indian study culture

Cattle roping

Whale watch

Rainforest medicine

White water rafting

Fly fishing

Art Exhibits

Parasailing

Canoeing

Classical music

Four  Wheeling

Tubing

Gourmet dining

Canopy tours

Garden Tours

Live theatre

4 Wheeling

Boat Tours

Turtle count

Jet Ski

Poker

Gold Panning

Mountain biking

Estuary

Massage

Ultralite Flights

Mangrove tours

 

Volleyball

Butterfly Garden

Water threat

Cowboy for a day

Bird Observation

Weekly organic market

 

 

SPA

 

 

Movie night

 

 

Pot lucks

 

 

Church

 

 

Fundraising Activities

Contact Annie at Costa Rica Retirement Vacation Properties - south for more and check out our web

http://www.costaricaretirementvacationproperties.com/south_pacific.php

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Dec 24 2008

Rock & Roll in the South Pacific

Title:  Rock and Roll in Costa Rica’s Whale Coast

 

Residents, retirees, locals and tourist in the Costa Ballena or South Pacific Coast of Costa Rica aren’t lacking for musical entertainment. Nancy Buchan who has been associated with Bonnie Rait, Jimmy Buffett and various big musical names lives here with her husband Good Time Charlie.  Charlie arranges various groups and live music all around the area.  Most lately, Nancy has been playing with Kim Carson and the Radiators.

 

For people in the area, there is live music at the Marakuya Bar in Dominical on Tuesdays, The Tucan Hotel in Uvita on Wednesdays (with a buffet dinner), Dominical’s Rum bar on Thursdays, Los Delfines in Bahia Uvita on Friday’s as well as Twisted Tucan in Ojochal, sometimes a reggae or calypso night at Las Terrazas on Saturdays, again at Uvita’s Tucan on Saturday’s with Trey’s Band and at the Hotel Rio Lindo on Sundays.  If that isn’t enough, Hotels Cuna del Angel and Crystal Ballena both hold  monthly classical music concerts or jazz.  Once a month, Mistura Waterfall restaurant has a full moon party with a bonfire and a band.  Taj Mahal was just at Playa Zancuda and The String Cheese incident owns land in Escaleras.

 

Check out the article submitted by Nancy Buchan concerning quality music here in Costa Rica

 

MUSIC

Seems like we`re all planting some kind of seed this time of year, full of hope for its growth and marveling at the new beginnings all around us. The plants are trying to take over, folks are getting married, artists are starting new paintings, the kids are giving recitals – it`s just a fine time to be in our little dysfunction junction.

My April column was all about the Infinite River Orchestra (Orquesta del Rio Infinito) and since I’ve been driving my buddies nuts with tales of this adventure, I feel compelled to tell my readers about it. To really get the feel of this project, check out www.rioinfinito.com for photos, videos, the environmental agenda, future plans, biographies of the participants and press. Everything was being documented, so I imagine there will be CDs and DVDs available at some point, and the first concert at La Sabana in San Jose has been on national TV at least twice. At that very visual concert we had two stages in the lake with a water fountain in between, a ramp in the middle with the two musical directors and pianists, Manuel Obregon from Costa Rica and Benjamin Taubkin from Brazil, great lighting effects and fireworks behind us.

We started rehearsals in San Jose with the 35 musicians from 18 different countries introducing themselves and playing something typical of their style. Others joined in if they understood it and felt like contributing, so basically we had a whole lot of mini-jams getting to know each other. A Peña. We all shared common ground in the music, and there were the typical instruments involved – 3 electric guitars, a couple of acoustic guitar-like variations, 3 electric bass, 2 saxophones, 2 violins (3 if you count this really weird looking instrument played with a bow  by Siba from Brazil), 2 flutes, 4 marimbas, a harp, a cello and 2 accordions. Then there`s the bizarre and fascinating percussion section, with leaf fronds that you shake, gourds and birdcages and rain sticks and strange things you blow into…and, did I mention Mauricio, the Ecuadorian Shaman who chanted and played 3 five foot long flutes at the same time? Or the seven unbelievable female vocalists who left their egos at the door and thrilled us all with their powerful messages and  harmonies.

At a large press conference we all met Leon Gieco, an Argentinian singer, songwriter, environmental and social activist who has over 30 CDs to his credit and who is considered to be the Bob Dylan/Pete Seeger of South America. He`s performed  with Sting and Springsteen and others onstage at the Amnesty International  concerts. He`s written and published at least 3 books. His song, Solo le pido a Dios, is a passion filled anthem for the humble man that never failed to bring people to their feet singing along – often with tears rolling down their faces. An incredibly intense and important man, he had been active in protecting and cleaning up rivers in his country, so it was a natural fit for him to combine his efforts with Manuel Obregon and the objectives of the Orquesta del Rio Infinito. This man was soooo cool and was treated like royalty wherever we went, but he was just another guy jamming on the bus and was gracious and nice to everyone.

 

In the lovely town of Palmares we did some workshops with local musicians and music students, and you should have seen their smiles when they were invited to join the band on stage for the finale. Some 60 families patiently waited an hour and a half after the concert to collect a musician or crew member to take home with them. My family lived on a lovely hillside with a view of Poas Volcano, and their 7 year old daughter gave up her pink Barbie doll filled bedroom to me – a stranger just making music. A water blessing ceremony was held near there one afternoon, with local indigenous people and Ticos working together to address their issues politically, and everywhere we went peope signed letters to public officials supporting environmental attention to the health of rivers.

 

 

NOTES

The final concert was in the town of San Carlos , Nicaragua, on a beautiful Lake Cocibolca . We passed through a little customs shack on the Costa Rican side, and then the musicians all got on a flat bottomed boat to go down the Rio San Juan into Nicaragua. As we passed the border we were surrounded by boats full of machine-gun carrying policemen with big ole` smiles, boats full of cameramen and writers, and a boat with a brass band. Rarely has a bunch of musicians had such a glorious escort into a country… We were paraded through town and met at the stage by the mayor and other dignitaries. We were treated to performances by local school children about how they are helping to protect their rivers, and the entire event was broadcast live over the internet in all of Central and South America.

Throughout this trip children made tapestries or quilts or collages or some kind of art to demonstrate and educate about the plight of the rivers. Local grass-roots ecologically aware groups set up information centers and even the press seemed to center in on the message and not just the messengers. Seeing the pride and willingness of ordinary people to be caretakers of this planet was a hopeful and humbling experience.

Of course dancing with my 70 something violin playing buddy Miguel from Panama was also humbling, but one of my favorite moments. There were some hilarious stuff that went down , and no doubt there were some great musical moments, so I hope everyone gets a chance to hear or watch some of the concerts. However, the enduring message is one of hope that change can happen when our shared efforts produce something much grander and more important than the individual.

We`re headed down the Amazon in November and the Mississippi the next year, so stay tuned!

There`s a diverse and interesting concert coming up on June 7th at 7:00 pm at the Cultural Center in San Isidro.  “Ayer, Hoy and Siempre”, (Yesterday, Today and Always), will be a performance of Tangos, Boleros, Waltzes, Bachatas, Sambas and other styles of Latin music. The participants are current and ex students and faculty from the Escuela Sinfonica (music school in San Isidro near the square), and there will be a small orchestra accompanying several different singers, all under the direction of Leonel Calvo.

As always, thanks for supporting live music and I urge business and hotel owners to contact the various venues around town and find out what`s happening so they can tell their guests or clients about their choices. Locals and visitors should check with the Rum Bar at Rio Lindo as they have BBQ and music on most Sundays and often music inside on Thursdays.

Maracatu has open jam night on Tuesdays, and the Tucan Bar in Uvita has live music and buffet on Wednesdays, with a special welcome back party and open jam for Nelson and Oliver on June 2nd.

Someone contacted me about a free (needs work) upright piano she will donate to a school or church or similar good cause. Email me at njbfiddle@aol.com or 88 32 5810.

“Musical compositions, it should be remembered, do not inhabit certain countries, certain museums.like paintings and statues. The Mozart Quintet is not shut up in Salzburg: I have it in my pocket” Henri Rabaud

“You`ve got to continue to grow, or you`re just like last night`s cornbread – stale and dry.”

 

 

 

 

 

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Dec 24 2008

Dining in Uvita

Residents of Costa Rica’s Whale Coast have a hard choice to make when deciding where to dine!  There are so many options.  Many of the members of one of Christopher Howard’s New Golden Door to Costa Rica Tour were impressed with The Chef’s Table.  Apparently, the food critics were also.  Please refer to the following article.

We have many properties in close proximity to this wonderful restaurant.

Building Lot Hawk Vista IV $150,000

House Hawk Vista III $385,000

Building Lot Hawk Vista II $150,000

House Hawk Vista I $550,000

These are both large parcel properties for an Environmentally conscious developer or lots and turn key houses for newcomers and persons seeking retirement in Costa Rica.

This article that was published in the monthly newspaper “Dominical Days” was written by the food critics Marcel and Andres.

Time Out

THE CHEF`S TABLE

There are few professionally trained international chefs in Costa Rica and Sarah Plowright is one of them. She received her initial training and her Cordon Bleu degree in her native England. Then she worked, among others, with world famous star chefs such as Roger Vergé at his famous Moulin de Mougins in Southern France and also spent some time in United States. For years, she cooked for the rich and famous on their glamorous luxury yachts. That`s where she met her partner Paul Perks.

Chef`s Table is a romantic dong hideout nestled away above Uvita, a few minutes from the Costanera Sur. The restaurant is open for dinner only and subsequently one is left to wonder how beautiful the setting must be during daytime. The dinner menus are either a multiple-course menu gourmand (Sat/Sun) or a somewhat simpler barbecue night (Mon) with a choice of various grilled meat (marinated ribs), chicken or fish. Vegetarians will love the Chef`s Table since there is always something special available for them. The cuisine is distinctly Mediterranean in style but is often accented with Asian flavors.

Guests at Chef`s Table are invited to partake in a monthly raffle. The winner receives a dinner for two. Each raffle ticket is rewarded with a bottle of wine.

Paul Perk`s Australian strine makes him a very distinguishable host and maitre d`.

He seemingly enjoys taking care of all his client`s needs, from their arrival during a torrential tropical rainstorm to the farewell. Being a professional engineer by training, he applied his skills to building anything and everything at this romantic restaurant and retreat, from wrought-iron spiral staircases to the very distinct chairs.

Chef`s Table is the restaurant that goes with Villas de las Aves, a retreat offering quiet and private accommodations in a true jungle setting.

Highlights: Weekly changing menu gourmand. The home-made focaccia and the pesto-flavored olive oil dip are to die for. Romantic outdoor setting with very attentive service. They`re open on Mondays!

Room for Improvement: Wine selection is somewhat restricted. No credit cards due to lack of a phone line. Difference between menu gourmand and barbecue dinners could be communicated more clearly.

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Dec 24 2008

Theatre in the Southern Zone

Theatre in the Southern Zone

 We at South Pacific Real Estate Services (now Costa rica Retirement Vacation Proeprties) will bring you updates onlifestyle and events periodically

 

 

When I moved to San Jose in 1996, there was a variety of movies and theatrical productions to choose from. Three years later, after searching the majority of the country for a home to buy, I chose the Costa Ballena area. While I have never regretted my choice, I missed the cinema and plays that I once enjoyed in the city.

 

 

 

 Last year the employees of SOUTH PACIFIC REAL ESTATE SERVICES went to see the Christmas Production, a musical with lively skits!

Check out what Dominical Days Montly News paper has to say about the Centerstage.

 CENTER STAGE

Dominical Little Theatre, news, updates & other whimsies

Talking` the Talk…by Shawnell Parker 

Every theatric production begins with orienting the new talent, both performing and supporting, to the lingo of the art and the stage. Since I am sure you are all getting ready to participate in DLT`s next production whatever it is, I have prepared a little primer that will make you appear to be really savvy in front of the other rookies!

Pretty much everybody knows the old stage left and stage right. These terms were created to make sure no one in the audience knows what is going on during rehearsal as in fact from their perspective stage left is just the opposite. Most of us have also heard the term “to upstage” someone. This of course to the averagely intelligent person would mean that an actor is standing in front of another thereby drawing attention to themselves….wrong. The theatre stage was at one time titled toward the audience, hence when you are away from the audience you are upstage and when you move toward the audience you are moving down the tilt therefore moving downstage. Hmmm, that`s clear as mud.

Okay, now it gets a little more obscure, huh? “Green Room” is a term used to describe a room where the actors can rest while they are not onstage. The room is not always or even often green; in our case it is actually the parking lot at Roca Verde or for some of the more recalcitrant of the actors, the bar.  “Wings” are supposedly the areas offstage on either side; this is where the term “waiting in the wings” comes from, but actually “wings” are what I wish I had on my 27 trip to San Isidro for costume shopping. The “Booth” is the control room where the light-board operator runs the show; in our case, it`s the cement table, stage left, or the bar, stage right, where Ian hangs out.

Very good, now for some more advanced terms. The “Flies” is the area above the stage where scenery is hung and is lifted high in the air during scenes it is not use. Say what? Actually these are just some of the insects one must deal with in an open-air theatre. A “Money Note” is the strongest note in an actor`s singing range, aka every note Frank hits! The “Road” is everything outside of New York or the thing that keeps people from coming to the show from Quepos. “Dark” is a night when there is no performance in the theatre or whenever ICE feels like it. A “Call” is what Monica makes everyday to remind Gino to come to rehearsal. The “Apron” area sticks out beyond the curtain but Tom says it`s what Shawnell should be wearing at home in the kitchen instead of being at the theatre and the “House” is the place where the audience sits or the place where none of the actors or crew ever get to go in the three months we are preparing for the production.

 Finally, our last two important terms are “Shtick” which is a sure-fire piece of action that will get a laugh, such as when Sean makes the ptchew ptchew sound when the gun doesn`t go off and “Chewing the Scenery”, trying too hard to get a laugh or what the termites do when we build sets out of formuleta. Now you`re talking!

 CENTER STAGE is a publication of Dominical Little Theatre and is intended to be a means of communicating on an ongoing basis with our friends, sponsors, and volunteers. Please feel free to send your comments and article suggestions to dominical_theatre@yahoo.com

Remember to checkout our comprehensive Whale coast property tours.

I can be reached at  1 888 581 1786 or email annie@costaricaretirementvacationproperties.com

 

 

Now, my life is more complete! Five years ago, the Dominical Little Theatre began live productions featuring all time favorites and casting local residents of Dominical, Uvita and Ojochal.

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Oct 31 2008

The Inspiring southern coast now called Costa Ballena

The Inspiring Costa Ballena

In South West Costa Rica where the Coastal road or the Costanera Sur runs through Dominical , Uvita, Ojochal and inland to Palmar is a pity named the “Costa Ballena” or the Whale Coast. It`s geographical features differentiate it from the rest of Costa Rica. Rain forest covered meters drop sharply into the sea where giant waves carve out cliffs and caverns hidden behind cascading waterfalls. Marine turtles, spinner dolphins and several species of whales migrate up and down the coast navigating between jagged rock islands. The atmosphere creates a kind of intensity that awakens the senses of the adventurous spirit.

People who come here to relax may find that a difficult task. Of course there are many quiet coves, lazy riverbanks and crimson sunsets that are perfect for hanging a hammock and reading a book. However, the animal populated jungles, tantalizing mangrove islands and the forming surf pounding the volcanic sand beaches all tend to invigorate rather than tranquilize.

Activities in which residents participate are cabalgatas or large horse parades, walking through sea caves, rappelling down waterfalls, searching for nocturnal animals on an evening jungle trail and whale watching while nature is abundant, modern amenities are also convenient.

Dominical, Uvita, Ojochal and Palmar the 4 main towns are connected by the best road in Costa Rica. They boast banks, numerous gourmet restaurants, supermarkets, electronics, hardware stores, private English schools, internet cafes, cell phone sales and repairs, veterinarian, doctor, dentist, pharmacies, chiropractors and many others. Still there are many businesses needed inspiring new pioneers. A few come to live a quiet, relaxing exist but most move here to see the incredible nature and wild life., interact with Costa Ricans and learn their culture, make new friends and experience or start a new business.

Your new life begins here! What you do with it is your challenge, lead the life of a pirate, full of changes, excitement, adventure and fun.

This rare assimilation of invigorating sports intriguing common activities, energizing and revitalizing new available health treatments and the spectacular intense rainforest. Coastal environment has a different type of attraction.

The magnetism is for the person who wants a new beginning filled with all types of natural inspirations. One thing most have in common is a love for the environment and a desire to conserve and protect it!

To find out in depth about this awe – inspiring area, check out Christopher Howard’s Retirement Relocation Tours for the south Pacific. Learn about the possibilities of living here through our mini – seminar and familiarization / introduction course.

 

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Oct 31 2008

Come on Tour before you buy land in the Whale Coast

The South Pacific Division of Costa Rica Retirement Vacation Properties has just created The Whale Coast Tour The purpose of this tour is to familiarize people with the lifestyle in the Southern Zone of Costa Rica.  Don’t gamble and buy land in Costa Rica sight unseen.  Come on the 6 day tour, all inclusive, complete with seminar, before buying anything sight unseen.

Please read on for the article by AM Costa Rica regarding EBay land sales

E-Bay marketer does steady business in Sixaola lots

By the A.M. Costa Rica staff

Who says land prices are sky high in Costa Rica?

Why a clever purchaser can get a 1.75-acre lot with ocean view for several thousand dollars via an eBay bidding process. Or at least that is what the Internet posting says.

Included is a photo of a pristine beach with palm trees.

The most recent sale, which took place Thursday, came in at $2,045, according to eBay records. Two other persons made lesser offers.

Despite the photo of the beach and the palms, the seller says that the property is near the village of Margarita in the Canton de Sixaola “only a few miles from the pristine beaches.” That’s adjacent to the border with Panamá.

According to the eBay listing, “I have seen lots in the same area selling at much much higher prices, but I have to sell some of my properties to assist my elderly father,” said the seller.

According to other documents provided by another purchaser, the seller identifies himself as Michael Leu of U.S. Land and Investment Co. in Mentor, Ohio. Leu was not available by telephone Thursday night. However, an answering machine said that successful eBay bidders could leave contact information. Most of the sales appear to be via credit card.

U.S. Land seems to be working on a second section. One section had 109 lots, numbered from 231 to 340. The sale Thursday was for Lot 402.

Although buying land sight unseen via the Internet might not be a good investment strategy, the most recent sale validates a perception that North Americans have a renewed interest in Costa Rica despite economic problems there. Several other indexes that monitor interest in the country have shown a small spike in the last few weeks, including readership of A.M. Costa Rica.

Monday is Labor Day in the United States, traditionally the last holiday of the summer. Soon the season there will turn to fall and then winter.

As the Sixaola land dealer points out in eBay literature, Costa Rica’s weather has been described as eternal spring. This is inviting for Canadians and those from the chilly parts of the United States.

A handful of development companies have been telemarketing Costa Rican land to North Americans. Sometimes potential purchasers are invited to make a free visit.

U.S. Land appears to have been maintaining a steady sales business via eBay to persons who have not even visited the properties. At least one purchaser who visited later said he had trouble finding and then entering his property.

The complexities of Costa Rican real estate weigh heavily against impulsive purchases, via the Internet or otherwise. Property access can be a problem, as previous articles here have pointed out. Unregistered easements can freeze construction plans.

Utilities are a problem. U.S. land suggests “well and roof automated cisterns using rain water catchment” for fresh water. Land owners all over the country frequently have trouble getting electric lines installed, and long waits for telephone service are traditional.

Then there are the land invaders, individuals who move into untended property, build a rough dwelling and use legal maneuvers to gain possession. Some land owners have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars protecting against such invasions and sometimes successfully evicting the culprits.

Additionally, either through lack of legal knowledge or premeditation, land owners subdivide properties without official sanction and quickly unload the parcels. That leaves buyers in limbo. Even some well-financed and highly reputable development firms have had this type of title problem due to the legal intricacies of Costa Rican law.

 

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Oct 31 2008

Questions about the Whale Coast

Most Frequently Asked Questions

Anyone considering relocating to Costa Rica wants to find out everything they can about the country and the specific area/region that they prefer. Many people educate themselves through Christopher Howard`s book The New Golden Door… or by attending one of his tours.

 

Christopher, who has been a great friend and mentor since 1996 brings his tour groups to our S.P.R.E.S. office in Uvita, located in the Costa Ballena region in South West Costa Rica. He loves this area of the country and likes to familiarize his clients with the lifestyle here. Through working with him and clients from Robert Shannon´s Lifestyle Property  Tours, plus our many clients, I have become aware of their most common concerns.

Here are the most frequently asked questions our clients have asked

  1. What conveniences and amenities are available and lacking?
  2. What will my expenses be? Is the cost of living less expensive?
  3. Should I buy a turn-key house or build a dream home?
  4. Is it easy to make friends and what activities and sports can I get involved with?
  5. Are there many language problems and cultural differences?
  6. Is it easy to bring my pets?
  7. What about safety and crime?
  8. Do I need a 4 wheel drive?
  9. Are there any business opportunities?
  10. Are property management services for my house offered?
  11. Will friends and family visit?
  12. How is the medical care?

To address these issues, Christopher Howard and S.P.R.E.S. have designed a Tour specific to this region. It is a 5 night/6 day all inclusive package. It includes an introduction to the area a familiarization of the properties and lifestyles of residents, and a seminar on relocation. Anyone considering this change should also consider signing up for this exciting trip.

However I would like to give you more knowledge by answering some of the questions over the next few entries.

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Oct 31 2008

We Love to Live Here!

The Costa Ballena or Whale Coast draws a certain type of person. Its geographical features differentiate from the rest of Costa Rica. The rain forest covered mountains drop sharply into the sea where giant waves carve out cliffs and caverns, hidden behind cascading waterfalls. The atmosphere creates a kind of intensity that only the adventurous can respect.

People who come only to relax are often disappointed and feel out of place. Choices of activities are laced with challenges and excitement. Of course there are many quiet coves, lazy riverbanks and crimson sunsets, but the animal filled jungles, tantalizing mangroves islands and pounding surf tend to energize  rather than tranquilize.

Activities in which residents participate are cabalgatas or large horse parades, walking through sea caves, rappelling down waterfalls, searching for nocturnal animals on an evening jungle trail and whale watching while nature is abundant, modern amenities are also convenient.

Dominical, Uvita, Ojochal and Palmar the 4 main towns are connected by the best road in South West Costa Rica. They boast banks, numerous gourmet restaurants, supermarkets, electronics, hardware stores, private English schools, internet cafes, cell phone sales and repairs, veterinarian, doctor, dentist, pharmacies, chiropractors and many others.  , Still there are many businesses needed inspiring new pioneers.

A few come to live a quiet, relaxing exist but most move here to see the incredible nature and wild life, interact with Costa Ricans and learn their culture, make new friends and experience or start a new business.

Your new life begins here! What you do with it is your challenge, lead the life of a pirate, full of changes, excitement, adventure and fun.

This rare  assimilation of invigorating sports intriguing common activities, energizing and revitalizing new available health treatments and the spectacular intense rain forest. Coastal environment has a different type of attraction.

The magnetism is for the person who wants a new beginning filled with all types of natural inspirations. One thing most have in common is a love for the environment and a desire to conserve and protect it! 
Costa Rica Retirement Vacation Properties south is a green Real Estate company and seek preservation wherever possible.

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Oct 25 2008

Everyone needs to see this

If you have been confused about the USA election, wondering where all this is going, what does the future hold and how will it impact on you, then read on for a serious amount of information that will tell you how fast change occurs in this point in time.

This will renew everyone’s perspective no matter what your field of endeavor. It is the most riveting thing I have seen in a long time in one place.
Go HERE  and watch this video that was produced for Sony executives in June of this year.

Costa Rica Retirement Vacation Properties feels this is a good watch for everyone.

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Jul 29 2008

Sustainable Paradise

The following article was written by Jack Ewing, the founder of Hacienda Baru, a private reserve that specializes in Public Education.  He was one of the first North Americans to move to this area.  His dedication to Ecological conservation has set a standard for everyone.  There are many greedy and destructive developers in this area with little or no regard for our environment.

It is always advisable to find a good green Real Estate firm that is totally committed to sustaining the enviroment.

The responsibility of our office is to list properties that are developed with the minimal environmental impact and have taken steps toward the protection and restoration of their properties.  We urge all of our clients to receive environmental counseling through ASANA, an organization founded by Jack Ewing.  More information to come, but for now, check out the following.

To sustain is to nourish, prolong or support. It is the act of supporting. Sustainable development refers to how we use land. It can be defined as, the use of land in such a manner that the resources will be sustained at a given level indefinitely. It means that we don’t take away more each year and never put anything back. For example, it would be considered sustainable to buy old pasture land, plant trees and restore wildlife habitat on part of it while growing crops on part of it and later, cutting a few of the trees to build a house. It doesn’t mean to buy pristine beach frontage, cut down all the trees, replace native vegetation with exotic, fill in wetlands and build a hotel. We can apply the concept of sustainable development to a large area involving many property owners, such as a neighborhood, community or region. For community level sustainable development to function, the entire area in question needs to be governed by some type of zoning law, or agreement to limit development.

In recent years the central Pacific coast of Costa Rica has seen a rash of over development. Thirty years ago Puntarenas was considered to be the tropical paradise of the Pacific. My family and I lived in San Jose at that time and would often drive to Puntarenas on the weekends to enjoy the beach and natural beauty. By the early 1970s Puntarenas was showing signs of over development. Developers had subdivided too much land, built too many hotels, cabins, restaurants, bars and discos, left too much trash on the beaches, streets and road sides, and polluted too many water ways. The community was in a state of decline which was reflected by falling real estate prices. An unforgiving public abandoned Puntarenas. Jacó became the new hot spot. A few years later, by the time the costanera reached Quepos, that same public shifted their focus to Manuel Antonio. That was about 20 years ago. There was only one really nice hotel in Manuel Antonio then, The Mariposa. How many are there now, 150, 200? In my opinion, Manuel Antonio is, today, at the same stage of over development as was Puntarenas in 1970. Dominical is now comparable in its level of development to Manuel Antoino 15 years ago.

I know lots of people in Manuel Antonio who are very concerned about the development situation there, and are trying to do something about it. For them, it is an uphill battle. In Dominical, we have a head start. I have aerial photos of Dominical in 1972, when all the surrounding land was overgrazed cattle pasture and rice fields, and I have aerial photos of Dominical today. We are gaining ecologically. There is more secondary forest and tropical vegetation, more wildlife, more natural beauty today than in 1972.

Dominical has another advantage. Guapil Beach, Barú Beach, Dominical Beach, Dominicalito Beach, Escondidas Beach, Puertocito and Punta Achote are already regulated by zoning laws. That may not seem like much, but it is a big advantage. Manuel Antonio didn’t even begin trying to regulate its beach development until it was already overdeveloped. Dominical is a giant step ahead. Zoning laws aren’t perfect and most aren’t sustainable. So far, they apply only to first 200 meters inland from the beaches, and they can be modified. But they are a good start. They offer one level of protection.

A master plan for zoning and regulating development in the entire area would be helpful, but it would take a number of years to implement. We don’t have that much time. The costanera is coming soon. With it will come hoards of developers, all with ideas for large hotels, shopping centers, subdivisions, etc. I call these people the “bottom liners.” All they want is quick profits; buy, subdivide, sell and get out. Where does that leave those of us who want to stay here? I want to live here. I want to leave something nice to my children. I want something better. What about you? I think most of us agree. The point is, we need protection now, before the costanera is built.

Those of us who live and own property in and around Dominical have a unique opportunity to create a sustainable paradise. Don’t ask me for an example of a sustainable paradise, because I’m not sure that one exists anywhere in the world. But we can do it here. How, you ask? My answer is that we already have paradise. We must now take steps to limit our development and make it sustainable. We have a window of opportunity to create a community with a high quality of living at a level that can be maintained forever. It will be a place where, 30 years from now, our grandchildren will be proud to live.

What are the resources in the Dominical area that we need to protect? That’s as easy as asking you why you live here or why you are visiting here. What attracted you to Dominical? The beach certainly has something to do with it. But let’s be brutally honest. Compared to Manuel Antonio, Guanacaste, Honduras or the Caribbean our beaches are mediocre. They’re dangerous too! But we like them and they are an asset, even if they’re not the main attraction. We have Nauyaca Falls and other beautiful cascades. Just across the river, we have Hacienda Barú National Wildlife Refuge, our equivalent of a national park. We have numerous unofficial reserves and protected areas, many of which border each other or are connected to each other. We have wildlife and forests all around us. We have the Path of the Tapir Biological Corridor, a project of ASANA, which is striving to connect all these protected areas together. This will facilitate the movement and proliferation of the birds and animals that everyone enjoys seeing. The south has been called “The land of large parks and small hotels.” Dominical has been called “The gateway to the southern zone.” This reputation is certainly an asset.

Steve Stroud and I are taking steps to limit development on and around Hacienda Barú National Wildlife Refuge, in perpetuity. That doesn’t mean for a few years, for my lifetime or for 200 years. Perpetuity means forever. We are creating an environmental easement that will guarantee that 300 hectares and three kilometers of beach remain in their natural state forever. Under the same easement, we are severely limiting development on the other 30 hectares of our land. Why do Steve and I want to give up the right to develop our land? What do we get out of it? For one thing the other 30 hectares become much more valuable because they are situated adjacent to an internationally known and respected Wildlife Refuge, and because the status of the refuge is secure. Anyone who buys a home site or commercial lot there will have absolute assurance of the future of their neighborhood. Where else will you be able to find 300 hectares of jungle and three kilometers of pristine beach 20 years from now. My grandchildren and great grandchildren will be able to enjoy a Hacienda Barú that is in better condition ecologically that it was when I found it 29 years ago. Hacienda Barú will continue, forever, to be an asset to the community.

My son lives in Boulder, Colorado. People who live there brag about it. The county of Boulder learned the value of limiting development. They purchase thousands of acres of land around the city and declare it “open space.” Nobody can build there. They do other weird things too, like making it difficult to drive and easy to walk or cycle. They don’t synchronize their stop lights and make lots of bicycle and walking paths. They make it easy to park bicycles and difficult to park cars. They even have public buses with bicycle racks.

Property that goes on the market in Boulder usually sells within hours. Boulder is one of a kind. We can’t expect our government to become suddenly enlightened and do something similar for us. We have to take steps to protect our own community, create our own open space, and increase our own quality of living.
How could environmental easements work to protect the many assets within our region? Let’s imagine that Don Lulu and all his neighbors decide that Nauyaca Falls is such a treasure that it should be protected forever. So they all get together and create a covenant to use environmental easements to protect the land around Nauyaca Falls. The question of how much to limit development would be up to the land owners.

Maybe they would want to keep it as is, no hotels, no paved roads, limited access and pristine. Maybe they would decide that a little low impact development would work better. They could protect a great regional attraction in perpetuity (there’s that word again,) and, in so doing, increase the value of the rest of their land. Then imagine that the people around Pozo Azul do the same. Imagine that the property owners in Escaleras decide their land will be more valuable and their quality of living greater if they get together and agree to limit development. Imagine that the people in Lagunas do the same, and then those in Dominical, Dominicalito, San Martin, Barú and Hatillo follow. Are you getting the picture?

That’s how a sustainable paradise could happen, right here in our area. And, we, you and I, can make it happen. It‘s within our grasp. But we must do it now. The time for procrastination is over. I challenge the property owners of Dominical to take an historic step, to work together, to make decisions that will affect our lives and those of our descendants. I challenge the community to come together to make legal agreements to limit development forever, to become a model for other communities that wish to follow our example. I challenge Dominical to become the first sustainable paradise ever.

I realize that all of this probably brings up more questions than it answers. But, we have to start somewhere. If you are interested or want more information, call us at 1 866 512 7781.

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