Saturday, December 12, 2009

The Official Countdown Begins

It's been months since our last post -- mostly because there really hasn't been any news to report. As we've waited for word from our Costa Rica immigration attorney, we've been busy finishing up work on the house to prepare it to go on the market when we leave for Costa Rica.

Which market it goes on remains an open question at this point. We could decide to rent it, but for now we're leaning strongly in favor of listing it for sale. That said, we vacillate on an almost daily basis. So, we try not to obsess on the subject, choosing instead to trust that the right decision will become obvious when it's time to make it.

Last week we finally received the news we've anxiously awaited. Our application for temporary residency has been approved. As soon as we make our final payment to our attorney and pay some government fees, we'll receive an immigration appointment to receive our cedula, the legal document/ID card that provides us our temporary residency.

With that news, the countdown begins in earnest. And with it, an end to the luxury of uncertainty that permitted us to indulge in a casual "manana" mentality toward packing, sorting, painting, and detailed planning.

Expect more updates more often from this point on... complete with photographs of the memories we'll leave behind. Here's one of snow on the desert that will pull on our heart strings for a long time to come.
Pura Vida

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Answers for Puzzled Friends & Family




One of the most frequent questions we get from friends and family is what we're going to do when we get to Costa Rica. It's a valid question, and of course there's the obvious: We hope to spend time touring this beautiful, environmentally rich nation populated by friendly and interesting people.

But I think the questions they are really asking are...

Will we dine out with friends? How will we make those friendships? Where is there to eat out, anyway? With our families on a different continent, how will we spend our holidays? What about TV? Won't we miss NCIS and our other favorite programs? Will we have access to the Internet?

You get the picture. We've asked ourselves the same questions, of course. In fact, pretty much on a daily basis we find ourselves visualizing what we think our daily routine in Costa Rica might look like. Here's what we've come up with.

Breakfast will no doubt include what might be considered the national dish of Costa Rica: gallo pinto, or fried beans and rice. Add an egg, some fruit, and a cup of one of the best coffees on the planet, and you just might have the most perfect start to any day.

Instead of weekly trips to Costco and large corporate grocery stores, we'll shop at produce vendors, the central market, and small local food stores for the most part. When necessary, we'll reluctantly head for the Pali, Mas x Menos, or Hiper Mas -- all owned by WalMart and amply stocked with essentials like bathroom tissue, cleaning supplies, and products like Helman's Mayonnaise and Kraft salad dressings. Hopefully, we can do it all on foot, leaving the car (if we decide to have one) parked in the carport until we need to head for San Jose or the remote countryside.

Who's going to clean the house and do the laundry is still up for debate. Hiring help around the house will be inexpensive and provide jobs for our Tico neighbors. At the same time, it still feels a bit decadent to shirk those jobs by handing them off to someone else.

Of course, we expect to spend a good amount of time reading while waiting in line at ICE, CAJA, the bank, and just about everywhere else. But that's okay. One of our goals for this experience is to learn to relax, slow down, and accept those minor inconveniences as exactly that - minor.

Holidays? Who knows. We're open to new opportunities.

Television? We'll have cable or satellite - with American stations. But we're not sure how much we'll want to watch them. Staring up at the sky or into the trees in the hope of spying a colorful bird or lizard might be much more interesting.

Internet is a high priority for us and a high speed Internet is a non-negotiable pre-requisite for any place we might consider settling.

Without question our silver craft and lapidary hobbies will continue to occupy much of our lives. But there will be more:

- planting a vegetable garden and fruit trees
- becoming fluent in Spanish
- building or re-doing our new home
- leaning to cook Tico-style
- sitting in the park
- becoming a regular at the heladeria (ice cream shop)
- welcoming family & friends when they come to visit
- finding a way to give back to our host country


Perhaps most of all, we hope to enrich our lives by getting to know our neighbors - the ones who live near to us and the ones we encounter in our travels. And to learn from them new ways to live our lives that will allow us to focus on what is truly important...

It is tempting to try to finish that last sentence, but somehow we suspect that we've something more to learn first.

Pura Vida

Wednesday, June 24, 2009



This one shot goes a long way toward explaining why we feel drawn to Costa Rica and this whole adventure.

Environmentalists tell us to buy local. It doesn't get much more local than choosing your fruits and vegetables from the pulperias, street vendors, and ferias (farmer's markets) in town.

We found this one on a corner in San Isidro del General across from the park that marks the center of town.