Costa Rica - 100% Natural Beauty |
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| PARADISIACAL COFFEE COUNTRY BETWEEN OCEANS |
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Just the name of this country awakens longings and dreams. However, the wealth of the country does not lie in the gold which the Spanish conquistadors hoped to find in Costa Rica. Its true treasures are the magnificent scenic beauty, the hospitality of its people, and its fine coffees.
Costa Rica is a small, democratic and peaceful country, located at the center of the Americas, between Nicaragua and Panama. With a national territory of about 51,000 square kilometers (20,000 square miles), Costa Rica is slightly larger than Switzerland (3/4 the size of West Virginia) and it is the third smallest Central American country.
In 1502, on his fourth voyage to the New World, Christopher Columbus landed on the Atlantic Coast, close to what is now the port of Limon. The Spaniards were greeted by friendly Indians. Columbus was so impressed by the golden mirrors they wore around their necks and their stories of gold mines along the coast to the south that he named the land Costa Rica, the "Rich Coast." |
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Costa Rica has two distinct
coastlines: the Atlantic (or Caribbean) coast, and the long
Pacific shore. Its diverse beaches attract a multiplicity of
wildlife and its waters are home to gigantic whales as well as
tiny mollusks in delicate circular shells. A small country,
Costa Rica is packed with more beauty than almost any on earth.
Tropical rainforests and beautiful beaches, active volcanoes,
windswept mountaintops, cloud forests and a high density of
wildlife make Costa Rica an exciting, wild, adventurous and
exotic destination.
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The majority of people live in and around San Jose, Costa Rica's capital city. San Jose is nestled in the heart of the Central Valley between giant volcanic mountains and miles of green foothills.
Costa Rica is characterized by an impressive scenic beauty, a consolidated system of protected areas, social and political stability, high educational levels, and efficient infrastructure and services.
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| The people - the sympathetic face of Costa Rica |
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"Pura vida" is a Costa
Rican expression that means "The good Life." Costa Rican's use
it to say hello or goodbye, as affirmation or approval, and just
to express themselves in casual conversation.
Not without pride, the inhabitants of Costa Rica call themselves
Ticos and Ticas and are eager to share the beauties of their
country with visitors from all over the world.
Ticos are famous for their hospitality, and are quite happy to
live up to their reputation. An important aspect of Costa Rica's
cultural legacy is their love for peace and democracy. |
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They like to point out that
their nation is the exception in Latin America, where military
dictatorships have long dominated politics. They take pride in
having more than one hundred years of democratic tradition, and
almost half a century without an army.
Costa Ricans take pride in the National Theater, which is
considered to be the most impressive building in San José. |
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In the 1890's, the ruling coffee barons voted
for a tax on coffee exports in order to fund the construction of the
Theater, and European artisans were imported to design and construct the
baroque-period building.
Completed in 1897, the Theater features a
classical Renaissance columned facade topped by statues symbolizing
Dance, Music, and Fame. The most famous of the paintings is one showing
coffee harvesting and export. It also graces the back of the 5-Colon
banknote. |
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| La Carreta - Oxcart Tradition in Costa Rica |
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The traditional oxcart, or
carreta, is Costa Rica's most famous type of craft. From the
mid-nineteenth century, oxcarts were used to transport coffee
beans from Costa Rica's Central Valley over the mountains to
Puntarenas on the Pacific coast, a journey requiring ten to
fifteen days.
The tradition of painting and decorating oxcarts started in the
late Nineteenth Century.
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| Originally, each region of Costa Rica had its
own particular design, enabling the identification of the driver's
origin by the painted patterns on the wheels. While in most regions of Costa Rica, trucks and
trains replaced oxcarts as the main means of transport, but they remain
strong symbols of Costa Rican former country life, and the carretas
still feature prominently in parades and in religious and secular
celebrations. In 2005, UNESCO added the painted carreta to its world
registry of national art treasures. |
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| A natural paradise like no other in the world |
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Costa Rica is a natural paradise in the tropics,
unmatched by any other place in the world. The facts speak for
themselves: 6 % of all species that can be found on the planet are
concentrated here, in this tiny area that represents only 0.03 % of the
earth's surface. Nowhere in the world will you find such a spectacular
biodiversity per square kilometer. Even better, Costa Rica is proactive
in the conservation of these natural treasures for future generations,
and has protected more area per capita than any other country in the
world.
A total of 26 % of the country's area is protected in national parks,
biological reserves, national wildlife refuges and privately protected
areas. 12 ecosystems in eight climate zones are the home of 850 species
of birds, more than in all of North America; as well as 205 kinds of
mammals, 376 different species of reptiles and more than 9,000 species
of flowers, among them 1,200 types of orchids.
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More than 1,400 tree
species can be found in Costa Rica and until today, more than
35,000 insect species have been discovered, including 2,000
species of butterflies alone; new species are still being
discovered.
Costa Rica ...located between two great oceans, it is the
gateway between North & South America. Known for it's incredible
biodiversity, Costa Rica is a land of cloud forests and
volcanoes, arid lowlands and pristine beaches where the tropical
jungle meets the sea.
The scenery is so spectacular that from many of the highest
points it is possible to simultaneously view the Pacific Ocean
and the Caribbean Sea.
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| Costa Rica is an ideal
place to cultivate coffee. Its volcanic-rich soil, high altitude,
afternoon sun, plentiful rain, and cool evenings together create perfect
conditions for yielding beans that are rich and intense in flavor. |
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