Exclusive COSTA RICA TOUR

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MARIS61

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So, next March or thereabout my wife and I are going to visit Costa Rica. Since it's got fairly primitive infrastructure and roads, high crime, and several very different environs in different parts of the country, we are going to go for 10 days with a tour group, probably Caravan Tours, to get an overview of the country and it's history.

We've never done this type of tour, and I'm wondering if anyone here has been on a group tour for an entire trip somewhere. Would love any input on tours in general and definitely any info from people who have spent time in Costa Rica.

From a few sources I have derived that tours can pretty much separate you from the local inhabitants to a large degree, except if and when you skip the activities for the day to do something on your own, which we plan on doing. I get the impression I will have to learn some Spanish to be able to converse with the locals on a shoot-the-shit level, so I have started checking out some free apps for that. We may stay a few days after the tour on our own.
 
Buy the latest issue of Archeology magazine. In the magazine will be ads for different university hosted tours. A friend and I went to Cancun like that about 10 years ago. Got amazing private tours of archeology sites all around there. Totally worth the money. I knew someone with a timeshare in Cancun so we stayed there while everyone else stayed in hostels. We would just cab to the group and then take off to the sites. So we would party in Cancun and then meet up with the group. Chitchen Itza, Coba, Talum. Because we were with archeology professionals and students we were allowed to inside many of the buildings and tombs that regular tourists can't access.

I plan one doing the same thing if and when I ever make it to Machu Picchu.
 
Buy the latest issue of Archeology magazine. In the magazine will be ads for different university hosted tours. A friend and I went to Cancun like that about 10 years ago. Got amazing private tours of archeology sites all around there. Totally worth the money. I knew someone with a timeshare in Cancun so we stayed there while everyone else stayed in hostels. We would just cab to the group and then take off to the sites. So we would party in Cancun and then meet up with the group. Chitchen Itza, Coba, Talum. Because we were with archeology professionals and students we were allowed to inside many of the buildings and tombs that regular tourists can't access.

I plan one doing the same thing if and when I ever make it to Machu Picchu.
Love this, thanks. I don't plan on doing Mexico anytime soon, but the university/archaeology tour would be fantastic.

Totally random, but my dad was flying for the Air Force in the 80's and stopped quickly near Cairo. He was stoked to get a couple of hours of free time and went to see the Pyramids as a bucket list item. He was super-disappointed, b/c he only got to go in the uber-tourist section, there were graffiti and garbage all over, and he got a generally bad feeling about how these wonders of the world were being cared for, instead of awe that they were built 5000 years ago. Maybe it's better now, but I think I'd rather see the scientist/historian view of things, even if it takes longer or is more expensive, than the "random touristy" view.
 
Love this, thanks. I don't plan on doing Mexico anytime soon, but the university/archaeology tour would be fantastic.

Totally random, but my dad was flying for the Air Force in the 80's and stopped quickly near Cairo. He was stoked to get a couple of hours of free time and went to see the Pyramids as a bucket list item. He was super-disappointed, b/c he only got to go in the uber-tourist section, there were graffiti and garbage all over, and he got a generally bad feeling about how these wonders of the world were being cared for, instead of awe that they were built 5000 years ago. Maybe it's better now, but I think I'd rather see the scientist/historian view of things, even if it takes longer or is more expensive, than the "random touristy" view.

I would do a university tour for Egypt. They offer them for all around the world.

Also you can rent someone's timeshare at a resort for cheaper than you can book at the same resort. Just make sure you do your homework first.

I've stayed twice at resorts in Cabo using rented timeshares. Once it was a 4 bedroom suite and there were only two of us. The magic basket as AWESOME!
 
Tours are a bunch of old crackaz. You wake up early as fuck and rush through sites. They have been fun though and you do see a lot.
 
So, next March or thereabout my wife and I are going to visit Costa Rica. Since it's got fairly primitive infrastructure and roads, high crime, and several very different environs in different parts of the country, we are going to go for 10 days with a tour group, probably Caravan Tours, to get an overview of the country and it's history.

We've never done this type of tour, and I'm wondering if anyone here has been on a group tour for an entire trip somewhere. Would love any input on tours in general and definitely any info from people who have spent time in Costa Rica.

From a few sources I have derived that tours can pretty much separate you from the local inhabitants to a large degree, except if and when you skip the activities for the day to do something on your own, which we plan on doing. I get the impression I will have to learn some Spanish to be able to converse with the locals on a shoot-the-shit level, so I have started checking out some free apps for that. We may stay a few days after the tour on our own.

I have never been on a tour in a foreign country. I did however go to Ecuador with a youth group in my early twenties. We had a guide and went to different parts of the country meeting people, living how they lived, not much luxury. Stayed in Quito a bit for some downtime. But, mostly adventure. Stayed in a village called Panchanillay in the mountains next to a volcano, Mt. Tungurhua which erupted when I was there....favorite part was that I got to live with a tribe in the Amazon for several weeks. Very eye opening. Had to learn a good deal of spanish.
 
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Been to Costa Rica twice. Love that place. Never done a group tour there. I prefer planning a more private trip.. What do u want to know? Cloud forest in Monteverde - do both a day and night tour. Pacific beaches are very nice and relaxing.
 
Been to Costa Rica twice. Love that place. Never done a group tour there. I prefer planning a more private trip.. What do u want to know? Cloud forest in Monteverde - do both a day and night tour. Pacific beaches are very nice and relaxing.

As most of the usual sites and activities are included, it would be helpful to know which might not be worth the time, as we will probably need a break from the tour routine one or two days at least. Here's the tour info:

http://www.caravan.com/tour/costa-rica
 
So, next March or thereabout my wife and I are going to visit Costa Rica. Since it's got fairly primitive infrastructure and roads, high crime, and several very different environs in different parts of the country, we are going to go for 10 days with a tour group, probably Caravan Tours, to get an overview of the country and it's history.

We've never done this type of tour, and I'm wondering if anyone here has been on a group tour for an entire trip somewhere. Would love any input on tours in general and definitely any info from people who have spent time in Costa Rica.

From a few sources I have derived that tours can pretty much separate you from the local inhabitants to a large degree, except if and when you skip the activities for the day to do something on your own, which we plan on doing. I get the impression I will have to learn some Spanish to be able to converse with the locals on a shoot-the-shit level, so I have started checking out some free apps for that. We may stay a few days after the tour on our own.

Do you speak Costa Rican Hispanic? Dialects vary from one country to another and the slightest mis conception of a word will get you in trouble. Perhaps it is easier to fake a British or Austrian accent. You have got to hook up with retired CIA agents.
I hear they have fiefdoms spread all over the beautiful coastline.
 
As most of the usual sites and activities are included, it would be helpful to know which might not be worth the time, as we will probably need a break from the tour routine one or two days at least. Here's the tour info:

http://www.caravan.com/tour/costa-rica
If you like zip lining, when you go to la fortuna check out the zip lining there. Just hang out at the beach at guanacuste. Not sure how the snorkeling is in that specific area. We didn’t do much in San Jose. I don’t know what cloud forest you are going to, but see if you can get a private guided tour. We just asked someone at the hotel to hook us up and had a great experience that way. Again we did a day and night tour with the same guide. A lot of the wildlife is nocturnal so it is a completely different experience. That’s about all I got. I would also try to find out the mosquito situation. One time we went and the mosquitos were unbearable. I had wished I had packed more light pants. They love the fresh blood of tourists, but they might only like liberal blood so you might be ok!
 
Also, for the most part you don’t need to speak Spanish. There are a lot of ex pats and the economy is tourism based. Rural areas have less English. Guestures and Spanglish go a long way. Uno mas cerveza por favor,will get you by.
 
I'm going to Costa Rica at the end of March too. Keep the info coming!

We are going south of your path, Jaco. I have plans to go surfing. Zip line is a possibility. Going to rip around on this boat and catch some sail fish, hopefully.
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I'm going to Costa Rica at the end of March too. Keep the info coming!

We are going south of your path, Jaco. I have plans to go surfing. Zip line is a possibility. Going to rip around on this boat and catch some sail fish, hopefully.
View attachment 18491

Isn't Jaco known as Hooker Island?
 
Also, for the most part you don’t need to speak Spanish. There are a lot of ex pats and the economy is tourism based. Rural areas have less English. Guestures and Spanglish go a long way. Uno mas cerveza por favor,will get you by.

Not to be a stickler, but in my experience the word you wrote as "uno" should be "cinco".

barfo
 
It wouldn't surprise me. You can find a hooker anywhere. Surprised that you even said that as it's probably your modus operandi.

one of my cousins wanted to do a bro trip there a few years ago and we found out it was basically all hookers there. dunno if they would have been all that hot.
 
Berlitz pocket dictionary for Costa Rican travel....covers everything in English and Spanish you'll ever need...look it up in English...point to it in Spanish...pick one up at a good book store
 
As most of the usual sites and activities are included, it would be helpful to know which might not be worth the time, as we will probably need a break from the tour routine one or two days at least. Here's the tour info:

http://www.caravan.com/tour/costa-rica

When your tour is over and you have thought it through, I look forward to your report.
While I will not be taking a tour, I might spend a winter down there. We shall see.
So Cal is neat, warm and I like it much, but Costa Rica, I have not done.
 
So I've been following Costa Rica fairly closely for awhile now, the citizens, their recent election, the waves of immigrants from failed neighboring shitholes, the types of employment, the expats, the food...

So far, I've given up on the food. It seems they eat beans and rice, with a bit of fish or meat, and call it good.

A more elaborate meal might include carrot slices.

We'll see.

The election was heated like ours, but theirs was like Mitt against Barack and the left won.

Since then, things seem to be getting more violent, more crime, but not in a political sore loser way like America. Not in a political way at all except the result of shifting political influence maybe.

Nicaraguans in San Jose walk together for safety and survive on ¢300 colones daily

By
Rico
-
20 August 2018
What’s it like to be a Nicaraguan migrant in Costa Rica today? Contrary to the social media posts and comments that they come here to ‘pillage’, the sad reality is that most live on a few colones a day and without a roof over their head unless they are able to find work, a task that is becoming more and difficult by the day.
Fleeing repression and violence at home, Nicaraguan refugees now live the same fear in Costa Rica
Bryan Castillo, writing for the daily La Teja, a Nacion publication, took to La Merced park on Sunday, the same park that a day earlier became violent when a group of some 400 Costa Ricans descended on the public park in the center of San Jose, demanding the departure of Nicaraguans living in the country, according to them for the damage that this population has done in our territory.

Authorities immediately closed off the park on Saturday.

On Sunday, the park, for many years, dubbed “Nica park”, a source of culture and a meeting place for many Nicaraguans living in Costa Rica, remained closed and under police guard, fearing more violence. It was reopened this Monday morning.

Castillo writes he met up with Armando, a ‘pinolero’ (a colloquial term for a Nicaraguan) who preferred not to reveal his full name for fear of reprisals from Ticos (Costa Ricans) and the government of President Daniel Ortega.

Armando, 42 years old, says he arrived in Costa Rica on July 18, fleeing violence in his country. Like Armando, there are about 25,000 of his compatriots who arrived in Costa Rica since April, requesting refuge.

Armando says he is from the department of Carazo, about 95 kilometers from the border between Costa Rica and Nicaragua, a tourist town on the Pacific coast. Behind he left two daughters whom he did not communicate with much, but now must, to assure them, given the news of the violence, that he is Ok.

Armando and many of his fellow Nicaraguans are not a menace to Costa Rican society. They are here to work if they can find work. To earn enough to help out the family back home, to get them here, if possible, away from the repression of Daniel Ortega.

But that all changed on Saturday.

Armando, with only a few colones in his pocket and no place to live, is, like many other Nicaraguans, who came to Costa Rica seeking peace but in the last day has found a similar scenario to the one he saw every day in Nicaragua.

“We have to walk together, as you can see, we are five (two men and three women) because we are afraid of being attacked, we have been here for more than a month and we do not have where to sleep. All Nicaraguans at this moment are together, you will see us with other people and not alone because we do not want to be beaten,” he said.

“We have lived things that thank God you (the Costa Ricans) have not lived, we have lived wars, we have suffered from hunger and humiliations (stops and cries). We feel bad because we have to flee our country and we arrived here with the hope of working but some people do not want us,” he said.

“I offer an apology to all Costa Ricans for the Nicaraguans who have hurt here but we are not all like that, most of us are honest people who only want to feed our families.”

Surviving on ¢300 colones daily
Another reason for grouping is financial. Armando said that every day they survive on ¢300 colones, that is, with their contribution and that of the other 4 people with whom they walk, they put together ¢1,500.

“At this moment I have ¢50 colones (US 50 cents) but among us we can buy ‘galletas’ (cookies, soda crackers). After what happened (the aggressions of Saturday) other Nicaraguans who are better-off, give us something to eat, have also given us food in a shelter (in the Obras de Sor María Romero, 300 meters from KFC Paseo Colón) but we only eat once or twice a day that’s why we buy the cookies,” he said.

Carlos, who arrived last week, on Thursday, August 16, says he is living the same situation.

From Puerto Corinto, in Chinandego, the 44-year-old fled his country afraid because according to him, the Nicaraguan army was looking for him to kill him.

He was a ‘cruzrojista’ (red cross worker) and, according to his account, they mounted a persecution against him and fellow cruzrojistas after they attended a young man who was demonstrating against the government.

“Ortega took my family away from me, I have three daughters, twenty, eighteen and eight years old and a thirteen-year-old boy. Since I’m here I do not communicate directly with them (he does through neighbors) because I’m afraid that the police will check their phones and realize they talk to me, if that happens they can kill them and I do not want that to happen to them,” he commented.

He also survives with ‘three tejas’ a day, although sometimes he has more. For him, that is not the worst since the most complicated thing has been not having a place to sleep or take care of bodily needs.

“When I feel like going to the bathroom I go to a ‘cantina’ (small bar). I explain what I’m going through and they let me use it. I do not like to bother people with things like that but I have to do it because the body can not take it anymore,” he added.

Both Armando and Carlos said that sometimes they sleep in a shelter called El Pastor, which is 200 meters south of the Ministry of Health park and 300 meters east. A few blocks from La Merced park.

They mention that they only have 50 spots a night. The entrance is at 8 pm. and the departure at 5 am.

“It’s the only night in which we do not get cold in the wind or the rain, if we do not get a spot then we sleep on the sidewalk of the hospital (San Juan de Dios) or on the roof of the gas station (which is in front of the north side of La Merced park),” said Carlos.

According to the 2011 census, approximately 290,000 Nicaraguans live in the country, the majority of whom work in construction and domestic work.

During the embarrassing spectacle of this Saturday, the Fuerza Publica (police) arrested 44 people. By means of a tweet, the Office of the Prosecutor announced that it released 41 and that the remaining 3 were being held by the Fiscalia pending the resolution of their judicial situation.
http://qcostarica.com/nicaraguans-i...for-safety-and-survive-on-¢300-colones-daily/
 
http://qcostarica.com/they-didnt-wa...mily-of-spanish-woman-murdered-in-costa-rica/

“They Didn’t Warn Us About The Danger”, Says Family Of Spanish Woman Murdered in Costa Rica
Spain’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs now recommends that tourists “travel with caution” to Costa Rica

By
Rico
-
11 August 2018
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“Don’t fail us again.” That’s the message from the family of Arancha Gutiérrez, a 31-year-old Spanish woman who was murdered in Tortuguero last weekend while visiting Costa Rica with her husband and a group of seven other Spaniards.

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The mother, partner and father of Arancha Gutiérrez (l-r). KIKE PARA, El Pais
Speaking to Spain’s El Pais, Miguel Ángel Escribano, said nobody – not Spanish or Costa Rican authorities or the management at their hotel – had told them that police had stopped patrolling the beaches: “They didn’t warn us of the danger we were running.”

“Spanish people travel across the world to destinations that can be more or less dangerous and we decide how much risk we take,” he said, reading from a statement inside San Fernando de Henares City Hall, in the Madrid region. “But this does not mean we are looking to get ourselves killed.”

Escribano said that before traveling to Costa Rica the couple had consulted information offered by Spain’s Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores (Ministry of Foreign Affairs) on global destinations.

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“We thought Tortuguero was a very safe place where nothing ever happened,” explained Escribano. “After the tragedy, we became aware of things that, it seems, no one knew about.”

Spain’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs website has been updated since the murder of Gutiérrez and María Trinidad Mathus, from Mexico and now recommends that tourists “travel with caution” to Costa Rica. According to the website, travelers should “adopt measures to protect themselves and avoid traveling alone or to remote or poorly lit places, both in urban settings and tourist areas.”

“There has been an increase in violence with the use of firearms (although not directed specifically against tourists) in the most conflictive areas of the urban area of cities such as San José or Puerto Limón, especially at night.

“Since the aggressors are usually under the influence of drugs, in the case of being assaulted, it is recommended not to resist and to prevent this type of events the basic rules of prudence should be adopted with luggage and personal objects, especially with valuables (cameras, video devices …). It is recommended not to wear jewelry and it is strongly discouraged to travel in pirate cabs,” explained the Ministry in the Security section.

In addition, as a result of recent attacks against female tourists, “it is recommended to take self-protection measures and avoid traveling alone or in isolated or poorly lit areas, both in urban areas and in tourist areas.”

The website asks travelers to Costa Rica to keep handy Spanish embassy’s emergency phone number (+506 6050 9853).

Escribano thanked the Spanish consulate and embassy in Costa Rica, as well as the Costa Rica government and police force, for their support following the murder. But he called on the Spanish government to do more: “Don’t leave us in this important moment because this matter cannot be left unresolved. Don’t fail us again.”

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The family returned to Spain on Thursday. Escribano and the victim’s family – mother, father, sister, and brother-in-law – agreed that the attack had been sexually motivated.

“Arancha left to go running early in the morning, like any woman wishing to enjoy her holidays would have done. She was attacked by a vile pervert, a blot on the human condition,” they said.

“We do not know how far machismo reaches, and up to what point a woman cannot enjoy nature by herself in broad daylight, creating fear and insecurity for the rest of the women who want to live freely.”

OIJ Raids Home of Suspect

Meanwhile, in Costa Rica, the Organismo de Investigación Judicial (OIJ) raided Friday morning the apartment of the suspect in the killing of the Spanish woman, an individual named Albin Díaz Hopkins, in the community of Tortuguero de Pococí, in search of elements that tie him to the murder.

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Hopkins is believed to have met the victim the before the murder, was released on Monday for insufficient evidence to place him in preventive detention. The court did, however, turn him over to immigration officials given his ‘irregular’ status in the country.

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Hopkins, of Nicaraguan nationality, remains since Tuesday in the custody of the Dirección General de Migración y Extranjería (immigration service), since he is illegal in Costa Rica, being held in the Central Region Apprehension Center (CARC), located in Los Lagos de Heredia.

Authorities suspect sexual motive was behind the attack, as Gutiérrez’s clothes had been torn off.

More tourism security promised

The Tourist Police (Policía Turística) increased the vigilance in Tortuguero since Friday.

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Also on Friday, the Costa Rican Tourism Institute (ICT) reported that for December, when the high season starts, it hopes to have an application ready with warnings and safety tips for tourists.

The application will have geolocation to alert the user about the dangers according to where they are, explained the Minister of Tourism, María Amalia Revelo.

This in addition to President Carlos Alvarado’s announcement on Thursday that the central government will allocate US$1 million annually from the budget of the Costa Rican Tourism Institute (ICT) to tourism security.
 

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