After reading through some of the posts in the different sections of this board and watching the original post get perverted into something else, this post is for all.
Read
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=48954 before reading this post and maybe you'll understand where I'm coming from. Sorry if the my grammar and punctuation don't meet with your approval.
After recently reading through many of the posts and rebuttals to said posts I decided to write this little primer about Costa Rica.
A quick disclaimer, in this context “primer” is defined as “A short informative piece of writing”. Not the other definitions available.
Many people seem to post about Costa Rica with a rather dim view of the country. Personally I can’t see this as the case. I have spent a lot of time in the gulch but have also spent time in other parts of the Country. Granted Costa Rica has its’ faults but name me other countries that do not have faults of their own. Whether it be crime, poverty, race relations, laws that seem,
to us, unreasonable or ridiculous, or any other reason you may be able to think of.
We travel to these countries to broaden our knowledge of the rest of the world and experience different cultures. Whether that be the food, the architecture, their way of life or even their method of transportation. In many of these countries prostitution is legal but pimping is not. So be it.
But I digress from the original subject.
How many people who post on this board can
honestly say they have done any of the following:
Viewed the Stone Spheres at Palma Sur?
Visited the Mayan ruins at Guayabo?
Experienced the waterfalls in La Fortuna, Montezuma or La Paz?
Experienced the volcanos of Orosi, Irazu, Poas or even Arenal?
Wind surfed the waters of Lake Arenal and then enjoyed a hot spring soak at Baldi, Eco Thermales or the tourist trap of Tabacon?
Have you ever enjoyed a sunset cruise on a sail boat in the southern waters off Guanacaste province?
Perhaps taken an extended jet skiing tour of the Papagayo peninsula?
Swam in the ocean of Drake bay and then spent the night listening to the sounds of the jungle in a nearby rain forest?
Enjoyed the pilgrimage or actually taken part in the pilgrimage in July or August to the Cathedral/Basilica de Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles in Cartago like so many devout Catholic Costa Ricans do?
Enjoyed the lights of the San Jose valley from the restaurant Mirador Ram Luna or from a balcony at the old “White House”?
Have you visited the numismatic museum or the Museo de Oro or Museo De N*no or even the Jade museum which used to be in the INS building but has moved to Avenida Central opposite the Max por Menos?
Possibly strolled up Paseo Colon to the Museo de Cultra; you know the old fort with the bullet holes in the walls?
Have you ever played golf at Playa Conchal or Los Seunos or even Cariari?
Done an ATV tour through the mountains and valleys in and around Jaco or Flamingo?
Picked mango from the tree in Jaco? Seen a Teak plantation ?
Zip lined through the mountains and flown like a bird on those zip lines? Experienced one of the many coffee plantation tours ?
You’ve probably gone deep sea fishing or have pictures saying that’s what you did. Did you share your catch with the locals ?
There are so many other things to do in Costa Rica besides the gulch.
If you go to Costa Rica for the gulch and the gulch only so be it, enjoy your time there.
Until you have experienced more of the country and its’ people than the gulch you have no right to bad mouth the country, its laws, its people, its traffic or anything else. I know of only a few people that can claim to have “experienced” Costa Rica. I’m not one of them because my Spanish is still very bad ( like my writing or English). Some of these people are “perpetual tourists”, others are actual residents, others just visit. A few are expat residents.
If your impression of Costa Rica is based solely on your experiences in the gulch you have missed out on the warmth, the cordiality, the willingness to help and the best parts of the people of Costa Rica. They are some of the best people I have ever had the pleasure of meeting in any of the 15 or more countries I've been to.
Just one man’s opinion.