Downtown Map located most businesses Puerto Viejo de Talamanca, Costa Rica |
If you haven’t figured it out yet, Imperial is the main beer company in Costa Rica and thus makes many of the business signs! All Over Costa Rica |
Downtown Map located most businesses Puerto Viejo de Talamanca, Costa Rica |
If you haven’t figured it out yet, Imperial is the main beer company in Costa Rica and thus makes many of the business signs! All Over Costa Rica |
Think of us as near the Panama Canal! And South America! |
We are between Nicaragua & Panama. Only Panama separates us from Columbia, South America. And there is a big Colombian influence here including 1 airline, restaurants, and my barber! 🙂 |
And there are 5 totally different worlds between us and Mexico! And only Panama separating us from Columbia and South America! |
Before Sunrise this morning, I had to leave for birding hike before it rose, so maybe get it tomorrow.
Atlantic Ocean/Gulf of Mexico/Caribbean Sea from Puerto Viejo, Costa Rica. |
I’m still working on photo posts for the first day plus Cahuita yesterday and now Samasati today! So I will not try to get them all while on the trip. SLOWING DOWN! Tomorrow I stay at hotel the whole day! No trip or hike! Then Friday go home where I will finish my photo work. Internet is sometimes slow here.
Cover Plates of the first edition in 1719. |
As much as I might like to compare my adventures in this tropical rainforest to a story like The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, possibly the first English novel, my modern conveniences and friendly natives are a completely different world than the one Daniel Defoe described on the little island near Trinidad & Tobago for Robinson’s unique adventures of surviving on the island for 28 years before rescue in the 1600’s supposedly. But I too “came to the woods” just for a different purpose.
I just read it almost as a parallel to my last year’s reading of Don Quixote, the first Spanish novel. Though lacking in many modern writing skills, it is a simple and hardy adventure story that is easy to read, with fewer boring moments than Don Quixote. Here is a good synopsis or description of the book found on Wikipedia:
Robinson Crusoe[a] /ˌrɒbɪnsən ˈkruːsoʊ/ is a novel by Daniel Defoe, first published on 25 April 1719. The first edition credited the work’s protagonist Robinson Crusoe as its author, leading many readers to believe he was a real person and the book a travelogue of true incidents.[2]
Epistolary, confessional, and didactic in form, the book is presented as an autobiography of the title character (whose birth name is Robinson Kreutznaer)—a castaway who spends twenty-eight years on a remote tropical desert island near Trinidad, encountering cannibals, captives, and mutineers, before ultimately being rescued.
The story has since been thought to be based on the life of Alexander Selkirk, a Scottish castaway who lived for four years on a Pacific island called “Más a Tierra”, now part of Chile, which was renamed Robinson Crusoe Island in 1966,[3] but various literary sources have also been suggested.
Despite its simple narrative style, Robinson Crusoe was well received in the literary world and is often credited as marking the beginning of realistic fiction as a literary genre. It is generally seen as a contender for the first English novel.[4] Before the end of 1719, the book had already run through four editions, and it has gone on to become one of the most widely published books in history, spawning numerous imitations in film, television and radio that its name was used to define a genre, Robinsonade.
One of many illustrations from many editions of the book. Here he saves Friday’s life from the cannibals & gains a servant. |
I went on to begin reading Defoe’s sequel to his very popular book, The Farther Adventures of Robinson Crusoe. In short, not as good! (As most sequels!) He tries to take Robinson back to the island and populate it and much is an unrealistic stretch that is more boring and less adventure than the first book. I put it down and have not finished reading it, which came as a bonus with my Amazon digital copy of the original book.
But I hardily recommend the primary book as a classic representation of adventurous & religious men of the 1600’s! To be honest, I liked it better than Don Quixote, maybe because it was shorter and easier to read and less complicated development of characters. Devout Christians will like the ultimate confessional and faith elements included in Crusoe’s story.
And how cool is it to have read the first English novel AND the first Spanish novel?! History! Life insights! Fun!
The more I read, the more complete my life feels! 🙂
We come to the woods for many reasons! |
View from My Beach-side Hammock (3-pix panorama) Manzanillo Beach, Costa Rica |
Looking to the Left Manzanillo Beach, Costa Rica |
Looking to the Right Manzanillo Beach, Costa Rica |
Dangerous Currents – No Swimming! Manzanillo Beach, Costa Rica Yeah! They had a sign in English too, but this one more interesting! 🙂 |
Maybe Dangerous, But Fun Waves for Many! And many swim anyway and/or try to surf – “At Your Own Risk” Manzanillo Beach, Costa Rica |
Multiple Caution Signs Protect the Hotel And are probably required by their Insurance Co. And “No Life Guards” is indicated at check-in Manzanillo Beach, Costa Rica |
Barefoot Beach Futbol (Soccer) Manzanillo Beach, Costa Rica And by the way, ALL BEACHES ARE PUBLIC in Costa Rica! There are no private or hotel only beaches. |
Local Boys – Not Tourists! Manzanillo Beach, Costa Rica |
And Someone Kayaks By Our Beach Manzanillo Beach, Costa Rica |
Sundown Mist One Evening Manzanillo Beach, Costa Rica This beach was not positioned right for the sometimes beautiful Caribbean sunrises Like this one at Tortuguero and on wrong side of country for sunsets! 🙂 |
I am not a “Beach Person” as some people call themselves, not liking to swim in the ocean at all! But I do love to visit and walk on the many beautiful beaches here. Some friends ask me to compare the Atlantic and Pacific beaches and that is difficult.
It is almost down to specific beach compared to specific beach. In general the Caribbean (or the Atlantic beaches) are less developed with more wildness and more natural things than much of the Pacific, though the Osa Peninsula or Corcovado National Park is a big exception on the Pacific side as are some other “South Pacific” beaches. In the north or Guanacaste there are a few pretty beaches but overall I think it is over-developed and I thought the famous Tamarindo Beach was ugly and overcrowded! Jaco is pretty but also overcrowded, especially on weekends as the closest beach to San Jose. South of there at Manual Antonio National Park there are two gorgeous beaches that are very crowded, both the one in the park and the one outside the park.
I still have a lot of exploring to do before I even think about ranking beaches. Then there is the important reason or purpose! Are you a surfer, swimmer, sunbather, fisher, or photographer? Each beach is different for each purpose. And there are a lot of choices! If you believe travel articles, here is one on “The Best Beaches” by “Costa Rica Experts.” You will not find Manzanillo listed though it is one the nicer ones I have visited and least crowded! Then here’s an article on “Costa Rica’s 6 Most Stunning Beaches” by TicoTimes, the online English language Gringo newspaper. And travel sites like TripAdvisor rank the ones that hotels and resorts pay them to rank best, so don’t believe everything commercial sites say. For example Tamarindo is promoted as one of the best, but after my visit there, it is one of my least favorite, remembering that I do not like crowds, commercialism and a lack of nature. So maybe that is why I favor the Caribbean beaches more than most people.
See also my VISTA GALLERIES for Caribbean Beaches and Pacific Beaches
Today I take my laptop in to have everything transferred to my new computer which will be at least two days, assuming the new one arrives today. So just one shot from Manzanillo:
Emerald Basilisk, Manzanillo, Costa Rica |
Hopefully you will receive the other photos from Manzanillo by Thursday or Friday.
It seemed like thousands of acres of bananas enroute to the Caribbean. |
The Cariblue Hotel is a collection of jungle huts. |
Hotel is on the beach at Puerto Viejo. |
Three others from the club are in this hotel a day early. Very interesting people! This is going to be fun! One guy still works for the World Bank and another is/was a computer software guru with close ties to Apple, IBM, and Microsoft.
Costa Rica Pacific Coast Sunset by Charlie Doggett |
I’ve pretty much decided that IF I move to Costa Rica, I will start with a monthly rent apartment in the center of the country while I find a rental house or apartment that I could feasibly live in the rest of my life. Always getting ahead of myself, I’ve been reading two books and lots of websites about the various sections of the country where expats live. There are pluses and minuses for each and mostly has to do with the individual person’s interests and lifestyle. Here’s my quick synopsis for now: