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Quiksilver Surf Competition in Dominical

 

The Quiksilver Cup will travel next weekend to the South Pacific beaches of Playa Dominical in Costa Rica.  Next Sunday they will bring together the best surfers in the country in the fight for 1500 points towards a National title.

Noe Mar McGonagle who was the recent leader at the World Junior Surf Competition will be present and ready to compete!

” All of the categories are important. In the open competition, I had a hard time because the level was very high. I have two second place medals, but now goal is to win first place in every tournament before the final,” Noe Mar said.

Sunday May 20th is the 4th event out of 7 total. At the end of the 7 events they will give the national title to the competitor with the most points.

They expect the waves to be in perfect condition for competing and are ready to see the best of the best from Costa Rica surf this weekend!

 

 

Festival of the Stone Spheres

 

This past weekend, April 13-15, the Osa, Palmar, and Bahia Uvita regions celebrated the 8th annual Festival of the Stone Spheres.

The free, three day festival aimed to promote cultural literacy about our mysterious stone spheres.

At the highest point on Isla del Caño, there is a pre-Columbian cemetery of the Boruca people. Two spheres covered with moss sit under the forest canopy and are believed to have been brought to Caño by canoe and rolled to the cemetery.Thousands of spheres like these have been found all over southern Costa Rica, as well as northern Panama.The origins and significance of these spheres still remains a mystery, but it is speculated that they were made in villages on the Osa Peninsula near Palmar Norte.The stone spheres vary in size, some are as small as a piece of fruit, while others are over 2 m (6 ft) in diameter!Costa Rica is interested in finding a talented researcher who will one day decipher the precise reason that the stones were made.

The festival highlighted the amazing biodiversity of the Osa Peninsula. There were workshops on digital photography and video recording, medicinal plants, protecting cultural heritage, and birdwatching in the region.

Bird and plant life tours were guided by specialists from the National Museum and budding astronomers were able to get a chance to wake up extra early and watch the sunrise as it aligned with the spheres. One of the theories behind our man-made petrospheres is that they served as instruments of celestial observation, which makes sense since the Bribri people are considered to be the earliest astronomers in the Americas.

Other activities included workshops for children, face painting, handcrafts, ethnic cuisine, mangrove tours, dance exhibitions, indigenous culture, mangrove tours, film screenings, parades, and even a traveling circus from Perez Zeledon.

We look forward to next years Festival of the Stone Spheres!

Opportunity Is Not a Lengthy Visitor

Paraphrasing Stephen Sondheim is fun, but really, it’s the truth. One in a while, an opportunity presents itself that you just know will never come again. Here in Tulemar one of those moments is here today.

Lot #37 is on the market for sale, and the price has just been reduced to an incredible $325,000.

It’s what we call an “estate size lot” at just under ½ an acre (21,506 sq. ft or 1,998 m²) and has great ocean view potential. It lies at the edge of Tulemar and has its own private drive. A bit secluded, wildlife visit this lot daily.

At this incredible price, it’s like stepping into a time machine and setting the dial back 10 years.

Who’s ready to make their dream come true?

ocean view lot for sale

When developed, Lot #37 will have a similar view of the Pacific

Earth Hour

Tonight at 8:30 pm, more than one hundred countries on every continent will be taking part in Earth Hour, which was founded by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) in 2007 as a symbolic way of raising awareness about climate change and the world’s depleting resources.

Big monuments around the world like Big Ben in London, Sydney’s Opera House, Great Wall of China, the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin and the Vatican Dome already announced that theywill be part of the movement. In Costa Rica, companies like the Costa Rican Institute of Electricity (ICE) is sending text messages to invite the people joining the action.

This year, the Earth Hour matches with the International Year of Sustainable Energy, initiated by the UN in order to raise awareness about the importance of increasing access to a efficient, sustainable and renewable energy.

So, will you be part of it?

Costa Rica’s Coveted Ecological “Blue Flag” Awarded to Tulemar Beach

For the fifth consecutive year, Tulemar Beach has received the prestigious Blue Flag award for water quality and other ecological criteria from the National Blue Flag Commission.

Located in Costa Rica’s central pacific coastal town of Manuel Antonio, the beach provides a unique experience for residents and visitors of the residential resort community of Tulemar. The entire association of vacation rental home owners and residents work diligently to maintain a clean and sustainable beach environment. Tulemar’s residents come from not only Costa Rica, but Nicaragua, the Netherlands, Canada, the UK and the US, representing a diverse group of people sharing the same commitment.

The Blue Flag flies at Tulemar

Established in 1996 with the cooperation of community business leaders and governmental agencies, the Blue Flag Program was founded with the goal of improving education and awareness about the environment. It evaluates the beaches according to the water quality of the ocean and the drinking water, sanitary facilities, waste disposal, tourist safety, participation in environmental education in schools, and community involvement in beach maintenance.

“There’s a lot of work and planning involved,” says Dave Houck, owner of Tulemar Vacation Home Rentals, located within Tulemar. “You have to get a score of 90% in all the categories to win the award. It’s really important that we work with the program to ensure that we maintain a clean and sustainable environment for our residents and vacation rental visitors. It’s something that helps keep Tulemar at the top of popular destinations in Costa Rica.”

In addition to the annual evaluation, beach communities are monitored every month to make sure they’re in compliance with the program. Participation has increased steadily since the program’s launch. The success has allowed the program to be extended to include non-coastal communities as well, providing a direct and appreciable reward for efforts to preserve the ecology.

Día del Boyero

 

The second Sunday in March marks the annual celebration of Día del Boyero (Oxcart Driver’s Day). The festival takes place in San Antonio de Escazú; a suburb of San Jose.  There is a colorful parade of oxcarts, and blessings of animals and crops by local priests.

A Boyero is a person who guides a team of oxen pulling one of Costa Rica’s famous oxcarts, or carretas in Spanish. If you go back in time about 100 years ago, you would see Boyero’s coming down country roads in the mountains carrying oxcarts full of coffee beans. Now the Boyero is typically considered a” thing of the past ” and the painted oxcart is more of a novelty than a functional piece of daily Costa Rican living.

This tradition has been going on for 26 years as a way to preserve the cultural tradition of the Boyero. The Costa Rican people use this day to look back and reflect on values, traditions, and activities of the past, and to take deep pride in their culture.

The day’s festivities include: a mass in honor of the fallen boyeros, typical and folk dance performances, mask parades through the streets, concerts, a fireworks show, and a grand parade of cattle and oxcarts through the streets of  Escazú!

Costa Rica Named Among Top 5 Greenest Countries in the World

Costa Rica ranks as the fifth greenest country in the world, according to the study “Environmental Performance Index (EPI) 2012,” conducted by the universities of Yale and Columbia and published last week.

Costa Rica is the only country outside Europe in the top 10 list that includes: Switzerland, Latvia, Norway, Luxembourg, Costa Rica, France, Austria, Italy, U.K. and Sweden.

 

Other countries of the region ranked are: Nicaragua in 35th place, Panama in 39th, Hondurasin 71st, El Salvador in 75th and Guatemala in 76th.

The United States was noteworthy as a developed country with a poor ranking, although since 2010 the U.S. has moved up in ranking -it was in 60th place- and now stands in 49th place.

Experts who conducted the research expressed concern about poor results for water resources and the effects on ecosystems and greenhouse-gas emissions implicated in climate change and urban air pollution.

At the bottom of the list, countries with the worst environmental records are Kuwait, Yemen, South Africa, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Iraq.

Article courtesy of Tico Times.

Hatched to Fly Free: Bringing back the Great Green Macaw to the Costa Rica Rainforest

 

With so much abundant and diverse wildlife in Costa Rica, one of the world’s most popular ecotourism destinations, it’s hard to imagine that there could be something missing. Until recently, however, there was: The Great Green Macaw. This spectacular Central American Parrot, identified as a species “most in need of protection,” is internationally endangered primarily due to habitat loss.  Those who reside or vacation in Costa Rica will be happy to know that the beautiful Great Green Macaws can once again be spotted in the rainforest in Costa Rica.

green macaw costa rica

Great Green Macaw (Ara ambiguus). Photograph by Chris Castles

The ARA project, a non profit organization which dedicates itself to the conservation of the Scarlet Macaw (Ara macao) and the Great Green Macaw (Ara ambiguus) is responsible for bringing these endangered species back to the Costa Rica wildlife. A licensed zoological park, the ARA Project Breeding Centre is located in the Central Valley and works closely with MINAE (Ministry of the Environment and Energy and Telecommunications) to execute their controlled release programs while abiding by Costa Rica wildlife laws.  They utilize a variety of breeding techniques, environmental studies, and aviary management for captive breeding and release into the wild.  The ARA’s breeding center hosts the largest collection of captive Great Green Macaws worldwide.

Recently, in 2011, the ARA project executed the first Great Green Macaw reintroduction in the world and released 10 Great Green Macaws at the Manzanillo release site, located on the Southern Caribbean coast of Costa Rica.  The release projects and breeding programs are ongoing and the ARA Project will continue to monitor the released macaws and contribute to conservation and scientific research on these magnificent birds.  Since 1999 the ARA project has released over 80 scarlet macaws who have successfully reproduced and have a survival rate close to 90%.  The Great Green Macaw release is expected to produce similar results.  The macaws are bred for release only and the breeding center hosts nearly 100 Great Green Macaws and 100 Scarlet Macaws.

green macaw flying

Flying free in Costa Rica. Photograph by Franck Dziubak

 

 

The ARA project also offers the opportunity to volunteer and be personally involved in the conservation and release of the Macaws, either in the breeding center, or a release site.   Interested volunteers should remember that working and living in the tropics can be challenging due to the hot and wet tropical climate and the variety of animals and insects found in the rainforest. For more information on volunteering or making donations, please visit http://www.thearaproject.org/donate.php.

Guide to Fishing on the Central Pacific Coast

Costa Rica is a fisherman’s dream, and Manuel Antonio and Quepos have some of the best fishing in the country!

The Pacific provides Costa Rica’s most consistently exciting fishing, with sailfish, marlin, tuna, wahoo, roosterfish, mackerel, mahi mahi and snapper being caught regularly.

Billfish are the target of most visiting anglers, and they are seldom disappointed from around December through April. Some sailfish and marlin are taken throughout the year.

On an inshore fishing trip you can expect tuna, roosterfish, wahoo, dorado, snook, jacks, mackarel and a variety of snapper species.

Some boats out of the Quepos marina even offer multi-day trips to Drake Bay or Caño Island. This region is best known for its wahoo, cubera and rooster fish, but there are also some tuna, dorado, sailfish and marlins.

The fishing experts say each fish has a certain season when it is at its best for sportfishing.

Marlin: October is normally the top month for Marlin in this area, but it is also good in September and November. Occasional blues and rare blacks can be found year round although they are more likely to be spotted out further than where the boats hunting for sailfish are likely to be fishing.

Sailfish: Middle of December through mid April is the best time for sailfish when they are starting to move north, however the big schools usually move in mid October and stay longer. A few sailfish can be caught from June to September but it’s not as common.

Tuna: Can be found year round, although they are most abundant from June to September.

Wahoo: Not common in the area around Quepos and Manuel Antonio, but are abundant from June – August in Drake Bay or Caño Island.

Dorado: Best time is late May when the winter rains typically start

Roosterfish: Fishing for this inshore species is incredible in this area with the best spots being at the river mouths and the rocky drop-offs. Favorite spots are the mouth of the Naranjo River,the mouth of the Parrita River, Palo Seco, Drake Bay and Caño Island. The best time of year for roosterfish is June through September.

Snook: Favored spots are in the many river mouths along the coast. The IGFA world record black snook was caught in the month of July at the river mouth of Rio Naranjo about 20 minutes outside of Quepos. The best months seem to be from July – November during the “green season.”

Come stay with us at Tulemar Vacation Homes, and we would be happy to set up your once-in-a-lifetime fishing excursion!

 

 

 

New Decor in Villa Vigia

Check out the new decor and new furnishings in beautiful Villa Vigia!

http://www.4tulemar.com/villavigia.html