Guanacaste Real Estate

Guanacaste News

Enjoying the last weeks of summer

Costa Ricans and foreign residents alike are taking advantage of the last days of radiant sun and gorgeous sunsets characteristic of the dry season or summer here.
Along with their families, friends or as couples, tourists visited the Guanacaste beaches last week, taking advantage of the Holy Week holidays.

...read more at
The Journal

Guanacaste News

                                              

Arrival of more charter flights to Liberia announced

Guanacaste NewsThe Costa Rican Tourism Institute (ICT) has announced the arrival of more charter flights to Liberia’s Daniel Oduber International Airport starting next November.

Even though ICT didn’t say which specific airlines will be offering these services, it did indicate they are from North America and Europe — Canada and Germany, respectively.

Tourism Minister Carlos Ricardo Benavides added that negotiations are underway with other companies that organize this kind of flights originating in England and Spain, in efforts to add three new direct routes to Costa Rica.

...read more at The Journal

Guanacaste News

 

Community leaders analyze barriers to development in Guanacaste

Officials with political and civil society groups in Guanacaste met to speak about the development model that would better suit the province as part of the First Costa Rican Idea Generation Day of the XXI Century, which took place in Liberia and was organized by the National University (UNA).

“We need to guanacastequizar (make Guanacaste-like) our development model, for which it is necessary to employ of what we have in Guanacaste and figure out how to make it reach the entire population,” Guanacaste writer Marco Tulio Gardela said at the event, which was held at a local hotel. “We need a model that doesn’t revolve around money and that is decentralized, backed up by a sort of Guanacaste development corporation that would lead it.”

... read more at The Journal

Guanacaste News

 

Archaeological Landscapes in Greater Nicoya — the Open Spaces

Settlement Pattern Archaeology. For the past 60 years or so, archaeologists have conducted archaeological studies about how prehistoric (and historic) populations distributed themselves over the landscape (in modern times we might refer to these as “urban planning studies”). These studies addressed human settlements of many sizes with relation to natural topography, such as peaks, coastal areas, and valleys, and to natural resources such as water, fertile plains, and the presence of stone suitable for tools or clay suitable for containers. Unfortunately, these studies often focused on the centers of population without considering the surrounding areas. For example, at the highland Costa Rican site of Guayabo de Turrialba, Costa Rican archaeologists had carried out many detailed studies of the habitation and ceremonial center of the site before anyone decided to survey the surrounding area. When they did, they found, still intact, numerous stone cobble roadways that connected Guayabo with other sites. This greatly expanded our understanding of the importance of the site of Guayabo.

...read more at The Journal

Guanacaste News