www.nytimes.com by Chris Spence, August 9, 2011
PUERTO JIMENEZ, COSTA RICA — We struck camp at 4 in the morning and set off on a 12 mile hike down the Pacific coast and back to civilization. The unsociable hour was to beat the incoming tide; too late and the ocean breaches the Claro River mouth and bulldog sharks cruise up the channel to feed.
We had no guide with us but waded across without incident in moonlit ankle-deep water. Further up the beach a puma appeared in our torch beam and slunk off to hide behind a dead tree trunk. Dawn finally broke with squadrons of brown pelicans plunging the surf in search of fish.
During our two-week stay in the Corcovado Peninsular of Southern Costa Rica it seemed we met everything that swims, walks and flies on this good green planet — and the human life was interesting too, including the expats.
According to "The New Golden Door to Retirement and Living in Costa Rica" (edition 15), there are about 20,000 American expats in this country. This guide vaunts a retirement paradise — high living-standards and less corruption than its Central American neighbors. Affordable real estate and no winter heating bills are other attractions.
But perhaps it’s not always happy landings. Arriving by boat in the isolated village of Puerto Jimenez, a tout greeted us on the jetty. Brochures in hand, he sidled up nervously like a dog expecting a kick. This disheveled American was well beyond retirement age and, apart from us, the horizon was tourist-free with the sun hammering down.
Moved more by pity than genuine interest, we let him escort us to the guesthouse he was promoting. He had a wonderful patter, recounting how he had met three Costa Rican presidents and gave a fascinating lowdown on Bailey Bridges, metal prefabs that span numerous rivers in the region and are throwbacks to the World War II. They were originally designed as temporary tank crossings for the European campaign.
But perhaps it’s not always happy landings. Arriving by boat in the isolated village of Puerto Jimenez, a tout greeted us on the jetty. Brochures in hand, he sidled up nervously like a dog expecting a kick. This disheveled American was well beyond retirement age and, apart from us, the horizon was tourist-free with the sun hammering down.
Moved more by pity than genuine interest, we let him escort us to the guesthouse he was promoting. He had a wonderful patter, recounting how he had met three Costa Rican presidents and gave a fascinating lowdown on Bailey Bridges, metal prefabs that span numerous rivers in the region and are throwbacks to the World War II. They were originally designed as temporary tank crossings for the European campaign.
On a less truthful note, he passed himself off as the guesthouse owner, only to scuttle off when we arrived at reception. Another man appeared who turned out to be the real owner and booked us.
We had been duped but no hard feelings — it was by a master salesman and the address was good anyway. We bumped into him a few times during our stay in that outpost of civilization; he popped up in the most unlikely places — idling in doorways, leafing through a Bible in the midday sun like a character from a Graham Greene novel.
