November 27, 2007

   
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Still Dancing for Their Dream: Costa Rican dancers Shirley Alvárez and Ricardo Granados competed Sunday in the dance competition “Bailando por un Sueño Internacional” in Mexico City.

Jorge Gutiérrez | EFE
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Smoke and Mirrors: A group of students near the University of Costa Rica (UCR) in San Pedro, east of San José, yesterday burned tires to express opposition to legislation that would implement the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA). They joined in a protest staged by unions of the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE). Though union leaders had summoned 5,000 workers to walk out, only about 400 participated in the strike.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

Strikers in Costa Rica Strike Out

The prediction that 5,000 Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) employees would march down San José's Paseo Colón yesterday proved a drastic exaggeration as the ICE unions' strike fizzled into threats and a mixed gathering of several hundred protestors outside the Legislative Assembly.
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Experts Warn Climate Change Is Already Affecting Costa Rica

Meteorologists and representatives of the U.N. Development Programme (UNDP) warned yesterday that climate change is already happening in Costa Rica, citing extreme weather and its subsequent effects, from health problems to rat infestations.
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Earthquake Rattles Central Pacific

An earthquake measuring 4.0 on the Richter scale shook the central Pacific town of Quepos Sunday night.

Sex Offender On the Run

A man identified as Douglas Henry Happer who was sentenced to 63 years in jail for various counts of rape and sexual abuse yesterday disappeared before the judge could read his sentence, according to a statement from the Judicial Branch.

Seed Saving a Rewarding Endeavor

Every time we save seeds from the plants we grow, we carry on an ancient tradition that connects us to nature's circle of life. The conservation of seeds also has an ecological aspect, as it helps to preserve the wonderful species of plants that sustain us on the planet.

 


Strikers in Costa Rica Strike Out

By Peter Krupa
Tico Times Staff | pkrupa@ticotimes.net

The prediction that 5,000 Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) employees would march down San José's Paseo Colón yesterday proved a drastic exaggeration as the ICE unions' strike fizzled into threats and a mixed gathering of several hundred protestors outside the Legislative Assembly.

The unions were protesting laws the Legislative Assembly is considering that would put Costa Rica in compliance with the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA), which Costa Ricans approved in a referendum last month.

Last week, after calling for a “general strike” at a press conference, Fabio Chaves, president of the Association of Costa Rican Electricity and Telecom Workers Union (ASDEICE), called for 5,000 ICE workers to participate in the walkout.

But only about 400 protestors showed up at the ICE building on the north side of La Sabana Park in western San José. At the gathering, the unions decided to limit the strike to a single day, while threatening a general strike should the CAFTA implementation laws – and particularly the telecom laws – be approved.

On the other side of town near the University of Costa Rica (UCR) in San Pedro, a group of students blocked streets, burned tires and waved signs expressing their opposition to CAFTA.

No services were interrupted during the one-day walkout, and the ICE management was not impressed. ICE spokesman Elbert Durán called the strike a “pathetic act of desperation” and said the workers who walked out would not get paid for that day.


Experts Warn Climate Change
Is Already Affecting Costa Rica

By Dave Sherwood
Tico Times Staff | dsherwood@ticotimes.net

Meteorologists and representatives of the U.N. Development Programme (UNDP) warned yesterday that climate change is already happening in Costa Rica, citing extreme weather and its subsequent effects, from health problems to rat infestations.

“It would be an error to think that climate change will only affect future generations. Today in Costa Rica, we are already starting to feel the effects,” said José Manuel Hermida, the program's representative in Costa Rica, during a conference in San José.

Hermida rattled off a list of gloom-and-doom predictions if countries don't initiate efforts to cut the emission of greenhouse gases, including a five-degree-Celsius increase in temperature and a rise of global sea levels by as much as one meter.

Roberto Villalobos, climate change specialist for the National Meteorological Institute (IMN), warned of the possibility of extended droughts along the Pacific slope – an area already parched during the summer dry season. About 3.5 million Ticos depend on water from that region, he said.

Villalobos also warned of the potentially serious effects on electricity generation. Water, he said, is Costa Rica's “petroleum.”

Villalobos and Hermida also spoke of potential health risks caused by more variable and warmer weather, including the spread of mosquito-borne viruses, such as dengue fever and malaria, to higher altitudes.

“These were once considered lowland diseases,” Villalobos said. “Now we are seeing them in the higher regions of the Central Valley.”

Incidence of skin cancer has also gone up 33% in women and 43% in men over the past 10 years, he said.

Extended rains this year drove field rats out of caves and holes in the ground and into people's homes, yet another example of the effects of unpredictable weather, said Villalobos.


Earthquake Rattles Central Pacific

An earthquake measuring 4.0 on the Richter scale shook the central Pacific town of Quepos Sunday night.

The quake occurred at 8:39 p.m. and was felt in the Southern Zone community of Perez Zeledón and the Central Valley areas of San José, Atenas and Heredia, according to a statement from the Volcanological and Seismological Observatory of Costa Rica (OVSICORI) at National University in Heredia, north of San José.

-Tico Times


Sex Offender On the Run

A man identified as Douglas Henry Happer who was sentenced to 63 years in jail for various counts of rape and sexual abuse yesterday disappeared before the judge could read his sentence, according to a statement from the Judicial Branch.

A court in Goicoechea, north of San José, decided Happer's sentence at 10 a.m. and was preparing to read it about an hour and a half later. By that time, Happer had disappeared.

Judicial Investigation Police (OIJ) officials with the Sex Crimes Unit are searching for him.

He was found guilty on three charges of first-degree rape and three charges of sexual abuse against minors.

-Tico Times


Seed Saving a Rewarding Endeavor

Every time we save seeds from the plants we grow, we carry on an ancient tradition that connects us to nature's circle of life. The conservation of seeds also has an ecological aspect, as it helps to preserve the wonderful species of plants that sustain us on the planet.

Seed saving can be the ultimate game for the tropical gardener. It's a fascinating and worthwhile endeavor, but requires patience and a keen watch on your plants to be successful. You can save seeds from many vegetables, fruits, herbs and flowers grown at home. The following information will help you to perfect the art of seed saving.

Standard seed varieties or heirloom seeds, as they are often called, are the best for seed saving. These are nonhybrid seeds that have been passed down from generation to generation because they are hardy and genetically stable.

Full Circle with Nature: Saving seeds is a time-honored gardening tradition that helps to preserve plant species.
Ed Bernhardt | Tico Times

Seeds collected from hybrid plants, however, won't produce the same plants in the next generation. That's because they revert back to their crossed parents. With hybrid seeds you have to buy new seeds each year, whereas with heirloom seeds you can save your own seeds year after year.

Annual plants that are easy to reproduce from seed include corn, beans, tomatoes, lettuce, mustard, peanuts, grains, squash, cucumbers and melons, as well as many herbs and flowers.

Perennial plants that can be reproduced from seeds include fruit trees (except for mangos, avocados and citrus, which are best when grafted), native rain-forest trees, ornamental shrubs and vines.

Pollination is another factor, determining how true to seed your plants will be in the next generation. Because of their flower structure, certain plants, especially squashes, melons and corn, are open-pollinated, generally cross-pollinated by bees that travel from one plant to the next. Seeds from these types of plants are not always true strains of the parent and may show considerable variation.

If you're trying to maintain specific traits of open-pollinated plants, grow only one variety at a time to get a pure strain. Plants with self-pollinating flowers, however, maintain their particular traits in the next generation. Lettuces, tomatoes, beans and peanuts are good examples.

Biennial plants, such as carrots, beets, cabbage and onions, require freezing temperatures to stimulate their biological clocks to trigger seed production. Because of this phenomenon, these types of plants are difficult to reproduce by seed in the tropics.

When you collect seeds, keep the following points in mind. Select one or two of the best plants early in their development for the purpose of collecting seeds. It's often useful to mark these plants with a stake, so they are not harvested or disturbed during their growth. Fertilize and water them well, just like the other plants.

Collect seed capsules when they are mature and dry. Separate and clean the seeds well, and then dry them for several days at a temperature no more than 50 degrees Celsius. Store your seeds in airtight containers, preferably in the refrigerator. Corn and other grain seeds can be frozen in airtight containers for 48 hours to eliminate insect eggs and larva.

I hope you'll try your hand at seed saving. You'll find December in Costa Rica an ideal time to start a garden – and a chance to go full circle with nature.

For more on tropical gardening, visit www.the newdawncenter.info. We have seeds to share with you, as well as books and classes on gardening. We'll try to answer gardening questions at thenewdawncenter@yahoo.com

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