February 5, 2008

   
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One in a million:  Teresa Agüero, 76, held up a sign adding one Costa Rican voice to the “One Million Voices Against the FARC” protest yesterday at Plaza de las Garantias Sociales. Agüero's sign reads, “ Colombia, C.R. is with you. No more deaths.” More than 1,000 people, according to the protest's organizers, rallied at the plaza before heading to Soledad Church to hold mass, in a worldwide demonstration against the leftist group's violence and holding of hostages.

Harmony Reforma | Tico Times

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Home at last: Formerly conjoined twins Fiorella and Yurelia Rocha, 29 months old, at the Costa Rica's Marriott Hotel after spending more than two months in California rehabilitating from their surgery. Today their mother will bring the twins, born attached at the chest and abdomen, back home as two separate girls for the first time.

Harmony Reforma | Tico Times

Formerly conjoined twins return to Costa Rica
Yurelia and Fiorella Rocha were walking, talking and even playfully biting at one another at the Marriott Hotel near Costa Rica's Juan Santamaría International Airport yesterday – their first day back on home turf as separate children.
See More...
Government resolved in decision to close Papagayo hotel
Legislators, ministers and environmentalists joined yesterday in urging the central government to stand firm on its orders to close the Hotel Allegro Papagayo.
See More...
Costa Rica's January inflation lower than past years
Inflation went up only 0.73% last month, the second-lowest January inflation numbers in a decade. Dropping costs in clothing, transportation and communications helped keep the numbers low.
Another win for surfer Gilbert Brown at Tamarindo
Puerto Viejo's Gilbert Brown over the weekend showed he's got the moves when it comes to waves, taking home the National Surf Circuit's crown for the second consecutive time. After Saturday and Sunday's surf competition at Playa Tamarindo, in the northwest Guanacaste province, Brown tops the ranking in the Costa Rican Surf Federation (FSC), a feat in a country with no shortage of ace surfers.
New Surf Guide More
‘Punchy' than ‘Mushy'

I have tried surfing once, and would like to try again, but I am not a surfer.

 

Formerly conjoined twins return to Costa Rica

By Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net

Yurelia and Fiorella Rocha were walking, talking and even playfully biting at one another at the Marriott Hotel near Costa Rica's Juan Santamaría International Airport yesterday – their first day back on home turf as separate children.

Groggy at first, encircled by snapping photographers and television cameras after a flight from California, the formerly conjoined twins were handed toys and lipstick to play with, and soon warmed up to the reporters.

The 29-month-old Rocha girls were born attached at the chest and abdomen, heart and liver.

With the help of a U.S. charity, Mending Kids International, the twins, accompanied by their mother, María Elizabeth Rocha, and teenage sister, Cintia López, were able to obtain the high-risk operation in November at Stanford University in California.

Facing a 50% chance of survival, according to Dr. Carlos Esquivel, who oversaw the liver operation, Yurelia and Fiorella recovered more quickly than expected and flew home yesterday as individuals.

“As you can see, they've become quite normal little girls,” said Cris Embleton, founder and executive director of Mending Kids International.

“And they have amazing personalities: Fiorella is very fearless and adventuresome; Yurelia is very shy and quiet,” she said, echoing the mother's words at a press conference last month in California, the twins' first public appearance since the operation (TT, Jan. 25).

Embleton thanked the Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford and lead surgeon Gary Hartmen for carrying out the procedure.

“The day the girls were separated, they (the doctors) started at 7 in the morning to put all the wires in and by 11:30 they were separated and by 12:30 one of them was already in the ICU (intensive care unit),” she said.

A very grateful María Elizabeth Rocha, 40, thanked God and the people of Costa Rica and her native Nicaragua for showing concern about the fate of Yurelia and Fiorella, her 10th and 11th children.

Since the operation, it hasn't all been doctor visits and media events. Embleton said there were fun times too.

“Two days before we came down here we did what every child who comes to America wants to do, and that is we took them to Disney Land,” she said.

Government resolved in
decision to close Papagayo hotel

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

Legislators, ministers and environmentalists joined yesterday in urging the central government to stand firm on its orders to close the Hotel Allegro Papagayo.

Last Wednesday, the 300-room Guanacaste hotel – which houses almost 600 guests – was ordered closed in 24 hours by officials from the Health Ministry, who had discovered clandestine pipes dumping sewage into an adjoining estuary, which leads to the Pacific Ocean.

The hotel appealed, stalling closure for almost five days, but yesterday Health Minister María Luisa Avila confirmed the order and said appeals had been denied.

Environment and Energy Minister Roberto Dobles also showed his support.

“This hotel must have a sewage treatment plant…and right now, that is not the case,” said Dobles, citing the hotel's months of violations and warnings issued by Environment Ministry (MINAE).

Three hours later, legislators from the Citizen Action Party (PAC) gathered at the National Assembly, urging the immediate closure of the hotel and calling for more forceful compliance with the country's environmental laws.

“Our government institutions must fight to assure laws are followed. In this case, as in so many others in Guanacaste, the authorities don't intervene or they do it too late. Now is the time,” said Guanacaste legislator José Rosales.

The hotel, part of the government-sponsored Papagayo Tourism Project in the northwestern corner of Costa Rica has long been hailed as “eco-friendly” by government officials and Costa Rican Tourism Institute (ICT) promotion.

Environmentalists, including the Guanacaste Brotherhood, the local environmental group that warned of the situation three weeks prior, and the Costa Rican Federation for the Environment (FECON), an umbrella group for almost 30 environmental groups countrywide, also showed their support for the hotel's closure.

“This has gone on long enough. The hotel is still not closed. The situation is outrageous, and we urge the government to take action now,” said Gadi Amit, vice president of the Guanacaste Brotherhood.

Health Ministry officials first discovered the hotel dumping sewage into the neighboring estuary via hidden pipes in April. Two weeks later, hotel manager Guillermo Guerra assured them in a written letter that the problem had been “definitely solved.”

Over the next few months, as reported Jan. 25 in The Tico Times, residents and government officials discovered the hotel was trucking its sewage to overburdened and often illegal dumpsites throughout Guanacaste, transferring the contamination from its own estuary to neighboring towns.

Last week, after months of foot-dragging, the Health Ministry called for the hotel's closure until the hotel could prove operation of a functioning sewage treatment plant, a stipulation required in its original contract with the government.

Costa Rica's January inflation lower than past years

Inflation went up only 0.73% last month, the second-lowest January inflation numbers in a decade. Dropping costs in clothing, transportation and communications helped keep the numbers low.

Food costs, however, continue to rise. The cost of food and non-alcoholic drinks went up 0.94%, meaning that for the last 12 months alone food prices have gone up 20.54%.

Increases in the costs of housing and education were also steep, coming in at 2.40% and 3.13%, respectively.

Cumulative inflation for the last 12-month period remains above 10%. The Central Bank has set its inflation target for 2008 at 8%, plus or minus one point.

-Tico Times

Another win for surfer Gilbert Brown at Tamarindo

Puerto Viejo's Gilbert Brown over the weekend showed he's got the moves when it comes to waves, taking home the National Surf Circuit's crown for the second consecutive time. After Saturday and Sunday's surf competition at Playa Tamarindo, in the northwest Guanacaste province, Brown tops the ranking in the Costa Rican Surf Federation (FSC), a feat in a country with no shortage of ace surfers.

Riding in on 2- to 4-foot waves, other finalists included Jason Torres and Jairo Pérez, both from the central Pacific beach town of Jacó. Also finishing near the top was Federico Pilurzu, the native toast of Tamarindo, who spectators favored to beat out the competition.

Pilurzu gave this comment after his loss: “I have been surfing at an incredible level at these two dates of the circuit,” he said. “Simply, the other Ticos are prepared for that and are surfing great against me …(that) made the National Circuit a super event.”

Lisbeth Vindas of Jacó closed the circuit victoriously in the women's competition, beating out National Women's Surf Champion Nataly Bernold, a long-time Tamarindo resident who now lives in Jacó as well. Bernold did however win 1st place in the female under-18s.

Women also competed in the circuit's beauty contest. Winning the Miss Surf Organic and Natural were 18-year-olds Jetsi Hernández, of Puerto Viejo, and Marion Leroy of Tamarindo.

Some 250 competitors registered for the surf competition, a record according to the FSC.

-Tico Times

New Surf Guide More ‘Punchy' than ‘Mushy'

I have tried surfing once, and would like to try again, but I am not a surfer.

There are many reasons for this. Principal among these is an absence of qual-ity waves in the English Home Counties where I grew up. However, there is something else: I think surfing has something of an image problem.

I realize that this is probably a minority view – certainly the bank balances of surf-label executives provide strong evidence against me – but hear me out.

When you think of surfing, what comes to mind? Exotic countries, white, sandy, palm-fringed beaches, blue skies and bluer waters inhabited by healthy, tanned, athletic people living wonderful stress-free lives. What's not to like? I hear you ask. You still don't follow me, do you?

The problem is, I think, that surf culture is a victim of its own success. Those images and their ubiquity now seem mocking because I know my wide-eyed, pasty-white face just does not fit the mold. Furthermore, as I sit writing at my cluttered desk, looking out at gray clouds spreading gloom across the polluted center of San José, I am jealous and resentful of the beautiful people who have the time and money to chase after paradise.

And it is more than just images. Surfing is its own alien, confusing, intimidating world from which the uninitiated can feel very much excluded. It has its own language, music and worldview that I can't seem to share. Try as I might, I just cannot bring myself to like Jack Johnson.

So when I was asked to review the new “H2O Surf Travel Guide: Costa Rica,” I was a little wary. My fears seemed confirmed when I opened a random page and read: “Consequences: You gonna get hurt. You gonna bleed! You will scare yourself silly, and you will be a victim of your destiny. That's why you surf.” Oh dear.

Thankfully, first impressions are not always to be trusted. The guide is informative, easy to use and has none of the pretensions I expected. It provides substantive information, rather than just a series of glossy images, and tells you all the mundane things you need to know: where to stay and eat, where to watch out for thieves, where to get stitched up when you take on a wave the guide warned you not to. It even tells you where to watch out for sharks.

The book, clearly, is designed for the serious surfer, so it is packed with specialized jargon. In fact, most of the book made very little sense to me. I managed to find some help at www.riptionary.com, an online glossary of surf lingo, but I am still at a loss to explain the exact benefits of a “perfectly hollowed drop,” or why precisely I might want my dings repaired, but no matter because this is not just pointless wordiness. Rather, it is clearly the product of author Jonathan Yonkers' overwhelming passion for the sport – a passion that is engagingly disarming and cannot help but rub off on even his most unsuspecting and cynical reader.

It is not just the text, either; the book is nicely put together across the board. Who cares if the picture shows an overcast and leaden sky? Just check out that A-frame, mae. It's the Tico surfers who really know the scene, so the photos invariably show them, rather than Gringos. The book is clearly organized by region, and easy-to-follow symbols tell you whether or not a wave is suitable for your level and what services you can expect to find at a particular beach. To steal the lingo, it is “punchy” rather than “mushy.”

It is true that I did not understand much of what I read, that I cannot tell you how accurate the information is, and I do not know whether the book represents value for money. I may not be one of the beautiful people, I may not know a beach break from a point break, and I may not even be able to stand up on a board.

I do, however, feel inspired. With this guide, I feel it is safe to go back into the water.

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