Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
August 18, 2009
   
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Off-track : An attendant peeks out from the new train between San José and Heredia. The train  derailed late afternoon Tuesday at Tibás, north of San José, without causing injuries or damage, according to local media reports.

Whitney Martin | Tico Times

| Previous Daily News

Ready to work: President Oscar Arias, seen greeting children Aug. 8, before it was announced he caught the H1N1 virus, is expected to resume his duties Tuesday after recovering from the flu.

Photo courtesy of Mónica Jiménez

Costa Rica’s President Arias resumes
duties after recovering from H1N1 virus
Costa Rican President Oscar Arias will fully resume his duties Tuesday after recovering from a mild case of H1N1 flu, the government said Monday.
Costa Rica steps up search for David Gimelfarb
Search teams increased efforts Monday to find David Gimelfarb, the 28-year-old doctoral student from Chicago who disappeared last Tuesday in Costa Rica's Rincón de la Vieja National Park in the northwest province of Guanacaste.
Café Britt expands operations to Mexico, Antigua, and Chile
Costa Rican specialty coffee provider Café Britt has announced plans to expand operations and construct locations in Antigua, Chile, Mexico and Peru. Café Britt also intends to build eight more locations in Costa Rica in the next 12 months.
Let there be light in San José at night
Things are looking bright for downtown San José – at least where a park is nearby.
Behind the Scenes at
the World Surfing Games

With some 36 countries competing in the water at the 2009 World Surfing Games Aug. 1-8 in the Central Pacific's Playa Hermosa, there was a lot of action behind the scenes.

 

Costa Rica’s President Arias resumes
duties after recovering from H1N1 virus

Costa Rican President Oscar Arias will fully resume his duties Tuesday after recovering from a mild case of H1N1 flu, the government said Monday.

Arias is the only known head of state to have contracted the virus – initially called swine flu – showing signs of low fever, sore throat and headaches. The 68-year-old leader belongs to a higher-risk category because he suffers from asthma.

After it was announced a week ago, Arias stayed home but reportedly continued to work from his San José residence.

The president is expected to attend the inauguration Tuesday of the National Center of Biotechnological Innovation.

Nearly 1,000 people in Costa Rica have been confirmed to be carrying H1N1 and 28 people have died, according to the Health Ministry.

The flu has hit most of the country's seven provinces and infected people of all ages. Pregnant women and people with weakened immune systems are most vulnerable.

–EFE

Costa Rica steps up search for David Gimelfarb
By Mike McDonald
Tico Times Staff | mmcdonald@ticotimes.net

Search teams increased efforts Monday to find David Gimelfarb, the 28-year-old doctoral student from Chicago who disappeared last Tuesday in Costa Rica's Rincón de la Vieja National Park in the northwest province of Guanacaste.

Red Cross officials from San José said 10 extra members of the Red Cross joined the search in the park, increasing the total number to 25. Combined with park rangers and local residents, close to 70 people are looking for the Chicago resident, who was still missing as of Monday afternoon.

Officials were not sure exactly how much of the park had been searched, but Freddy Román, a press officer for the Red Cross, said that teams had covered “good portion” of the area.

If search efforts don't muster any results after eight days, teams will begin looking for signs of Gimelfarb outside the boundaries of the more than 14,000-hectare (34,000-acre) national park, he said.

Meanwhile, friends and family are helping in every way they can to locate the 28-year-old.

Gimelfarb's mother Ludmilla and father Roma Gimelfarb flew to Costa Rica last Thursday to aid local efforts.

Ratana Koka, a family friend who accompanied the couple to Costa Rica, said they are not allowed to assist directly with the search because it would be too dangerous. But Koka and the family are buying groceries and running the supplies to search teams inside the park.

Koka is informing locals of the situation and said the family is holding out hope that Gimelfarb will be found.

“We haven't reached the point where we are giving up,” she said. “If anything, we are ramping up. The people in the area have been absolutely fantastic. They all want to help out.”

On Monday night, friends back in Chicago researched private search companies that are equipped with infrared and heat seeking technology, Koka said. Officials have informed the family that this equipment may be the best way to locate Gimelfarb.

Gimelfarb arrived in Costa Rica alone last week to go hiking and relieve the pressure from his doctoral program in psychology. He was staying at the Hotel Hacienda Guachipelin in Guanacaste.

A communiqué from his family described him as an experienced hiker.

Those who have information about his disappearance or are interested in assisting are urged to contact his family at the Hotel Hacienda Guachipelin: 2665-3215.

Café Britt expands operations
to Mexico, Antigua, and Chile

Costa Rican specialty coffee provider Café Britt has announced plans to expand operations and construct locations in Antigua, Chile, Mexico and Peru. Café Britt also intends to build eight more locations in Costa Rica in the next 12 months.

The expansion of the Café Britt line, which originated in Costa Rica in 1985, will begin with a location in the V.C. Bird International Airport in the Caribbean island of Antigua. Café Britt will also construct a café in Iquique, Chile, as well as locations in Urubamba and Paracas, Peru. In Cancún, Mexico, Café Britt is creating a bean roasting plant to develop a line of Mexican produced coffee, according to media reports from around the region.

The new international locations, as well as the eight new Costa Rican stores, required an investment of $5 million. The next two locations planned for Costa Rica are expected to be located in the Cariari and Corobicí hotels in San José.

According to the Café Britt website, the company currently has over 50 locations in five different countries. Café Britt's first international expansion was in Peru in 2005.

-Tico Times

Let there be light in San José at night
By Daniel Shea
Tico Times Staff | editorial@ticotimes.net

Things are looking bright for downtown San José – at least where a park is nearby.

A new campaign to light up the parks in central San José at night was kicked off Friday at a celebration of the illumination of the Plaza de la Democracia, according to a statement from the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE). The plaza is adjacent to the National Museum in the center of the city, sitting between Avenida Central and Avenida 2.

The project is an initiative of the Regional and Urban Planning in the Greater Metropolitan Area program (PRU-GAM). The National Power and Light Company – a subsidiary of ICE – installed 37 decorative lamps in the park for the project. In all, the lighting project came at a price of a little over $15,000 (¢9 million), the statement from ICE said.

The larger idea for the “Illumination of Urban Parks,” came from PRU-GAM, an organization affiliated with the European Union that works on urban planning projects. With the support of ICE and the municipality of San José, the project's aim is to illuminate every park in central San José at night so that criminals won't be drawn to the darkness, and so passers-by will have a newfound sense of security in areas that tend to lose their charm when the sun sets.

The Plaza de la Democracia was the first of 16 similar projects in parks that will be finished this year, ICE said. Beyond parks, heavily trafficked areas in the city will also receive the benefits of brighter lights, including the city's central streets.

Please send us your letters, 500 words or fewer, to letters@ticotimes.net for Costa Rica issues or letters@nicatimes.net for Nicaragua and the Central American and Caribbean region. Thanks!

Behind the Scenes at the World Surfing Games

With some 36 countries competing in the water at the 2009 World Surfing Games Aug. 1-8 in the Central Pacific's Playa Hermosa, there was a lot of action behind the scenes.

The Costa Rican national team had its own bamboo resting area among a line of team spots, where they regrouped and constantly fueled up on peanuts and fruit.

Here, Gilbert Brown, 26, from the southern Caribbean beach town of Puerto Viejo, welcomed his mother, Magdalena López, for the first week of the competition. She rarely left his side. Luis Vindas, 22, from Jacó, just north of Hermosa, barely spoke; he just surfed. In the back corner, Jacó's Jason Torres, 20, napped between his buddies' heats.

Gilbert Brown
Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

Physical therapist Julio Granados worked on the surfers between heats. Torres sported flesh-colored bandages on his shoulder, while Lisbeth Vindas, 27, had one on her knee. Brown sat in a chair with electrodes attached to his back and shoulder as Granados turned up the power on a small device. Later that day, Brown got the biggest wave score of the day, a 9.23. He finished the event ranked 21st.

The Red Cross estimated that more than 10,000 people passed through Hermosa the first Saturday of the games, but no one but Tico surfer Diego Naranjo, 28, noticed three-time world champion Tom Curren as he strolled by with his surfboard.

Throughout the games, the Tico team met each night at their hotel to discuss the day's heats and strategize for the next day. The meetings were led by José Ureña, president of the Surf Federation of Costa Rica and head of the team's technical body. Team members Naranjo, Brown and Lisbeth Vindas also took a strong role.

“(We) have a lot of experience, so we try to lead the team meetings,” said Naranjo, who finished 33rd in the games' longboard category. “We comment on the things we do during the day and say how the heats are going to go tomorrow. Like if they have a guy with high levels in their heats, we point out that Jason and Gilbert have already beaten them, and if they concentrate, they can, too.”

Vindas finished 15th among the women, down a position from last year's games in Portugal, but she was not discouraged.

“It was a great experience working with the team José put together – Laura (Moreira), the sports psychologist, Julio, the physical therapist, and Donald Vega, the strength and lifestyle coach. We improved, and I felt like a professional athlete,” she said.

Tico Alex “Coki” Valverde served as an International Surfing Association judge for the games. Sixteen judges worked on rotation at the event, judging two heats and then taking a break.

“We're doing good as a team – the guys surfing and me in the (judging) podium,” Valverde said.

Over in the U.S. team room, The Tico Times spoke with Cory Lopez, 32, the games' silver medalist and one of the most famous surfers at the event.

“My brother has a house in Los Sueños in Herradura, so I've been here many times,” Lopez said. “I'm happy to be here and represent for America.”

Another big star, Mick Campbell, 35, the 1998 World Surfing Games gold medalist, surfed for Australia in Hermosa, finishing 15th.

“It's my first time in Costa Rica, but what a beautiful place. There are so many different faces – hot, windy, rainy. The waves are smooth, then choppy the next minute. It's a really moody place,” Campbell told The Tico Times during a two-and-a-half-hour power outage Aug. 6.

The Peruvian team rented a house behind the team rooms for the games. Here, The Tico Times talked to Sofía Mulánovich, 26, the 2004 world women's champion on the WCT and fifth among the women in Hermosa.

“I'm having fun,” Mulánovich said. “I've been here before on a boat for a ‘surfari,' but this is my first time on the beach in Hermosa. I really like it. There are good waves, good people.

“The World Games are about being with your team and doing good for your country. My country is where I learned to surf and live, and for me it's the best country in the world.”

Back with the Tico team, 16-year-old Carlos Muñoz, upon learning he finished 15th in the world, tied with Campbell, said, “I'm sad, but happy. In the next World Surfing Games, I'm going to do better.”

And Torres, who finished the games ranked seventh in the world – down two points from last year's performance in Portugal – jumped in the Terraza del Pacífico hotel swimming pool with his surfboard to avoid reporters.

 
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