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A Virtual Visit to Dominical Costa Rica - Part 1

Part 1 – Arriving

Dominical’s claim to fame has historically been its world class surfing beach, Playa Dominical, or Dominical Beach. Now Dominical’s appeal to travelers has diversified to the extent that the little town has become a world class vacation destination of a rather unique sort.

Things haven’t really changed that much here over the last 13 years (since 1999), the time that I’ve been living in and around Dominical Costa Rica. The town is still pretty much made up of one main street that remains unpaved and varies in quality depending on when the last grading was done (and how much rain has fallen recently). The locals like it this way since it keeps traffic driving slow, and it has the side benefit of helping vacationers from more harried lifestyles to slow down in other more philosophical ways.

Dominical is shaped (loosely) like a slice of pizza, oddly enough with the town being at the pointy end of the slice. The rough outline of our pizza slice is drawn by the ocean on one side, the coastal mountain range on the other, and the Baru river at its narrowest point. The southerly part is where the coastal mountain range closes back towards the ocean.

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Where to stay

Help With Selecting a Vacation Rental in the Dominical Area

Selecting a vacation rental in Dominical, Costa Rica can be a daunting task. If you peruse through the listings here on dominical.biz,  you’ll find that there are numerous vacation rentals to choose from. Altho there are so many vacation rentals in the Dominical area, I think you'll be pleasantly surprised to discover that they each have their own little piece of Paradise, either nestled in the jungle, on the beach, or up on a breezy hill with a view of the ocean.  I feel pretty confident that you will more than likely find the Dominical area very much to your liking for your vacation.

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A Fascination with The Love

I've had one of those "that stuff happens to OTHER people and not to me" experiences.  I was beat up and left for dead by a criminal - hmmmm. 

I can honestly say that I never thought of that sort of thing as happening to me.  I've certainly read about such things, and seen movies and CSI shows about such things.  But to actually be a real live player in an actual event has taken my personal reality over to the surreal. 

They put me in a coma for the first two weeks.  So, I laid in a hospital bed and thrashed about, uttering vile commands and “let me go”.  I tried coercing Natalie to “take me home”.  I still have the scars on my wrists from where they tied me up – well actually – from where I pulled against the restraints.

From my perspective, I fully lived those two comatose weeks, going about life as - well I can't say “as normal” - but I was unaware of the fact that I was tied up in a hospital bed.  I carried on my life, complete with good times and bad.  I even came up with a tourism marketing strategy that I may even implement once I get back into the swing of things. 

So I use the expression “when I arrived” instead of “when I came out of the coma”.  I really thought that at about week number two I had driven up to the hospital and checked in.  Granted I would be hard pressed to explain the “why” behind my “checking in”, but that’s just a slight inconvenience of the tale.  I checked in and they were working on me in ICU.

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Make As Many Mistakes As You Can

 Make as Many Mistakes as You Can

In the previous article, we established a couple points that help one stick with the formidable project of learning to speak a second language namely, Spanish.

To re-cap:

  • It is a huge project that will take longer than you think.
  • It is hard for everybody (except for the extremely rare progeny).

If we can clean these 2 points out of our heads and press on, we’ll be more likely to learn Spanish. However, there is another point that needs to be mentioned. And it’s a problem that likely plagues other areas of our life from time to time: pride.

To learn to speak a language, we have to pass through the goo-goo gah-gah phase of our toddler days yet again, but this time as an adult. It was much easier when we were 16 months old, everybody expected our incompetence. But now we are mature, intelligent, have a respected career, and are really quite intellectually advanced. 

Pride kills a lot of efforts to learn a second language. Funny thing, it isn’t just the big, wealthy, fit, smart, beautiful ones that fall to this. Over the years of living here in Costa Rica and being asked on innumerable occasions to help Tico friends with their English, I have seen on a regular and consistent basis these lovely, humble Ticas (female Costa Ricans) unable to overcome their embarrassment (they need to speak perfectly before they’ll let anyone hear their limited level of English). This effectively hamstrings any possibility that they will learn the language. 

Ya’ Gotta’ Make Mistakes:
It’s the only way. You try this, and it doesn’t work, so you try that. If you’re wrong, you find out by doing. It’s the Thomas Edison rule of achievement. “I didn’t fail 10,000 times while inventing the light bulb. I uncovered 10,000 ways that a light bulb won’t work. 

This point has actually been established by researchers. The process of learning a language involves making many mistakes. If we aren’t sticking our necks out

Learn Spanish - It's Really Really Hard.

There is an awful lot of emphasis put on life enrichment these days.  We see it when we turn on the TV, listen to the radio, surf the web.  Walk into a book store and there is likely a display of books on how to be happier, healthier and live a fuller, richer life.

I’ve got a tip that can enrich your life – learn Spanish.

It has got to be one of the, if not the most life enriching thing that I’ve done. 

To be able to communicate with another culture is an amazing thing.

This fact had an awful lot to do with my then wife and I deciding to sell out, pack up, and move our family to Costa Rica in 1999. 

Prior to that time, I had always admired and envied those that had a second language. We tried in the States to learn Spanish.  I bought a huge satellite dish and put it out in the yard just so we could get Spanish TV.  I thought that would be the way to get the kids to learn Spanish – NOT. 

At that time there was no Rosetta Stone, but I did scour the market and found what there was.  Berlitz has always been pretty good.  I bought their cassettes and memorized them.  “Hola Pedro. Como está?  Donde está María?” and so on.  We found a video set that assured us our kids would learn Spanish.  They did watch the videos and would mockingly say “Zozo está listo para los panquekes?”

There just weren’t a lot of options back then.

Our decision to move to Costa Rica had several facets, but this learning a new language was prominent among them.  I felt that it would be a leg-up in this world for my kids to be bi-lingual.  I know that sounds noble, but my own intense desire to learn a second language was firmly in the mix as well.

Why Use Dominical Dot Biz For Your Small Business?

"In many cases, it seems that small business sites are becoming harder to find through organic search. If you look you can find them, but users want convenience, and they are probably not going to look too hard if they can find what they are looking for on the first search results page..."

Costa Rica's southern pacific zone is a sausage linkage of small towns: Dominical, Uvita, Ojochal, Hatillo, Matapalo, all chalk full of small businesses.  There are no, none, zip, zilch - name brand hotels, restaurants, department stores here.  Consequently, when people are preparing to visit here and they go into their favorite search engine, let's say - Google, and they search for the nice, generic words "Hotels in Dominical Costa Rica". What they are going to find in their returns are portal sites, like Dominical Dot biz, that deal with all that the town has to offer, and a smattering of long standing, hard working hotels in the area.

One of the most searched for words on the Internet is "Hotels".  There are hundreds of hotels in Costa Rica.  They are all vieing for that search term. 

Recession Blues Cure

I just stumbled on an article over at CNN's Money section that says that Costa Rica is the place to go right now. The dollar goes a long way. Check it out. Its hard to say what the effect is going to be on Costa Rica, but the global economic conditions might actually stimulate things around here a little bit. I'm not making any projections. In fact, I'd like to defer to the response that I see the TV commentator using quite a lot: "we'll see". The dollar is currently worth about 560 colones here. The expats in the country are feeling some relief from this exchange rate.

The Road Between Quepos & Dominical

I found a recent article in the Costa Rican national newspaper that discussed the current state of the “Bumpy Road” north of Dominical. It was so detailed and specific with date projections that I thought it might be a benefit to readers of my blog to translate and paraphrase it here. My analysis should be unique enough that I haven’t asked permission from La Nacion, but the attribution is inherent in the above disclosure. Their website is www.nacion.com. (Click here for the smaller English version.)

The article was dated Wednesday October 19, 2008: “The minister of Public Works and Transportation, Karla Gonzales, declared before neighbors of Quepos ‘In October of 2009, the Southern Coastal Highway (la Costanera Sur) will be ready’”

It was interesting to find this article when I did because I was sitting in my favorite Sushi restaurant in San José, when I found the article. I had to come up the coast since the Pan American route had been experiencing periodic shut downs due to landslides. I don’t like driving up the coast primarily due to the 25 mile stretch between Dominical and Quepos. It is hard on the car and my temperament.

Getting to Costa Rica’s southern zone has been a big reason why it has been one of the last areas of Costa Rica to get developed and become “touristy”. So the question of “when are they going to pave the road between Dominical and Quepos” has been a regular feature of life here with visitors and prospective investors planning their next visit, or even their move to the area.

Snowed-In In Costa Rica

Pretty catchy title, right?. We all know that it doesn’t snow in Costa Rica. But remember that movie about the Jamaican bobsled team? This is exactly the same kind of thing, well in a remote sort of way it's almost the same thing.

I am sitting in my house in San Isidro. I came up here on Tuesday, it is presently Friday. I had intended to go back home to the coast on Wednesday. I have been unable to return home. The reason? Well, now therein lies the crux of this article. The impediments to me getting back home have been every bit as diverse and non-negotiable as though I were snowed in, just like the good ole days, back in my pre-Costa Rican life in Colorado.

My trip to San Isidro was motivated by my need to get my car’s technical revision (Riteve) made current, as well as some documents that I needed to sign at the lawyers for a new corporation for my Internet company. No problem. I figured I’d take care of those items and then get out to my house, which is just on the Dominical side of San Isidro. There is a screaming broadband Internet connection there that isn’t satellite based, so it seems to work all the time, well… almost.

Old Guy In Costa Rica

Uvita Costa Rica, where my office is located, is exploding. In the last year we have seen changes in this little coastal town that now has a smooth, pot hole-less highway running through it. Huge changes - nay, massive… what would the word be – revolutionary? One year ago we had no banks in Uvita: we now have two with a third on the way. One year ago we had two small neighborhood groceries; we now have three major ones, fluorescent lights, grocery carts and all. I went to a PDGD (pretty darn good dentist) here in Uvita the other day. I guess I should say PPDGD since she is pretty to boot. I needed a front tooth fixed cosmetically and she did a PDGJ. I used to think that I would have to travel to San Jose for such service, and in fact I/we have made numerous trips to San Jose when my kids had braces.

There is a golf course going in down the way, there are new hotels, cabinas, restaurants, tour companies, storage facilities, car washes and businesses of all types going in all around. In real estate companies we’ve got six in Uvita that I can think of off hand.

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