From survivor to five stars, Isla Palenque, what a difference in two years

In June of 2011 Mayra and I visited Isla Palanque. At that time in a post, I described the vision of the developer and called it “survivor for the jet set”. We were invited to return this past weekend to see the changes made in two years. I am pleased to say Isla Palanque is still almost all a nature preserve as promised but the signs of the planned community are taking form.

Isla-Palenque-is-in-the-Gulf-of-Chiriqui-of-Panama-homes-for-sale-500x217

We stayed in what I will describe as a five star hotelet, six rooms.  It will be someone’s home after the first real hotel is built on the Isla Palenque. We had the opportunity to take a hike down one of the beaches and into the rain forest. We enjoyed some of the most innovative food I have eaten in all of Panama and on Saturday we took a tour with the project designer and manager who is living onsite.

Getting to Isla Palenque required a drive to Boca Chica and a thirty minute boat ride to a new pier.

Forget Fantasy Island

Forget Fantasy Island

We were greeted in a style reminiscent of Ricardo Montalban, except we were met by two gracious ladies both too young to remember Fantasy Island. They were from the staff of what turned out to be the nicest little house on the island.

Our welcome cocktails

Our welcome cocktails

After a weekend there I decided to take three days to share our experience. Today just a bit about the accommodations because they represent the quality of design and innovation. The current hotel is based on a design for a six bedroom house. It is a design I have never seen before. Each bedroom is part of a two level stack, each stack independent, floating above the ground with connections to the salon and outdoors. The salon has an infinity pool and view of the ocean. Each unit has air-conditioning, two or three different showers, a bathtub for two. The water is solar heated and the interiors true apartments themselves. I originally thought each bedroom suit was a free standing cabin minus a kitchen, but not to be, each is a bedroom.

Isla Palenque

Isla Palenque bathroom

Bathrooms are not usually photogenic but this one has a shower wall. a bathtub built for two and behind those doors an outdoor shower that is open to the sky and closed to prying eyes. It was great fun. The toilet has it’s own room.

Isla Palenque bedroom suiteThe suit has a king sized bed, living area and opens to a view of the ocean and a floating terrace. I spent most of my time on the terrace staring at the sea. There is no cable, in fact there is no television, who needs it. They do have Internet and provide an Ipad in each bedroom.

Isla Palenque  beach view from hotel

Isla Palenque beach view from hotel

Isla Palenque

Kayaking

The image below is the hotel from the beach. The Joron is the restaurant. The roof in the center the salon and entrance to the home.

Isla Palenque Hotelito from the beach

Isla Palenque Hotelito from the beach

Mayra suffering

Mayra suffering

Isla Palenque wants you, local residents to have our experience so they are providing a nice deal to fill short term vacancies. Tomorrow more, Food Pornography, the naked truth about great food.

VECINO5 discount rate
The special unpublished package rate applies to stays of 2 nights or more between 11-19 May and includes:

> Jungle Room accommodations
> All meals
> 1 Island Tour per room-night, based on tours offered per our regular schedule
> Transport to/from Boca Chica

The price per room, per night for this package is $195 (value: $540/night; save over 60%). All our rooms are double occupancy but one of our Jungle Rooms can accommodate a third person; to add a third person to this room would cost $95.

All that’s needed to take advantage of this rate is to input the rate code VECINO5 when booking. Please be advised that this is a “last minute” offer, meaning it can only be redeemed 7 days before arrival and is subject to our availability. Also, this rate is strictly “word of mouth”, meaning it cannot be published online, but you are welcome to email it to anyone you think would be interested.

This is the LINK to their website form more information.

 


Caribbean Tobacco in Bugaba Panama

If smoke cigars or not, I suggest you visit the Caribbean Tobacco Company in Bugaba Panama. You will be treated to a tour that takes you from the piles of tobacco, all grown in Chiriqui, through the process of rolling and finishing a cigar.

IMG_1157

If you go to the Tuesday market you have probably seen Dave selling cigars. You might not realize he is the manager of the local facility that makes the cigars. Caribbean tobacco in Concepcion, Bugaba is located on the highway to Volcan.

cigars8

They have been the resurrection of the local tobacco industry. Condemn smoking if you wish but tobacco was once a major cash crop for the farm in Chiriqui. Mayra who went with me for our visit was fast to notice the tobacco plants in from of the facility. She recognized them because her father was a tobacco grower in the past.

cigars9

Now there is a new market for tobacco in Chiriqui, cigars. All the tobacco in cigars produced in Bugaba is grown in Chiriqui, except for the outer leaf wrappers, they come from Nicaragua.

cigars3

 

Mayra with a wrapper leaf below. Our tour guide with a pile of filler above.

cigars4

 

Rolling cigars is an art. The gentleman below has been making cigars for fifteen years. Not that his hand is literally a blur. He explained by rolls five hundred cigars in one day. I have video links below of him doing slow rolling for us to see.

cigars5

If you are wondering what he is using to glue the leaf together, I wondered, it is a potato starch glue.

Cigars and not just for men, women who smoke cigars are very erotic. Look for cigars from Panama and support your local farmers.

cigars7


Gone FIshing, again

When Rainelda postponed for the meeting this Tuesday my visiting son and friend decided they wanted to go fishing. Thanks to Capital Bob Schmucker, the new president of the BCP and first mate Frank we had the opportunity. Since Mayra’s daughter Karina just celebrated her birthday we decided what better birthday present for an inspector of boats than to get out on one for pleasure and drag in some fish.

the day was slightly overcast as we left Boca Chica and the water pretty calm. We trolled and soon saw some humpback calves cavorting and were joined by escort of porpoises.

Porpoises  bocas chica panama

Porpoises on the bow

Then the fun began, I think the porpoises drove the fish to us.

Big Eye Tuna on the hook

Marina with a big eye Tuna

Marina hauling in the first of three big eye Tuna’s. Her first catch and her first Tuna.

Dorado Boca chica panama

Karina with a Dorado

Karina hauled a Dorado and we ended up with three more to join it.

We also caught several Bonita, all but one returned to the sea. In all a great day. Karina being like all the locals I know said, wácala to the tuna. I am not sure if the word wácala is Spanish or just misspelt but it means, yuk.

For the rest if us the Tuna meant, sashimi as soon as we could find the wasabi, ginger, soy and sharp knife.

Sashimi from Boca chica


A Beaching Day

I am not a big beach fan but we were virtually kidnapped yesterday and dragged to a small secluded beach two hours form Boquete, about forty five minutes from  the Interamerican Highway at the Boca Chica turnoff. This is one of the nicest, closest beaches I have visited in this area. I call it private in error, all beaches in Panama are public property, but to get to this beach you either access it by boat, free, or by car $1.50 a person; it was well worth the $1.50.

This is Panama for the locals, not the tourists and worth discovering before someone buys the land, pass the road  and builds a condo tower.

Gavilla Beach Chiriqui Panama

We rented  a large thatched joron, a ramada,  for a $35 and set up the barbie. The unstated objective my by captors was to tie my son Nicholas and I to hammocks and force us to relax. The objective was achieved with out rope. The ocean was warmer than the air temperature, we had shade, lunch, lots of cold beer which we had brought and no cell service, no interruptions, no internet in fact no electricity.

As the day progressed Karina and Caesar went out in a boat with the manager Francisco and pulled lobsters out of a trap. Those that were too small for commercial use need up on the BBQ and each made a one bite snack. The others were taken to the kitchen. If you wish you can buy your lobsters live and cook them yourself or let have them cooked for you. We had planned on neither but the day progressed and we lingered, it was too relaxing to leave early.

As Nicholas and I read, the others took a boat ride the lobsters found their way through the kitchen onto plates. Dinner which was the end to a wonderful day . Options were Pargo, Red Snapper,  dragged out of the ocean that day and fried whole or lobster broiled with patacones.  Entry $1.50 a person, Ramada $35 for the day, Lobster dinner $8 and the entire day , not priceless but dirt cheap. What a wonderful discovery only two hours from Jaramillo.

If you want to go call Estefan the owner  and ask if the roads are open and lobsters available, his number is 6428-3376  or just go.  to get their drive to David and heard toward Panama City. Turn at the Horcincito turn off and head on the new road to Boca Chica. Before you get to Boca Chica you will see an intersection full of signs at a left turn. One sign is for Gavila Beach. Just follow the signs, the road goes from paved to good dirt to bad dirt, but a car can make it when it’s dry. If it is raining, don’t bother.

Some photos:

gavilla

[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa15.jpg]10
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa16.jpg]10
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa19.jpg]20
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa01.jpg]10
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa04.jpg]10
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa13.jpg]20OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa14.jpg]10OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa17.jpg]00OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa18.jpg]00OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa20.jpg]10OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa02.jpg]10OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa03.jpg]00OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa05.jpg]00OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa06.jpg]00OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa07.jpg]00OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa08.jpg]10OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa09.jpg]10OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa10.jpg]00OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa11.jpg]00OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/gavilla/thumbs/thumbs_gavilla-playa12.jpg]00OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

 

 


Flip Flopping

Nope, not about gay marriage nor other political issues, just the my latest drive back from David to Boquete. For those who are not here I am post three videos of the trip from David to Alto Boquete. You can see the progress using the new road flip flopping from one to four lanes and from one side to the other depending upon the state of construction. Much is almost completed, but not everything.

It is clear that once done the trip between Boquete and David will be a better, safer, faster experience.


A day in Volcan and some interesting but taxing information

When I first arrived in Boquete I did a lot of exploration in Chiriqui, later when I was writing for Live and Invest Overseas, I did a lot of travelling throughout Panama. Recently I have logged miles only between  Bugaba, David and Boquete. Yesterday I went to Volcan, just on the other side of Vulcan Baru.

I made the trip to Volcan to do a presentation at their monthly community meeting. I went because I wanted to see, compare, contrast and donate my time and knowledge. It seems that someone who tries to find good speakers for meetings in Boquete should be willing to speak in another community when asked. The topic was the same as I most recently presented in Boquete, Internet 101. My speaking however is not the motivation for this post.

Although I have driven through Volcan to Rio Sereno several times in the past years yesterday was the first time I stopped and looked around since July 2010. Volcan is changing, slowly.

Volcan Panama Community Meeting

Volcan Community Meeting

In Volcan they meet monthly, not weekly as in Boquete. This meeting was in the Artisans center which has shops and a restaurant integrated. The Volcan  meeting is focused on US expats.  One topic yesterday was about a new bill in front of the US House of Representatives, passed in the US Senate already as SB1813. In the US the controversy about the bill focuses on this section.

SEC. 31406. VEHICLE EVENT DATA RECORDERS.

(a) Mandatory Event Data Recorders-

(1) IN GENERAL- Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall revise part 563 of title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, to require, beginning with model year 2015, that new passenger motor vehicles sold in the United States be equipped with an event data recorder that meets the requirements under that part.

In Volcan the focus was on an unrelated amendment that would empower the IRS to seize passports from US taxpayers who owe more than $50,000 in taxes. No place in the world is going to be safe for US tax evaders.

SEC. 40304. REVOCATION OR DENIAL OF PASSPORT IN CASE OF CERTAIN UNPAID TAXES.

(a) In General- Subchapter D of chapter 75 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 is amended by adding at the end the following new section:

‘SEC. 7345. REVOCATION OR DENIAL OF PASSPORT IN CASE OF CERTAIN TAX DELINQUENCIES.

‘(a) In General- If the Secretary receives certification by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue that any individual has a seriously delinquent tax debt in an amount in excess of $50,000, the Secretary shall transmit such certification to the Secretary of State for action with respect to denial, revocation, or limitation of a passport pursuant to section 4 of the Act entitled ‘An Act to regulate the issue and validity of passports, and for other purposes’, approved July 3, 1926 (22 U.S.C. 211a et seq.), commonly known as the ‘Passport Act of 1926’.

‘(b) Seriously Delinquent Tax Debt- For purposes of this section, the term ‘seriously delinquent tax debt’ means an outstanding debt under this title for which a notice of lien has been filed in public records pursuant to section 6323 or a notice of levy has been filed pursuant to section 6331, except that such term does not include–

‘(1) a debt that is being paid in a timely manner pursuant to an agreement under section 6159 or 7122, and

‘(2) a debt with respect to which collection is suspended because a collection due process hearing under section 6330, or relief under subsection (b), (c), or (f) of section 6015, is requested or pending.

‘(c) Adjustment for Inflation- In the case of a calendar year beginning after 2012, the dollar amount in subsection (a) shall be increased by an amount equal to–

‘(1) such dollar amount, multiplied by

‘(2) the cost-of-living adjustment determined under section 1(f)(3) for the calendar year, determined by substituting ‘calendar year 2011’ for ‘calendar year 1992’ in subparagraph (B) thereof.

If any amount as adjusted under the preceding sentence is not a multiple of $1,000, such amount shall be rounded to the next highest multiple of $1,000.’.

(b) Clerical Amendment- The table of sections for subchapter D of chapter 75 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 is amended by adding at the end the following new item:

‘Sec. 7345. Revocation or denial of passport in case of certain tax delinquencies.’.

(c) Authority for Information Sharing-

(1) IN GENERAL- Subsection (l) of section 6103 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:

‘(23) DISCLOSURE OF RETURN INFORMATION TO DEPARTMENT OF STATE FOR PURPOSES OF PASSPORT REVOCATION UNDER SECTION 7345-

‘(A) IN GENERAL- The Secretary shall, upon receiving a certification described in section 7345, disclose to the Secretary of State return information with respect to a taxpayer who has a seriously delinquent tax debt described in such section. Such return information shall be limited to–

‘(i) the taxpayer identity information with respect to such taxpayer, and

‘(ii) the amount of such seriously delinquent tax debt.

‘(B) RESTRICTION ON DISCLOSURE- Return information disclosed under subparagraph (A) may be used by officers and employees of the Department of State for the purposes of, and to the extent necessary in, carrying out the requirements of section 4 of the Act entitled ‘An Act to regulate the issue and validity of passports, and for other purposes’, approved July 3, 1926 (22 U.S.C. 211a et seq.), commonly known as the ‘Passport Act of 1926’.’.

(2) CONFORMING AMENDMENT- Paragraph (4) of section 6103(p) of such Code is amended by striking ‘or (22)’ each place it appears in subparagraph (F)(ii) and in the matter preceding subparagraph (A) and inserting ‘(22), or (23)’.

(d) Revocation Authorization- The Act entitled ‘An Act to regulate the issue and validity of passports, and for other purposes’, approved July 3, 1926 (22 U.S.C. 211a et seq.), commonly known as the ‘Passport Act of 1926’, is amended by adding at the end the following:

‘SEC. 4. AUTHORITY TO DENY OR REVOKE PASSPORT.

‘(a) Ineligibility-

‘(1) ISSUANCE- Except as provided under subsection (b), upon receiving a certification described in section 7345 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 from the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of State may not issue a passport or passport card to any individual who has a seriously delinquent tax debt described in such section.

‘(2) REVOCATION- The Secretary of State shall revoke a passport or passport card previously issued to any individual described in subparagraph (A).

‘(b) Exceptions-

‘(1) EMERGENCY AND HUMANITARIAN SITUATIONS- Notwithstanding subsection (a), the Secretary of State may issue a passport or passport card, in emergency circumstances or for humanitarian reasons, to an individual described in subsection (a)(1).

‘(2) LIMITATION FOR RETURN TO UNITED STATES- Notwithstanding subsection (a)(2), the Secretary of State, before revocation, may–

‘(A) limit a previously issued passport or passport card only for return travel to the United States; or

‘(B) issue a limited passport or passport card that only permits return travel to the United States.’.

(e) Effective Date- The amendments made by this section shall take effect on January 1, 2013.

Source Govtrack.us

I often wonder if anyone in the US Congress reads the bills they vote on, or considers the impact. It is clear the US government wants more tools to take what they think is due to them. This IRS has often been used a tool to deal with matters the were otherwise untouchable, remember Al Capone. His jail time was not for murder, it was for tax evasion. My advise to US taxpayers, file your returns, file your FBARS, file whatever is needed and sleep better at night.

I spoke on the Internet and the final presentation in a meeting spanning two hours, was regarding smash and grab robberies that are occurring in David. There have been a string of these all focused on people leaving the HSBC bank in the El Rey Shopping center in David. The targets are people who withdrew large sums of cash, left the cash in their cars went elsewhere, return to discover a broken window and no cash. It is pretty obvious someone is observing transactions in the bank and has associates on the outside doing some very profitable smashing and grabbing.

The group was small between 20 and 30 people. People were from Volcan, La Barraqueta and Bugaba, large distances.

After the meeting I visited a few places, some familiar one new. I had lunch, a executive special for $4.50 at a place new to me, a large, multi faceted place call La Cava of Volcan, it was a good lunch and I ran into some Boquete people returning from their quarterly pilgrimage to  Costa Rica.

Then off to Berard’s back door to pick up some goodies, they are about 20% less expensive there than in the markets. Finally across the highway in Collegio San Benito to the Lands End outlet. Sadly the selection for June was too heavy on inexpensive down coats. I wanted a rain coat, they had many but all were lined with something making them too well insulated for here.

After Volcan I drifted down to Concepcion, a detour motivated by a lust for some cigars. (Note to my children: Your father is still vice ridden.) I stopped in the Caribbean Tobacco facility and bought direct from the ladies there, it took some negotiating but what started at $7 ended up at $4, so advice is never say yes on the first offer.

In all a nice day trip and nice view of beautiful Volcan, a great place to visit but I would not want to live there. Some people consider Boquete boring, I heard that again last week from an expat. Boring is a state of mind, but I am convinced that there is little community interaction in Volcan, Boquete has a critical mass and that makes for activities that can fill in for social interaction many of us need.

 


TCM: Puerto Armuelles

Harry Hunt a long time resident shared his experience of living on the Burica Peninsula below Puerto Armuelles. I asked Harry to speak because I, a beach hater, love the area of beaches below Puerto Armuelles.

puerto armuelles

puerto armuelles


Puerto itself has a troubled history of feast followed by famine. A few decades ago it was the jewel of Chiriqui with over sixty thousand residents centered on the growing and exporting of bananas. United Fruit, Chiquita banana was the main employer and when hit with a major labor dispute they packed up and left the area. What was left in the wake of their departure was a virtual ghost town. Puerto dropped to about ten thousand people and is still suffering a weak economy.

Things are changing, Puerto has a natural deep water port and is home to a petro terminal and pipeline that moved oil from the Pacific to the Caribbean at Chiriqui Grande. This pipeline, a free zone and new government investment are making the area attractive to capital investment. The area below Puerto is unfortunately is within ten kilometers of Costa Rica. The constitution of Panama precludes non Panamanian citizens from owning land in that zone. According to attorney Rainalda Mata-Kelly, neither a corporation nor foundation will get you around that issue. Harry discussed new ideas that are being used to achieve ownership using banks as trustees similar to Mexican beach property sales.

I love the beaches below Puerto and from a strictly tourist agenda I recommend anyone who lives in Boquete and wants to get into a time machine back twenty years take a day trip.

puerto armuelles

puerto armuelles

The beach above is a few hundred meters after exiting the Petro terminal and has a great little restaurant featuring fried fish and cold beer.

I shot the video below starting in the Petro Terminal and it will provide some idea of the area.
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=BK6NyrMfUJs

 

 


Cars, Boats and getting fixed, what a weekend

[GTranslate]
Part of the weekend was planned, part a surprise and all of it an education.

Thursday night we received a phone call that the mother of one of Mayra’s friends had died. The death was not unexpected, and we were asked to go to the funeral in Volcan on Friday. Our Friday morning was spent trying to buy a funeral wreath of flowers. The one florist in Boquete was closed, so we went to David. It took a couple of hours and it was done. We then headed to Volcan for a 2pm internment. Before we arrived Mayra received a call, the funeral had been moved to a town new to me, Plaza de Caisan near the Costa Rican border and had been delayed until 4pm.

Volcan to Plaza de Caisan

So off we went in increasing rain on a road that has been destroyed by semis hauling over weight loads to a new hydro electric facility. We arrived too late for the service, just in time for the slow, slow, slow cavalcade of cars to the cemetery.

There Mayra presented the wreath, held her friend and watched the burial I snapped one cell phone photo and then we drove the long ride back. This time avoiding David and using the Ruta Sur from Cuesta de Piedra to Dolega. It will be nice if they ever finish the connector to Palmira.

Ruta sur runs from a point on the road from Volcan to Dolega now.

The video below is a seven minute snap shot of driving in the rain, not recommended for the sane.

When my daughter Paige was here, she expressed an interest in going fishing, unfortunately the timing didn’t work. She is gone and the fishing opportunity came Saturday. I asked Mayra to come, she asked if we would be on a cruise ship, she said she would not get into anything smaller. Karina, her daughter jumped at the opportunity and Karina, an inspector of boats for the Maritime Authority of Panama had her first chance to go fishing.

She like many Panamanians of her generation has an addiction to her Blackberry. Despite the fact we left all cell phone towers in the distance she clung to it taking photos to share later. The trip was great we saw a school of Porpoises, a mother humpback and a calf and all my camera could capture was the open sea.

Pacific Coast of Panama

For anyone not familiar with the area off the Chiriqui Pacific Coast this Google map might help. We drove about sixty miles from Boquete to join Captain Bob and First Mate Frank for this experience.

Map of Gulf of Chiriqui

If you have never taken the opportunity to sail the virtually empty seas and pull in some fish you are missing an opportunity.

I seem to do this every six months and each time I say never again, but despite that I do return, because the beauty of the coast is worth the trip even if I do occasionally chum the waters.

Karina and her first catch, a Barricuda

Karina hauled in a Barricuda, but never dropped her Blackberry. Captain Bob displays one of the two Yellow Fin Tunas of the day. I am eating fresh Sashimi as write, thank you, Bob.

Yellow Fin Tuna

Tuna is not something most Panamanians eat. I offered Mayra Sashimi and got the usual response, “guacala”, yuck. I do get the same response if beef is offered with a touch of pink. For her I boiled some tuna and will try to imitate what comes out of a can.

After a well needed night of sleep Sunday was the Amigos de Animales clinic. I had convinced Mayra’s other daughter, Joana to bring her four month old boxer, Don Dhosty (Dusty) in for a clipping. I had to overcome numerous objections about stealing his masculinity and making him dumb. It was bit strange to hear the arguments. Most women I know say that a sterilized male tends to me much smarter and easier to control, they seem to wander less also.I did succeed and she agreed and Sunday was Dusty day.

Don Dhosty

It has been a while since I visited a Spay and Neuter clinic in Boquete, approaching two years. I was amazed at the number of people there, the number of dogs, cats and volunteers. I remember when all the volunteers were gringos and almost all the animals were brough by the sae group. Most of the volunteers are still gringos but more Panamanians are participating and most of the animals brought in were from local people.

Don Dusty did fine in his surgery and will now be singing in the canine boys choir for life. The volunteers were great and I think all of the community needs to help as we can. These people work long and hard to help reduce the surplus population of starving dogs and cats in Boquete.


Road trip to Rio Sereno

[GTranslate]
Weekend field trips in Panama can discover new and interesting things.  This weekend I had an opportunity to see how one church in Panama does a Sunday service. God was smiling on a church in Rio Sereno, so Mayra and I went to meet some of his agents. It was pastoral appreciation day in the Assemblies of God church in Rio Sereno and the Pastors are Mayra’s sister and brother in law, both wonderful people. We gathered the family into three overcrowded cars and drove the route to Rio Sereno.

The video below starts in Cuesta Piedra which is the fastest route to Boquete, goes through Volcan and then the very nice but very dangerous curve ridden fifty minute drive to Rio Sereno. This very beautiful area is mostly devoid of human habitation until you get to Santa Clara. Santa Clara, just outside of Rio Sereno has large coffee and plantain farms.

I enjoyed the first five minutes of the service because it was all music and dancing. I liked the integration of culture and church. The music was good and as you can see in this photo the church has all the cultural diversity that is Panama, Indigenous, Caribbean, European and Mestizo, all represented.

Five diverse children in Rio Sereno

When the service turned to more serious matter, prayer, I went for a walk.

 
The church is about half a kilometer from the dusty frontier with Costa Rica. Rio Sereno is probably best known by those expats here on recycled tourist visas, it is low traffic, low hassel compared to Paso Canoas.

Among the photos in this montage is the voter registration drive for Cambio Democrato, the Presidents political party. If enlisted the bribe was a drink and sandwich; a low cost voter drive.

rio-sereno

[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama01.jpg]00
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama02.jpg]00
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama03.jpg]00
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama04.jpg]00
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama05.jpg]00
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama06.jpg]00
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama07.jpg]10
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama08.jpg]10
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama09.jpg]10
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama10.jpg]10
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama11.jpg]20
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama12.jpg]20
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama13.jpg]20
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama14.jpg]20
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama15.jpg]20
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama16.jpg]20
[img src=http://www.boqueteguide.com/wp-content/flagallery/rio-sereno/thumbs/thumbs_rio-sereno-panama17.jpg]20

Mamon Chino and the beach

Another Sunday, another adventure. This Sunday Mayra, my daughter and I decided to visit a beach below the Peto Terminal near Puerto Armuelles. I have made this ride several times and besides a stop at the City Mall in Paso Canoas nothing was different until we were past Paso Canoas.

It is the season of Mamar Chinos, Lychees and they are everyplace.

Lychees on the tree

According to Mayra, the peninsula is home to the best Lychees in Panama. The trees have them and there were many road side stands selling them buy the bunch.

Lychees for sale

We bought some for road food, $.50 a bunch, it was easier than climbing trees and far less risky. They were sweet, delicious and like Lay’s Potato Chips I’ll bet you can’t just eat one.

Our second surprise happened when we turned off the highway to go to the beach. The high path we would normally take was gone, a new river was created three days ago washing the road away and requiring a beach path to the Brisa del Mar restaurant. We did the beach and shortly after arriving the owner suggested I drive the car out before the incoming tide required an overnight stay.

The video shows both the coming and the going.

When we finish lunch, three fried pargo (snapper) we needed to walk out, not far but Mayra was a bit reluctant to get her feet wet.

Fording the River

A fun afternoon that culminated at still another fruit stand on the Interamerican near Bugaba stocking up on oranges, pineapple, mangoes, Pifa and Mandarins, sacks of fruits for $3.