But first, let’s look at the book Living Abroad in Costa Rica, by travel writer Erin Van Rheenen, who later created the iPhone app.
World Traveler
When I was a small child growing up in Seattle, the farthest I lived from home was 300 miles away on my grandmother's farm in northern Idaho where I spent summer vacations from school. And my international travel was limited to a single, one-day trip to Vancouver, British Columbia, arriving in the morning on a United Airlines DC-6, spending the day wandering through shops with my mother and a friend of hers, before returning home late in the evening by train.Erin Van Rheenen, whose personal Website is aptly named Miss Move Abroad, relocated with her
Planning Your Escape
This isn’t a guidebook that merely paints a romantic picture of living cheap in a palapa on the beach. Instead, it’s loaded with lots of practical information about getting yourself, your kids and your pets into the country, finding a place to live, getting a job and and financing your new lifestyle, obtaining TV and Internet service, making phone calls, and receiving and sending mail.
Movie buffs will appreciate the “Suggested Films” list which includes ones familiar to me (such as Endless Summer and Jurassic Park) as well as others that I’ve never seen, like Caribe, a 2004 film which was the first from Costa Rica to be submitted in the Academy Award competition.
The book divides the country into four “Prime Living Locations”: The Central Valley and Beyond (San Jose is here; several national parks peppered with volcanoes are to the north of it); Guanacaste and The Nicoya Peninsula (“The Wild West” with “the lion’s share of the nation’s beach resort infrastructure”); The Central and Southern Pacific Coast (only a couple hours or so by road from San Jose); and The Caribbean Coast (which Van Rheenen says “seems much more remote and exotic than the west coast”).
For each of the four geographical areas, the author sketches out “The Lay of The Land,” gives the price of housing in various communities, and describes what it is like to live in each. If you never stopped being a kid you’ll be pleased to learn that some expats actually reside in treehouses with Internet access and flush toilets.
Of course, the toughest decision to make about relocating to Costa Rica is whether to do it at all; the second question is where to live. In “Planning Your Fact-Finding Trip,” Erin explains how to prepare for your first exploratory journey, and offers up proposed itineraries that will give you an opportunity to visit different regions of the country on stays of varying duration: 10-days, 2-weeks, and 1-month.
So, if you think it’s time for you to say “Via Con Dios, America!”, pack up your belongings, and emigrate Way South of The Border, Living Abroad in Costa Rica looks to be your ticket to live in a banana republic.
iPhoning It South
Although Erin Van Rheenen’s iPhone and iPad app, Costa Rica Trip Ideas, has a section entitled “Explore Living in Costa Rica” that mentions the Central Valley and the Nicoya Peninsula as possible new homes for émigrés, she intended it to be a vacation travel guide rather than an electronic version of Living Abroad in Costa Rica.
The “Trip Ideas” section offers several possibilities including “He Surfs, She Yogas,” “Hot Spots in 10 days” (San Jose, both coasts, and more), and “Explore Hot Springs & Volcanoes.” There are three separate sections on checking out critters that fly, swim, or walk on land: “For the Birders,” “Sea Turtle Safari,” and “Wildlife Galore.” The app was recently updated and added “Explore Gay Costa Rica” and “Explore Medical Tourism” (the iTunes Preview says “Cut-rate facelifts and bargain bypasses”).
Costa Rica Trip Ideas covers culture, food, history, makes specific lodging recommendations, and contains some of the same practical information for travelers that is found in Living Abroad in Costa Rica. The app will prompt you to buy a plane ticket to Costa Rica by taking you on a virtual, visual tour of the country with great color photographs of beaches, hotels, jungles, mountains, and wildlife.
Fish or Cut Bait?
After reading Living Abroad in Costa Rica and trying out Costa Rica Trip Ideas app on my iPhone, I only face one dilemma: Is my roll-aboard suitcase big enough to carry all that I will need for the trip, or do I need a shipping container, too?Dick Jordan publishes the travel blog, Tales Told From The Road. His last post to the Book(ed) Passage blog was about legendary travel writer Tim Cahill. When Dick isn’t traveling, you can usually find him hanging out with other members of Left Coast Writers at the Book Passage Corte Madera store on the evening of the first Monday of each month.