Here in Costa Rica there is an abundance of intentional living communities sprouting up - all are pretty much in the nascent stage, and run from permaculture with animals to totally raw.
There is also a convention / workshop coming up in less than 2 weeks here on Intentional Communities.
If anyone is interested in forming or joining a community here where raw foods are abundant, many properties have rivers and waterfalls/ water sources, and there is no risk of confiscation by Uncle Sam, l would love to hear about it!
I'm interested in all of that. I'm focusing my attention right now on vilcabamba, Ecuador, and Costa Rica is not a bad option, either. My questions would be: what about the wildlife? It is my understanding that CR abounds with monkeys and snakes, so what to do to avoid those? (My brother has a friend who owns an island there (really) and he went for NYE one year, and he said he had to be accompanied by a guide at night to walk between the main house and the bungalows because of the wildlife there.
Two: forgive my ignorance - their growing season is year-round, yes? I understand there is a rainy season - is that like the rainy season in Ecuador where there is still sun during the day in between the rain, or is it more like monsoon season?
Is land inexpensive? How easy is it to immigrate there? What are the rules about foreigners owning land there? How cheap is it to build there?
Hi - I am interested in the place in Ecuador too - I know Mike Adams pushes that place.
But I love Costa Rica.
The reason why I moved to Costa Rica is because it is politically very stable, has no army, a highly literate populace and it is a close, quick flight to the U.S., and it has a great health care system. Hopefully we won't need it much living healthily, but it is all close by. It is a small country and most places are within 4 hours of the capital.
Rainy season brings rains in the afternoons and it is sunny in the morning. During the worst month, it rains a lot,usually that is October.
Don't worry about animals. Every country has snakes - anywhere you live in nature will havesnakes; they are no worse here than anywhere else.
Monkeys don't hurt people, although the howler monkeys could wake you up in the morning with their noise. There are no big cats here either, except the very rare and endangered jaguar that steers far clear of people and lives in the very remote areas.
Building costs are not bad here, as the cost of labor is cheap, but, it is not the same reliability as labor in the U.S., and it can get frustrating dealing with local workers for those used to the North American culture. Foreign nationals can own land with no problem at all - probably the safest country to own land in all of Latin America; especially if you are living on the land!
Getting a residency is not too hard if you have cash to invest here. Otherwise, most people just leave the country for at least two nights every 90 days. People either fly back to the states or make a quick trip to Panama or Nicaragua.
Land prices vary on where you are, like everywhere else. Beach prices are high, but it is all coming down now. I would not want to live right on the beach anyway. I'd rather see the ocean from the mountains and be able to go down and visit the beach when I feel like it.
So where are you living now? Do you have land, or are you looking to acquire it jointly? Do you have some links with photos of where you are? The place I'm looking at, NOt the place Mike Adams is talking about, but a place he is writing an article on soon, gardenofparadise.com - a hectare is about $80K I think? How would that compare to Costa Rica?
What currency do they use? If it is not the Us dollar, how does it compare? I am in Canada so our money sucks in comparison to Us right now :-)
Hi there Chasmyn.
I live in the suburbs of San Jose, the capital, now, Gardenofparadise.com did not produce any websites, is it still coming? Adams just came out with a health retreat down there, did you see his promo video?
It sounds similar price-wise to Costa Rica, the 80K per hectare. Prices vary measurably due to location, altitude, views, etc. You can get some hectares for $7K in the lowlands on the Caribbean slope.
In Costa Rica we are on the Colon. It floats with the U.S. currency, but seems to gradually keep going down against the dollar. Most people accept dollars too here. Don't worry, the dollar finally has ended its bull market, in my opinion, and will devalue rapidly within the year. Canada might be sucked down a bit with it too from what I hear.
What I like about Costa Rica is how easy it is to get to from North America. You don't need to take 2 flights once you are in the country either (although you can) like in Ecuador. But I am sure that valley in Ecuador is incredible and according to Adams, the rain may be less than here during rainy season, which lasts here from around May to December.
Wow, that sounds wonderful - especially the part about being closer to NA. I do NOT like to fly, and we do have relatives in NA, so we'd be going there at LEAST once a year. The flights seem daunting to me.
I think you're right - Canada always keeps its dollar lower than the Us intentionally, and right now it is at an all-time low from what I understand. We are already being slightly affected by stuff in the US, and I am guessing will continue to be.
Perhaps I'll do some more research on Costa Rica - any thoughts on where to start? I do know there are some ecovillages there already - www.ic.org
In the future, she will post highlights, useful information, tips, tools, events, etc. on the ICCCR blog (http://icccr.wordpress.com/) and eventually the website.
I'm interested. What do you want from people who are interested in going there to live? I mean long long term. Tell me more please. Thanks much, Troy Santos.
Thanks for posting! I went to the dentist today and was absolutely delighted when I heard the dentist comment to the hygenist, "she has beautiful teeth, doesn't she?"
WOW! Coooool! Haha, all thanks to raw food!!!
Yeah! I have been getting into apples big time, and discovering new ones that I have not tried before like the Honey Crisps! I always like the Gala too great for raw recipes!
Thank you for your positive words everyone. I've been raw for 8 months and it was simply dissappointing to have gone through such a binge! Besides I felt physically awful!
Onward we march from here! lol
57 minutes ago
Renee Being happy is a moment-to-moment choice, not a destination :D