Oh Panama!

My Life and Times in Panama

Sunday, April 19, 2009

OUR new AZUERO EARTH PROJECT website! www.azueroearthproject.org



www.azueroearthproject.org

Get involved in our new Azuero Earth Project... reforestation is everything in this area, the driest part of Panama. The idea is to save it from its devastating effects of ongoing global warming and restoring its lost flora and fauna.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Thursday, January 29, 2009

CARNIVAL HOUSE FOR RENT $1950 for all the 5 days! Pictures of the new guest house in Playa Venao, Los Santos Province...contact: renate@ohpanama.com



























Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Carnival | Pedasi | Rental | Las Tablas |

Friday, December 26, 2008

My big guest-house at the beach in Playa Venado Los Santos Province FOR RENT!...contact me at: (507)6662-5680 or at renate@ohpanama.com

























Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Playa Venado | Beachhouse | Rent |

Friday, December 12, 2008

A Taste of Panamá…



In the Panamanian cuisine there is a soup dish that is an all-time favorite with the Panamanians. Some call it “levanta muerto” or “raise the dead” soup, especially after a night out in the town because it revives body and soul… and the name of this traditional soup is the “sancocho”.

I find that the best sancocho with the most unique flavor is the one cooked under firewood and you must use the meat from a “free raised chicken”, fresh culantro leaves (not cilantro which has not the same taste), fresh oregano leaves (not the dried kind), sticky yam (ñame), salt and water. The chicken is cooked with some culantro and oregano leaves. It is left to simmer so that it softens up, and then more water and part of the yams are added so that it thickens. Then some more water, oregano, culantro, and the rest of the yams are added with a little bit of pepper.

It is served with a bowl of white steamed rice on the side.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Sunday, September 07, 2008

RECENTLY DISCOVERED 3 TOED PYGMY SLOTH

A recently-discovered species, the pygmy three-toed sloth was discovered on the tiny island off the coast of Panama in the Islands of Bocas del Toro. With a total length between 49cm-53cm it is classified as Critically Endangered on the Red List of 2006. As its name suggests, this species is a dwarf compared with its mainland relatives. In addition to its small size, the pygmy three-toed sloth is characterised by usually blotchy, pale grey-brown fur and a tan coloured face with a distinctive dark band across the forehead, from which long, shaggy hair hangs over the face. Sloths have an unusual means of camouflage to avoid predation; their outer fur is often coated in algae, giving the pelage a greenish tint that helps hide them in their forest habitat. They are known exclusively in red mangrove forests surrounding the island at near sea level.
Sloths in general are arboreal folivores that eat leaves of a variety of different trees. This is an energy-poor diet and these animals have a very low metabolic rate. Their main defenses are camouflage, stealth and stillness, whereby they avoid predation largely by avoiding being detected.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

PANAMA CELEBRATES ITS FIRST GOLD MEDAL IN ITS HISTORY !!

www.chinaview.cn 2008-08-19 09:04:29

PANAMA CITY, August 18 -- Panamanians celebrated excited on Monday the gold medal Irving Saladino won in long jump with 8.34m at the Olympic Games of Beijing, since this was the first gold Panama ever won at the Olympics.


Irving Jahir Saladino Aranda of Panama competes during the men's long jump final at the National Stadium, also known as the Bird's Nest, during Beijing 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China, Aug. 18, 2008. Irving Jahir Saladino Aranda won the gold. (Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery>>>


Panamanian media broadcasted live the competition and Panamanian people stopped activities to watch Saladino's performance.

When Saladino won the medal, it started a carnival in the city of Colon, in the Atlantic coast, people went out to celebrate the medal and the celebration also took place in other provinces.

This is the first gold medal Panama wins in the history of its participation at the Olympic Games, previously it has won two bronze medals by the runner Lloyd La Bech during the Olympic Games of London 1948.

David Saladino, father of Irving Saladino, said that "Irving has promised me to win the gold medal for Panama, and he did it" and he added that "I'm the happiest man of the world."

David also said that Irving made history because he achieved the first gold medal in the history of Panama, "he gave us a good result today, he gave us a medal that for so long we didn't have here in Panama. Ok let's celebrate Irving's triumph."

Cristina, the mother of Irving, said that "I was sure, completely sure that everything would be fine and this medal would be for Panama.

Irving's brother said that "now I can feel relieved, I had headache and I was nervous, because the jumps other competitors were performing. But, I knew my brother would give a good jump, and well, there is the medal for Panama."

The first thing Irving did, after winning the medal, was to call his family and greet the Panamanian people and he said that "the medal is yours, you are the ones who have won it. I send my greetings to all the people in Colon who have helped me a lot."




Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

TUNA and tuna industry depend on Achotines (Miami Herald)

photo: William Boyce AT A GLANCE: Yellowfin tuna live in tropical and subtropical seas worldwide. The fish can grow to over seven feet in length and weigh over 400 pounds. Its second dorsal fin and anal fin are bright yellow.

The future of the tuna fishing industry, not to mention the very survival of some species of tuna, may well depend on research conducted by scientists working in association with the Achotines Laboratory on Panama’s Azuero Peninsula.
The Lab was inaugurated in 1985 and for the next 8 years dedicated itself to the study of the early life stages of near-shore tropical tunas. Laboratory studies focused on the ageing, growth, nutrition and development of vision in early-juvenile tunas. Field studies in the open sea described the distribution and abundance of larval tunas in the northwestern Panama Bight.

In 1992, scientists from the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC) began working with Japanese scientists in Japan on the rearing of larval tunas. Their collaboration led to the founding of a joint project initiated by the IATTC, the Overseas Fishery Cooperation Foundation (OFCF) of Japan, and the government of the Republic of Panama. The project was anchored at the Achotines Laboratory, and its objective was to investigate the culture and captive spawning of yellowfin tuna, snapper, and corvina in land-based tanks in order to provide larvae and juveniles for research purposes. When the joint project concluded in 2001, the facilities and equipment installed as part of the project became the property of the Government of Panama. In 2002 it was agreed that they would remain at the Laboratory for use by the IATTC staff in its research.

The data collected by scientists is used by the IATTC to advise its 16 member countries on how to manage their marine resources, explained Ernest Altamirano, an IATTC scientist. Recommendations are based on mathematical models for prediction, studies of climate conditions, fleet movements, fishing techniques, and tuna mortality. The United States, Japan, France, Panama, Colombia, and Vanuatu are some of the organization’s members.

The tuna mortality studies conducted at the Achotines Lab, for example, are “virtually unique in design and execution”, according to Altamirano. They’re based on investigations of such things as the early stages of tuna development, the factors that affect the fish’s growth, estimates of their population, and their movement in the open sea. Data collected at Achotines is integrated into the statistical program of the Eastern Pacific fleet, according to another IATTC scientist Osvaldo Alexis Silva.

Located on the Bahía de Achotines, the Lab site “is like a natural loading platform” says the facility’s director, Vernon Scholey, in that the sea reaches depths of more than 200m only five to eight kilometers from the coast, facilitating fieldwork and the transportation of live samples to the laboratory. There is an almost constant availability of eggs and larvae, which are otherwise difficult to come by since tuna are a pelagic species, meaning they dwell in the open sea, and are difficult to study.

Scholey explained that there are few research facilities in the world designed specifically for studying the early life history of tropical tunas, and that currently the principal programs at the Laboratory focus on breeding and rearing yellowfin tuna and skipjack.
www.iattc.org

Panama | | | | | | | | | | |
| Laboratory Achotines | Tuna | tuna larvae | Azueros | IATTC |

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

UNCOVERING PANAMAS SECRETS...

Flora, fauna aid climate research

Los Angeles Times / July 20, 2008

BARRO COLORADO ISLAND, Panama - High on a jungle hilltop, at an innovative research center in the middle of the Panama Canal, scientists are studying three-toed sloths, howler monkeys, and jungle flora to better understand evolution and the practical effects of global warming.

The biological secrets being studied at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute are more than just thesis fodder. Scientists say some provide clear warnings of a planet in peril and could provide clues to ways to save it.

Barro Colorado Island was formed in 1911, when the Chagres River was dammed to help create the Panama Canal. The flooding formed an isolated refuge for thousands of plant and animal species.

The Smithsonian set up shop here in 1923, when the canal was under the control of the United States. Its continued existence was assured through the terms of the canal's transfer to Panama in 1999. Now, an average 300 biologists a year from 15 countries use the institute's unique self-contained ecosystem to study animal and plant life.

"It's a precious jewel of tropical biological research," said Kate Milton, a University of California at Berkeley zoologist who has studied howler monkeys here for 30 years.

One project underway that has borne perhaps the most dramatic results is a study of rain forest trees native to the region, led by Harvard botanist Stuart Davies. Early results show that rising temperatures cause trees to grow more slowly. As a consequence, they absorb less carbon dioxide and release less oxygen into the atmosphere, a worrisome upshot of global warming.

Milton said her research on the primates' eating habits has underscored the vitamin D deficiency in the human diet "compared with our wild primate relatives."

The deficiency, caused in part by low consumption of fruits and vegetables, could be contributing to cancer, obesity, osteoporosis, and other maladies.

"Our modern Western diet has gotten us off track in terms of our health," Milton said in a telephone interview from Berkeley.

Research here took a qualitative leap forward in 2004, when the research institute installed an electronic tracking system that scientists use to monitor the movements, heartbeats, and brain waves of resident wild animals, including ocelots, toucans, bats, and agoutis, a rodent species.

The system consists of seven 10-story radio towers with which scientists track native animals outfitted with electronic gadgetry.

Niels Rattenborg, a scientist at Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Starnberg, Germany, used the system in collaborating on a study of three-toed sloths' sleep habits. (Contrary to his expectations, sloths in the wild averaged several fewer hours of sleep than those in zoos.)

"Sleep is good for human beings. We perform poorly if we are deprived of it," said Rattenborg, who this year will clock the snooze patterns of ostriches in South Africa.

© Copyright 2008 Globe Newspaper Company.


Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Barro Colorado | Panama Canal |

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

Panama Ranks 48 In List Of Most Peaceful Countries

May 20, 2008 by patrickwoolford

Panama was listed 48 in the Global Peace Index released by Britain’s Economist Intelligence Unit,
putting Panama one spot ahead of the United Kingdom.
The index ranks 140 different countries according to factors such as military spending
and respect for human rights.
Iceland and Denmark took the top spots in the rankings this year,
beating the United States by an incredibly large margin, which had a ranking of 97.
Panama’s higher ranking likely reflects the small nations relatively low crime rate
and lack of a military force.

Source:INDEX ranks US more violent than Libya (CNN.com)
Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | |

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

The beautiful San Blas Islands on the Atlantic side...


The San Blas islands are an example of an unspoiled paradise. The Kuna indians live on these hundreds of tiny islands just off the coast of Panama.
They have governed this autonomous province since the 1920s. They maintain their own economic system, language, customs and culture with their distinctive dress, music, dance and legends. It gives a feeling of being in another world. The men still fish from canoes and climb for coconuts as they have done for centuries. Stunning golden sands and blue-green waters are edged by the coconut palms, the idyllic islands of your dreamsThey dress just as you would expect with the women wearing the famous molas as part of their blouses. Gold around their neck, in their ears or in their nose, the arts and crafts of the Kunas are famous. The bright tropical scenery and wildlife is reflected in the colorful molas, a rainbow of reverse appliqué embroidery in geometric designs made by the Kuna women.

Snorkling is absolutely fantastic with many corals and lots of fish.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | San Blas | Islands | Diving |

Sunday, January 13, 2008

First visitors from Germany at my new house in Playa Venao!







Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Playa Venado | Surf | Fishing | Diving |

IGUANA RELEASE...

The Green Iguana (Iguana iguana) is a large, arboreal herbivorous species of lizard of the genus iguana native to Central and South America.
The Green iguana is a reptile that grows to 1.5 meters in length from head to tail, although a few specimens have grown more than 2 meters and can weigh upwards of 20 pounds.

The iguana has become extinct in some countries and is endangered in others as excessive hunting and destruction of their tropical forest habitat has depleted their numbers. The green iguana depends on trees - they feed primarily on leaves, flowers and fruits from the upper storey of the forest - but as species from the forest-edge, they can also do well on farms or ranches with forested areas.
Iguana farming can provide an economic incentive to 'grow' lizards and not to fell forests to create more space for growing crops or cattle. Local farmers, who once hunted the iguana, are now learning how to raise them for food and for income generation in the production of leather handicrafts. Fat and eggs are also used for medicinal purposes.
This particular animal was rescued from a local that had gone hunting and sold it to me...

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Iguana | Iguana Farming | Pedasi |

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Nov 10th. Cry of Independence Los Santos...

A small, quiet town, Los Santos comes alive to commemorate the "Cry of Independence" on November 10.

South of Chitré just across the Río La Villa, LA VILLA DE LOS SANTOS - often referred to simply as Los Santos - is where the first Panamanian declaration of independence from Spain was made on November 10, 1821. According to some versions an actual woman's shout, and by the hard historical evidence a resolution by the notables in the town of Los Santos. On the 28th of that month the rest of Panama agreed and the hard pressed Spaniards, having been taken by surprise and routed by Bolívar in Bogota, were run out of Panama with surprisingly little resistance.

This day of the year used to be just a regional 'fiesta', but has turned into a major and popular folcloric celebration in all of Panama.

The oxcart parade rules the streets in many parts of the country all the way from Chiriqui to the jungles of the Darien.

Thus November 10 is one of the countries' patriotic holidays, and every year there is a parade that winds its way from San Miguelito to Juan Diaz to celebrate the occasion. It's particularly popular with all the santeños who have been transplanted to the metro area.


Panama has three Independence Days, all in November. Nov. 3 celebrates independence from Colombia, the day in 1904 when Panama declared independence and the U.S. immediately recognized Panama and stationed warships off the coast to dissuade Colombia from trying to retain possession of the isthmus (Colombia was making too many demands in the canal negotiations).

Today, Nov 10th, celebrates El Grito, when the city of Los Santos declared independence from Spain before the rest of the country had decided to do it.

Nov. 28 is official Independence from Spain, when Panama declared independence from Spain and then later decided to remain part of Colombia.
Panamanians celebrate all of these holidays with big parades.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Independence | Holiday | 10 de Noviembre |

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Traditional Hardwood BEDS, rustic style...

These are beautiful 'madrono' beds worked exclusively with natural materials, cured and treated for long lasting! Prices depend upon sizes ordered, email me at: renate@ohpanama.com for shipping and handling.






Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Tropical Hardwood | Rustic | Beds |

Saturday, July 07, 2007

The latest pictures of the progress of my house at the beach...






















Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Great deep sea fishing in El Ciruelo, Pedasi...

Local fishing captain taking us out to the fishing grounds of the yellow fin tuna far beyond the Frailes Islands pretty much in the shipping langes.

Catch and release. Aren't they beautiful?













Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Fishing | El Ciruelo | Pedasi | Tuna |

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

HOUSE BUILDING GOING ON.....


Shopping for natural building materials in El Limon de Chupampa...











































Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Carnival in Pedasi!












Did we ever have fun.....



































Panama

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Another two weeks later, it looks like a HOUSE...





Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Patron Saint Festival in Los Asientos de Pedasi (Holy Three Kings)

The yearly festivity of a religious holiday (holy three kings) are dearly important to the locals of the pueblo de Los Asientos, Pedasi. From bullfights, to lots of music and dancing people of the village gather from all over to celebrate their town and customs.


















Panama | | | | | | | | | | |
Festival | Patron Saints | Los Asientos | Holy Three Kings |

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Two weeks later, the next phase...
















Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Thursday, January 04, 2007

My house on the beach...

It's coming along nicely. Started about 6 weeks ago and built a very solid foundation, trying to keep a sustainable living style, old roof tiles, natural materials and a 'cool' feel to it. Anyone need any help? I am always available for questions.















Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Architecture | Sustainable | Natural | Playa Venao |

Sunday, December 17, 2006

Recipe for Ceviche

Corvina Ceviche

Any fish or sea food can be made into ceviche, and most fish are used that way on occasion. The dish seems startling at first, for it appears to be raw. But a taste will convince you that the lime juice has done a great deal of cooking the fibers, and the hot peppers have finished the job. Ceviche is usually served as an hors d'oeuvre, but is met outside of mealtime as an excellent accompaniment to ice-cold beer and like beverages.

1/2 pound corvina fillet, cut into little chunks of 1/2 inch.
6 limes (juice only)
2 tomatoes (finely minced)
3 white onions (finely minced)
1 chili pepper (minced) or 1 small yellow pepper
1 green pepper (minced)
1 clove garlic (minced)
1 large sprig parsley (minced)
salt and pepper
2 or 3 drops pepper sauce or tabasco

Mix the ingredients and spread over the fish. Let sit in the refrigerator for about 6 hrs. Make sure the fish is covered in lime.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Ceviche | Corvina |

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Buying land in Panama...

Panama investment guidelines:

Buying property in Panama is a great as well as safe investment but it’s important to be familiar with the procedures to make sure things go smoothly. The government encourages and welcomes foreigners to purchase/develop real estate in Panama. Foreigners can buy and sell Panamanian property legally and easily, while also having the security of having the same rights and protections as a local Panamanian property owner, according to Law #54. Foreign investors in Panama and the businesses in which they participate in have the same rights and duties as national or local investors and enterprises, including those that refer to the freedom of trade and industry, export and import.

The main types of properties are: Titled Property and Possession Rights Property.

Panama has a very sophisticated Public Registry with a cadastral department that oversees the registration of titled properties in the country and titled property is commonly the most preferred type since it is easily verifiable in the Public Registry and since private property is guaranteed by the Constitution of the Republic of Panama. Titled Properties also generally incur annual property taxes when the registered value is over $30,000. The procedures to acquire Titled Property are the following: (I would recommend hiring an experienced attorney)

1. Promise to Purchase Contract which usually includes a small down payment at the signing of the contract to secure the property, provide enough time for title search, coordinate payment arrangements for the closing and form a corporate property holding structure, if applicable. This contract should be registered with the PR to guarantee that the property can’t be sold to any third parties in the interim prior to the final closing.
2. Title verification at the PR to ensure that the title is legally in the name of the seller and that it’s free and clear of encumbrances, liens, or misc. issues that could affect the free disposition or transfer of the title. Also the Cadastral map survey should be reviewed and in some cases, it’s recommended to have the survey done again to ensure accuracy and to avoid any potential boundary conflicts. Also thirdly I would recommend verification of utility debts (water, electricity, telephone and sewage.)
3. Buy-Sell Contract: This contract is registered at the PR and the seller is paid off in full, or if an escrow agent is used, payment is made once the title is transferred to the name of the buyer.
4. Title Transfer: Ownership is officially transferred to the buyer once the title is transferred to the name of the buyer, which takes place after the Buy-Sell contract is signed and registered at the PR. If the title is in the name of a corporation and the seller agrees to sell the corporation shares, then there is no transfer of title, only a transfer of shares of the corporation.

These steps are necessary for purchase of Rights of Possession over a property.

1. Promise to Purchase Contract like above.
2. Due Diligence is more complex due to the absence of a central database of information on ROP properties.
a. Verification of Certification of ROP. This certification should contain the name of owner and accurate description of the property (size, location, limits, all the neighbors, area, boundaries)
b. Survey Verification: should be stamped and signed by licensed surveyor/engineer, identifying the name of the possessor and location details.
c. Inspection: The most important details to verify are the physical occupation status, no opposition by third parties and good faith. Have the surveyor confirm the points of the land and ensure there are no boundary conflicts with neighbors. I would recommend keeping the land well maintained and fenced to clearly delineate the boundaries of the purchased land.
d. Verification of Permit: If the buyer intends to build a marina, airstrip, port etc. it’s necessary to verify if there are restrictions and/or regulations against such a construction.
3. Buy-Sell Contract: See above
4. ROP certification transfer once the ROP certification is transferred to the name of the buyer, as soon as the Buy-Sell Contract is signed by each party. If ROP is in a corporation, then seller agrees to sell the transfer shares and again there is no transfer of ROP certification only the corporation shares are transferred.
Title insurance is available through major international title insurers although Panamanian laws protect foreign investors. And NO property taxes on new construction! The Seller is responsible for a 2% transfer tax and capital gains taxes.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Property Taxes | Property | Land | Pristine | Possession Rights | Title |

Monday, November 06, 2006

3rd of November, Independence from Colombia!

Weekend celebrations of Memorial Day on 2 November and Independence from Colombia. After the Spanish conquest of Colombia in the fourteenth century, Spain established colonies in Panama, which became part of Colombia. In 1903, Panamanians, supported by the United States which wanted to build a canal across the country, revolted and declared Panama independent of Colombia.

Memorial Day on Nov. 2













Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Saturday, October 14, 2006

PIXBAE...the perfect food!

The Pixbae "Peach Palm Fruit", Bactris gasipaes is a species of palm native to the tropical forests of South and Central America and is a tropical fruit that is found abundantly in mountain regions and remote areas of Panama. It has been recognized by renowned chefs as "the noble Panamanian fruit," because 92% of its skin, pulp and seed are usable.

Analysis performed by experts has confirmed that as food, it is the tropical fruit that is the most balanced and the most nourishing, because it contains more protein than the avocado, has twice the protein value of the banana and its nutritional value is comparable to the hen's egg but without the cholesterol.

It is a palm which can typically grow to 20m or taller, with pinnate leaves 3 m long on a 1 m long petiole. The fruit is a drupe with an edible pulp surrounding the single seed, 4-6 cm long and 3-5 cm broad. The rind (epicarp) of this wild palm can be red, yellow, or orange when the fruit is ripe depending on the variety of the palm.

Pixbae is well known by the native population of Panama. They frequently eat the fruit peeled after being boiled in salted water. It's also eaten with honey, used to make compotes and jellies, or also used to make flour and edible oil.

The Pixbae also has a high nutritional value since it's rich in fiber, contains Vitamin A, Thiamin, Riboflavin (excellent for the blood), Niacin (very good supplement to keep good eyesight), Ascorbic acid, calcium and other nutrients.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | |
Pixbae

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

The Harpy Eagle, Panama's national bird...

The "Aguila harpia" is a very rare animal with an unknown population. This incredibly beautiful and majestic bird weighs from 5-9 kg. (males) and 7-9 kg. (females) with a wingspan of 7 feet (around 2.2 m). This is one of the largest of the 50 species of eagles and can achieve a speed of around 50 mph.

The Harpy Eagle's habitat is the tropical lowland forests like the Darien and is geographically restricted from southern Mexico, through Central and South America down to the northern part of Argentina.

In the wild the diet of the Harpy Eagle consists of small tree dwelling animals such as monkeys, oppossums and sloths.

Its head is pale grey and crowned with a double crest. The back of the animal is black and its underside is white with a black stripe or band going up the chest thus giving it a menacing look to match its reputation.

There is knowledge of about 35 harpy nests in the Republic of Panama, although there are surely more.

The country is willing to save its national bird by leaving it and its habitat alone, and that's a conscious decision that people have to be convinced to make.

Two eggs are usually laid but only one chick hatches after 53-56 days of incubation. This species has one of the longest rearing periods of any raptor; about 2-3 years can pass between the birth of the chick and the next nesting attempt.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Harpy Eagle | National Bird | Darien | Rain Forest |

Friday, September 15, 2006

Balboa, Atlas, Panama, Soberana, Cristal, Warsteiner...Guinness...

Gustatory pleasures abound throughout Panama, and the pleasures extend to the beers as well. While most of the beers found in Panama are light pale lagers, Panama almost certainly has the widest range of domestic brands with Balboa, Atlas, Panama, Soberana, Cristal, HB, Balboa Ice, and a few contract-brewed beers like Warsteiner and Guinness Stout.

There are breweries in Panama, both located in Panama City: Cerveceria Nacional is the oldest and largest of the two, having been established in 1909 and accounting for roughly 70 percent of the Panamanian beer market. Cerveceria Baru is the up-and-coming challenger, with about 30 percent of the market.

Most of the beers found in Panama are light and when the temperature starts climbing along with the midday sun, there's really no refreshment on earth quite as good as an ice cold light pale lager beer.

My favorite brew is the green bottled "Panama" and I think it stands out as a beer that's really worth drinking for its flavor properties -- not just its ability to slake the thirst of a sun-drenched drinker.
At 4.5 percent alcohol, its also among the stronger beers in Panama, the others range around 3.6-3.8

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Beer | Lager |

Friday, September 08, 2006

Great story on Panama City's buzzling nightlife!

TRAVELS WITH LONELY PLANET History and nightlife in Panama City

Long overshadowed by its forested neighbor to the north, Panama has finally earned its place among the world's hot new destinations. The wonder is that it has taken so long to be discovered. Like Costa Rica, Panama is packed with wildlife, teeming jungles and breathtaking highlands; it's one of Latin America's safest destinations; the currency is the U.S. dollar; and it's close--it takes less time to fly between New York and Panama than it does to fly across the United States.

But most importantly, Panama has Panama City, a steamy salsa-infused capital with a beautiful historic district reminiscent of Old Havana, dozens of restaurants, nightspots and jazz clubs, and a rich mesh of cultures all adding to the lively street scene beneath the tropical sun.

Casco Viejo is the city's colonial gem, complete with picturesque plazas, cobblestone streets and old mansions near the edge of the bay. Dilapidated for years, this neighborhood was first rediscovered by the city's artists, who came seeking cheap rents amid old-world ambience. Since then, others have followed suit, giving the crumbling homes a much-needed facelift. One of Casco Viejo's most famous arrivistes is the singer-actor-activist Ruben Blades. He is only slightly overshadowed by President Martin Torrijos, who holds court in the elegant Palacio de las Garzas, named after the slender white herons (garzas) gliding about nearby.

A wander through Casco Viejo will lead visitors past splendid churches, tiny art galleries, charming cafes and several museums, including the excellent Interoceanic Canal Museum. Exhibits here offer a wealth of information on the first railroad across Panama (built to carry prospectors from the eastern United States to the gold fields of California), the early efforts of the French to build a canal (leaving one French company bankrupt and thousands of workers dead) and the later success of American efforts (though it, too, came at a heavy loss in life). The museum is housed in a lavishly restored 1870s building that headquartered the French and later the U.S. canal commission.

Although Casco Viejo is the oldest still-inhabited part of the city, Panama's first foundations were laid a few miles east of there in 1519 by Spanish conquistador Pedro Arias de Avila. Founded as the first European settlement on the Pacific, Panama soon became a major link in Spain's golden pipeline. Gold plundered from Peru passed through Panama on its way back to Europe. This brought the city great wealth as well as unwanted attention from English pirates.

Although Sir Francis Drake left his calling card in Panama, Henry Morgan was the one who dealt the city its most lethal blow. In 1671, he sailed up the Chagres River, continued overland and, in a surprise attack, routed the city in a few hours. He and his band stripped the gold from the storehouses, then left the town in flames. Three years later, Panama City was refounded in present-day Casco Viejo. Although only fragments of the original settlement remain, visitors can wander through the ruins, photographing the still-standing tower overlooking the sea. Nearby, the Panama Viejo museum gives a sense of what things might have looked like in 1671.

As night falls on the city, it's time to return to the present and take advantage of Panama's relentless vida nocturna (nightlife). Casco Viejo is a good place to start the evening, in one of its excellent restaurants, low-key bars or jazz spots (one located in a former dungeon). Later in the night, Isla Flamenco, with its many open-air nightspots and underground clubs, becomes the destination of choice. One of four islands created from dirt dredged during the construction of the Panama Canal, Isla Flamenco has some enviable cocktail-sipping spots on charming patios beside the water. In the wee hours of the morning, Plaza Pacifica keeps the party going, with several late-night clubs and DJs spinning a broad mix of tunes.

Just before dawn, it's back to Casco Viejo once again, to catch the early morning fish market and the wild spectacle of sunrise over the city. Because of Panama's twisting shape along an east-west axis, from the city it appears that the sun rises from the Pacific and sets in the Atlantic: one of many curious wonders, just like Panama City itself.

Where to stay: Located in the best part of Casco Viejo, the beautifully restored 19th Century mansion of Casa Mar Alta has lavish guest rooms and a scenic rooftop terrace (011-507-211-2277; www.casamaralta.com; doubles from $155). The all-suites DeVille Hotel has a boutique feel, with spacious antique-laden rooms. It's located in El Cangrejo, a neighborhood packed with restaurants and bars (011-507-206-3100; www.devillehotel.com.pa; suites from $155).

Where to eat: Stylish Limoncillo serves a creative blend of eclectic dishes, prepared by one of Panama's top chefs. If you like the ambience, take it home. Most of the artwork adorning the walls is for sale (011-507-263-5350; Calle 47 near Calle Uruguay; entrees run $14-$20). For one of the world's more unique dining experiences, take a cab 20 minutes west of the city to the Miraflores Locks. Here you can dine al fresco on tasty Panamanian fare while watching ships pass through the canal just below. Call to reserve a choice table and to find out the best viewing times (Miraflores Restaurant; 011-507-232-3120; entrees around $9-$15).


Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Panama is HOT ...


READ THIS ARTICLE!



Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Carnival in Las Tablas...(Panama has the second largest carnival after Brazil!)

The Carnival of the City of Las Tablas in the Province of Los Santos, 282 kilometers and 3 and a half hours away from Panama City is recognized as the best carnival in this country. It takes place during February, about 40 days before Good Friday.

On friday before Ash Wednesday everything begins with the selection of the carnival queen and her attendants. The queen then reigns over the daily parade and official activities. It's a true spectacle of beauty and extravaganza of national and international fame. The queens work very hard all year round to raise funds for the expenditures of their glamorous costumes and fireworks.

For all Panamanians, Carnival is the most awaited annual event, their popularity is comparable in Latin America with the famous Brazilian carnival, both in popular participation, fun, as well as in their splendorous costumes and popular folkloric allegories. The whole country, a multitude of people from all races and social backgrounds, take to the streets for four days and five nights, for the sole purpose of having fun.

Events follow a similar pattern on each of the four days of Carnival (Saturday to Tuesday). In the morning, there are "mojaderas" or water throwing, blue dye and shaving cream fights in the central plaza, and the two "tunas" parade in sexy clothing, dressed for the heat, dancing and singing songs praising their group or ridiculizing the other. The morning events are called the culecos.

Thousands of people are congregated in a small plaza to enjoy the exciting "culecos" wich are mainly popular outdoor dances where participants are sprinkled on constantly with clean water pumped from cistern trucks. There are moments when the event comes to a climax when the queens parade with their beautiful costumes saluting participants while the songs and the traditional typical music of the tunas play along. The luxury and the splendor of the Las Tablas Carnival envelope the nights while the traditional rivalries among the "calle arriba" and "calle abajo" tunas, (each routing for their Queen), sing folkloric tunes and dance on top of the impressive and majestic allegorical carts designed for each of the four holidays. They are accompanied by "comparsas" and "tunas" (cheerful groups of musicians and dancers) which delight young and old alike. At nights there are dances in popular public sites and streets that complete a full day of festivities.

People dress in party clothes and the dancing parades include decorated floats. After the parades at night, each tuna goes back to their toldo (their base) and join a large dancing party until early hours of the morning.

The time for rest is rather short since as soon as the sun appears the celebration begins once more. Come and see for yourself, live your own Panamanian carnival experience. The celebration in Las Tablas doesn’t have any limits, you must come prepared to enjoy an endless number of festive activities and dance all night!

Las Tablas has few hotels. Plans to stay in Las Tablas for Carnival are best with Panamanian friends.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Tuna | Culecos | Carnival Las Tablas |

Friday, August 11, 2006

Listen to Live Music from Las TABLAS!

www.hoyconelpueblo.com

Get yourself into the Panama vibe by clicking on the brown 'escucha nos en vivo' music box on the right hand side....

Learn Spanish and feel the 'tipico' together with the happening events.



Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Monday, August 07, 2006

Tagua, Wounaan



Tagua, (tah-gwa), also called ivory nut or vegetable ivory, is the seed of several kinds of palms that grow in tropical rainforests. The durability of tagua and its similiarity to animal ivory has been known for a long time. Before tagua was displaced by plastics in the 1930's tropical countries exported large quantities of tagua to the U.S. and Europe for making buttons and jewelry.

Unlike products made from animal ivory, tagua products help conserve rare and endangered species by providing an incentive to protect rainforest habitat. Most tropical deforestation is the result of hardworking rural people seeking income by converting the rainforest into low quality crop land and cattle pasture. As they rapidly deplete the poor tropical soil, the small scale farmers sell their land to large-scale ranchers, and move to new forests in a process of hardship for their families and ruin for the tropical environment. By producing a sustainable income from the intact rainforest, tagua and other natural forest products can provide both stability for rural people and an alternative to rainforest destruction.The Wounaan Indians are master artisans from the Darién-Chocó region of Panamá. They are known for their fine baskets and high quality wood carvings. In addition to crafting objects for sale, skilled wood carving has many traditional uses in the Wounaan culture, including fabricating hunting weapons, canoe, paddles, household furnishings, and ceremonial objects. Pioneered by Selerino Cheucarama, one of the best master carvers, the Wounaan have recently extended their carving skills to tagua and have created a unique and imaginative art inspired by the plants and animals of the rainforest.The Wounaan artisans care the tagua with hand tools and polish the tagua with a series of fine abrasives; no varnishes or lacquers are used. The natural color or tagua is ivory white with a dark brown skin. Natural inclusions are shades of brown and gray. Other colors are produced by dying the tagua with natural extracts of plants and earth, using the traditional methods for dying basket fibers. Only high quality India inks are used on those pieces with inked details.

More Information about Tagua

· When mature, tagua nuts fall to the forest floor, where they are harvested by hand. The parent trees are not harmed in any way.
· Most tagua comes from palm trees in the genera phytelephas and Palandra.
· A common tagua palm in Panama is Phytelephas seemanii, which produces an exceptionally hard variety of tagua.
· Tagua palms grow in the shade of other rainforest trees and in open wet areas.
· Before WWII, Panamá, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, and Brazil exported approximately 5 million dollars worth of tagua per year to the US and Europe. Panamá enjoyed a “tagua boom” between 1900 and 1940.
· In the 1920’s, 20% of all the buttons produced in the US were made of tagua.
Small factories in Ecuador still do a thriving business manufacturing tagua buttons for European and Japanese fashion designers.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Tagua | Wounaan Indians | Rainforest | Choco | Darien |

Saturday, July 29, 2006

A trip through the Panama Canal

Freelance writer John Jaworski of Canada and his family recently took a vactation cruise that sailed through the Panama Canal. The Northern Life (Ontario) recently published his article about their voyage through the Canal. I think you'll enjoy it.

Oh, and in case you missed it, here's the link again to the fast-motion video of sailing through the Panama Canal that I first posted here a few months ago.

— Renate

Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

World's third-largest bank buys Panama's biggest

Recently a visitor to this site wrote me to say that talking about parrots and toucans was okay, but what about safety and financial security in Panama?

CNN reported that last week that European banking giant HSBC has agreed to a friendly $1.77 billion takeover of Panama's Grupo Banistmo, the biggest banking group in Central America, further boosting its presence in Latin America.

HSBC Holdings has banking operations in 76 countries. Latin America has become increasingly popular to big foreign banks like HSBC, Citigroup and BBVA in recent years as they reap attractive profits from the region's hefty service fees and fat net interest margins.

London-based HSBC, the world's third-biggest bank, already owns Mexico's fourth-largest bank and one of Brazil's top ten, and has said it wants to grow more in Latin America.

Your money is as safe in Panama as it could be anywhere — perhaps safer than in many countries.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Friday, July 21, 2006

I'm in Panama this week... it's bird heaven on earth!

I'm actually in Panama this week. I flew down yesterday. Oh, it's great to be back again!

I just woke up, and am brewing tea. I hear parrots all around. It's feeding time for the animals as well as for me. There are yellow-headed amazon parrots, and a ton of littler ones: mealy amazon, parakeets... this is the bird heaven on earth! There is world record count of species here, more than in the whole USA and Canada combined!

There are toucans in the trees, too. I can see them.

This is paradise! I told you so!

— Renate

Panama | |Parrots |Toucans | | | | | | | | | | |

Monday, July 17, 2006

Diablos Rojos (Red Devil) buses: Panama's rolling art

Panama city is home to the diablos rojos or "red devils" buses decorated with bright paintings of famous personalities and unique designs of psychedelic or religious nature, a variety of flashing exterior lights and some Spanish block lettering or decals. A few have neon lights flashing above their windshields or all around them, huge steer horns attached to the hoods and flying tassels affixed almost anywhere.

Hundreds of former US school buses barrel through Panama City's streets with loud reggae and salsa that blasts from speakers more powerful than the engines themselves. They cost just US$0.25 per ride and go to almost every corner of the city between 6am and midnight. No bells or buzzers to signal the driver to stop, so when you want to get off, just yell "parada."

Most are individually owned and there are no fixed routes or schedules : you just have to look for the destination painted on the windscreen. Plaza Santa Ana is the main hub where you can get buses to almost anywhere in the city. Good maps are available and free online at www.panama-maps.com.

A lot of Diablos Rojos have long vertical tail pipes that help to raise the decibel level on Panama's streets. While each Daiblo Rojo follows a certain consistent route, you have to learn how to navigate the city on a trial and error basis.

The most expensive decorated buses are airbrushed work of art. Unfortunately the best paint and customizing jobs are very expensive, and the high cost may soon put an end to this amusing tradition. Buses painted plain white or blue lack character.

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Sunday, July 09, 2006

The Panama Hat

Like most of you probably know, the authentic Panama hat is really woven from the 'toquilla straw' in a remote town on Ecuador's coast called Montecristi. www.planetepanama.com

This village is now internationally known for the high quality "Panama Hats" the handful of master weavers, creators of the finest straw hats in the world produce. The finest panamas have a silk, creamy smooth texture in which the weave is barely perceptible, but if held up to the light, a spiral of rings will be seen spanning out from the middle of the crown. They are so fine they look like silk and cost thousands of dollars on the retail market.

These concentric rings or vueltas indicate where new strands have been started in the weaving process. It is the number of vueltas that determines the quality of the Panama. In the cheaper and most common quality that might take a day or two to weave, there may be up to ten "vueltas" whereas in the finer quality or "finos" there could be as many as forty. This quality work represents many months of work of one individual. And it's the only income the weavers' families have.

In 1835 Manuel Alfaro, a Spanish entrepreneur, arrived in the port of Guayaquil in the province of Guayas. He settled in nearby Montecristi and quickly realised the economic potential of the toquilla hat setting up his own chain of production from the straw plantations to circuits of weavers. His hats were soon being exported from the ports of Guayaquil and Manta to Panama which was quickly becoming an important center and staging post for international trade and travel.

As you might expect, Ecuadorians themselves do not call their hats Panama hats. In Ecuador, the hats are sombreros de paja toquilla, or "hats of toquilla straw."

At first they were sold locally within Ecuador, it was many years later before they actually started to export their hats. Buyers shipped them to Panama during the building of the Panama canal, where they were worn by the workers for protection from the sun.

The toquilla hat soon began its conquest of the United States. Prospectors heading for the Californian gold fields during the rush beginning in 1848 passed through Panama picking up hats on their way. It wasn't long before large quantities of hats were being exported to California.

At the same time the authorities at Cuenca, 2,550 meters high in the Andean province of Azuay, opened a hat factory and later a workshop for training in an attempt to alleviate economic problems. The authorities made apprenticeship compulsory throughout the region with the threat of prison for those who refused. The industry in Cuenca developed quickly and utilised modern methods and organisation which led to it slowly outstripping the more traditional producers in the Manabi region.

In the 18th Century Panama hats found their way into the United States. During the American-Spanish war (1898) the US government ordered from Ecuador 50,000 "sombrero de paja toquilla" (hats of the toquilla plant), for their troops heading for the Caribbean. Earlier in 1855, a Frenchman living in Ecuador took some to the World Exhibition in Paris. The finest hat was presented to the then Emperor of France Napoleon III and has been much sought after by Royalty ever since.

Its popularity was further enhanced when in 1906 President Theodor Roosevelt was photographed wearing a Panama hat whilst viewing the Panama Canal under construction.

In England much encouraged by royal patronage, the Panama quickly became known as the most fashionable summer hat and remains so to this day.

If you need to remove a wrinkle or bad shape, simply spray water lightly on the place to be reformed and then warm it a little with the hair dryer. You will notice that a heavy crease will start to relax with just this! Then allow the water to soak in for a minute or so and you will notice that the hat becomes a little like clay in your hands. Reform/reshape it how you like using a little water and the hair dryer.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Panama Hat | Toquilla Straw | www.planetepanama.com |

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Retirement Incentives for Panama

Panama offers an attractive incentive program for retirees, and because of the lower cost of living, great climate, lower crime rate and tax advantages, Panama compares with many European choice of retirement destinations.

Some benefits for the retiree that move to Panama under a Retirement Visa:

• Household goods can be brought in to Panama free of taxes.
• No property taxes for 20 years.
• No income tax on incomes earned outside Panama.
• New cars can be brought in duty free every two years.
• Discounts between 15% and 50% are offered on hotels, restaurants, movies, many professional services etc.
• Panama is a safe country.
• Panama City has a modern, American style infrastructure due to the near 100 year presence of the Americans in Panama.
• High-band Internet connectivity, cellular phone networks and ADSL in-home phone capability are readily accessible throughout most of Panama. Full-service satellite and cable TV are also very common.
• Panama's cost of living is a fraction (approximately 1/5th) of the United States.
• Panama has an ideal climate.
• Panama has medical facilities on a par with the United States.
• Panama is close to the United States with direct flights to Panama from 5 major US cities.
• Retirement visa requirements are minimal.
• Foreigners can buy and own property in Panama enjoying the same rights and protections as Panamanians.
• English is the second language in Panama and is widely spoken.

The Pensionado Visa has an income requirement established by the Panamanian Government of US$500 per month and US$100 additional for each dependant. It is issued to those who receive a monthly income from retirement sources such as Social Security, Government or Private Companies.

The Private Income Retiree Visa has an income requirement established by the Panamanian Government of US$750 per month earned from a CD deposited at the National Bank of Panama. At current rates, the deposit could be around US$200,000 (keep in mind this amount may fluctuate). The deposit should be renewed every 5 years to maintain the status.

The Person of Means Visa has three options:

1. Purchasing a property of US$200,000

2. Having a CD deposited in a Panamanian bank for 2 years in the amount of US$200,000 (Does not need to be renewed)

3. A combination of the two options above, purchasing a property of US$80,000 AND having a CD deposit of US$120,000.

Issuing of visas takes between 30-60 days.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | Taxes | Duty Free | Visa | Climate

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

Tamborito, Panama's national dance

The tamborito is Panama’s national dance with its call-and-response vocal phrasing and interlocking drum patterns showing African antecendants. The lyrics tend to be repetitive and, as in West African vocal music, also incorporate proverbs and political commentary.

“El Tamborito” means the little drum and it is more than a dance. The tamborito is contagious. It is an expression of the Panamanian grace, faith, hopes, desires, spirit and soul. It is Panama’s typical and folkloric musical theatre. Its intoxicating rhythm and underlying emotions are communicated to all. Its cadences are mixed with the turbulence of jealousy; with the palpitations of pleasure; with the resonance of kisses; with the laughter of deception; with the honey of coquetry; or the pain of sorrow. Breaths come short and fast, spirits soar and yield to an atmosphere bathed in romance, in sensuousness, in love.

The performance displays an elegant and dramatic synergy of singers (“Cantalantes”),dancers and drummers. The performance usually depicts themes of seductive poetry revolving around the joys and anguish resulting from the attraction between men and women.

The native drums of Panama, the “Caja”, the “Pujas” and the “Repicador” have special significance in Panama’s folkloric tradition. These drums are made of hollow cylindrical wood from local tree trunks covered with tanned velum from thoroughly sun dried cowhide stretched tightly over one or both circular ends of the receptacle, kept taut and wound by hoisting chords made of hide or rope. They are played by beating the head or heads repetitiously in rapid succession of strokes with the hands or sticks to produce reverberating rhythmical sounds.

The “Caja” is a short and squat rhythmical drum that produces staccato like tones. The “Puja” or Pujador gender is masculine. It is a long and marrow deep tone drum that produces booming baselike sounds. The “Repicador” gender is feminine. It is a long and narrow drum that produces sonorous high pitched scaled melodious sounds, which carries the rhythm of the dancers.

And all three of them, played together, diffuse into the atmosphere a symphonic poem.

And how graciously sound the silver voices of the girls as they clap hands to the beat of their song. Their bodies sway in tune with the music and beginning with the “cantaora alante (the soloist) who stands beside the caja, the circle of girls which ends close to the repicador grows slowly smaller.

When dancing the “Tamborito”, the dancers sensuous movement and suggestive gestures are usually in response to the pulsating vibrations and rhythmical reverberations of the hypnotic drum beats. A favorite, classic is the “Tambor Empollerado” where Panama’s national dress is worn by the dancers. The decoratively frilled and embroidered gown, “La Pollera” is worn by the woman and “El Montuno” is worn by the man. There are many who swear that a woman is more seductive robed in a “pollera” than Venus de Milo disrobed.

DEFINITION: The term is a derivative of “El Tambor” which means the drum in Spanish. Historically, drums have symbolic cross-cultural meaning such as to give signals, to command, to summon, to call, to alert and to warn. Drums are also percussion instruments used to produce music to entertain, as well as, for special and solemn occasions.

“Por carida... Por carida...
Maria Remolona... dime la verda...
(In charity;s name, take pity, do,
And, Lazy Mary, tell me true.)

The chorus answers:

“Lazy Mary, in the name of Heaven above,
“Tell me if you love me... I’m dying of love.”

“A poor man steps out with his lady fair
“Along comes a rich one, and he gets the air.”

“In charity’s name, take pity, do,
“And, Lazy Mary, tell me true.”

“The poor man is kicked right out the door,
“He scratches his head... And is he sore?”

“Lazy Mary, in the name of Heaven above
“Tell me if you love me... Before I die of love.”

“If you leave me I’ll wish I had never been born,
“Without your love I am quite forlorn...

OOOPAAA!

“Panameno, Panameno Panamanian Panamanian
Panameno, vida mia Panamanian, my life
Yo quiero que tu me lleves I want you to take me
Al tambor de la alegria To the drum of joy"

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | |

Monday, June 26, 2006

Festival de la Pollera

Every year the Festival of the “Pollera” (national dress) is celebrated, as a part of the celebration for the Patron Saint of Las Tablas, in Azuero, Santa Librada.

The most beautiful “polleras” of the region take part in this festival. The “Pollera”, made completely by hand, is one of the most spectacular folkloric dresses in the world. It can take from six to twelve months to make and it can cost several thousand dollars, in addition to the value of jewelry that complements the dress.

The men's finery consists of embroidered, long sleeved shirts, three-quarter length pants and the traditional "Montuno" straw hat.

There are many tales related about its origin, but the popular opinion is that it was adapted from a gypsy dress worn in Spain at the time of the conquest of Peru and brought to Panama by the servants of the colonial families. It normally consists of a blouse or shirt and a two-tiered full skirt.

The lavish satins and brocades that made up the dress of society at that time were not suited to the tropical climate and the servants' garb was appropriated by the mistress and enhanced with lace and embroidery. It was not worn outside of the home but gradually the ladies added more lace and ribbons, ornaments for the hair (tembleques) and jewelry for the neck and eventually it made its way into the public eye.

The experts agree that the ground cloth must be white and the 12 yards of material required can be fine linen, cambric or voile. The motifs may be formed by birds, flowers, fruit, vines, garlands or native designs. The height of elegance is achieved when these designs are executed in "talco en sombra" which is hand-sewn appliqué; however, they can be also created in cross stitch or embroidery. The cost of the gala costumes runs into hundreds and sometimes, thousands of dollars, depending on the hand work involved.

The basic pieces of the pollera are the gown or upper part, the skirt or lower part and the petticoat or underskirt. The gown or blouse consists of two ruffles, appliquéd or embroidered in favored color and design edged with valencienne lace and gracefully draped from handmade thread lace insertion at the neckline (this blouse is worn off the shoulder.) Wool is woven in and out of the insertions and two big pom-poms are centered at the chest and back. The wool must be the same color as the shoes, which are heel-less and made from velvet or satin.

The skirt is two wide pieces ornamented with the chosen motif and joined together with insertion and bordered with insertion and lace. It is very fully gathered on a waist band. Four wide ribbons hang from the waist, two in the center front and two in the back--they are called "gallardetes", meaning "graceful streamers". The petticoat is often as elaborate as the skirt but is always pure white and the trimming is hand-made thread lace.

The ornaments, "tembleques", for the hair are exquisite. A large tortoise shell comb embellished with pearls and gold is worn on top of the head and resembles a crown. This is the key piece and the gold hairpins and tembleques, which are quivering pins and worn in pairs, are placed on the head to give the appearance of a radiant halo. Two small discs tied to the hair at the temples with black silk thread and large gold filigree earrings with pearls or corals complete the head dress.

The jewelry adorning the neck usually consists of a pearl or coral rosary, a flat gold chain or a chain of gold coins and a gold cross on a black velvet ribbon worn as a choker. The jewelry worn with the pollera in the olden days was indicative of one's wealth and sometimes as many as a dozen chains were worn, all of pure gold and precious gems. A large gold and pearl button or rosetta is worn over the wool pom-pom and a purse suspended from the waistline and fastened with two gold brooches is the finishing touch.

Four days before Ash Wednesday are "carnival" days and La Pollera comes into its own. The streets are filled with merry makers and each Pollera one sees seems to be more beautiful that the last. La Pollera has to be seen to appreciate the work and imagination that produces this loveliest of dresses.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | | | Pollera | National Dress

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

Rainforest Art Baskets

The Wounaan and Embera Indians from the rainforest in the Darien province of Panama are master artisans.

The women are well known for their fine baskets and the men for their cocobolo wood and tagua carvings. These baskets were hand woven using natural fibers found in the forest.


A variety of reeds and palm fibers are normally used. The colors are produced with natural extracts of plants and earth, using the traditional methods for dyeing basket fibers.

Seldom, if ever, are two baskets a like. The original designs usually portray life in the village, local animals and insects, or plant life.


Income earned from the sale of these lovely baskets reduces the need to destroy the rainforest for agriculture.

| | Wounaan Indians | | Panama | | | | | | | | | | | |

Monday, June 19, 2006

Sailing the Panama Canal: A Video

Traversing the Panama Canal takes about 24 hours, including wait times. This video lets you do it in about two minutes.



Panama | | | | | | | | | | | |

Panama seeks to expand canal capacity

According to Sunday's Financial Times, Panama is is ready to add a "third lane" to the Canal by 2014. They just need to find $5.25 billion to pay for it.

Expanding the canal would allow passage of the most modern seagoing vessels, many of which are too wide to fit through the current Canal, allowing ships from Asia to sail to east coast U.S. ports.

The canal today carries five percent of world trade, and currently operates at over 90% capacity, thanks in part to the recent boom in Chinese trade worldwide.

Panama needs to win the support of its own people in a referendum, as well as that of international financiers, who will provide half the cost of the project.

Read the full story.

Panama | | | | | | | | | | |

Friday, June 16, 2006

Panama tree frogs airlifted to U.S. in carry-on bags

I found this story from the New York Times about scientists bringing Panamanian tree frogs into the U.S. in their suitcases fascinating. These frogs were found near El Valle, an inactive volcano, and were in danger of becoming extinct because of a waterborne fungus.

— Renate




To Stem Widespread Extinction, Scientists Airlift Frogs in Carry-On Bags

by Brenda Goodman

ATLANTA, June 5 — Of all the things airport security screeners have discovered as they rifle through travelers' luggage, the suitcases full of frogs were a first.

In a race to save amphibians threatened by an encroaching, lethal fungus, two conservationists from Atlanta recently packed their carry-ons with frogs rescued from a Central American rain forest — squeezing some 150 to a suitcase — and requested permission from airlines to travel with them in the cabin of the plane.

The frogs, snuggly swaddled in damp moss in vented plastic deli containers big enough for a small fruit salad, were perhaps the last of their kind, collected from a pristine national park that fills the bowl of El Valle, an inactive volcano in Panama.

In many parts of the world, habitat loss is thought to be the biggest driver of amphibian extinctions, but the frogs in El Valle are facing a more insidious threat.

A waterborne form of chytrid fungus is marching down the spine of the mountain range where they live. Scientists aren't exactly sure how the fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, kills, but it seems to break down a protein in the skin called keratin that may be important for respiration. The skin of infected animals sloughs off in layers, and within two weeks, they die.

The chytrid fungus is thought to play a large role in the worldwide disappearance of amphibians, a trend terrifying to experts, who say it would be the first loss of an entire taxonomic class since the dinosaurs.

Joseph R. Mendelson, curator of herpetology at Zoo Atlanta, who has discovered some 50 new species of frogs only to watch half of them become extinct in the last 15 years because of the fungus, was tired of watching helplessly as salamanders, newts and frogs were eradicated from one patch of forest after another.

With the help of new data published on Feb. 28 in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by Karen R. Lips, a zoologist at Southern Illinois University who spent years tracking the chytrid fungus, scientists were able to predict where it would next strike.

"When you can make predictions with respect to catastrophic population declines and extinctions, we all agreed you have a moral and ethical responsibility to do something about it," Dr. Mendelson said.

Dr. Lips called Dr. Mendelson and Ron Gagliardo, the amphibian conservation coordinator at the Atlanta Botanical Garden, because the men have a reputation for being especially good at catching and taking care of frogs, and proposed an idea that would seem reckless to most biologists.

She wanted them to collect as many frogs of as many different species as they could and move them out of El Valle as soon as possible. She estimated they had only weeks to carry out the mass frog evacuation.

"We are going to over-collect hundreds of animals," Dr. Mendelson said. "That flies in the face of all conservation logic."

There was no time to do the meticulous studies of behavior, reproduction, eating habits and habitat that zoologists try to conduct before moving any endangered species from its natural environment.

There was not even time to figure out where to keep hundreds of frogs.

"Years and years of work go into moving one species out of the environment," Dr. Mendelson said. "We decided that can't happen. There's no time for that. We had to figure out what could be done quickly and, of course, legally."

They went into the forest at night, since most frogs are nocturnal, slogging down a river in hip waders and carrying powerful flashlights. After four separate trips, some lasting only 48 hours, the two men, along with a native guide who possessed stealth and fast hands, managed to gather 600 frogs, shooting for 20 males and 20 females of each species to ensure good genetic variation in their breeding colonies.

To feed them, they rented a house and left piles of rotting fruit in the corners to attract flies. "It was pretty stinky," Mr. Gagliardo said.

Then there were those trips through airport security.

A guard in the Panama City airport was not satisfied with the letters of explanation the biologists presented, even though they included permission from the Panamanian government to collect the frogs.

He had them open a container that held the Michael Jordan of jumpers, a species the biologists liked to call rocket frogs.

"I open it and, sure enough, the frog goes bing!" Dr. Mendelson said.

Fortunately, Mr. Gagliardo caught it before it landed on anyone in the amazed crowd that had gathered.

Many of the species they brought home to their respective institutions in Atlanta have never before been kept in captivity.

But Mr. Gagliardo, who has been bringing frogs home since he was 4 years old, has developed a fine touch for their husbandry and for recreating environments for them to thrive and breed.

He quickly realized, for example, that a translucent species of frog collected from a cloud forest wasn't breeding because it needed, well, clouds.

With a cool-misting humidifier he bought on eBay and some plastic pipe, Mr. Gagliardo filled the glass frogs' tank with a steady whisper of white water vapor. Once the tank, which sits in a corner of a behind-the-scenes room at Zoo Atlanta, was bubbling over with a creeping mist like a witch's caldron, tadpoles followed in short order.

"It's a bit of a Noah's Ark, in some ways," Mr. Gagliardo said. "But it gives these species that are predicted to go a new lien on life."

Not all experts, it should be noted, are fans of what has come to be called the rapid response protocol.

Dr. David Wake, an integrative biologist at the University of California, Berkeley, said the strategy felt too much like triage.

"I am alarmed at the apparent disappearance of so many amphibians in Central America," Dr. Wake said. "But if the situation is so bad then much organized thought should be given to a plan for captive breeding that is not responsive to emergencies only, but that looks at all amphibians worldwide to decide where limited funds would be best spent."

Not all species are equally valuable, he noted, and not all are equally at risk.

Still, in an apparent validation of their tactics, Dr. Mendelson said the chytrid fungus had recently been found in El Valle, as predicted, and he estimated 90 percent of the frogs there would be gone within 90 days.

"You won't hear scientists say this too often," Dr. Mendelson said. "But I wish we were wrong."

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Some reasons why I love Panama, and why you will too!

Panama's topography and geographic location present interesting choices for everyone. Beautiful mountains provide an excellent quiet retreat from a bustling city life, and rivers can offer an exhilarating white-water rafting experience. Tropical rainforests are an excellent destination for those who like to see the natural fauna and habitat up close. Coastal areas have some of the best beaches in the world, the finest fishing, scuba diving, and snorkeling, and spectacular coral reefs with colorful marine life. Some terrific tropical islands are also nearby for anyone wishing to make a short leisurely cruise by boat. Some islands are accessible by commuter aircraft.

Panamanian people are extremely generous and hospitable to visitors. Most of Panama is rural farm country and the residents have a relaxed, friendly pace of life. Panama has an extensive Indigenous population with seven distinct traditional cultures.

Costs are low. A typical meal of rice, beans, beef or chicken and salad costs $2. A flight from Panama City to David or Bocas Del Toro costs about $50 each way. Laborers work for $1 per hour. Professional services like medical, dental, as well as construction costs are also cheap. Rent for vacation homes and hotels range from very economical to luxurious.

Panama maintains a hot tropical climate along the coast with fresher temperatures in the highlands. At sea level, temperatures usually hover around 30-33 degrees Celsius (90-100 degrees Fahrenheit) in the afternoon and drop to the low twenties at night (70's Fahrenheit). In mountainous towns like Boquete and Volcan, subtract about eight degrees Celsius.

The Pacific coast receives a distinct dry season between December and May with occasional showers during the wet season. The Caribbean receives a mix of sun and afternoon showers for most of the year.

Panama City offers casinos, nightclubs, shopping, live theatre, and some of the finest international cuisine in Latin America.

The scenery is spectacular and diverse. There are more than 1600 islands, blankets of lush cloud forests, exotic jungles, and endless white sand beaches to explore.

Hiking, horseback riding, surfing, boating, scuba diving, fishing, bird watching, gardening, and hiking are all available and excellent in Panama.

Panama is rich with natural beauty and cultural heritage.

Most notable are Panama's long empty beaches, pristine forests, friendly and hospitable people, and affordable cost of living.

Add high-speed Internet, satellite TV, international cuisine, and offshore tax savings, and Panama becomes a very attractive place to live and invest.

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Thursday, June 15, 2006

What's the weather like in Panama?

Panama has two seasons. The dry season lasts from January to mid-April and the rainy season from mid-April to December. Rainfall is heavier on the Caribbean side of the highlands, though most people live on or near the Pacific coast.

Temperatures are typically hot in the lowlands throughout the year — days usually reach around 32°C (90°F) and only drop to an average of 22°C (72°F). Mountain temperatures are much cooler, ranging between 10-18°C (50 and 64°F) in a day, and they too vary little throughout the year.

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Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Provincial map of Panama



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