![]() |
| I guess 24 hour service is easier from your home! 🙂 Atenas, Costa Rica |
![]() |
| With Dental Tourism big in Costa Rica, we have many dentists! Atenas, Costa Rica |
And the photo gallery of Home Business Signs in Atenas
![]() |
| I guess 24 hour service is easier from your home! 🙂 Atenas, Costa Rica |
![]() |
| With Dental Tourism big in Costa Rica, we have many dentists! Atenas, Costa Rica |
And the photo gallery of Home Business Signs in Atenas
Just one more reason I love living here!
![]() |
| One of the retired Americans in Atenas organizes trips like this occasionally. Today’s trip was to San Jose to visit the famous Jade Museum. |
![]() |
| The modern building of 5 stories has the latest educational presentations assisting schools in history education. San Jose, Costa Rica |
![]() |
| Even a Jade-Jaguar monster for the kids! San Jose, Costa Rica |
![]() |
| Afterwards we have lunch at Porky’s Burger Bar, Home of 50 types of hamburgers and 100 beers! San Jose, Costa Rica |
See also the photo gallery: Home Business Signs – Atenas
![]() |
| I circled in red what he is talking about in yesterday’s photo. Atenas, Costa Rica |
![]() |
| Su Espacio where I study Spanish 3rd location is in home of owners Atenas, Costa Rica |
![]() |
| Home of David & Corinna & location of language classes Near public library & police station downtown Atenas, Costa Rica |
It was difficult for them to pay rent for a house in the country and a storefront in town plus riding bus to town daily, so by moving to town to a large-enough house they can live and work in the same location with just one rent. They have one room as a classroom and could have additional classes at same time in their living room and on their covered terrace, so very practical.
![]() |
| Auto Decorations? Of course this image makes you think of your car. And adding decorations, audio, alarms, etc. 🙂 Atenas, Costa Rica |
Across the street from the Sports Park one young man runs a business out of his garage or more likely out of his parents’ garage. And every morning he carries this portable sign out to the curb to attract other young men fortunate enough to have a car (not many). He basically adds unnecessary accessories to your car, I guess to attract women like this. Interesting home business.
![]() |
| Before he gets up and puts the girl out, his closed business. Atenas, Costa Rica |
I’m growing a new photo gallery: Home Business Signs – Atenas
![]() |
| My “Carne” or government Healthcare Services Card |
One of the newsletters I receive electronically is called Retire for Less in Costa Rica and this month’s edition has an article by Rob Evans titled My 2017 Healthcare Plan for his retirement in Costa Rica. If you click it goes to top of newsletter, so scroll way down past their budget stuff to the article. His plan is very similar to mine though I do not have the gym membership or the private travel insurance plan. And I am keeping my Medicare active “just in case” I’m back in the states and have a problem needing care there. And like him I have no car, walking several miles every day which is part of my healthcare. I’m probably not as careful as he sounds on food choices as I consider retirement a time to enjoy life, including food! And I do! I eat pizza and ice cream unashamedly! 🙂
![]() |
| Discount card for a private hospital. |
If Republicans get their way on healthcare, it will cost middle class retirees like me a third to half our meager incomes in the future. The sad condition of health care costs in the states (read the above linked article) was one of the reasons I chose to move to Costa Rica. There are many options here, but I am doing like Rob and taking the public healthcare program with a discount card (at left) at a private hospital to use if I am not satisfied with the service of CAJA for something like long delays or poor service. But so far I have been happy with the public healthcare even if a little slower.
This blog was originally for friends and family with hopes that a few who are considering retirement in Costa Rica might find it and learn a little bit. Well, one of those is Ed Fair, a professor of law at the University of Texas in Austin and a bigger birder than me. Thus we met through him reading the blog and contacting me and we have corresponded off and on. He wants to retire here maybe next year and do the same sort of things I do He is here now for 6 weeks with two week-long birding trips planned and checking out what it is like to live here. That’s interesting but not the miracle yet.
Tuesday I gave Ed a walking tour of Central Atenas and we had breakfast in a little Tico Soda. He was carrying his camera in his hands rather than his backpack and when he missed it later we both thought he left it in the little soda. But alas, when we went back it was not there. (He didn’t leave it there but on sidewalk wall in front of a shoe store we later learned.) Ed was numb and sad and the loss of his one camera was going to affect his birding experience and he wasn’t sure he wanted to buy one here. I of course told him about losing 3 cameras in Puntarenas.
We went our own ways yesterday (Wed) and had planned to ride a bus to the beautiful vista restaurant La Casita del Cafe up a mountain outside Atenas. We missed one bus and after an hour and a half wait on another one we gave up and called a taxi, and were later getting there than intended (providential?).
Seated at the bar overlooking the vista was a young American couple we started talking with who lived nearby in Barrio Jesus and just came at this time to get away from their 10 & 15 year old boys for a cappuccino. Earlier we would have missed them. He works over the internet and can live anywhere and chose here. In all the things we talked about, somehow photos came up and Ed commented, “Well, since I just lost my camera, I won’t have many photos this trip.” And Walter casually responded, “Oh don’t worry Ed, I have your camera at my house.” Ed and I were stunned. Walter then asked Ed if he has a daughter or granddaughter named Ashley and of course he did. (Camera had folder of photos labeled Ashley) Then he asked Ed if he took a lot of bird photos? Bingo! It had to be Ed’s lost camera. Walter was advertising it as found on multiple Atenas Facebook groups, hoping he would find the owner. But none of us expected this little miracle meeting! Praise God!
We road in their car with them to their house and got his camera and admired their house with a big yard. Then walked down the highway to Jalapeno Restaurant for a taxi back to Atenas central. Now the chances that we would meet the way we did with the person who found his camera has to be a one in a million kind of miracle! Guardian angels? Sorry I can’t say it is an answer to my prayer because I did not pray for it to be returned. I even told him he would never see it again. Oh me of little faith!
![]() |
| I watched teenagers painting on it one day and a week later it was done! Parque deportivo (Sports Park) Atenas, Costa Rica |
![]() |
| I think it is an amazing work of art! Thanks to the youth of Atenas! And a little closer! Both are cell phone photos, as most of my photos from walks in town. Atenas, Costa Rica |
I assume that maybe art classes in one of the two public high schools is doing all of these quality murals around town. This particular park is a hangout for kids of all ages, so very appropriate here!
Every artist dips his brush in his own soul,
and paints his own nature into his pictures.
~Henry Ward Beecher