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Playas del Coco
Community
is an essential part of family, of lifestyle, and of real
estate.
Understanding
local conditions in El Coco is important when it comes to buying
and selling real estate, but the neighbourhood you choose can
have a dramatic impact on all other aspects of your life as
well.
Please feel free
to browse through the complimentary El Coco information I’ve
provided.
When it’s time to
move,
call me to get a representative on your side who has
experience, El Coco market knowledge, and the confidence to help
you make the best transaction possible. |
El Coco is more vibrant than ever!
There is always something exciting to do or see. Whether it is
taking in a show, enjoying an outdoor festival, attending a
community class, or simply hanging out and enjoying El Coco’s
unique culture. It is the people that make El Coco special.
This is a place to work, live and call home.

Playa del Coco lies 35 kilometres
(22 miles) west of Liberia, Guanacaste’s main city, and is the
easiest beach on the Nicoya Peninsula to access by road from San
José. and just 24 km or 20 minutes drive
from the Daniel Oduber International Airport in Liberia
.
This pleasant fishing town is a popular
destination for Ticos, and offers a variety of nightlife and
restaurants. Sailboats and fishing boats can be seen scattered
throughout the bay, offering a great opportunity to watch local
fisherman at work. Playas del Coco is one
of the best known beaches in the country. Plays del Coco is the
best known for it's sports fishing
, surfing, scuba diving and snorkelling.
Playas del Coco is the largest village in
Guanacaste province of Costa Rica. Originally known as the main
Costa Rica hub for surfers with places like Ollie’s Point and
Witches Rock within easy reach,
this busy beach is a prime scuba diving
spot, with many tour and diving companies
set up here. Social life is very active and
dining and nightlife are superb.
Playas del Coco has a fairly well developed infrastructure, good
roads and lots of shops, restaurants, bars, discos, casinos,
hotels, resorts and markets
. If you happen to
visit the area during Christmas or Easter week expect to find a
lot of people here partying ‘beach style’, when the main road is
practically impassable from 10 pm until 3 am.
The sand of
Playas del Coco beach itself is a greyish-brown and the tide
here often remains quite low. Surrounded by steep hills, this
horseshoe shaped bay area is the ideal place to have fun.
However, if you are looking for a quiet spot to relax, try
staying away from the centre of town, which could be quite busy
with tourists and local people.
School Information
The Country Day School in Guanacaste
(Pre-K through Grade 12)
Location: Playa Brasilito
Phone: (506) 654-5042
Website: www.cdsgtc.com
Contact: Patrick Brown
Remarks: About an hour drive south to Brasilito, considered the
best
school in the area. Tuition is $7,500 per year.
International Christian School
Location: Liberia
Phone: (506) 665-0007
Website: www.icscr.net
Contact: Wendy Taylor
Remarks: About 40 minutes to Liberia. School is branch of larger
school
in San JosÈ.
Escuela Teocali
Location: Liberia
Phone: (506) 666-2903
Remarks: About 40 minutes to Liberia. School has been operating
for
25 years.
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Playa Ocotal
According to Lonely Planet, Playa Ocotal has “the cleanest and quietest
beach in the area, offering good swimming and snorkelling.” Known for
its breathtaking view of the Gulf of Papagayo, with lush Santa Rosa
National Park across the way, Playa Ocotal is a dreamy getaway for those
seeking peace and relaxation. Elegant vacation homes scatter the
mountainside through Ocotal on the way to Bahía Pez Vela – then
disappear from sight the moment you enter our secluded community.
Guanacaste and the Nicoya Peninsula
Once part of Nicaragua, the Guanacaste province chose to secede from
Nicaragua to join Costa Rica in 1824. Famous for its unforgettable
beaches, perfect climate and friendly residents, Guanacaste is Costa
Rica’s most popular visitor destination.
Nicknamed the “Gold Coast”, Guanacaste enjoys a drier climate than the
rest of the country; the region experiences little precipitation even
during the rainy season – just one of the reasons why so many feel it is
“the place to be” in Costa Rica.
With an international airport in Liberia, Guanacaste’s main city, and
direct flights now available from Atlanta to Liberia on Delta Airlines,
visitors destined for Guanacaste can bypass San José altogether – and
head straight for the beach.
The Nicoya Peninsula’s spectacular beaches and long Pacific coastline
are the region’s star attractions. The country’s best dive sites are
here, as well as ample opportunity for record-breaking sportfishing,
surfing, snorkelling, swimming or just plain sun-worshipping. The area
also offers excellent windsurfing and sailing.
A region rich in folklore, music, colour and delicious casados (typical
dishes), Guanacaste offers up the bounty of the sea to its tables,
including lobster, ceviche and whole pescaditos (fish).
The area’s national parks harbour some of the oldest formations in the
country, such as the caverns of Barra Honda National Park, with their
many stalactites and stalagmites, as well as important expanses of dry
tropical forest. In addition, many of the region’s protected areas
possess worldwide importance for protection of wildlife, including the
several species of sea turtle that nest on the peninsula’s beaches.
National Parks in the Area
Guanacaste
is home to several national parks protecting a spectacular host of
flora, fauna and marine life.
Barra Honda
Approximately 90 kilometres (55 miles) from the property. Stroll through
a network of caverns created sixty million years ago by limestone reefs
thrust upward by tectonic forces.
Guanacaste
Approximately 75 kilometers (45 miles) from the property, across from
Santa Rosa National Park. Rainforest, tropical wet forest, cloud forest
and tropical dry forest shelter hundreds of bird and animal species and
thousands of insect and plant species.
Marino Las Baulas
Approximately 75 kilometers (45 miles) from the property. On
the northern side of the village of Tamarindo, this national park
protects Playa Grande, one of the world’s most important nesting sites
for the leatherback turtle (baula in Spanish). Leatherbacks are the
largest reptiles in the world, with some measuring an astounding five
meters (over 16 feet) head to tail.
Palo Verde
Approximately 80 kilometers (50 miles) from the property. A migratory
and resident waterfowl refuge, the lakes and floodplains here are
inhabited by more than 50,000 waterfowl and forest birds. Swimmers, take
note: crocodiles up to five meters (over 16 feet) long have been seen in
the Tempisque River, which runs through the park.
Rincón de la Vieja
Approximately 60 kilometres (35 miles) from the property. This park’s
claim to fame is the active volcano it’s named after; it also boasts the
country’s largest populations of guarias moradas (purple orchids), Costa
Rica’s national flower.
Santa Rosa
Approximately 75 kilometers (45 miles)
from the property, across from Guanacaste National Park. This park
harbours important habitat for protection and restoration of Costa
Rica’s Pacific dry forests, as well as several sea turtle nesting sites.
For more information on these and other National Parks in Costa Rica,
check out the following websites:
www.costarica.com
www.costaricabureau.com/nationalparks.htm
Here you can download a few video clips:
1.Plays
del Coco
2.
Luperon
Supermarket
3.
Luperon inside
4.
Lusitania Grill Restaurant
5.
Hardware Store
6.
Canope Ride |
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Contacts |
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Tropical Felgate (UK)
Head office
+44
207 625 4490
UK National Rate:
08456-12-4427
USA Toll Free:
+1 888- 722-4427;
Phone USA:
+1 646- 652-6430;
Skype UK:
Tropical Felgate
(Costa Rica)
+506-2670-1750;
+506-8344-3201;
+506-8887-2519;
Skype Costa Rica:
Tropical Felgate
(Canada- Sales Only)
+1(416) 732-5482 |
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