Costa Rica.
Nothing Is Closer To Paradise.
Eric W. Robinson - Adventure Inn Hotel
| Introduction | Costa
Rica Vacation | Caribbean
Coast
| Pacific Coast |
| History |
Everything Grows | The
Ticos
|
Ex Patriots | Oldest
Profession | | Staying Safe | Ecotourism
Vs Poverty | Government
Responsibility |
| Fixable Problems | Closer
to Paradise |
THE PROBLEMS ARE FIXABLE,
BUT IT TAKES INTEGRITY
The problems here are more self-inflicted than related to Costa Rica tourism.
Attempts have to be made to treat raw sewage, and make tougher pollution
controls on vehicle emissions, particularly buses. It should to be considered
wrong to litter, since it hurts everyone. Though an astonishing 28% of Costa
Rica is parks, preserves, buffer zones and Indian reserves, more people are
required to protect these lands from logging and poaching and to enforce
fishing regulations. Greater concern for the whole environment has to be
incorporated in all future developments and farming practices.
Better tax collection methods are essential. Basic welfare is needed to
assist the disabled, the elderly, and homeless children. Sound business decisions
have to come from leaders who do not bow to unfounded public emotions. Communications
should be privatized and forced to compete. Foreign investment needs to be
welcomed and bank interest needs to be competitive to encourage borrowing
and development. The list is long and difficult, but still possible, poco
a poco, through common sense, simple arithmetic, and broadening the tax base.
Ticos need to regain that positive democratic egalitarian attitude that got
them this far ahead of the rest of Central America in the first place.
In the Central Market of San Jose I was disheartened to see turtle eggs
in plastic bags openly for sale, less than $2 per dozen. Ticos swallow them
down raw in cantinas in a sweet hot sauce to give them the "strength
of lions". Upon further investigation, the eggs were said to be Lora
or Pacific Ridley turtle eggs taken from Playa Ostional on the Nicoya Peninsula,
one of the world's most important sea turtle hatcheries. Though harvesting
turtle eggs is illegal in Costa Rica, the controlled sustainable egg harvesting
program in Ostional is the exception. As many as 200,000 turtles storm the
beach on mass for a week or more in what is called an arribada, clambering
over each other to find a piece of beach to nest, burying an estimated twenty
million eggs. So many hatchlings scampering to the sea at the same time ensures
their propagation. Local residents came to find the greatest scourge, however,
are the turtles themselves, with later waves of arriving turtles inadvertently
digging up and destroying the nests of their predecessors, cluttering the
beach with smashed eggs and rotting embryos, preventing the development of
further embryos because of the ensuing bacteria and fungi. Therefore egg
harvesting is only allowed during the first thirty six hours of any arribada
where many of the hatchlings would never have survived anyway.
After this period the beaches are diligently guarded from poachers and animals.
Numbers of turtles arriving are increasing every year proving the controlled
harvesting is more than sustainable. Eggs are placed in pre-stamped bags
with a government seal, and distributed throughout the country. Proceeds
are given back to the community of Ostional, the Ministry of Agriculture,
the egg collectors, biologists, and the Sea Turtle Project. In 1992 a report
stated that the cheaper Lora eggs from Ostional have 94% of the Costa Rican
market.
>> Nothing is Closer
to Paradise
|