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    Awaiting Your Return From Shore | 
     Puerto Limon, 
    once an important banana port, is the capital of Costa Rica’s Limon Province 
    on the Caribbean coast. The town offers few sights, but serves mostly as a 
    gateway to Costa Rica’s rugged wilderness. Among the natural sites of the 
    area is Cahuita National Park, known for its flora and fauna and its 
    magnificent coral reefs. Visitors can also take advantage of a train tour 
    through the banana plantations or spend a day whitewater rafting on the 
    rapids of the Reventazon River.
 A two and a half hour drive from Puerto Limon leads to San Jose, situated in 
    the heart of Costa Rica’s central valley at an altitude of 4,450 feet, which 
    accounts for its pleasant climate. The capital of Costa Rica was founded in 
    1737 but frequent earthquakes have destroyed most of the colonial buildings 
    and the modern replacements give the city of roughly one million inhabitants 
    a very modest appearance. When Columbus discovered Costa Rica during his 
    last voyage, rumors of vast gold treasures led to the name of Costa Rica 
    (Rich Coast). The Spaniards settled in the central valley and with 
    additional immigrants from northern Spain their numbers increased 
    considerably. The local Indian population was soon greatly diminished due to 
    diseases brought by the settlers. In 1821 the country declared independence 
    from Spain and in an effort to create a source for revenue, coffee was 
    introduced from Cuba in 1808. The government offered free land to coffee 
    growers, thus building up a peasant landowning class. The first coffee 
    exports were carried on mule-back to the ports, by 1846 there were ox-cart 
    roads to Puntarenas. By 1850 there was a large flow of coffee to oversea 
    markets which was facilitated by the opening of a railway from San Jose to 
    Puerto Limon in 1890, and later on to the Pacific port of Puntarenas. Today, 
    the country’s economy is based on the export of coffee, bananas, meat, sugar 
    and cocoa.
 
 Costa Rica is known to have the most stable democracy among all of the Latin 
    American countries. The army was abolished in 1949, however law and order is 
    being upheld by a very efficient-looking Civil Guard. The country boasts the 
    best standard of living in Cental America, along with the highest literacy 
    rate and the greatest degree of economic and social advance.
 
 Tourists particularly enjoy the country’s well-kept national parks and 
    nature reserves which have been established to protect the extremely varied 
    Costa Rican ecosystems, such as the few remaining patches left of the dry 
    tropical forest and the unique cloud forest.
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    Awaiting Your Return 
    From Shore |