You are currently browsing the Casa Sacuanjoche news weblog archives for January, 2007.
- canada.com (1)
- centralamericagrapevine.com (1)
- Commercials (1)
- examiner.com (1)
- finanzas.com (1)
- Granada (28)
- guest house (1)
- in internet (2)
- Leon (3)
- Link (9)
- marketwatch.com (1)
- Media (16)
- mercurynews.com (1)
- MiamiHerald (2)
- Money (2)
- News (30)
- Nicaragua (42)
- nicatimes.net (2)
- nuwireinvestor.com (1)
- nymag.com (1)
- NYT (4)
- on internet (24)
- photos (1)
- poetry festival (1)
- propertywire.com (1)
- Real Estate (4)
- Retiring (1)
- scotsman.com (1)
- Sn Juan del S (6)
- southafrican.co.uk (1)
- staying (3)
- thestar.com (1)
- travel (27)
- Video (1)
- volunteer in Nicaragua (1)
- youtube.com (1)
- March 8, 2010: Building New Hope
- January 28, 2010: P R O G R A M for the SIXTH GRANADA INTERNATIONAL POETRY FESTIVAL
- January 12, 2010: Top ten travel recommendations for 2010 - scotsman.com
- December 11, 2009: A Retiring Life on the Beach in Nicaragua, Despite Risks
- November 27, 2009: VI Festival Mundial de Poesía en Nicaragua 2010
- November 27, 2009: Colonial architecture part of Granada's charm - canada.com
- October 30, 2009: Casa Sacuanjoche Guesthouse - list of activities while in Granada, Nicaragua
- October 30, 2009: LOS COCHES DE GRANADA NICARAGUA - canal 2
- October 29, 2009: Esperan crecimiento en sector del turismo en Nicaragua - prensa-latina.cu
- August 29, 2009: Join Granada's Revival - nymag.com
Archive for January 2007
The hottest spots around the world
January 19, 2007 by sacuanjoche.
Lonely Planet
To inspire travelers’ adventures in the new year, Lonely Planet recently published the Bluelist, a 260-page compendium of top places to go and things to do around the world, compiled from our globe-girdling staff, authors and on-the-road travelers.
In addition to profiles of 30 hotter-than-ever countries, the book contains 40 “bluelists” of recommendations in such categories as Best Adventure Travel Ideas, Dining on the Wild Side, Best Music & Place Combinations, Most Deserted Islands and Tourist Traps Worth the Stay.
With these in mind, we asked our U.S.-based staffers to choose their three top hot spots for 2007. We compiled their responses and came up with our collective bluelist. Here are our recommendations, along with selected staffers’ comments.
7. Nicaragua
“Nicaragua is one of the safest countries in which to travel in Central America; it has the wonderful cities of Leon and Granada, the Isla de Ometepe, rain forests, beaches, the famed Miskito Coast and the Corn Islands, and a distinctive national identity. Go!”
To see the top ten visit: http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/travel/4480326.html
Posted in travel, Media, Granada, Nicaragua | Print | No Comments »
From the New York Post my lovely Isla del Maiz
January 16, 2007 by sacuanjoche.
….BIG CORN ISLAND
Weird vegetal nomenclature aside, seedlings of tourism have started to sprout here in the form of diving operators and horseback riding tours.
The larger of Nicaragua’s duo of Corn Islands, 47 miles off the mainland, was once a bustling pirate’s cove - a seafaring/fishing culture still remains.
Get here: Fly from Managua on La Costena (tacaregional.com)
Stay: Casa Canada has 20 stylish cabanas (from $85; casa-canada.com)
Info: bigcornisland.com …..
http://www.nypost.com/seven/01162007/entertainment/travel/escape_plan_travel_chris_bunting.htm
Posted in travel, News, Nicaragua | Print | No Comments »
Investors in Nicaragua banking on Ortega
January 15, 2007 by sacuanjoche.
![]()
Eric Sabo, Chronicle Foreign Service Monday, January 15, 2007
(01-15) 04:00 PST San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua — A barbed-wire fence and several angry men armed with machetes are standing in the way of Philip Christopher’s dream to build a world-class surf resort.
The 46-year-old Missouri native has spent the past two years buying up property around Popoyo Beach, 17 miles from this Pacific beach community that is also known as a surfer’s paradise.
“Popoyo is already its own brand,” said Christopher, one of thousands of U.S. investors buying ocean-view lots and other properties in this once war-torn country. “Everyone knows that this is the best place to surf.”
Yet his $14 million project, which includes beach condos and a clubhouse, has run afoul of the Nahualap, an indigenous group that first settled in the area. Its leaders claim nearly 15 acres of prime beachfront land stemming from an 1877 deed, which Christopher says is part of the 93 acres he bought from previous owners.
“You can’t come into our home and buy whatever you want,” said Bartolome Lopez, the president of the Nahualap community in Las Salinas, a town near Popoyo. “You have to respect those who live here.”
Late last month, dozens of men brandishing machetes stood on the perimeter of Christopher’s fence, claiming a new ally. “They were shouting that (new President Daniel) Ortega will never allow me to get away with this,” said Christopher.
But Ortega, a 61-year-old former guerrilla commander viewed as a dangerous leftist during the Reagan administration, may do just that.
After nearly 17 years out of office and three consecutive election defeats, Ortega was sworn in last week to lead a country that has largely grown out of its revolutionary past. Ortega himself says he has changed from the days when he imposed a state-run economy, nationalized properties to give to landless peasants and fought U.S.-backed Contra fighters. In fact, he has courted nervous foreign investors by promising to respect private property and continue free-trade agreements. As a result, there have been few signs of investor flight.
“There is not even a thought of confiscations,” Ortega told a group of business leaders at an October meeting at his Managua home, which included Christopher. “Foreign investment will help reduce our unemployment problem.”
Indeed, his Sandinista party bears little resemblance to its revolutionary roots. Seven of the nine original junta leaders have abandoned Ortega, including his brother and former head of the army, Humberto Ortega. Jaime Morales, a former Contra whose home was confiscated by Daniel Ortega, is the nation’s new vice president.
“Ortega has given absolute certainty for the respect of property rights,” Morales said last month in a speech in San Juan del Sur designed to assure foreigners that their hotels and homes are safe investments.
Chris Berry, a 52-year-old former ballet dancer and a San Francisco resident who owns the Pelican Eyes resort in San Juan del Sur, says Sandinista officials have been “especially helpful” in his dispute over hillside property with a distant relative of Augusto Sandino, the famed revolutionary hero from the 1920s. “The Sandinistas have been assisting us throughout,” said Berry.
Most political observers say Ortega is well aware that Nicaragua — the hemisphere’s poorest country after Haiti — needs tourist dollars to benefit the impoverished voters who supported him. In 2006, tourism brought in $240 million — surpassing the nation’s coffee exports — up from $189 million in 2005.
Indeed, Nicaragua’s long stretch of white sand beaches and stunning vistas along the Pacific Coast have become hot destinations these days for not only investors but also retirees and U.S. and European tourists. Visitors are also lured by the nation’s volcanoes, lakes, rain forests and colonial towns like Granada.
Calvet & Associates, a Managua consulting firm, says Californians are blazing the trail, accounting for nearly 20 percent of U.S. citizens inquiring about property. An estimated 6,000 U.S. citizens now live at least part time in Nicaragua, according to media reports.
Yet property confiscations during Sandinista rule in the 1980s have left bitter memories and a confusing array of title claims that can make buying property a tricky proposition. Although foreign investors can still find good deals, lawyers and real estate agents say, buyers should beware. A 2002 World Bank study said as many as 60 percent of Nicaraguan properties lack proper documentation.
“Finding property with a clear title is not an easy task,” said John Margolis, who worked in the hospitality industry in San Francisco before purchasing 50 acres near La Bonita Beach, an hour’s drive west of the capital, Managua. “We wanted something that was still off the radar, said the 41-year-old Margolis, who plans to build beachfront homes.
Aside from Christopher’s experience, there have been at least three other beach area property disputes — including one that turned violent. Three members of a group calling itself the Pedro Joaquin Chamorro Cooperative were shot and wounded Dec. 1 by security guards after entering a new development they claimed is being built on their land at Arenas Bay, a few miles south of Popoyo. The Nicaraguan owner, Armel Gonzalez, said that the guards acted in self-defense.
“Some followers of Ortega believe we are going back to the ’80s,” said Gonzalez. “But that’s not going to happen.”
Most owners of confiscated properties either have reclaimed their land or been compensated. According to the U.S. Embassy, more than 4,500 Nicaraguans who fled to the United States during the 1979 Sandinista’s revolution against dictator Anastasio Somoza have received compensation mainly by government bonds.
Vice President Morales has warned poor Nicaraguans who have lost redistributed land in subsequent years not to expect the new government to return those properties. “No invasions will be allowed,” he has said.
These few land disputes, however, have not deterred tourism, which is transforming once sleepy fishing villages such as San Juan del Sur into fashionable retreats dotted by million-dollar homes and $400-a-night hillside spas. Further up the coast are a growing number of gated communities, which offer American-style suburban homes and Nicaragua’s first golf course along the Pacific Coast.
“There used to be nothing but livestock and farms here,” said Steve Snider, who sailed to Nicaragua from his San Diego home 10 years ago.
Snider, now a real estate agent, says cheap land deals are becoming harder to find. Yet, he says property in Nicaragua still sells for about 25 percent less than in Belize and Panama, two other hot spots in Central America for American investors.
Meanwhile, Christopher is gearing up for what he describes as a “battle royal” if he and his business partners are forcibly evicted by the Nahualap. He expects a judicial order soon that will allow him to oust the protesters and fence off the disputed area.
“Clearly, this is not what the Sandinistas want to deal with right now,” said Christopher.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/01/15/MNGHJNIR5V1.DTL
Posted in Money, News, Sn Juan del S, Nicaragua | Print | No Comments »