Considering Bocas del Toro as a Retirement Location
If there is anyone on this forum that lives in or has visited Bocas del Toro I would love to hear about your experience there, the people, the cost of living etc.
Thanks so much
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janet119 wrote:I will let you know. I am arriving to live in Bocas on the 17th
Hi Janet, that is fabulous.聽 I will definitely be looking for your posts.聽 I've seen videos and pix and really love what I've seen so far.聽 I love the Caribbean feel that it appears to have.聽 Have you visited there prior to deciding to make that move?
janet119 wrote:I will let you know. I am arriving to live in Bocas on the 17th
I just noticed that you are currently living in Cuenca.聽 Ecuador is on my list as possibilities, although I like the "Look" of Bocas better.聽 Why did you decide to leave Ecuador?
janet119 wrote:I find Ecuador REALLY polluted. I currently living in Cuenca. I have been to the coast many times in Ecuador. The coast here is very very dry. you can stand there and look at a beautiful ocean, and turn around and bump into a 10 foot high cacti. I want to live near a beach and Ecuador isnt it for me.
Ok, that makes sense.聽 I definitely want to live near a real beach also.聽 thanks
SunsetSteve wrote:We spent 3 days in Bocas at koko resort. FYI Bocas town is a hopping place with bars and pricey restaurants teeming with surfer dudes and gals partying it up big time.聽 The shoreline stinks with floating garbage and homeless large dogs roam free. Such a beautiful place despoiled by careless greed. Others may disagree but this was not our jam. No reggae vibe at all. Tourist town. Ymmv.
WOW! That's depressing. The videos that I watched showed a well kept area. Too Bad
janet119 wrote:What part of ecuador were you thinking of?
Cuenca to land then once I was settled finding a beach town
janet119 wrote:Some expats live in Cuenca part time and the beach part time. This time of year is pretty chilly in Cuenca. The beach towns I have been to are very dry, nothing is green.
I've considered Salinas as the best option in Ecuador.聽 Your thoughts?聽
I really like Panama City, but Panama does not have any beach community like Salinas, Ecuador (and others in Ecuador such as Manta and smaller beach communities) where one can live on the beach and walk or have very close access to many shops, restaurants and bars (of course) and other amenities.聽 Panama's large beach developments mean living back from the beach typically and definitely driving everywhere, usually to the over-priced, expat-targeted shops in Coronado.聽 There's no feel of living in a beach community - beach, malecon/boardwalk, condo building. Bocas is too small, lacks good infrastructure and reliable utility service and costs too much for budget conscious folks because of its remote location.聽 Listen to SunsetSteve.
sjpersonal wrote:SunsetSteve wrote:We spent 3 days in Bocas at koko resort. FYI Bocas town is a hopping place with bars and pricey restaurants teeming with surfer dudes and gals partying it up big time.聽 The shoreline stinks with floating garbage and homeless large dogs roam free. Such a beautiful place despoiled by careless greed. Others may disagree but this was not our jam. No reggae vibe at all. Tourist town. Ymmv.
WOW! That's depressing. The videos that I watched showed a well kept area. Too Bad
To echo SunsetSteve's point, it is very depressing to witness the trash spewed all along the roads and streets, beaches and elsewhere.聽 Whether deemed ignorance, laziness, a cultural thing or simply poor trash pickup service (perhaps all), it is so sad to see in what is otherwise such a beautiful and lush landscape.聽 My unscientific opinion is that this culture or behavior is not limited to Panamanians, however, it seems less prevalent in Ecuador, but still much more than one would like to see.
Puerto lopez and montanita has a bank machine, but puerto cayo does not. I think nobody actually lives in montanita, they lives in the town of olan right beside it. Mintanita is a surfing town. I love Montanita!!! But wouldnt live there.
janet119 wrote:I have not been to Salinas. Most of my friends have though and say it is lovely, though very very touristy. I have spent time in Montanita, puerto Lopez, puerto Cayo and Manta.聽 Out of those places the only one that has stores like grocery stores etc is manta....the only place I really didnt care for...LOL There is buses that will take you to inland towns like jijihapa for your groceries.
Puerto lopez and montanita has a bank machine, but puerto cayo does not. I think nobody actually lives in montanita, they lives in the town of olan right beside it. Mintanita is a surfing town. I love Montanita!!! But wouldnt live there.
I've read about Olan from other expats there.聽 They describe the town as being very nice, friendly with a lot of shops etc.聽 and clean beaches.聽 I have to land somewhere as there is no way that I am staying in the US after I retire.
On to Ecuador for a moment - if anyone read my post, this is IL and marketing!聽 I have a great friend and ex-collegue that was born in Ecuador. He came to the US, became a citizen, has advanced degrees from a prestigious school.聽 A true go-getter that made it happen.
Having said that, he (when I first met him he聽 didn't have much English), is now considering going back when he retires but wow is he doing well and a several years younger than me. He currently has a high level position in Panama and we laugh at the irony of how we both ended up here!
I have been to Cuenca - don't get it at all although I am sure it has changed since I was there but .. Quito of course.. you do the equator walk but don't get that one at all. Guayquil on the coast - one dangerous place and I doubt that has changed.
But I have never been to the new IL聽 "coastal area"聽 but have no desire to go either.聽 I can't belive the number of people I know that keep leaving for the next best place and yeah we all know Ecuador is on the radar.
My thoughts on this post but everyone has to have a clear goal of what they want and their expectations. Ecuador is a completely different place than Panama. That will never change! Not saying which is better than the other for most but don't try to compare them - I hope IL does monitor this - I paid my subscription too.
But on the biggest island, Isla Colon (where Bocas Town is), I was struck by two things: first, medical care is very limited. There was a clinic, but if you were really ill, your options are few and you would need to be transported to David to get hospital care. And the second is the limited availability of food. Vegetable deliveries were (I think) once a week and it was impossible to get fresh fish -- crazy, right, on an island? We were able to buy some frozen fish from a market, but the selection was limited.
Have you actually been to聽 Boquete? I have been to Caracas at least 10 times聽 - I would have to look at my passport - most during the Chavez days and right after the bridge collapsed going to/from the airport? This is just to let you know that I am not unfamiliar with Caracas. If I recall, the Spanish term used for the mountains that extend with shacks of very poor people are called "pobrecitos"? It is very sad for such a beautiful country. It upsets me every time I have been there because if it weren't for corruption, every person in Venezuela could live comfortably due to the oil.
There are are some great places in Caracas as you say - wow I loved the Hotel Tamanco for example and the numerous great restaurants.
I also by the way, have been in every country in Latin America except Nicaragua, Uruguay, and the 3 countries on the north east side of South America - I don't recall the names right now.聽 聽So I truly know the region.
If one has never been to Latin America, yes you will have culture shock I believe and it's not important which country it is. Now to finally comment on the ghettos in Boquete - I have not seen any - David yes.
IMHO, the Panamanians, in general are some of the friendliest people, at least here in Chiriqui, that I have ever met. Many are very poor but they are always clean, have flowers planted in front of sometimes houses constructed of bamboo, etc. So if you know where there is a ghetto region in Boquete, like the hillsides I described in Caracas, I would like to know.
I may sound a little strong, but that isn't my intention. It also could easily be that sometimes what we write can be interpreted differently by others. You are obviously 100% bilingual and I SO wish I could say that but unlikely that I ever will be - fluent but to write perfect Spanish like your English -wow I am impressed!
Saludos y buen dia de Panama
Yes, you aren鈥檛 judged by your skin color or any of the other things we are used to in聽 the US.
I appreciate hearing about people impressions and experiences. We鈥檝e also mostly lived in cities due to work opportunities (Phoenix, Minneapolis, San Francisco), but are looking to slow things down a bit. We don鈥檛 need a big house, finely furnished... a cottage with a guest room & a yard to garden where temps are cooler and the people both diverse & friendly would suit us just fine! I鈥檓 sure we鈥檒l take jaunts to beaches, islands & the city but a cozy home base sounds like paradise to us!
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