2 Tips for driving in Panama

boy holding a chicken in Panama
Be careful of running over a chicken in Panama. It's not only sad, but you must find the owner & pay for the chicken.

Here are 2 items you need to know about driving in Panama.  

2 small, but important items. 

1. You must wear a shirt while driving.  

It sounds silly, but its true.   I know people who have gotten tickets for ignoring this law.  Keep your shirt on while driving, even if the AC goes out.

2. If you run over a  chicken, you must pay for it.  

It is expected that if you kill someone's chicken, you will stop and find out who owns it.  You will then pay for the chicken.  Depending upon the age and size of the chicken and the attitude of the owner, it could cost you $5 - $15.

It is unlikely that you will be tracked down if you don't do this, but you should.  For some people, that chicken may be the difference between eating or not.

About driving in Panama

I had forgotten to mention those items in my longer and more detailed post about driving in Panama.  That post covers items like cell phone use, seat belts, insurance, and what type of driver's license you need to have.

In that post, I also discuss I what it is like to share the road with erratic taxis and more.

I hope you don't hit any chickens during your Panama travels.

This is a heads up about a house we just put on the market.  

One of the things that makes this property so special is that it's on a ravine so it has an abundance of trees and tropical birds.

Watch this video about it. 

[leadplayer_vid id="56AD17232A22E"]

Also, it is only 90 feet from our favorite beach.

The house is in the popular Corazon de Jesus neighborhood of Puerto Armuelles.  A neighborhood that is only a 10 minute drive from downtown Puerto Armuelles.

The other day I took these photos (below) of and by this house for sale.

This link has more photos and details about this beach house for sale in Puerto Armuelles Panama

cityscape with close up of girl, wire statue, and cascading water over vertical wall
The front of Riande Granada Hotel (Skylar, the author, also shown)

The Riande Granada Urban Hotel stands out from the crowd.

When pulling up to the hotel the first thing that caught my eye was a wire statue of a woman crouched in front of a water fountain.  

The statue is right in front of the hotel's main entrance.

The statue is what initially attracted me to the hotel. But once I entered the lobby, I realized there were many more architectural novelties yet to come.

Even before I reached the front desk I was immediately struck by the chaos of the interior design.

Interior Design

The lobby looked as if 100 different interior designers, all with an affinity for patterns, had decided that they would, individually, decorate the hotel as they saw fit, without any regard for consistency or order.

The end result is very "unique" and "interesting".  For example, the bar looks like a Victorian sitting room.  The only difference  is that, in the hotel bar, all the beautifully carved "Victorian" wooden furniture had been painted varying shades of blues and cotton candy pinks.

panoramaof lobby of hotel
A panorama photo of the lobby area - showing the entrance to restaurant, bar, and more.

 

Though the atmosphere was chaotic it did serve some purpose; it was a great conversation starter. Even though I could go on and  on about the lobby, for hours on end, I won't because it is now time to move on to the most important part of any hotel: the rooms.

Rooms & Air Conditioning

The rooms vary in price and size. The largest and most expensive rooms being the Executive suite and the most inexpensive being the Standard room (no breakfast included). By far the best value room package is the Standard double, with breakfast included. It is well worth it to have breakfast included.

To me, the best perk of this hotel is its amazing air conditioning. Unlike many other Panama hotels, the air conditioning at the Granada really works.  It can actually feel cold in the room.

girl taking photo of hotel lobby
A quirky hallway entrance to restaurant.

The standard rooms are a bit bland, especially compared with the colorful decor in the lobby. Also they lack some basic essentials such as a coffee maker, ironing board, and the usual generic watercolor prints on the walls.

Location & Amenities

Rianda Granada is conveniently located in the El Congrejo neighborhood.  The receptionists are attentive and speak English well. The breakfast  is excellent.  It also has both a gym and a pool.  You can easily walk to a number of good restaurants, shopping centers, and various Panama City landmarks from the hotel.

Other than the helter-skelter aesthetic of the interior, this is a great place to stay.


You can see the tripadvisor reviews of hotel Riande Granada, here.


This article was written by my 14 year old daughter, Skylar Vayda.  Over the next 3 months, Skylar will be writing a Panama-related article each week.  She will pick the topic.  We hope you enjoy them. 

 

January 14, 2016

Photo taken in Boquete, but not at the flower festival. We'll be going for the 1st time this year

The Boquete Flower and Coffee Festival (Feria de las Flores y el Café) is a very popular event. 

The festival has been happening in some form or another since 1950.

In 2016, the festival is 10 days long, January 14-24.

The festival is a huge celebration. Thousands of people flock to Boquete to see it.

So don't expect to get a last minute hotel reservations. People reserve rooms months in advance. However, you may be able to find a hotel room about 30 minutes away in David.  

I must admit that so far the crowds have always kept us away from the festival.

But this year we are going! I am looking forward to it.  I will write up our review of the festival once we go.  

Now that our younger daughter, Blaise, is getting older, it is easier & more fun to go to these bigger event. (She is now 9 years old.)  Blaise tolerated our participation in the Boquete Jazz festival last year.  But I think she will enjoy this festival much more.   Not only does she love flowers, but there are amusement rides and more vendors of both food and crafts.


BTW the Boquete Jazz festival is February 25-28 this year.   To learn more about Jazz festival, read about our visit to the 2015 Boquete Jazz festival.


I hear that during the 10-day flower and coffee celebration, the Boquete fairgrounds overflows with lush fill landscaping and flower displays. People spruce up their own gardens as well.  You also get many opportunities to enjoy a cup of local coffee.  And there are many food stands, live music, amusement rides, handicrafts booths, and more.

If you miss the festival,  you can still see the flower displays thru April.  You can get in to see them for only $1.

Map showing location of Boquete Flower & Coffee festival
Festival is at the fairgrounds, across the river from downtown Boquete

Location

The flower fair is located at Boquete's fairgrounds along the Caldera River, near downtown Boquete.

Also, in mid-April, Boquete holds the same kind of festival, but much smaller.  This one is the Orchid Festival (Feria de Orquídeas). It last for 4 days.  Many orchids bloom in April, so it is an ideal time for local orchid growers to show off their orchids.

4 handmade, life-size
Many people create these munecos (dolls) & burn them on New Year's Eve. It is a way to leave the past behind.
photo: alongthegringotrail.blogspot.com/

What you do at the start of the new year will set the tone for the rest of the year. 

At least that is what most Panamanians believe

People carefully consider how to greet the new year here.

  • Want a new car?  Make sure you are touching the car you want, or at least the toy car version.
  • Want to go on a trip?  Walk around with a suitcase when the New Year begins.

My guess is that many Panamanians, and others around the world, will greet the Year on the dance floor with a glass in hand.  Not a bad way start to 2016.

I love to travel.  Luckily for me, my family and I will be in an airport at midnight on New Year's Eve.

Read about the many New Year customs and traditions in Panama here.  Many are quite unusual, like the one in the photo above.

New Year’s Eve is an big event in Panama.

Everyone is in great spirits and ready to party!

If you will be in Panama for New Year's Eve, you also need to plan ahead.

Often for big holidays you can not buy alcohol in grocery stores for a specific period of time.  I'm not sure that will happen on New Year's eve, but it is worth asking about before New Year's Eve.  But you can always go to a bar, of course.

Learn about 12 of Panama's New Years customs, by clicking here.

Happy New Year!

 

December 10, 2015

text: Guns in Panama on dark cement background with panama flag and penguin dress as sheriff with guns drawn
You must have a permit for a gun in Panama. It takes about 6 months to get it.

The gun laws in Panama are tough in some ways.

The critical one is the gun permit requirement.

It is very risky to have unregistered gun in your possession here.

Never smuggle a gun into Panama. Always declare your gun if going through customs. The jail time in Panama for having a gun with no permit is big and automatic - no ifs, ands, or buts allowed.

(scroll down for a story about a former police chief who didn't have a permit)

How To Get A Gun Permit in Panama

You need the following to qualify for a gun permit in Panama.

  • Relatively well-off financially.   It is assumed that, if you have money, you legitimately need a gun to keep your wealth and possessions safe.   Otherwise, they assume you want a gun for political or nefarious reasons.  If you are a foreigner, you qualify as well-off automatically. In Panama, almost all "gringos" are considered rich.
  • Have a bank account in Panama
  • Be a legal resident of Panama (not a tourist)
  • Get a psychological evaluation.  They will ask you questions such as “Have you ever committed a murder?” or “Do you and your wife fight a lot?
  • Submit your gun for a ballistic test.  That information is kept on record in Panama.
  • Pee in a cup.   To prove you do not use drugs, or at least at the time of the gun purchase.
  • Get a finger prick blood test.  This is to provide a DNA sample.  You will need a specific form to be submitted when you get your blood taken.
  • Give permission for a background check by Panama police

It takes about 3 - 6 months to get a gun permit.

Because of these requirements, you won’t find your gardener or the average guy carrying a gun in Panama.

How to Start The Permit Process

Buying a gun in Panama

If you are buying the gun in Panama, the gun shop owner will know, and initiate, the process.   You will need to show him or her your residency visa.  You will also pee in a cup there (your urine sample) and get the form & info on getting your blood test.  The shop owner will send all the paperwork to the police department.

More than one gun can be bought at the same time and go through the permitting process.  There is no limit to the number of guns you can buy.

Importing your guns to Panama

Guns cost about 50% more in Panama than in the States.   However, importing guns is a huge pain in the neck.  You might want to save yourself the grief and buy your guns in Panama.

To import your guns, you also start at a Panama gun shop.  They will help you apply for an importation permit. You may need to enlist the help of licensed gun dealer to export your guns as well.  You need to check with your country of origin to find that out.

The importation permit process is similar to the gun permit process.  Also you will need to ship, by Fed Ex or such, your unloaded gun and all your paperwork from both countries to Panama. Then the wait begins.

Your guns will be stored in a non-climate controlled, rust-inducing, government warehouse somewhere in Panama.  You need to pay an import duty based on the value of the gun, which can be steep.  You may need to hire a custom broker to get you through the process.

You may want to skip this entire process and buy a gun in Panama.  If you really must have a gun, that is.

Panama Safety

Only the USA, Czech Republic & Switzerland are better to gun owners, according to Guns & Ammo.

Panama is very safe.

The Pinkerton Intelligence Agency has given Panama the highest rating for tourist safety.  You are very unlikely to ever need a gun to defend yourself or your loved ones in Panama.

Concealed Guns & Carrying Restrictions

A gun permit in Panama automatically includes permission to carry a concealed gun.
In fact, if you carry a gun in Panama, it MUST be concealed.

You are not allowed to take a gun (concealed or otherwise) into banks, bars, nightclubs, and certain other financial or government buildings.

Surprisingly, you can take a gun to the airport in Panama.  You must declare your gun to a security guard and give him a copy of the permit for that gun.  The guard will take the gun to your airline to be shipped.  You then pick it up when you get to your destination. Of course, you may want to check out the firearms rules at your destination airport.

Other Gun Rules & Restrictions

You cannot own any fully automatic firearms.

You can buy handguns (Glocks, semi-automatic handguns, revolvers), rifles and shotguns.  Again, no fully automatic guns are allowed. You can have hi-capacity magazines in any type gun, no restrictions.  You can have semi-auto rifles and handguns.

Silencers and armor piercing ammo are not allowed. Hollow points, high speed light weight defensive rounds, etc. are fine.

You can legally buy, sell, and receive guns in Panama.  It just takes time to get the permit.

You can own as many guns as you want.  Keep in mind, there is no big game in Panama, so you won't need any big gauge hunting guns.

Former Police Chief  - Jailed - No Gun Permit

Earlier this month, Gustavo Pérez, Panama's former National Police chief and national security director was sentenced to 64 months in jail for owning guns without a permit.

Armed with a warrant for Pérez’s arrest, the police raided Pérez's house to search for illegal electronic eavesdropping used during the Martinelli administration.  Police and prosecutors didn’t find any spy equipment.

However, they did find two 9 millimeter pistols, a .38 revolver, and a submachine gun. One of the pistols was registered as National Police property.  Pérez had no permit for any of the firearms, so he was charged with that.  He had inherited the weapons from his father, also a former National Police chief.

I don't know what the response to the discovery of these weapons would be if Pérez were in good graces.   But he is very much on the outs with both the police and with the Varela administration. Pérez already had a warrant for his arrest due to his illegal spying.  Also during Martinelli's adminstration, both Pérez and Martinelli had fired more than 2,000 cops. Not only did they fire almost all of the country's homicide detectives, but many police officers in the upper ranks as well. Martinelli replaced these cops by promoting people that he and Pérez liked.  So I imagine that the arrest and sentencing was politically, as well evidence, motivated.

Had the judge decided to throw the book at Pérez, as prosecutors had asked, the former chief could have been handed a 10-year prison sentence.  The judge was said to take into account that Pérez had not lied or tired to stall the case, so he made the sentence 64 months instead.

The judge, Mr. Carrasquilla, ruled that the laws on gun registration and permits apply “even when a person holds high positions in the field of security and public order.

Pérez also awaits trial on invasion of privacy charges and has been under investigation for purportedly improper purchases when he was police chief and later national security director. He is incarcerated where Manuel Antonio Noriega and several other politically connected prisoners are held, El Renacer Penitentiary near Gamboa.

The Take-away

If you must own a gun in Panama, get a permit!

Sources:

  • PanamaNews
  • Forum on ar15.com, home of the black rifle
  • Forum posts by Roger J. Pentecost of Boquete Valley of Flowers Condos
  • Guns & Ammo's website
Image with red background and cartoon image of man with text regarding learning Spanish online
Why do you want to learn Spanish? The answer will help you choose the right program

I want to speak Spanish better.  

I hope the right online Spanish program will push me to the next level - fast.

But which online Spanish program?

There are so many.  It can be alittle overwhelming.  

Are online programs really any better than traditional methods?

Stick with me as I explore:

  • Is learning a language online different or better from traditional methods
  • How to choose an online program?
  • Which online Spanish course is the best?

Online vs Traditional Learning

The last time I studied Spanish seriously there were a few software language programs, but almost no online options.

In those days, I tried to learn Spanish the way people have been doing it forever:

  • Books
  • Classroom
  • In-person conversations

That way still works.  But it didn't work that well for me.   I found that you must be very self-motivated to move beyond basic Spanish using the old methods.

I have now reviewed a number of online language courses out there.  Not all, but some are different from traditional methods.  And some have integrated ways to boost your motivation.

What Online Language Programs Offer

The programs I liked:

  • Give immediate feedback.  For instance, letting you know if you translated something correctly. And telling you the correct way.  Or saying you did not pronounce a word correctly.  And having a way to listen to the right way to pronouncing it and then trying again.
  • Progress Reports.  Some programs tell you how often you are working on your Spanish. Time flies.  You think you are working hard.  But then when you sign-in to your program, you learn it has been over a week since your last check in.   Some programs also offer badges and other status updates on your learning progress.
  • Forums.  A few programs also have forums,  A place where other people learning Spanish can ask questions and help each other.  I found forums helpful for this reason.  Also forums make it feel like you aren't learning in a vacuum, all by yourself.
  • Emphasis on Speaking Spanish.  I write more about this below.   Most people want to learn a language to speak to people in that language.  Not just listen to it or read it. Therefore, it is the thing that needs the most practice.

So far, I have been much more excited and motivated to learn using the more innovative online programs than I ever was using the more traditional book and classroom approach.

Speaking Spanish Required?

One of the biggest difference between the programs is if you are asked to actually speak Spanish.

For me this is critical.  I can write, read, and understand Spanish pretty well.   Speaking it is much harder for me.

I have pronunciation issues in English.  After a lifetime of work, I have overcome many of those issues.  When I try to speak Spanish it all comes back.  Spanish not only uses more words to say the same thing as in English but many of those words are dismayingly long.   I literally feel like I get lost in the middle of those many long multisyllabic words in Spanish.

Even if you have no speech issues, making yourself understood in a foreign language is the biggest hurdle.

4 of these 6 online programs require that you speak Spanish.

  • Rocket language features a way for you to record yourself speaking Spanish.  It includes an immediate evaluation of how well you did.
  • Fluent-in-3-months recommends a number of free resources for you to start speaking Spanish out loud from day 1.  But those resources are not integrated into its program.
  • italk is a program that hooks you up with one-on-one real time lessons with native speakers.  It starts you speaking from day one.
  • Doulingo focuses more on how well you hear others speak language.  So far in my use of Doulingo, it hasn't asked me to say a word of Spanish out loud.
  • Babbel seems similar to Doulingo, although not as dynamic.  However, it does have a microphone feature for you to speak Spanish yourself, including how to say individual letters.
  • Fluentu is a very innovative program with many interesting features.  But it has no method for you to speak Spanish yourself.

Differences In Online Programs

I was surprised at the differences in the various online programs.

For instance, Rocket Language, Fluent-in-3-months, Duolingo, and especially Fluentu use very different approaches. But all 4 use online technology to make learning Spanish more fun.

And while those programs are different from traditional methods of learning languages, some other programs, like Visual Link Spanish, are more like traditional methods, online.

How to Choose

So which program is best for you?   To find out you should ask yourself at least 2 questions:

  1. Why do you want to learn Spanish?
  2. What type of learner are you? (visual, audio, sensory)

Keep your answers to those questions in mind when evaluating each program.  You will choose different programs if your goal is to learn medical terminology vs chatting up a senorita.

Online Spanish Program Reviews

I will be reviewing many of these online Spanish programs.  Check those out to help you decide which is best for you.   You can also use the links above to start reviewing those programs yourself.

1st up for review is Rocket Language.  Here is the link to my Rocket Language review.

2nd up, I will review the Fluent-in-3 months program, and others to follow.

This La Palmas house is almost unchanged since Chiquita Banana built it in the 1930s

As you may know, Puerto Armuelles has about 2 dozen neighborhoods.

Many people have asked us to describe them.

This post is an announcement of a new page.  

A page describing 10 of  the neighborhoods of Puerto Armuelles, Panama. 

Below, there are a few photos of these neighborhoods.

To learn about these 10 neighborhoods in Puerto, click here

  • Carmen
  • San Vicente
  • Pueblo Nuevo
  • El Porvenir
  • Pez de Oro
  • Corazon de Jesus
  • Coronado
  • Cucuy
  • Rio Mar
  • Las Palmas

These 10 neighborhoods are the ones that most interest people moving to or investing in Puerto Armuelles, Panama.

In the near future, we will add at least 2 photos for each neighborhood on that page.  I first need to format the photos to fit on the page property.

However, I can share photos of some of Puerto Armuelles' neighborhoods below.

 

 

View from San Vicente towards downtown Puerto Armuelles

Want to get a sense of Puerto Armuelles from wherever you are now?

I have put together some photos of Puerto to help give you a feel for the town.  

These are photos that say Puerto Armuelles to me.   

To see these photos, go to this new page on my site. 

That's all.  Only wanted to announce the new page, photos of Puerto Armuelles, Panama.