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Liberia, Costa Rica’s gateway to elsewhere, is worth a closer look
LIBERIA, Guanacaste — When I mentioned that I was taking Southwest Airline’s inaugural flight from Baltimore to Liberia, Costa Rica, someone asked if I was worried about the Ebola virus.
I had to clarify that I was headed to Liberia in Costa Rica, the Central American tropical paradise, not the beleaguered African country.
Ebola or not, foreigners and even Ticos may avoid Liberia like the plague because of the traffic and gritty conditions on its outskirts as they traverse the Inter-American Highway on their way to other destinations.
If headed for the beaches, they’re likely to avoid the city altogether after arriving at Daniel Oduber Quirós International Airport, the country’s increasingly busy and second international airport.
Pellejo welcomed me to his home on Calle 7 and Avenida 2 next to the tiny river that flows through town. Although he was hurrying back to his “real job” as a sanitation truck driver, Pellejo proudly showed off his most unusual assortment of artifacts, tools, photos, animal skulls and other relics.
Rafael Zuñiga, known as “El Pellejo.” |
The front of his simple but crowded home was covered with hand-painted signs featuring Pellejo’s favorite proverbs, including “El tirano muere y su reino termina, el martir muere y su reino comienza.” (“The tyrant dies and his reign ends, the martyr dies and his reign begins.”) The one sign in English simply reads, “WELCOME MY FRIEND LIBERIA CITY WE LOVE YOU.”
But tour guide, professor and consultant Josué Duarte Montes says Liberia’s best local attraction is Pellejo himself.
“He is the best representation of the Tico, especially the sabanero of Guanacaste; the way he talks, the way he looks, but most of all … his knowledge and passion for the history of our cultural heritage,” Josué said.
All Pellejo asks from visitors is that they leave a donation to help with the display and maintenance of his collection.
I met Josué as I strolled through Liberia’s shaded and pleasant Parque Central, the central park, with its gazebo-bandstand facing a spacious, modern, whitewashed church.
As Josué led his group to the church, I spotted four Belgians that I had played pool with the night before at Buena Vista Resort in the nearby mountains (proof that some tourists do indeed make a trip to Liberia, and not just around it.)
Someday tourists and Ticos alike may give Guanacaste’s provincial capital (population 57,000) a second thought, as tourism inevitably grows in the least populated of the country’s seven provinces.
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If completed next May as expected, it will speed traffic away along that edge, but my hunch is that the relative anonymity of Liberia seems destined to change.
In some ways Liberia reminded me of the vibrant, preserved downtowns of Antigua, Guatemala, or Granada, Nicaragua, or Costa Rica’s own Heredia. With its colonial architecture and clean, tree-lined streets, it’s a pleasant place to go for a stroll.
One of those streets is not only tree-lined but has a huge guanacaste tree, for which the province is named, smack in its middle, allowing for traffic to go around it.
Josué rhetorically asked, “Why people should visit Liberia — why not?? … Liberia has history hidden in every corner but exposed on the people’s faces, and culture that comes from centuries ago and is still vivid in everyday life.”
Paul Foer is a Maryland-based yacht captain and journalist who has traveled widely in Latin America. His most recent visit to Costa Rica was on a tour sponsored by the Costa Rican Ministry of Tourism.
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And be sure to check out these other great articles: Costa Rica Currency & Tipping, and Driving and Car Rentals in Costa Rica.
Pura vida!
Ed & Connie
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