The Osa peninsula, due to the fact that for long time the only possible access was by the sea, with irregular boats service from the
far Puntarenas, maintained its pristine conditions despite the frantic gold rush of the 50 and 60 decades and subsequent agricultural
development.
Only in the 80 decade, a more or less established road opened the Osa Peninsula to regular land transportation,
and until the first 90thies the wading of several river along the road from Chacarita, the cross intersection on the Interamericana
Road, until Puerto Jimenez, the main “town” on the area, was normal, and during the rain season was common to have to wait for hours
or days for the lowering of the level of the waters.
In the Osa Peninsula the average level of rainfall is between 4 to
7 metres per years, so you can imagine how often people had to wait for to cross the rivers, situation that today is still common
in the part of the road from Puerto Jimenez to Carate, the “door” of the Corcovado National Park.
Being the farer location in
the country, from the central capital town, the arrival-departing hub of the international tourist routes, helped the Osa to preserve
for all these years its natural jewels like the most extensive rainforest of the whole Central America, the most extensive mangrove
swamp, the Sierpe-Terraba rivers with 32.325 hectares of surface , and the populations of endangered wildlife, extinct in most
of the remaining country and Central American area.
Jaguars, American crocodile, Baird’s tapir, White-lipped peccary, and
the Harpy eagle, still lives in the Osa Peninsula, some of them with healthy, populations like the Scarlet macaw, common even in the
same streets of Puerto Jimenez, or the Jaguar with an estimated healthy population of 400 specimen.
Other species are only a remaining
of the past, like the Harpy eagle that re-appeared only few years ago after having been considered extinct from the 80thies, that,
due to the enormous area that need for to survive, will never grow to large numbers.
All the four species of monkey registered
in the country ( Capucine, Howling, Spider and Squirrel) live here and the Squirrel monkeys, an endemic species, represent the only
population of all central America.
Almost 400 species of birds live and nest in the Osa, ( the 5% of all the species in the world!),
amongst the 750 different species of trees cataloged until today and counting, sharing all the environment that vary from the coastal
lowland and marshes, to the dense rainforest covering the sides of hills and mountains, with 140 species of mammals, 117 of reptiles
and amphibians, 60.000 species of insects.
So, is not a surprise that, hosting the highest natural diversity per unit area in
the world, the National Geographic Magazine defined the Osa Peninsula as” the most biologically intense place on earth”, creating
a kind of trademark that is impossible to emulate.
Obviously the abundance of wildlife is not a prerogative of the land of the Osa
but a common characteristic shared with the warm, clean waters of the Golfo Dulce, the sole Fiord of the pacific coast of the whole
Americas, and the Pacific Ocean that surrounds the Peninsula.
Whale sharks, Humpbacked whales, dolphins, sharks and the most
impressive list of record game fish are common the whole year round, with moments of abundance that call sport fishermen from everywhere
in the world, while the bests spots of the country for diving, the Caño Island and surroundings, are always overbooked.
More
than 2.100 species of plants have been registered in the South Pacific Area, the 22% of the entire country, over a territory that,
with 4.104 Km2, is only the 8,6% of the Country.
The actual population is around 120.000 ( 29,23 Persons per Km2 ), mainly involved
in the agricultural and cattle breeding activities.
Tourism is grooving really fast and represent the second source of employment in
the region.
The Guaymi Indians still live in the reservations located in the centre of the Osa Peninsula the north-east
border of the Corcovado National Park, and in other municipalities in the Area, with a total population of 2.700 persons, living on
a territory of 23.063 hectares, the 3.1% of the total surface of the municipalities territories.
The Osa Peninsula is part
of the ACOSA Conservation Area, that cover the south pacific coast of Costa Rica, starting from Dominical, until the Panama border.
In Costa Rica the intensive agriculture ( coffe, pineapple, banana, rice, oil palm, etc.) have been the historical activity, together
wit the extensive cattle breeding, and in the last century the dense rainforest that was covering almost all the country was cleared
at an impressive rate per year, specially in the north-west area, the Guanacaste, where the deforestation has been so extended and complete that the same climate have been dramatically changed, transforming that area of green lush forest to the almost
pre-desertic environment that you can see today, completely deprived of the species of animal that were depending from the
forest consistency.
Other areas of Costa Rica had a little bit more luck, due to the distance from the centre of the civilization
hub and to the local weather. The surviving virgin rainforest in the country are less than the 10% of the surface and the Osa
Peninsula alone own almost half of them, making clear how important is the conservation of this natural resource.
Costa Rica
Real Estate Agencies, normally offer a wide fan of possibilities, ranging from prestigious beachfront properties, or ocean
front lots, to some hidden forest property, or houses facing breath-breaker tropical beaches, giving the idea that the whole country
is still a complex of estate for sale.
Travelling across Costa Rica, you can see everywhere signs with the " property
for sale " letters, on the fence of a piece of land that have been sold and bought, maybe three or four time in the last ten
years, from the original Costarican owner to a foreigner, to another foreigner, etc., multiplying the price at each passage.
Be careful
when, lured by the opportunity to buy a nice piece of land for a really cheap price, you enter in a deal with the " owner ", sometime
people got " Planos Catastrados " of pieces of land that are inside another titled property and you will loose your time
and your money.
In the last years the fast growth of the Real Estate business in this area, lured every kind of people to became
a " land seller", and now almost every hotel and restaurant owner offer "properties", and every taxi drivers has in his dash,
at least, a couple of land plans to show to some naive client, and almost none of them has the lesser idea about the rules and laws
that are involved in the titling process in the different zones that compose the Peninsula. For more information about this issue,
please visit
our Blog
Golfo Dulce Real Estate, and specially here, in the Osa, is still a first level business; a waterfront
property here, is still the private beach of some small farmer that live there with some cattle and some land where harvest some rice
and beans for the typical food, having in the same piece of land, maybe, a " backyard " rainforest property that he can sell
and use the income for to up rise his standard of life making some change in the farm, in the house or for to build a simple
but nice Ocean Front House to rent to tourists.
And this is the biggest challenge : to develop the area in a way that will
permit to the locals to enhance their life standard without destroying the environment and the traditional farmer culture.
For
this reason the local price for a beach front property here, in the Costa Rica South Pacific, is still one quarter of a similar one
in the most well known, but well deprived, tourism centres of other parts of the country.
So, buying a piece of land here around, a
beach lot, a deep forest farm or a waterside land, along one of the hundred rivers that flow from the Corcovado Park's mountains,
is a commitment with the higher concentration of biological mass of living beings in the world, Costa Rica really welcomes you if
you understand this important issue and will act with the aim of integrate your Dream House or Lodge in this environment, conserving
it for the new generations.
2.5 Ha Riverside Land good for Micro Farm or Eco Tourism Project, at the Gates of Corcovado Park. Electric Grid, public and private
Water, easy road. Ref. 2BH
Great 2.7 Hectares Turn Keys Riverside Microfarm with two Houses, Fruit trees, Pasture, Fences, Electric Grid, Public Water.
Ref. 2house