Sunday, July 27, 2014

Santa Fe and Los Islotes

July 2014

We have really settled into our new life here in Santa Fe and couldn't be happier with our living arrangements.  We have been able to keep our shopping trips to Santiago down to every two weeks which is great.  Peg is still making her yummy salsa and cooking delicious meals with our much limited fresh vegetable selection.  I have been trying my hand at pizza dough and even made a chicken pot pie with homemade crust.  We have had deliciously cheesy meals with all of our homemade cheese from Lucho and Janice; mozzarella, queso fresca, and a cheese she calls feta that is mixed with fresh basil.  They are fabulous people with a farm out in the country that is pretty much self-sustaining.  They even grow their own coffee.  We found a beautiful spot on the river where Calcite can swim and Zoe can sniff her way around.
Better picture of our kitchen
Dining area
Downtown Santa Fe
Beautiful river 
Calcite loves playing fetch in the river
Pristine water and no people

After being here three and half months we were both in desperate need of hair cuts.  Our land lady recommended a salon in downtown Santiago so we made the drive in, found parking and walked in with our prepared Spanish words: cut, shorter, layered etc.  We were taken in immediately, the stylists wet our hair down with a water bottle and cut away.  Peg's looks great and mine is a little shorter than I like, but a very good cut and they only charged us $5.35 each!
The drive to Santa Fe is so green
Beautiful view on the drive into Los Islotes

Zoe checking out Patricia's lot - this is what the rainy season does to the plants.
We have signed an agreement with our architect and will be making a trip into the city the first week of August to go over the first preliminary drawings.  We are very excited to get this process going.  We have been spending a lot of time working on the marketing materials for Los Islotes.  We spent two days at the property last week and two more this week putting up lot markers and making sure all of the lots are marked correctly.  We took the dogs and with the help of Karen (the project manager's wife) and Hermelinda (his assistant) we had a really great time driving around the property.  The Founder's Lodge construction is in full swing and Gary is working like crazy planting trees and putting pipes in the ground.  It is so fun watching our dream come to fruition.
Of course had to have a sold sign on our lot 
We made and posted over 70 of these signs all over Los Islotes
Welcome to the neighborhood Campbell's!
Stuff is happening on lot 131 
The Founder's Lodge is all graded!
The Los Islotes Project Manager Gary and his wife Karen live about 30 minutes from the project in a great house that overlooks the ocean.  They graciously let us stay in their guest room with our two furry canines while we are working so we don't have to drive all of the way back to Santa Fe every day.  It was fun getting to know them better and we are a lot more aware of the pitfalls of building an American style house in Panama.  For example, when all of the closets and cupboards are enclosed the lack of circulation causes a mildew and mold problem on everything including clothes and cooking utensils.  I think there will be a dehumidifier in our future.
Things grow so fast even in the potholes

US Shout Outs.... Alex and Jacob had a fabulous time in Romania sharing Jesus' love and made it home safe and sound.  Thanks to mom Leslie for the beautiful pictures taken with my birthday present!  Congratulations to Paul and Caitlin Harbison married July 26th.  Happy birthday to my niece Hadly!  As always missing our family and friends.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Our new home in Santa Fe

Santa Fe, Panama July 7, 2014

First I need to apologize in advance for the blurry pictures.  Our camera leaped off the counter and onto the concrete floor.  It hasn't been the same since.  We are trying to find a new one, but it hasn't happened yet.

It has been a crazy couple of weeks here in Panama.  After our last post we made a trip out to Los Islotes to be part of a tour group and practice our skills of showing the property to interested buyers.  We met the group in Santiago on Sunday morning and then headed out to the property for the tour and lunch.  It is always great to meet others that are interested in living here in Panama.  We had made arrangements to meet our attorney in Panama City on Monday morning thinking we could follow the group back to the city after the tour.  Lief had other ideas and asked if one of us would drive his rental car back to the city for him so he could fly home with his business partner and wife.  Being the agreeable sorts that we are, we said sure as long as we could still follow James (another Live and Invest employee) back to the city and our hotel.  As such we caravaned with James in front, Peg in 2nd in Lief''s rental car and me picking up the end in our truck.  As I mentioned before, driving is a sport here and it turns out James is the gold medal winner.  As a result I was a lane changing fool and literally kissed the ground when we arrived at the hotel.
Traffic on the way into the city
We spent the morning in the city with the attorney going to immigration to pick up our temporary residency visas and then to the US Embassy where we had to have our US Driver's Licenses validated - the first step in obtaining a Panamanian Driver's License.  In order to get into the Embassy you have to go through a security check point much like the airport except they take all of your electronics and keep them until you leave; cell phone, camera, computer, WiFi router etc.  Then you go in and wait with a very large number of people most of whom are Panamanian getting a travel visa so that they can travel to the US at a cost of $120, but it is good for 10 years.  They collected $40 from each of us, looked at our licenses and signed a piece of paper.  It took about an hour.  We then had the afternoon off so we went to the Live and Invest Overseas office and met with Lief about our new job.  We are going to be handling the property tours out at Los Islotes along with helping to update their marketing materials and website.  Very exciting for us.  We then spent a lovely quiet evening in the hotel with no chickens in sight or earshot.

On our way out of the city we decided to stop at the mall so we could buy a printer.  The Albrook Mall is huge and only about a 15 minute drive from our hotel.  Well let me just say this....  we never made it.  We drove through every neighborhood in the city and finally ended up on the toll road that goes right by the mall on its way to Colon, but doesn't have an exit.  Colon is on the Caribbean side of the country and hours in the wrong direction.  The toll booth lady took our fifty cents and laughed at us. She pointed off to her immediate left and we figured out enough of what she was trying to say which was....if you don't want to end up in Colon that is the only exit/escape.  Peg went through the toll booth and flew hard right to make the exit before getting run over by the cars to her right which wanted to go to Colon. We ended up back down town where we had started.  We decided to throw in the towel and head for home.  We somehow made it across the bridge over the canal, but then exited the Pan American Hwy by mistake and effectively drove on the frontage road through two cities (stop and go traffic) until finally making it back onto the Hwy.  It was good to be back to our little house in Pedasi.

We spent the rest of our last week collecting shells, enjoying the beach, spending time with our friends and making the most of our last three Spanish lessons.  We had decided it shouldn't take us too long to pack up so we spent Friday putting our worldly possessions back into our eight suitcases along with a few boxes.  On Saturday we loaded the truck with most of the belongings carefully wrapped in garbage bags (it is the rainy season) and made our first trip to Santa Fe.  We were pleasantly surprised as the landlady had completely out done herself.  She put up a wall between our house and the other one on the property and added mesh fencing around the bottom edge of the existing fence to prevent the animals from escaping.  The house is furnished very comfortably, has a second bedroom, a washing machine, two amazing portable room fans, a tv with satellite and even a little desk area with office supplies.  We couldn't have been more pleased.  More than twice the size of our Pedasi house for $200 less a month and it includes all utilities.  She even offered to clean our house once a week for no additional charge.
Another beautiful beach in Pedasi
Good shell hunting
Beautiful sunset from our living room in Pedasi.  One of the last.
We unloaded and headed back to Pedasi where we had a finalĂ© dinner with friends.  On Sunday we took one final trip to the beach with the dogs, cleaned the house, and packed up the crew.  We left Pedasi a little sad, but excited about our new phase in the mountains.  It is so beautiful here.  The hour drive from Santiago to Santa Fe is just amazing.  We are surrounded by green and the weather is about 10 - 14 degrees cooler and almost always breezy. We spent a few days getting settled in and are really enjoying our new space. The town is much smaller than Pedasi and we have only seen two other gringos, but everyone is very friendly. We even have a couple that delivers the best tasting homemade yogurt and cheese that we have ever tasted.
Our new living room with a comfortable couch!  that is the $70 fan our landlady bought for us complete with a remote control.  She put one in the bedroom too.
View from our upstairs window in Santa Fe.  This is a cloudy day.  We will take another when it is sunny.

New fence added by the landlord
We even have a storage area.
Locking gate
Kitchen with microwave and oven.  Yippee
We have made several trips into Santiago and have found our new favorite grocery store, hardware store, appliance store and are slowly learning our way around downtown.  We also were able to successfully order and receive an on-line purchase.  We decided to attempt the final two steps of the driver's license process ourselves without the help of our attorney.  She couriered our passports, embassy validations and Panamanian Authentication (step 2) to Santiago.  The final two steps are to get our blood types certified and then to the Sertracen Office (DPS / DMV).  We find the ATTT approved clinic in downtown Santiago - no small feat without addresses.  We walk in with our prepared Spanish statement "Necessitamos tipajo de sangue" and were actually understood!!!!!  We hand her the copies of our passport, were called to the back less than five minutes later, poked in the finger, watched as the tech mixed our three drops of blood with three different solutions.  He then wrote down our blood type on a piece of paper.  We then went back to the waiting area for another five minutes where we were handed our two official typed up certifications and asked for $4 total - $2 each!  And this was in a clinic the size of most of your living rooms and completely full of patients.  We then drove to the Sertracen Office walked in, handed in our paperwork, took an eye test, a hearing test, paid $40 each and walked out with our actual driver's license (not a paper copy) less than a hour later.  We couldn't believe it.  And as fate would have it, we were actually stopped at a police check-point on the way back to Santa Fe where we were able to show him our brand new license and residency visa.  Not bad for a day's work.  

Black and White Squirrel
We are all legal!