No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeChangemakersThis week in the Peace Corps: A volunteer's time in Talamanca

This week in the Peace Corps: A volunteer’s time in Talamanca

It’s interesting when people ask me what’s it like living in an indigenous community.

I get the sense that they’re expecting me to compare it with the rest of Costa Rica. Of my 24-month stay in Costa Rica, 21 of those have been spent in Talamanca in a rural indigenous Bribri community. It’s my second home and what I know best in Costa Rica.

Yet it’s perceived as this counter-culture; different, foreign.

While each community may represent a unique experience due to internal dynamics and occidental influences, in two words, my experience has been “Bua’ë Bua’ë.”

That’s Bribri equivalent of pura vida.

(Photo courtesy of Peace Corps Costa Rica)

I live in a family-oriented neighborhood that is named after the family who populates it. there is an ingrained belief of collaboration and support in their work and community. A poignant example is a form of work called mano vuelta.

Whether it’s family or neighbors, you’ll link up in groups to work each other’s farms in whatever task is deemed necessary for whose land they’re working. The next day, they work a different member’s farm, and so on and so forth. There’s always coffee.

Banana, cacao and plantain are the three main cash crops. However, corn and beans, cassava and other tubers, squash, pumpkin, and many a fruit tree are abundant. There are pigs and chickens in the patio, perhaps some cows grazing in the pasture.

Basically, the community and families practice sustainable permaculture before the word was invented. I believe, in large part due to their connection with the earth, their land, and respecting their roots.

(Photo courtesy of Peace Corps Costa Rica)

There is a display of pride and humility when sharing with family and foreigners alike. Everyone has always been incredibly open to sharing their culture with me.

They taught me the language, took me to the farm, made traditional food, and even indulged in my surely annoying requests to make chocolate and any sort of natural plant or fruit derivative. But they always did it, con mucho gusto y mucho amor… y, siempre con café.

To me, my community, the Bribri people, they’re as Tico as Tico can be. Because now and forever, when I think of Costa Rica, I’ll think of Talamanca and my wonderful experience with amazing people.

At the very core, I have learned from my community the essence of being Costa Rican: Living harmoniously with the nature and people around you.

It’s important to recognize and respect the divide of the sub-cultures throughout this little, yet diverse country. But I also think it’s important to embrace and celebrate it, all of it, for being quintessentially Costa Rican.


The Peace Corps photo series in The Tico Times Costa Rica Changemakers section is sponsored by the Costa Rica USA Foundation for Cooperation (CRUSA), a proud financial supporter of Peace Corps Volunteer projects nationwide. Learn more here. To donate to support the Peace Corps Costa Rica, visit the official donation page. Volunteers’ last names and community names are withheld from these publications, per Peace Corps policy.

Connect with the Peace Corps Costa Rica on FacebookInstagram or Twitter.

Brought to you by the Costa Rica USA Foundation (CRUSA). Courtesy of CRUSA

Trending Now

Costa Rica Uncovers Alleged Assassination Plot Against President Chaves

Officials in Costa Rica revealed today an alleged scheme to assassinate President Rodrigo Chaves, with the national election set for February 1 drawing near....

El Salvador’s Bukele to Break Ground on Costa Rica’s Mega-Prison

President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador plans to arrive in Costa Rica next week for an official visit focused on the country's new high-security...

New York Times Spotlights Costa Rica’s Osa as Top 2026 Travel Pick

The Osa Peninsula has landed on The New York Times' annual list of 52 places to visit in 2026, ranking fourth overall. This recognition...

Honduran Lawmaker Survives Explosive Attack in Congress

A homemade explosive device struck Honduran lawmaker Gladis Aurora López inside the National Congress on January 8, causing injuries that sent her to the...

How Altitude Shapes Flavors in Costa Rican Coffee Beans

Coffee growers in Costa Rica know that elevation plays a key role in how beans develop and taste. Farmers in regions like Tarrazú and...

Costa Rica Presidential Hopefuls Unite Against Fernández in Debate

In last night's heated presidential debate hosted by the Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones, Laura Fernández of the Partido Pueblo Soberano came under heavy fire...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica