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COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

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The Tico Times

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New Tomato Variety: A Game Changer for Costa Rican Farmers

There’s good news about tomatoes that will help both producers and consumers – that means us. Plant engineers at the University of Costa Rica's...

Visiting Arenal Costa Rica: A cool volcano and lots of hot springs

LA FORTUNA, Alajuela — At an estimated 7,000 years old, Arenal is a volcano in diapers, dating from around the time agriculture developed in...

Arenal Costa Rica: One very cool volcano and lots of very hot springs

LA FORTUNA, Alajuela — At an estimated 7,000 years old, Arenal is a volcano in diapers, dating from around the time agriculture developed in...

Costa Rica Security Guard Makes Dramatic Discovery During Night Shift

What seems like a regular, soggy night for guachimán Luis takes an unexpected turn toward the past in this short story by Robert Isenberg.

Women: Do we want to stay alive?

"There’s no such thing as the weak sex. The moment to act is now."

Is party allegiance dead in Costa Rica? There’s more to it than meets the eye

"It could be that the moment arrives when having a party will be a transgressive act... but I suspect that we cannot assume that Costa Rica’s parties are extinct dinosaurs."

Woman records video of man reaching down her shirt on bus; receives no help from driver

A woman traveling on a bus Monday in Costa Rica filmed a man touching her beneath her shirt. She said via Facebook that she showed the video to the bus operators who told her all she could do was move seats.

The intellectual migration of Pablo Bien

His family came from around the world to live in Costa Rica - and his Yiddish surname happens to work just fine in Costa Rica. Meet Pablo Bien.

Arenal: Costa Rica’s Adventure Capital and Its Locally-Owned Success Story

LA FORTUNA, Alajuela — It hovers over the region like a pyramid of the gods, a nearly perfect cone with deceptively green hillsides that...

5 questions for a Honduran artist

"There’s a conviction that even though they’re in a precarious condition, there will always be a better tomorrow." Artist Pável Aguilar gives a voice to Honduran migrants in an exhibit now on display in San José.

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