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COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

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The Tico Times

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How to grow cacao: Chocolate, the Costa Rica ‘food of the gods’

HOME GARDENING: Tropical home gardeners have the luxury of being able to grow their own cacao and make their own chocolate

Big Salvadoran majority skeptical of bitcoin as standard currency

In a snub to El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele, more than three-quarters of Salvadorans are skeptical of the maverick leader's push to adopt the cryptocurrency bitcoin as...

Aeronautical engineering company expands Costa Rica presence

Avionyx, an aeronautical engineering company, has announced it will hire an additional 50 people in Costa Rica to meet increasing demand for aircraft software.

Ocean safety and Rip Tides in Costa Rica

Rip currents are one of the most dangerous and ubiquitous members of Costa Rica’s beach communities. While many factors, including weather, alcohol and misinformation,...

Fans banned from Olympics as variant drives global Covid-19 outbreaks

Delta is the most infectious strain of the virus since the start of the global pandemic in early 2020.

Power outage due to unknown failure affects Central America

Honduras and Nicaragua, having been the most affected, will have a delay of three to five hours in restoring power.

Haiti president assassinated at home, wife wounded

Haiti President Jovenel Moise was assassinated and his wife wounded early Wednesday in a gun attack at their private residence

Nicaragua detains another five opposition leaders, as Ortega ups the ante

Nicaraguan police have detained at least five opposition leaders, including a presidential hopeful, deepening a sweeping crackdown of political and business figures opposed to...

El Salvador receives 1.5 million COVID-19 vaccines donated by US

The government of El Salvador on Sunday night received 1.5 million Covid-19 vaccines from the pharmaceutical company Moderna.

Costa Rica incentivizes residency for retirees and foreign investors

Foreign investment represented 7.8% of GDP until before the pandemic, but today it represents just 3.5%, according to Costa Rican authorities.

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