...In The Valley of the Kvetching Magnolias!

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Con Lluvia y Historia

Back at Hostel Bekuo. All the surfers are watching TV and talking football. I'm feeling a bit spent, but pretty happy with mi adventura del dia.

So upon getting to the hostel I posted on este blog, checked email, poured over my guide of Costa Rica to try to figure out what to do with myself. Once figuring that out, I was about to step outside when the thunder roared and the tropical clouds let loose. So while waiting for the rain to let up I played pool with an Aussie named Mick... I beat him one game, he beat me the next.

Suddenly, the rain let up and it was sunny and remarkably hot [a weather phenomenon I should probably get used to]. I hopped on a bus and headed for downtown San Jose. It's a super congested, super crowded, probably pretty polluted, super fast moving city, but I found it strangely charming. All the people scurrying across the street in hopes of avoiding the maniac cab drivers [these people will run you over, no broma], the smell of greasy meat, and the distant sound of tropical birds chirping like nuts, made me feel slightly excited.

If you walk up the hill from Avenida Central you come across a string of beautiful civic parts overlooking the city with sweeping views of the green, storm cloud capped, mountains around. Their bursting with verdant tropical vegitation in the midst of Spanish colonial style footbridges, fountains, and bronze statues of the heroes of liberation. I came across a bust of Bernardo O'Higgins, chief liberator of Chile, and I got very excited.

After a terrible hambuguesa especial at a cheap eatery called a soda, they're all over downtown San Jose, headed up to the Museo National de Costa Rica. It's a history museum located in this old colonial building that looks like a stone fortress from the outside, and has this amazing courtyard on the inside. Inside it's split between pre colombian history and post colonial history, with a small but impressive collection of gold artifacts from indigenous. One cool thing: indigenous groups of Costa Rica crafted these huge stone spheres to broadcast their power to neighboring groups. I the middle of my visit to the museum, it began to down pour harder than it had all day. I sat in the arcade around the museum's incredibly lush courtyard and watched it come down, a peaceful moment in the middle of a hectic, and busy day of airplanes, buses, and urban congestion.

Phew, this traveler can spew a lot. I can't promise this level of detail from every entry, but it's been a long day and the internet provides a nice, comforting glow. I might party with Australians tonight, but I'm more likely to curl up with my book about Pinochet and go to bed early. Tomorrow, Irazu Volcano might enjoy my company.

from Bekuo Hostel, Los Yoses, San Jose, Costa Rica

1 comment:

Leah said...

hi danny! sounds like fun. you should have gallo pinto for breakfast. its my favorite and bring me back some of the spicy sauce from costa rica. its a murky greenish brown colr but oh so delicioso! email ayanna re: peru. she's got some words of wisdom: ayannalw555@gmail.com