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Panama: Much More Than Palm
Trees Swaying in the Tropical Breeze by
Sydney Tremayne
Panama.
Warm, tropical, palm trees silhouetted against the golden
sky of a setting sun. Yes, it is all those romantic things.
But it is so much more.
Its capital is the most modern city south of the U.S. If
this is the third world, I missed the first somewhere in my
travels. Panama City is a world-leading financial center
with some 120 banks, many with competing glass and steel
monuments to commerce.
Panama is shopping, U.S. style. Many of the stores found on
Main Street, U.S.A., are here too. After all, the Panama
Canal was run by Americans for almost 100 years, and the
American military had a major presence here until 1999.
Panama once had a reputation as part of the pipeline for
Colombian drugs. It suffered under the savage dictatorship
of Manuel Noriega, until he was captured and imprisoned by
American troops in December, 1989. The country has had a
peaceful democracy ever since. Like Costa Rica, it has no
military. Money is spent on education instead, and its
people have a high level of literacy. And if you need
medical attention here, your doctor is likely to have been
trained in the U.S. or Europe.
Panama is silver sand on the Caribbean side and black
volcanic sand on the Pacific side. It has the second-largest
volcanic crater in the world inside which nestles a popular
tourist and retirement town. (The largest is the Ngorongoro
Crater in Tanzania.) It is dessert and mountaintop. It can
be humid all year, or like spring for all 12 months,
depending on where you are in this small country.
Panama is world-class hotels and resorts, the best roads in
Central America by far (many were built by Americans). And
Brinks gives the country a top rating for personal safety.
Panama is tales of pirates, of Spanish treasure and the
forts that tried to protect it; it is jungle and monkeys and
parrots. It has more birds than all of North America put
together, some 960 different species. There is even a jungle
preserve right inside the city limits. And Darien National
Park on the Colombian border is a jungle of monstrous size
and one of the world’s richest wildlife habitats.
Panama, that thin strip of land joining the northern and
southern halves of the Americas (yet running east to west)
provides a 50-mile wide divide between the worlds two
largest oceans. And its narrowness has provided the
ingredients for much of its history. The Spanish used it as
a land bridge to transship Inca treasure en route to Spain.
This attracted pirates whose exploits here made them
household names. The rest, as they say, is history.
The French tried to build a canal, and went broke. The
Americans, who proved the value of the isthmus during the
Gold Rush, succeeded where the French had failed. And today,
the Panama Canal, now run by Panamanians, produces much of
the country’s wealth. More shipping is registered in
Panama than in anywhere else on earth.
Panama is a land of diversity. Its people are friendly. If
your car breaks down, runs out of gas, or gets a flat,
within a few minutes someone will stop to help. Try that in
Manhattan! The language is Spanish, but in the major hotels
and many places in the capital, the people who serve you
speak English. And if they don’t, there’s sure to be a
helpful English-speaking person within earshot who will
offer assistance. Currency: the U.S. dollar since 1904. What
could be easier?
About the Author
Sydney
Tremayne publishes http://www.yourpanama.com, a leading
website for tourists and for potential ex-pat retirees in
Panama. His team of experts gives regular Q&A
teleseminars that can save costly mistakes. To find out
more, go to http://www.yourpanama.com/fear.html
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