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Unique history of Nosara Costa Rica weaves a fascinating tale

Playa Guiones, Nosara, Costa Rica

The fascinating history of Nosara, Costa Rica tells you a lot about its unusual residents and how the unlikely community developed into the thriving oasis it is today.

To start, Nosara, and its beaches of Playa Guiones, Playa Pelada, Playa Nosara and Playa Garza, are off the beaten track in Costa Rica. This area of the Nicoya Peninsula in the Guanacaste Province, north of Samara, was not easy to reach for settlement. The one road to get there is dirt and gravel, and it didn’t even exist until 1979.

Nosara on map of Costa Rica

In pre-modern day history, a large settlement of indigenous Chorotegas lived and flourished in the region beginning approximately 1,500 years ago until around 1520, when the first Spaniards arrived on the Nicoya Peninsula. Over the next decades, the Spanish rulers decimated the tribe by sending thousands to work in the gold mines of Panama and Peru, and took possession of their lands.

Chorotega indigenous people of Costa RicaThe Spanish settlers quickly converted the Nicoya Peninsula into huge cattle ranches. The cattle trade prospered here, along with cultivation of wheat and sugarcane. From this, the cowboy culture of Nicoya is still prevalent today among local residents.

Life went on this way for generations. The land was greatly deforested for cattle pasture, and it was to this stark coastal landscape that the first surfer from the United States came in the early 1970s. He discovered the still fabulous surfing waves at Playa Guiones, and the word began to spread, with other surfers trickling down over the next years.

Nosara Costa Rica aerial viewBy this time, the Nosara area was made up of five or six large ranches. Modern-day pioneers from the United States, seeking a simpler and more peaceful lifestyle, purchased three of these ranches in the early 1970s.

The nearly 3,000 acres became known as “the American Project” – a responsibly planned development originally consisting of about 700 lots and an 18-hole golf course. The original developers’ promise of a golf course was never realized, but that land is officially protected.

A lot next to the beach started at $3,000, and electricity came from a generator that ran for four hours a day. Townspeople used to have to make a two-and-a-half-day horseback trip to the large town of Nicoya for supplies, and the first building supplies were brought in by boat and then oxcart. That ended in 1979 with Nosara’s first dirt road.

Municipal electricity began in the early 1980s. Landline phone service first started in 1999 and cell phone service in 2002. Before then, CB radios were standard fixtures in homes for communication. Nowadays, you have all of the modern amenities: high-speed Internet, cable and satellite TV, fully-stocked grocery stores and plenty of restaurants.

Going surfing at Nosara, Costa Rica

The Nosara Civic Association formed at the beginning to protect the environment and community’s interests. Reforestation was a priority, and today, thick dry tropical forest grows over the hillsides and along the coast.

According to the community’s conservation policy, homes, hotels and businesses are all set back from the beach at Guiones to protect a buffer zone of 250 linear meters as a wildlife refuge for nesting sea turtles. As a result Nosara’s beaches annually receive Costa Rica’s Ecological Blue Flag Award.

Playa Guiones, Nosara, Costa Rica

The Nosara community’s unique kinship of Costa Ricans and “gringos”, or foreigners, remains to this day.
Though there are growing pains, like anywhere, residents take pride in working together on continued community planning and management of resources.

Visit Nosara for a Costa Rica beach vacation and stay at L'acqua Viva Resort & Spa, a top eco-friendly hotel in Playa Guiones at Nosara. The Bali-style Costa Rica luxury hotel is located between the beautiful white sand beach of Playa Guiones and forested foothills, full of wildlife like frequently visiting howler monkeys.

L'acqua Viva Resort & Spa in Costa Rica

 

Article by Shannon Farley

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