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OMG! Is Honduras really in the world cup?

costa rica sun
1st Baby Due 03/9/2010 asked:

OMG OMG OMG OMG OMG!!! Im totally freaking out!!! Im from Honduras and it seemed impossible up until USA made that second goal (THANKS USA!!!!!!!!! OMG) OMG!!!! My family in Honduras partied until the sun came up…I mean you know that Honduras hasnt been to a World Cup since Spain 1982!!!!!!! I wasnt even born yet!!!!! This is soooo unreal to me. I keep crying like a baby…. OMG its always been sooo close but far away just like it was last night… BUT OMG I wasnt giving up watching Honduras vs El Salvador and the last minute I walked into my room to watch USA vs Costa Rica and I prayed and prayed and OMG at the last 27 seconds USA gets a freaking corner kick and OMG it was a GOAL!!!!! I have NEVER EVER EVER celebrated a goal from another country like I did last night…. My father had tears in his eyes when I ran into the living room screaming GOAL!!!!!!! GOAL!!!!!!!!!!! GOAL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! FROM THE USA!!!!!! And we all started crying and screaming…. OMG I just wanted to share my joy with you guys here and Say thanks El Salvador good game… Costa Rica OMG I have soooooo much respect for you guys and well USA WOW!!!! If it wasnt for you guys we would be preparing to play against URUGUAY OUCH!!!!

COSTA RICA HOPE YOU GUYS WIN!!!!!!
Look I really dont a give a flying F**** if Honduras looses 15-0 in the first game but I’ll be Damn!!! We made it to a world cup! Im not asking to make it to finals or to even play a second game Im just glad were going to a world cup! Qualifying is a victory for us!!!

I know my baby was kicking… He is happy too!
OLIVER V!A— Thanks on the baby dust! Im just thrilled! Were actually in… OMG
Ticallion Stallion — You are sooo right, Thanks to the USA but mostly thanx to the Mexican ref. OMG and yes we do need something to celebrate about!
*3L [H3L@$* — Dide your hilarious lol. Thanks, hopefully if my coffee shop is up and running I will be in South Arfrica with my baby lol.

well i would like to know about taking my son out of the country?

costa rica sun
Yohebed A asked:

First , i will start with i have custody of my son ,but when me and my ex had the last court the judge ordered for my son not to be taken out of the country without court approval I would like to come to a understanding with the father because first of all he is very inresponsable nver gives me the child support money on time even when it is through court . He is dosn’t care about my son’s hygiene takes my son for almost 3 days and my son only takes a shower 1 time since his dad took him my son came telling me he doesn’t like the way his dad is with him because he took him to the beach and his dad kept telling him to get out and he didn’t listen so his dad had to come and grab him by the ear and drag him out my son did’nt want to tell me . . his dad is very ignorant i am from costa rica his dad is from salvador ,so sometimes his dads asks him where oyu from and my son says costa rica his dada gets mad so now when his dada ask hime things that are similar questions my son trys to always answer something that will satisfy his dad i think my son is afraid of his reaction hi can not have his on opinion or his dad will get mad if it doesn’t comply with his own? What can i do ? His dad tells him that i am stupid sometimes calls him maricon in spanish which means in english gay(girly). this is offensive took him to the beach and his back was almost purple from a sun burn he got my son said he can take his shirt off and didn’t put him any sunblock . His father says sometimes he tell s hime to do things but my son doesn;t want to so he lets him do what ever he wants that can not be he is disaplining my son the wrong way when my son comes back with me after he has visitation with dad he is changed he crys for everything like he is irritable what can i do?Please help!!!!!

Do I Have A Skin Rash? Cures?

costa rica sun
joline v asked:

I came back from Costa Rica with a dry rash. You cant see it…like its not a noticable rash…unless you feel it. I’ve had it since last Sunday. My face started to feel dry and slightly rough. It feels like after you’ve had a sunburn and your skin is all tight and dry…like its getting ready to peel from the burn. However, I did not get any sun. It was rainy, cold and misty the whole time. I have taken benedryl and apply a special lotion…and it seems to have spread down my neck and chest. I have no clue what I ate or touch to created this reaction. Now there is no redness, no visible bumps/swelling and no itching. Please help.

anyone been to costa caleta, fuerteventura?

costa sun
MISS WONDER asked:

i have been told it is family friendly resort which is not a problem but is it ok for couples? are there any bars you could have a late drink ? going on tuesday last minute booking , just need a holiday, some sun and hope that there will be a little bit of life. have anyone been lately?

why will my pyrethrum not grow?

costa rica sun
neat_eye asked:

I live in a wanna-be organic farm. I have planted several seeds of pyrethrum for insecticide. All web sites say it loves plenty of sun, moist dirt and that’s it. I live in Costa Rica, it’s the rainy season, yet my little plants stop at one or two inches, and for now they are in potting soil. What factor is inhibiting their growth? Thanks.

I was away last week and?

costa sun
asked:

I was on holiday in Costa Del Sol last week. We were bombarded with street sellers offering us hand bags, jewellery, watches, sun glasses etc…all fake I must add. They were all black males and seemed really eager to get a sale.
Im just wondering what the background is of these men?
I mean, they all had the same bags items for sale pretty much.
Are they working in a group?
Where do they get their goods?
Are they forced over to holiday resorts by some big shot to work?
Yep prehaps I am a bit “ignorant” as you put it to this type of life, but the fact I asked and am interested does not make it “ignorance” and more unaware and unkowning of their circumstances. However, you my friend I could call ignorant and rude for commenting as such.

Where to go on holiday with a group of friends?

costa sun
Liam S asked:

We’re all 18/19ish in our first year of univeristy and want to go on a sun, sea, sand kinda holiday with lots of partying. However, we don’t want to go to typical places full of British chavs, e.g. Magaluf, Malia, Costa Del Sol, Zante etc…Somewhere with a bit of culture, nice places to eat and visit etc. Any ideas!?

Advice for Costa Rica from those of you that have been there…?

costa rica sun
wlfrvn3 asked:

To those of you who know Costa Rica, I will be traveling from San Jose to Manuel Antonio by car and was wondering if you could give me any advice. I have never been before, and am planning on spending a lot of my time relaxing and hiking. I already know to drink bottled water and to avoid uncooked foods. I have had the necessary vaccinations and have malaria medication for the mosquitoes (I will be staying in/near the rainforest).

More specifically, I am looking for advice on:
1)Cool places to stop on my drive down (including restroom breaks =) since it’s roughly a 3 hour drive).
2)Sun exposure – I have pretty fair skin right now but tan quickly and easily (I am bringing SPF 15 and SPF 45).
3)Good and reasonably priced places to eat in Manuel Antonio and nearby areas.
4)Local foods I shouldn’t miss.
5)Must see places or activities (i.e., great hikes, waterfalls, caves, etc).
6)Anything else you would highly recommend or think I should be aware of.

Any information is greatly appreciated =)

Thanks!

Tips for baby’s first trip to the beach?

costa rica sun
kittycat_rml asked:

YeY ! so we are going to the beach for the first time with my baby girl who will be one year this nov 27, are there any tips or important things I should not forget? Obviously I should take some sunblock but what other things should I take so this is a stress free trip?

Oh and I live in Costa Rica so the sun is pretty strong and at the beach I’m expecting it to be pretty hot.

Some U.N. Members are Envious, Arrogant Beggars – How can he say this about our friends in the UN?

costa rica sun
Lupe M asked:

Some U.N. Members are Envious, Arrogant Beggars

By Wesley Pruden

Manhattan will be a dangerous place this week for President Obama, where the terminally envious of the world are waiting at the United Nations with envy, arrogance and outstretched begging bowls.

The diplomats representing the envious countries, some of them little more than tribes with flags and an embassy in a rooming house on a side street in Washington, have cooked up an interesting week to blunt the skepticism of a growing number of scientists who are finding the courage to say what they believed all along, even as Ban Ki-moon, the secretary-general of the United Nations, and others insist that time is running out to make the sun change its spots, the tides recede and the weather behave itself.

The London Guardian reports that the U.N. chief and global-warming negotiators “say that unless they can convert world leaders into committed advocates of radical action it will be hard … to avoid the most devastating consequences of climate change.”

If true, that’s good news for the rest of us, because “the most devastating consequences” would be enactment of Al Gore’s nightmare vision, to give the bureaucrats of the world all the taxes they can spend while bankrupting the most productive countries of the West.

The ambassador of the European Union to the United States is in particular need of a shot of Midol and a nice lie down until he feels better. Sen. Harry Reid’s disclosure that the U.S. Senate won’t take up cap-and-trade legislation, the centerpiece of “controlling” the effects of global warming, until next year has thrown the Europeans into a royal pout.

“Sometimes in this country,” says EU Ambassador John Bruton, the greatest deliberative body in the world acts as though it is the only deliberative body in the world, and we should wait until it gets health care passed. The … world cannot wait on the Senate’s timetable.”

Organizers of global-warming week at the U.N. are determined to “imbue leaders with a new sense of purpose,” one of the organizers tells the Guardian. Instead of speeches, leaders of big countries and small countries – some we’ve never heard of – will spend the day communing with each other. Britain, for example, will be paired with Guyana, Tuvalu with the Netherlands, Mongolia with the European Union.

There will be no respite from global warming at dinner, which will be a good hot meal (no Wonder Bread and cold cuts). Leaders of big countries will be regaled with whines by the likes of Bangladesh, Kiribati and Costa Rica. Kiribati is said to be one of the “primary victims” of global warming. Who knew? (U.S. Marines will not so fondly remember Kiribati as Tarawa, one of the fiercest island battles of World War II.)

“We need these leaders to go outside their comfort zones,” explains one of the organizers. “Our sense is that leaders have got a little too cozy and comfortable. They really have to hear from countries that are vulnerable and suffering.”

None of the delegates will hear any dissent from the mantra that the sky is falling, that only socking it to the taxpayers of the West can save us from being boiled in saltwater. But ghost stories told around the campfire, of melting ice caps and polar bears floating past Duluth, are losing their power to terrify. Slowly but inevitably, verifiable facts are dissolving the fondest fantasies of Al Gore’s hired scientists.

A new book by an Australian geologist, Ian Plimer, professor of mining geology at the University of Adelaide, argues that scientific fact has overwhelmed the doomsday scenarios of sinking islands, rising temperatures and collapsing ice shelves. He argues that global warming, which has naturally occurred over the billions of years of the Earth’s life, has often been a cycle of wealth and plenty. The Romans grew lemons, limes and oranges as far north as Hadrian’s Wall.

This naturally causes heartburn in certain labs and faculty lounges.

“They say I **** cows, eat babies and that I know nothing about anything,” he says. But the professor is not susceptible to the usual smear that he is a right-wing religious nut. He’s actually a member of the Humanist Society and wrote an earlier book attacking creationism, making him at one with the atheists, infidels and heretics who wear unbelief as scientific credentials.

American presidents always get grief abroad for looking out for American interests. Life was tough for Gulliver, too. But Lilliputians in every age are merely irritants, like ticks and mosquitos. President Obama should keep that in mind this week in New York.

• Wesley Pruden is editor emeritus of The Washington Times.

Copyright 2009 The Washington Times, LLC

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