Wednesday, April 11, 2012


Spanish Panama School has a new homepage
The new Spanish Panama School Homepage

The biggest & original Spanish institute
Serving Panama City since 2002

click to see our New 2012 eternal summer Spanish Programs




Thursday, November 04, 2010

Happening Panama City
An IMF Report says is going to have
the fastest growth of all Latin America until 2015

www.panama-guide.com/article.php/20101009095812178

There is more in a Newspaper from Trinidad
..... Panama has emerged, according to the Latin Business Index, as the Latin American country with the best business climate going past Chile for the top spot this year.

Information from Panama’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry, through a publication titled Panama Guide revealed that direct foreign investment grew by 26 percent in the first part of this year and companies have invested approximately US$1.1 billion to open new businesses in Panama in just the first six months of 2010.

Such a performance shows up the need to accelerate efforts to complete the Central America- Caricom Free Trade Agreement and this was one of the major points made by economist Jw
ala Rambaran in his summary of the conference, titled “The Way Forward”.

more at : http://www.newsday.co.tt/businessday/0,130280.html

Labels: ,


Monday, November 01, 2010

Canadian Snowbirds come taste the most expensive coffee in the world for FREE !
PARTY INVITATION TO
WELCOME BACK CANADIAN SNOWBIRDS!
As Director of both Spanish Panama and of the Canadian Association of Panama I'd like to invite our Spanish students and former students to a free Canadian Association Snowbird welcome at Pangea Restaurant on Thursday, Nov 18 at 7:00pm.
_
David Young also a Director has arranged that everyone will be treated to a free taste of the most expensive coffee in the world. (As a coffee lover I really want to check this out to see if it is also the best coffee in the world ! Vancouverites in Canada are paying $20 a cup for this stuff so I suspect they're paying this for a reason.)
_
Also, there will be free perfume samples for women, advice on finding a maid in Panama as well as other treats at Pangea this night, so this is a win-win night.

There'll be a "Tombola" (lottery) drawn and tickets are a few dollars each so you can win a yacht tour for EIGHT of your friends.

We just finished Canadian Thanksgiving in which proceeds went to FANLYC, a charity for children with cancer. This event's goal is to help Panama with its blood bank shortage.

Anyone interested can also join the Canadian Association for $20 as the goals for 2011 are pure fun and charity.
See you at Pangea's Nov 11, 7pm. See Newsroompanama(dot)com for more details. Please email us back to RSVP.

Have a good day,
Joseph Ennis, Director, Spanish Panama

Tel: (+507) 6590-2007 or 213-3121 open 8:30am-8:30pm http://www.spanishpanama.com//
Location - In the heart of Panama City, in El Cangrejo (next to the main business district)
Via Argentina, Bdg Americana, #1 (across from Subway Restaurant)
Student accommodation options;
http://www.hostelspanama.com/

Enjoying Panama means Learning Spanish!

from http://www.newsroompanama.com/for-your-diary/1843-welcome-back-snowbirds-to-the-flavor-of-panama-geisha.html

Welcome Back Snowbirds

… to the flavor of Panama Geisha FRIDAY, 29 OCTOBER

The social scene with
Dra Lourdes Quijada
The theme of the November social function organized by the revitalized Canadian Association of Panama(Canap) will be“Welcome Back Snowbirds” …. and what a welcome it’s going to be.

When it starts to look like this , it's time to head south. A free bottle of wine at the event to the first person who correctly identifies the location

After a successful Thanksgiving Dinner raising money for FANLYC (Fundacion Amigos del Nino con Leucemia y Cancer), attracting support from Canadian Corporations, and a host of local businesses, Canap plans to keep the momentum going by helping those who missed out on the earlier festivities get back into the swing, reacquaint themselves with old friends, and meet some new.

There will be a fun and event packed evening at Pangea Restaurant in El Cangrejo on Thursday November 18. All are welcome, and there’s no cover charge.
The night will be full of surprises, starting with a small gift for all ladies attending and Happy Hour prices. There will also be an opportunity to learn about some of the legal twists and turns that an expat can encounter, from property titles to hiring a maid, from Newsroom columnist and lawyer Yasser Williams Arosemena.
A highlight of the evening will be a Geisha coffee tasting event arranged by Frank Tedman MacIntyre of Palo Alto, a coffee growing company founded by his grandfather who left Ontario Canada over 100 years ago, to start growing coffee in Boquete after seeing an advertisement in a Canadian newspaper.
Panama’s Geisha coffee is famed around the planet and for six successive years has led the world in taste tests and, in March of this year, at the annual on line auction. recorded the highest price yet for a pound of beans: over $170. Orders of 50 lbs a time were snapped up by buyers in Japan and Europe.

A cup of Geisha coffee in places like Japan can be as high as $40.
The evening event is open to all Canadians and those from Panama and elsewhere who would like to meet people from the land of snowbirds.
The fun starts at 7 p.m. and there will be a tombola for a four hour yacht cruise for up to 8 people, valued at $500 . It comes courtesy of Canadian owned Panama Sailing School.
There will also be an opportunity to register for the “Blood for Everyone” Campaign.
During the evening there will be a brief outline of some of the future plans of the Association and the new benefits to be introduced. New and existing members can sign up for 2011, and gain some additional benefits and surprises, so don’t get left out.
Snowbird: A person from northern climes, (including northern states in the US) who heads south for the winter when the first hint of frost or the first snowflake arrives.


Wednesday, October 27, 2010


More Happening Stuff in a Happening Panama City
The UAHuntsville/CATHALAC Climate Change and Sustainable Development Summer Program Expo
On Friday, October 15th, the University of Alabama in Huntsville invited the university community including students, professors, local corporations, and special guests, to celebrate the success of a unique study aboard program conducted in the summer of 2010 in partnership with the Water Center for the Humid Tropics of Latin America and the Caribbean (CATHALAC) in Panama. The Program offers graduate and undergraduate students a combination of professional training, hands-on learning, research opportunities, and cultural immersion.

“This was an excellent opportunity for UAHuntsville students to work with leading researchers in Panama and the University,” said Dr. Sundar Christopher, chair of the university's Atmospheric Science Department. “The students conducted interdisciplinary and value added research in climate change and sustainability issues. More importantly, they were able to get out of a classroom setting and conduct ground-up research in environmental issues.”

The presentation came as part of a pilot program among UAHuntsville, the Water Center for the Humid Tropics of Latin America and the Caribbean (CATHALAC) and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama.

this site appears to be permanently down

source :


Monday, September 13, 2010

WHY PANAMA

from : The Desk of Jaime E. Figueroa Navarro http://panamaallinone.com/why_panama.htm

This is an oft-asked question that needs to be addressed regardless of your lifestyle, investment strategy or retirement expectations.

We cannot help but notice while watching the North American evening news the growing number of medications being offered during commercial breaks. Panama is poles apart. We often say that you retire in Panama to live, not to die.

With abundant organic tropical fruits and vegetables, as well as naturally grown cattle, fowl and game, the incidence of first world diseases is noticeably lower here. Never mind that the name Panama in native language means “abundance of fish”. We possess a most delicious seafood variety. Panama prawns are world-famous for their taste and consistency. Local “corvina” or sea bass has been hailed as the best fish in the oceans. Red snapper, lobster and other sea specialties adorn the Panamanian menus. And our coffee has recently been awarded the #1 spot in the world by the Specialty Coffee Association Conference in Charlotte, North Carolina.

With local health facilities linked to top U.S. hospitals such as Johns Hopkins, The Cleveland Clinic and the Harvard University Medical School, medical care in Panama is excellent at a portion of U.S. costs and exemplified by humane treatment and not by commercial exploitation. As a matter of fact, the latest fad is for many people to come to Panama for medical tourism. With the money saved, the entire family enjoys a marvelous vacation!

In the early years of the twentieth century, the United States built the Panama Canal, one of the wonders of the world. Now under Panamanian control, the canal is currently undergoing an unprecedented expansion project, larger than the original construction project, to allow the continued expeditious flow of the growing world commercial fleet.

The U.S. presence in the isthmus extended for almost a century, leading to the creation of a new Panama, the Phoenicians of the modern era, a most unique country in the entire Americas, which finds itself today with the largest merchant fleet in the world, its second most important banking center after Switzerland and home to the second largest free trade zone after Hong Kong, and all this, amazingly, with a population only a trickle over three million citizens!

Additionally, canal traffic and revenues have almost doubled since the American departure at the end of 1999, and the new ports in the entry cities of Panama and Colon have become two of the most modern and efficient in the world.

The former military bases that housed the U.S. Southern Command have been transformed to Ciudad del Saber (City of Knowledge) where universities and educational institutions from all over the world have established a research and education center (for additional information, please review http://www.cdspanama.org/). Other military facilities, such as Amador located at the Pacific entry of the Panama Canal, have been revamped to tourism centers with a plethora of restaurants, boutiques, yacht piers and the new convention center that recently hosted the Miss Universe Pageant. Nearby, the Biodiversity Museum, soon to be Panama City’s hallmark, is being constructed under the watchful eyes of world renowned architect Frank Gehry.

Panama has used the U.S. Dollar as its currency since 1903. Thus, as opposed to other investment alternatives elsewhere, there is no exposure to foreign exchange fluctuations and investments are rock-solid. Its close association with the United States has led to a lengthy history of economic stability and very low interest rates, making this the ideal retirement destination.

Panama is very close to North America, just a bit over a two-hour flight from Miami, and in many cases, closer than other North American destinations, depending on your hometown. Unlike the popular retirement destinations in Florida and the Southeastern coast of the United States, Panama is outside the hurricane belt providing significant savings in expensive hurricane and associated flood insurance and no stress related to these impacting natural disasters.

When compared to the U.S. west coast, it is important to note that Panama has had no major earthquakes. And when matched up to the Midwest, Panama has none of the tornadoes or blizzards common to the area.

A tropical paradise in all sense of the word, Panama offers year-round warm climate in an ecologically superior area where you will find more species of birds than all North America and Europe combined, a bio-diverse rainforest so dense that the Province of Darien is the only stretch of the Inter-American Highway that has not been built, from Chile and Argentina in the South to Canada and Alaska to the North.

Panama’s flora and fauna is nothing but inspiring. Its water, the purest in the world, is now being bottled for the overseas markets. There are all types of animals and vegetation in lush greenery that breathes life. Coiba, the largest island in the Pacific coast of the entire continent, is one of Panama’s national parks where you can catch a glimpse of humpback whales coming from far away for their annual mating rites. And the Pacific’s Pearl Islands have recently served as hosts to several Survivor episodes.

Panama is safe: Safer than post 9/11 U.S. and much safer than its neighbors, Central America and Colombia. Panama City is an international business center with modern amenities that match and in many cases, outperform the amenities of North American and European competitors. It is without doubt, the fastest growing, best-affordable, modern metropolis in the world.

Panama offers world-class deep sea fishing, diving, sailing and surfing. Piñas Bay in Panama’s Pacific holds 170 world fishing records, including sailfish and both black and blue marlin. Panama offers fabulous diving in both the Pacific and Caribbean. Punta Catalina in Veraguas and Playa Venado in the Azuero peninsula are regarded among the top surfing spots in the world. And beyond ocean sports, there are plenty of golf courses and other amenities from ocean to ocean, to cater to your specific desires.

Of extreme importance to those baby boomers researching Panama is the best Retiree Program in the world. By applying for the Pensionado Visa you will be granted permanent residence in Panama, regardless of whether you decide to stay here permanently or visit for a few weeks or months every year. The Pensionado Program entitles you to the following perks:

Above all, Panama is its people. With the highest bilingual population in Latin America, the three million inhabitants of Panama are hospitable and warm. Be prepared to enjoy the veritable meaning of Carnaval during this annual festivity the week prior to the beginning of Lent, as well as the patron saints year-round celebrations in all the cities and towns of Panama. A colorful rainbow encompassing cultures from all corners of the world, Panama is truly the melting pot where there is mutual respect, admiration and curiosity for diversity. Enjoy the casinos, rich night life and myriad of restaurants offering fare from all over the world at a fraction of North American and European costs.

People come to Panama for its quality of life, and affordable standard of living. Come one, come all, come to Panama and become immersed in the passion for the most unique adventure in your lifetime!

Labels: , , , ,


Spanish School in Panama City : list of services

Address:
On the fashionable Via Argentina across from Subway Sandwiches and above Greenhouse Restaurant. In the El Cangrejo section of the business district. 20 international restaurants within 3 blocks.
E-mail: info@spanishpanama.com
Phone: (507) 213-3121. (507) 6624-3302.

Canadian-run Spanish Panama language immersion school with professional international Latin American teachers and just about everything you need to have a smooth start in Panama. We offer flexible scheduling, home stays, and airport pickup. Our courses include Spanish "on-site" practice around our neighborhood as well as in class. "Crash" courses are available for short term visitors

* Your Panama experience will begin with an airport pickup and transfer to your hotel, home stay, the Spanish language center student residence, or one of its efficiency suites.
* You will be taken on a tour of the Panama Canal, Colonial City, the artisan market, and Causeway-Amador for the city view.
* You will meet other Spanish language students and expats like yourself who know the importance of learning the language in order to really understand the local culture.So that you can learn Spanish as it is spoken in Panama and in Latin America ...
* Spanish Panama will offer you the choice of Panama's most professional, bilingual, and friendly Spanish teachers in their new modern facilities.
* There is a social area "city-view" terrace.
* We consider our neighborhood just another one of our "language labs". So sometimes the Spanish classes feature practice in real life situations with the local people at the coffee shops, bakeries, pharmacies, shops, parks, and travel agencies.

Note : Spanish Panama also provides Spanish courses in your business office or residence in Panama City

Superior Spanish instruction includes extras like :
our Spanish computer lab,
free salsa dance classes
and Panamanian cultural activities.

Make Spanish Panama your best choice for learning Spanish the fun way in Central America.



Labels: , , , ,


Friday, September 10, 2010

Spanish teacher training workshop
 in Panama City

- On August 24th, Spanish Panama school held a Spanish teacher training workshop at its Via Argentina location. Trainees were mostly from Panama but also from as far away as Costa Rica.

- Qualified Spanish teachers wishing to paticipate in these workshops may contact the language Center.

www.spanishpanama.com

Labels: , , ,


Thursday, September 09, 2010



The Canadian Thanksgiving Dinner

Sat October 9th, 7pm at the Sheraton Atlapa

Tix $45 > Tel 6619 6890

The Canadian Association of Panama




Canadian Thanksgiving dinner will raise funds for children with Leukemia and Cancer

Sunday, 15 August 2010 13:33
The Canadian Association of Panama (CANAP) will be devoting proceeds from the Annual Thanksgiving Dinner on October 9, to the The Fundacion Amigos del Ninos con Leukemia y Cancer (FANLYC), whose founder, and Executive Director, Leslie Ducruet, was recently named Woman of the Year by Panama's Association of Business Executives.
The dinner will be attended by the Canadian, Ambassador, Patricia Langan Torrell, and the ambassadors of the two founding countries: Richard Austen of the United Kingdom and Hugues Goisbault of France. They will be joined by Leslie Ducruet and representatives of many leading corporations in Panama and many local Canadian residents and their friends.
The Canadian ambassador will perform a ceremonial carving of the turkey, which will become the centre piece of a lavish buffet. There will be music and entertainment, door prizes, a tombola with thousands of dollars of prizes and an auction for a painting donated by renowned Canadian artist Yolanda Van der Kolk, who now lives in Panama.
The dinner will be at the Sheraton (Atlapa) Hotel, Saturday October 9.
More details and tickets at $45, or for a reserved table of ten $450, at: 619-6890; 6678-7568; 679-8299; 6515-3691
From News Room Panama

Labels: , , , ,


This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?