A true VIP lifestyle integrates luxury with adventure, opulence with activity. With this definition in mind we suggest that the Panama VIP take a look at Pearl Island. This development on the third largest island in the Pearl Archipelago should be the illustration in the dictionary entry for “tropical paradise.” The island lies in waters where humpbacks and other whale species come to breed and give birth every year. With over 700 species of fish and over a dozen types of coral the waters around Pearl Island are ideal for scuba diving. The island itself has a hundred and fifty bird species and miscellaneous mammals, amphibians and lizards living in harmony with the natural environment. The development plan for Pearl Island will leave 75% of the island untouched. This integration of luxurious living and a dedication to preserving pristine nature provides the Panama VIP with an authentic private tropical island experience.
A limited number of hotel suites and residences are being developed on the island’s Northern Zancadilla Peninsula as part of the first phase of Pearl Island. These hotel suites and residences are minutes away from Panama City by air and a short boat ride to the island, giving the Panama VIP the best of luxurious seclusion and easy access to the city.
For more information regarding Pearl Island and luxury living in a sustainable natural environment contact VIP Panama today.
There are ordinary places to live in Panama and there are extraordinary locations. Depending upon your preference for sea coasts or mountains, ability to get away from the daily routine, or desire to live the high life in an exciting Latin American capital city Panama offers a number of choices. The following article is about a development in the Chiriqui Highlands. Read on and then contact the Panama Club for the services that will fast track your business, real estate investments, and/or retirement in this tropical paradise.
In looking for the ultimate in luxurious living, upscale amenities, and a setting a of natural beauty, we have looked at seacoast developments and mountain properties. We recommend Valle Escondido in Boquete as an excellent choice for an upscale development with wonderful services in a great setting. There is the luxury of having people wait on you and the luxury of getting to do whatever you want when you want to do it. Valle Escondido fits a bit of both.

Valle Escondido offers spa treatments as well as a golf course for exercise. The surrounding area is replete with nature trails. In fact, people come from all over the world to see what you will have at your doorstep.
Valle Escondido offers meals every day at the resort’s restaurant. Alternatively, you have your own beautiful home for the privacy of an intimate get together.
Valle Escondido’s fitness center has the latest cardiovascular fitness equipment, as well as free weights. There is a racquetball court in case you want to pick up the speed of your workout.

Valle Escondido may be a “hidden valley”, but it is not cut off from the world. Available day activities that you can do from Valle Escondido include white water rafting on class 4 rapids, a very long canopy tree tour, tours of coffee plantations, horseback riding, rental of four wheelers, hiking tours including Volcan Baru and Quetzalas National Parks, a visit to the hot springs at Caldera, a trip to see pre-Columbian petroglyphs, and deep sea fishing 45 minutes away by helicopter on the Caribbean Sea.
This place is a combination of laid-back relaxation and up and at ‘em activity. There are those of us who think that mix is the ideal.
If you are interested in doing business in Panama or doing business with Panama you will want to make the right contacts, hire a competent, English speaking lawyer, and have someone on your side who knows local customs and politics. VIP Panama takes pride in connecting its clients to the right luxury living accommodations, the right business arrangements, and the most discrete entertainment, when required.
Email us at The Panama Club
+507-836-6542 / 43 (Panama) | 1-(305)-503-9957 (USA)
Have you noticed the street that your investment property is being built on at the Punta Pacifica shoreline in Panama City? It’s a dead end street lined on both sides with huge multi-story residential properties…most of them under construction now. Tremendous investments in Panama City’s Pacific Oceanfront real estate are represented on that street. They look good.
Please put on your virtual reality helmet and take a look at the future of that little street…in oh, let’s say – five years. In that moment of vision into the future: it is a two lane blacktop road, lined with lots of very valuable automobiles all sitting in rows, one going each direction with their motors running, unable to move more than about five inches at a time, as all the elegantly dressed people in the back seats seethe. Did you happen to think about ease of access to your multi million dollar property, when you noted that street being represented as a dead end on the initial site plans? Or did you just think it looked good?
Hmm…what else was excluded from your overview? Did your considerations include utility set up for your investors? How about deals to keep the investor residents from standing in lines at the immigration office for a couple of hours a month to keep their visa viable? Do you plan to make introductions to Panamanian bankers, who aren’t willing to talk with just anyone; or reliable attorneys to help them to get settled in Panama legally, tax accountants that know how to answer their foreign resident questions? Is your plan good or does it just look good?
Email us at The Panama Club
+507-836-6542 / 43 (Panama) | 1-(305)-503-9957 (USA)
Let us first say there is no shortage of competent physicians in Panama. Panama itself has two medical schools and two dental schools and please bear in mind that the country only has 2.7 million people.
Panama has specialists available in all the specialties to be found in the USA, Canada or the EU. The differences between these countries and Panama when it comes to seeing a specialist are vast. Let me explain. I went to see an ENT doctor once in a clinic in Panama and he spent almost one full hour with me and I was only charged $25.00. Yes he was able to talk to me in English just fine. In the USA, I would have been charged about $100.00 and would’ve been lucky if he spent 15 minutes with me. Some Panama physicians have studied abroad (particularly the U.S.) until time to serve their internship. Then, if practicing medicine in Panama is important the Panamanian government requires intern to complete their residency in Panama. Some Panama doctors are American Board Certified in fact and some even have American Medical Licenses. It easy to correctly assume, the doctors in Panama are excellent. Unlike in the U.S., where medicine has become ‘Big Money Game’ the doctors in Panama are afforded the luxury of still being able to CARE about their patients rather than their medical malpractice insurance rates.
Cost and Refilling Existing Prescriptions in Panama We have experienced being able to take our empty prescription bottles into the local pharmacy and have them refilled without any questions, hassles or unnecessary and costly trips to the Doctor for a refill. The only exception to this is serious narcotics like heavy pain meds, antibiotics and it seems most other medications can be bought over-the-counter. Are you aware that soon in the U.S., most vitamins and supplements will require a doctor’s prescription? For example, Vitamin C of more than 200 mg will be a prescription item as it is already in the U.K. Our experiences with the ease and availability of refilling prescriptions added great comfort to our lives. My husband’s eye medicine runs around $90/month self insured state side costs and is about 1/3 the cost in panama for same medicine, same manufacturer. Many medications will run about 30% to 40% of what they cost in the USA with no difference in the medicine.
In addition to the already much reduced price as compared to the prescription costs in the U.S., not to be forgotten is the 10% discount given for many services to individuals with Pensionado visas, plus not having to keep paying the Doctor for refills.
General cost of Medical Care in Panama As with most things in Panama you can spend as much or little as you like. The same rule applies to a great extent with physicians.
Most doctors in Panama besides being in private practice also are required to work at the public hospitals (Seguro social). The problem with using the Seguro social system isn’t related to the quality of care but is related to being at the hospital clinic at 6:00 a.m. and waiting most of the day to have your turn for an examination. Then, this is a life style decision. You can choose see a physician in the public hospital for $10-15, or you can choose to make an appointment with him in his private practice $35. With that said, what follows are rates and fees at the private practice level in Panama.
I had a broken tooth that I needed to have repaired. My office visit, x-rays, and composite filling were $89. A root canal would have been around $70 with an additional $25 for the filling.
A surgery in the states that would typically run $40,000 would be around $15,000 in Panama. Remember, no AMA and no U.S. insurance companies. In the U.S. coronary surgery is running in the $50,000-60,000 range. In Panama the same surgery will cost in the $10,000-15,000 range in Panama’s finest hospitals. In addition, the rates of success and complications are comparable to U.S. rates. Most of the elective surgeries will run about 25% to 40% of what they cost in the USA.
An initial visit to a Mental Health Care Professional will run you about $25.00. Doctors are by U.S. standards very inexpensive with $35 being a good average price for office visits. Remember, as stated early our ENT doctor was $25 for an office visit. And hold on to your hat, while we have not checked on the price yet doctors still make house calls. And it’s not unusual for your attending physician to call you at home, even on the weekend to see how you’re progressing – imagine that. Some of you probably can remember Doctor House Calls in the States going back about 40 or 50 years.
Panamaexpertos.com Call us — 561-210-5832
Overall large differences in price such as the one written here exist in all areas of medical and surgical procedures.
SOURCE: panama-travel-bureau.com
If you are interested in doing business in Panama or doing business with Panama you will want to make the right contacts, hire a competent, English speaking lawyer, and have someone on your side who knows local customs and politics. VIP Panama takes pride in connecting its clients to the right luxury living accommodations, the right business arrangements, and the most discrete entertainment, when required.
Email us at The Panama Club
+507-836-6542 / 43 (Panama) | 1-(305)-503-9957 (USA)
The combination of incredible natural beauty, pleasant moderate climates as well as access to international markets and the quality and low cost of the labor force, make Panama an ideal place to live. You can drive from a modern, bustling urban environment to a rain forest teeming with animal and plant life in as little as an hour.
Stats:
Full country name: Republic of Panama Area: 78,000 sq km (30,420 sq mi) Population: 3 million (July 2005) (growth rate 1.3%) Capital city: Panama City (pop 700,000) People: 70% mestizo (mixed Amerindian and white) 14% Amerindian and mixed (West Indian) 10% White 6% Amerindian Language: Spanish English Indian languages Religion: 85% Roman Catholic 10% Protestant 5% Islamic Government: Constitutional republic President: Martin Torrijos GDP: US$8.8 billion GDP per head: US$3200 Annual growth: 4.1% Inflation: 1.1% Exports: $5.699 billion f.o.b. (includes the Colon Free Zone) (2004 est.) Exports – commodities: bananas, shrimp, sugar, coffee, clothing (1999) Exports – partners: US 50.5%, Sweden 6.6%, Spain 5.1%, Netherlands 4.4%, Costa Rica 4.2% (2004) Imports: $7.164 billion f.o.b. (includes the Colon Free Zone) (2004 est.) Imports – commodities: capital goods, foodstuffs, consumer goods, chemicals Imports – partners: US 33.3%, Netherlands Antilles 8.1%, Japan 6%, Costa Rica 5.7%, Mexico 4.6%, Colombia 4.2% (2004)
Panama’s Economy Three-fourths of Panama’s GDP relies on an economy based primarily on well-developed services sector. Services include the Panama Canal, banking, the Colon Free Zone, insurance, container ports, flagship registry, and tourism. Panama’s economy has positive and sustained growth due to economic stability in the last few years, including an inflation level that is among the lowest in the world, and a per capita income that is among the highest in Latin America.
During the last 15 years, income from international tourism in the Republic of Panama has grown 1.5 times faster than the national GDP, and there is no indication that it will decrease. For the year 2005, tourism has contributed between 15% and 20% to the national economy. Panama has 1,398 tourist attractions of which 70%, are natural sites and 30% are cultural and historical sites.
Panamaexpertos.com – Call us — 561-210-5832
SOURCE: panama-travel-bureau.com
If you are interested in doing business in Panama or doing business with Panama you will want to make the right contacts, hire a competent, English speaking lawyer, and have someone on your side who knows local customs and politics. VIP Panama takes pride in connecting its clients to the right luxury living accommodations, the right business arrangements, and the most discrete entertainment, when required.
Email us at The Panama Club
+507-836-6542 / 43 (Panama) | 1-(305)-503-9957 (USA)
There are about 150 banks in Panama and they come in several flavors. One is the offshore bank that can only do business with entities not in Panama. There are banks that can only do business with entities in Panama and then there are banks that can do business with those offshore as well as those entities within Panama. In addition there are Savings and Loans (like a Building Society in UK) which operate like banks except they must invest 70% of their long term deposits in Panama real estate with appropriate controls.
If you are not living here and just walk in to your local bank on the corner I doubt you will get an account opened no matter what country you are from. If you own or rent a home here then things are different. You should have a cell phone number, a regular house phone number, a mailing address (mail does not get delivered to your house in Panama, you need a mail box), a good reason as to what you are doing in Panama like retired, a bank reference from your home country (states how long you have had an account, average balance and that you are in good standing), reference letter from local people who know you, and a reference letter from lawyer or accountant back home. Then add in your passport and drivers license and you should be good to go with a letter explaining your source of funds such as commissions, savings, proceeds from house sale, etc. It would be a real bad idea to try to open an account with a cash deposit instead use a wire transfer from your home town bank. Do not make any substantial cash deposits as this would be a warning flag. Checks from USA will take 3-4 weeks to clear. You are not allowed to write Panama checks outside of the country. They will give you a Visa or MasterCard Debit Card readily with your account. Most banks have Internet Banking.
If you get a residency first before opening the account it will be easier and all these references may not be needed. More on Visas, Residency and Citizenship can be found here.
Privacy and Banking in Panama Panama has serious bank secrecy laws. Your money here is safe from lawyers and others who wish to abusively take it away from you. Collecting a civil debt from another country in Panama is close to impossible, don’t plan on it happening. A government trying to get at your money has numerous difficulties. First it must be a national government. Next it has to involve a criminal case on file in their court system. The equivalent of their Justice Department contacts the State department and through their consulate in Panama papers are filed according to the MLAT (Mutual legal Assistance Treaty) by their consulate in Panama with the Panama Government. The papers are reviewed and questions in return are filed along with requests for more information. Thus the dance begins and can last years. If the request is lawful the information will eventually be supplied. Sometimes the country which the bank is located in may themselves get interested thinking a crime may have been committed in their country let us say, and they may seize the records and keep them for a long time while they do their investigation.
Your money here is safe from lawyers and others who wish to abusively take it away from you. The MLAT is a process that the USA would like to play more of but other countries are generally sick and tired of it and do not like it at all. If you are a criminal and they are after you they will eventually have the bank records and even get the money seized. A fun trick the USA plays is once they find out how much money their target has and can justify to their courts confiscating it, they then confiscate this amount from the offshore banks correspondent bank in the USA telling the bank to take the money back from so and so depositor who was their target. If in the interim from the time the USA has the bank records and made the seizure against the correspondents bank account the depositor took all or part of his money out of the bank and the USA took the full amount away, the bank would be in the position of trying to get the USA to return the money which probably would never happen or if so years later after a court battle that would cost a fortune. So now many people have taken to keeping their funds in Euros or non dollar denominated accounts so the USA can’t possibly say the money on deposit in America is theirs in whole or part. With few exceptions Panama Banks only have dollar accounts.
In Summary There are banks and then there are banks in Panama. Some are better than others. There is no FDIC or FSLIC in Panama. Make sure you get recommended to a bank before you open a bank account in Panama, don’t just pick one. So if you are privacy conscious I would avoid the Canadian and British Banks.
Panamaexpertos.com Call us — 561-210-5832
SOURCE: panama-travel-bureau.com
If you are interested in doing business in Panama or doing business with Panama you will want to make the right contacts, hire a competent, English speaking lawyer, and have someone on your side who knows local customs and politics. VIP Panama takes pride in connecting its clients to the right luxury living accommodations, the right business arrangements, and the most discrete entertainment, when required.
Email us at The Panama Club
+507-836-6542 / 43 (Panama) | 1-(305)-503-9957 (USA)
This is a new concept but one that is gaining in popularity. This is for the nautically inclined only with boating skills that are developed. Basically you live your present country and become a citizen of the world traveling perpetually on your yacht. While all this sounds great you still need to have papers and documents of registration and passports to avoid constant hassles with authorities wherever you go. So what can be done is as follows:
You form an anonymous Panama SA company (bearer shares). This company then buys a yacht for at least $150,000. Now you need to hire three Panamanians for at least $253.00 a month each. So you have deckhands, crew, cook etc. This would let you get residency in Panama quickly and after three years you could apply for citizenship and get a Panama passport. You could also do a version of this using the small investor visa to do it with a $40,000 investment and three employees on your fishing or touring boat. You can get a Panama cell phone, mail box, bank account, visa debit card, atm card and you can travel the world. For most this isn’t feasible but it is fun to dream anyway.
Investor Visa (Inversionista) Designed for those who wish to establish a business in Panama (note, though, that some retail businesses and some professions are reserved to Panamanians). There must be a minimum investment of $150,000 and minimum of three, permanent Panamanian employees hired. It is granted provisionally for one year and after renewal is granted permanently with the right to be issued a cedula identity card. Five years after obtaining the permanent visa, holders will be eligible to apply for Panamanian nationality.
Small Business Investor Visa (Inversionista de Pequeña Empresa) Designed for those who wish to establish a small business in Panama (note that retail businesses and some professions are reserved to Panamanians). There must be a minimum investment of $40,000 and minimum of three permanent Panamanian employees hired. It is granted provisionally for one year, and needs to be renewed three more times before it is granted permanently with the right to a cedula. Five years after obtaining the permanent visa, holders will be eligible to obtain Panamanian nationality.
If you’d like to know more about this go to. www.panamalaw.org
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Ronald_Edwards
SOURCE: panama-travel-bureau.com
If you are interested in doing business in Panama or doing business with Panama you will want to make the right contacts, hire a competent, English speaking lawyer, and have someone on your side who knows local customs and politics. VIP Panama takes pride in connecting its clients to the right luxury living accommodations, the right business arrangements, and the most discrete entertainment, when required.
Email us at The Panama Club
+507-836-6542 / 43 (Panama) | 1-(305)-503-9957 (USA)
[This is a companion piece to the article entitled .Panama Montecristi Fino Hats .where I discuss the pros and cons of purchasing a fine Panama hat in an unblocked state.]
If you have ever walked into one of those stores with big signs reading Persian Rugs: 50% to 75% Off and tried to get a handle on the value of these fine works of art and products resulting from months of labor by great artisans where knots per square inch and quality of the material were touted as evidence of great value and where the upshot was that this $5,000 rug could be yours for $1,800 (followed by make me an offer), then you can understand the potential discomfort in purchasing a Panama hat. Before getting into some of the particulars, I will begin with my conclusion
If you dont know Panama hats, know your Panama hat seller. Said another way Flim-flam is too easy and runs amok with these hats so be very careful. Now, here are some things to consider when shopping for a Panama hat:
1. A ,Panama, hat is a reference to the straw material that a hat is made from. It is neither a style nor a quality, but rather a hat – in any style and of any quality – made from the plant carludovica palmata, which grows in the coastal lowlands of western South America (not in Panama). Therefore, wide ranges of hat styles in a never-ending range of qualities are rightly sold as Panama hats. The rub is that a fair price for a Panama hat can be $5 or $5,000.
2. A knowing shopper usually begins by examining the fineness of the weave. These hats are hand woven, primarily in Ecuador, and the straw itself can continually be made thinner, or finer, by dividing the strand of straw in half. Every time the straw width is halved (via fingernail), the amount of work required to weave the hat is multiplied four times. Obviously – on this basis alone – a fair price for this handiwork can be dramatically different from one hat to another.
3. No matter the fineness of the straw, the work of the weaver needs examination. Look for tightly woven consistency in the straw the fewer the gaps, holes, or bumps, the better. Look for evenness in the weave. The rows should be straight and resemble, what you may know from woolen or cotton fabrics, a small herringbone or diamond pattern.
4. The color of the hat, per se, does not have a large bearing on the price, however there are some important things to consider. In the North American market, one mostly finds Panama either in natural straw or bleached white. (Colored straws are achievable via dying and these hats do turn up in stores.) Many people like the white hats, but the buyer should know that the bleaching process weakens the hat and it will likely not last a long as the unbleached natural straw. In natural straw hats, the more consistent the color is throughout the hat, the better. But remember that this is a natural material and differences in hue (sometimes slightly more gray or more reddish) are to be expected. Each hat is unique.
5. Not all hats advertised as Panama hats are in fact Panama hats. The phrase, Panama hats, is not regulated. Materials from all over the world, some of which closely resemble carludovica palmata, are sold as Panama hats. Some of these materials are quite nice and the hats are fairly priced. Others are not. Buyers beware.
Without the experience of comparing one hat to another, much of what is discussed above will have limited service to the novice Panama shopper. When someone comes into one of our Village Hat Shops and wants a quick education with regard to these hats, we simply line up a half-dozen or so hats in various qualities and much of what is discussed above becomes readily apparent. Because, however, each hat is hand woven and unique, quality is therefore always different from one hat to the next. This exercise in relativity is not the last word on value and fair price. Most people need to see many hats and know this fluctuating market well before feeling comfortable with a purchase that may run hundreds, or even thousands, of dollars.Therefore – if you dont know Panama hats, know your Panama hat seller.Fred Belinskywww.VillageHatShop.comwww.Panamas.comAdditional Reading:The Panama Hat Trail by Tom Miller. Adventure Press, National Geographic.Panama: A Legendary Hat by Martine Buchet. Photographs by Laziz Hamani. Editions AssoulineEl Sombrero De Paja Toquilla: Historia y Economia by Miguel Ernesto Dominguez. Banco Central Del Ecuador.Tejiendo la Vida: Las artesanias de la paja toquilla en el Ecuador by Maria Leonor Aguilar de Tamariz. Centro Interamericano de Artesanias y Arrtes Populares, CIDAP.Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Fred_Belinsky
Email us at The Panama Club
+507-836-6542 / 43 (Panama) | 1-(305)-503-9957 (USA)
They Eat What? Latin America’s Most Exotic Foods – Part 1By Larry M. Lynch
They’re horrid, ghastly, gross, unthinkable, gut-wrenching, wonderful and delicious. These are but a few of the adjectives used to describe commonly eaten fare south of the border from Mexico to Peru. The expression, One man’s meat is another man’s poison has never seen more fruition than evidenced in these exotic foods found throughout Latin America. Just feast your eyes on these taste-tempting treats.
Iguana Starting off our list is a common delicacy from the Pacific Coast and Caribbean. Although protected in many countries, these green lizards, which can grow to more than 3 feet in length, are a prized stable in Aruba, Bonaire, Panama and Colombia. The eggs are also cooked and eaten even though they’re often taken illegally. A sizeable black market for them exists in Cartagena, on the Caribbean coast of Colombia. They’re not cheap, but they are good.
Armadillo From Texas to Ecuador, these nine-banded creatures have been coveted for decades. Their numbers are now greatly diminished due to years of heavy hunting; they?re still considered a delightful treat when they can be found. Usually cooked in stews to help tenderize their thick, dense meat, almost everyone who has eaten Armadillo really likes them. You?ve got to be fast to catch them though. They can burrow into the soil at alarming speeds.
Ants Technically known as Hormigas Culonas, these swollen abdomen ant species are a highly-prized food commodity in Colombia and Mexico. They’re gathered from seemingly innocuous places like cemeteries, parks and untended pastures, then roasted or fried until crisp. Only the enlarged abdomen is consumed, often with cheese or honey as an aperitif. Sold and exported by the pound, they?ve quickly become an international favorite among the insect-eating crowd. To b honest, I like them myself.
Piranha Despite numerous movies to the contrary, they don’t always attack without mercy. Children in Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Guyana and Peru swim in Piranha-infested waters all the time without injury. Women are also known to do the family laundry in streams and pools teeming with razor-toothed schools of them. Many of the 35 known varies of Piranha, including the Cachama family, are not only edible, but delicious. Piranha head soup is used as a form of jungle Viagra. Tales abound of elderly Indian men with more than a dozen children and multiple wives.
Well if I didn’t get to you here in part one with treats from Colombia, Brazil and Mexico you’re gonna just love what you’ll get in part two of this three-part series. We’re going to travel into the jungles of Colombia and up into the high Andes mountain range in Ecuador to introduce you to some Eye-opening, high-flying specialties that’ll make partly-cooked greasy pork liver seem like Haute Cuisine?.
See you in part two of ?They Eat What! Latin America’s Most Exotic Foods?.
Bon Appetit!Prof. Larry M. Lynch is an expert author and photographer offering Web Content Writing Services for top-quality articles on: Education, Language learning, Salt and Fresh water fishing, exotic foods, South American travel and culture, Ethnic issues ? Blacks, Latinos, Indian native tribes, Health, Internet business resources and more ? His work has appeared in Transitions Abroad, South American Explorer, Escape From America, Mexico News, Brazil magazine and hundreds of sites online. For fr*e*e sample articles and available web content e-mail: lynchlarrym@gmail.comArticle Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Larry_M._Lynch
Email us at The Panama Club
+507-836-6542 / 43 (Panama) | 1-(305)-503-9957 (USA)
Step One
Step Two
Tips & Warnings
- In many areas of Panama, the sidewalks are in disrepair. If planning to travel by foot, be sure the neighborhood you’re staying in has maintained sidewalks, or the money you save by walking will quickly become the money you spend on taxis.
- Research beachfront resorts closely. Due to polluted bodies of water throughout Panama, many beaches are not open for public swimming.
- As in any large city, the risk of crime is present. Use a taxi to get around at night.
This article from eHow is useful but not really necessary. You do not need to re-invent the wheel. With the help of a well connected service in Panama you can cut out the unnecessary steps toward a luxurious and interesting life in this exciting Latin American capital city.
Email us at The Panama Club
+507-836-6542 / 43 (Panama) | 1-(305)-503-9957 (USA)





