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Uruguay
Joins Boomers Abroad Expatriate Destinations
Boomers
Abroad, a popular website for baby boomers seeking beautiful, warm and
affordable expatriate retirement locations, has added the South American
country of Uruguay to its metadirectory of Internet resources.
Napa
Valley, California (PRWEB) December 7, 2005 -- BoomersAbroad.com, a
popular website for people seeking an expatriate life south of the United
States, now includes comprehensive information on the country of Uruguay.
Uruguay joins Boomers Abroad's existing sections on Costa Rica, Cuba,
Mexico, Nicaragua and Panama.
As
with all other countries covered by Boomers Abroad, the new Uruguay
section includes information ranging from national drinks, currency
and electrical outlets to maps, books, photographs, carefully selected
articles and Uruguay websites, Internet forums and blogs, and most importantly
for the potential expat, visas, cost of living, doing business, and
buying property.
Uruguay,
a stable, democratic country of 3.4 million people, is located on the
east coast of South America at a latitude equivalent to that of Atlanta,
Georgia or Los Angeles, California. It is blessed with a very moderate
climate. As Boomers Abroad founder Mick Winter says, "It's the
place where Brazilians go to cool off and Argentines go to warm up."
Although
famous in Latin America and Europe as one of the great beach resorts
in the world, Uruguay's jet-setter destination of Punta del Este is
little known in Canada and the United States. That will inevitably change.
Uruguay
offers more than 400 miles of beautiful coastline, most of it untouched.
The interior is pastoral, with streams, rivers and fertile land producing
Uruguay's major product and favorite food: beef.
The
capital Montevideo, with a population of 1.3 million, is often described
as a smaller version of Argentina's Buenos Aires, just a short drive–-and
even shorter flight—away. Many visitors to the country are surprised
that it reflects a European culture rather than the Latin culture they
expect in a Spanish-speaking country. The population is almost all of
European descent, primarily Italian and Spanish.
Although
many Argentines have second homes in Uruguay, Americans and Canadians
have not yet discovered this beautiful, sophisticated country that offers
a first-world standard of living and sophistication at costs in most
areas less than half of those experienced by their North American neighbors.
As
Boomers Abroad founder Winter says: "Argentines and other South
Americans—as well as knowledgeable Europeans––have been buying second
homes in, or moving to, Uruguay for years. It's time Canadians and Americans
caught on."
For
complete information on Uruguay and other Boomers Abroad countries,
visit www.boomersabroad.com.