Who are the residents of Granada, Nicaragua? Who lives in Granada, Nicaragua?
John-Marc Gallagher - GPS Real Estate
Who lives in Granada, Nicaragua? I do! Along with hundreds of other expats from all over the world. Mostly Americans and Canadians but there are many exceptions.
Like the Frenchman who married an Italian woman and they own and run a great Italian restaurant.
Or the Dutch woman who married a Nicaraguan and they run and operate several local businesses and a small hotel.
Then there is the young American school teacher who fell in love with...
Like the Frenchman who married an Italian woman and they own and run a great Italian restaurant.
Or the Dutch woman who married a Nicaraguan and they run and operate several local businesses and a small hotel.
Then there is the young American school teacher who fell in love with...
Who lives in Granada, Nicaragua? I do! Along with hundreds of other expats from all over the world. Mostly Americans and Canadians but there are many exceptions.
Like the Frenchman who married an Italian woman and they own and run a great Italian restaurant.
Or the Dutch woman who married a Nicaraguan and they run and operate several local businesses and a small hotel.
Then there is the young American school teacher who fell in love with young Nicaraguan veterinarian-- he stayed, they got married and now she teaches at the new international school and he has his own veterinary clinic.
Or the Polish couple who immigrated to Canada (so they are now Canadians) and are currently retired in Granada.
Or the couple from Texas who built hotels, hostels and homes and run them as a retirement income stream.
We have to include the young Canadian couple who, with two children ages 8 and 3, moved to Granada and opened a fantastic French bakery. They are the beginning of a wave of younger folks moving to Granada and starting their lives over again and are being very entrepreneurial about it, too. They aren't alone. Dozens of young couples have moved to Granada recently. One major reason was the new international bilingual school, Sacuanjoche International School that opened its doors in Granada about two years ago.
The mix of residents from various countries and of all ages makes Granada a very interesting place to live and also retire. We still don't have a great Chinese restaurant yet, but I am sure that will change.
My wife and I hail from Texas and California respectively and are not at retirement age yet. So we own and operate several businesses that cater to the expanding influx of visitors turned investors, turned residents, turned into friends and fellow Granadinos!
Like the Frenchman who married an Italian woman and they own and run a great Italian restaurant.
Or the Dutch woman who married a Nicaraguan and they run and operate several local businesses and a small hotel.
Then there is the young American school teacher who fell in love with young Nicaraguan veterinarian-- he stayed, they got married and now she teaches at the new international school and he has his own veterinary clinic.
Or the Polish couple who immigrated to Canada (so they are now Canadians) and are currently retired in Granada.
Or the couple from Texas who built hotels, hostels and homes and run them as a retirement income stream.
We have to include the young Canadian couple who, with two children ages 8 and 3, moved to Granada and opened a fantastic French bakery. They are the beginning of a wave of younger folks moving to Granada and starting their lives over again and are being very entrepreneurial about it, too. They aren't alone. Dozens of young couples have moved to Granada recently. One major reason was the new international bilingual school, Sacuanjoche International School that opened its doors in Granada about two years ago.
The mix of residents from various countries and of all ages makes Granada a very interesting place to live and also retire. We still don't have a great Chinese restaurant yet, but I am sure that will change.
My wife and I hail from Texas and California respectively and are not at retirement age yet. So we own and operate several businesses that cater to the expanding influx of visitors turned investors, turned residents, turned into friends and fellow Granadinos!
Posted February 15, 2014