Peg Fairbairn and April Hess Retire To Panama’s Veraguas Coast

“I’ve Figured It Out… We’re Going To Retire
To Another Country”

Here in Panama, we’re still recovering from last week’s Live and Invest in Panama Conference. As always, it was a whirlwind week for everyone involved—both the participants and those of us that presented.

For this week’s issue, I thought I would share Live and Invest Overseas Publisher Kathleen Peddicord’s report on my own “Why Panama?” presentation.

Enjoy!

Peg Fairbairn
Panama Insider

“I was a schoolteacher for 30 years. For 20 of those years, I taught hormonally stressed adolescents. When I retired in 2008, I was ready for an adventure.”

So began Peg Fairbairn, addressing the group in the room for last week’s Live and Invest in Panama Conference in Panama City.

“The good news was that Peg had a teacher’s pension to retire on. I’d worked my whole life, too, but I had no pension. That meant the two of us would be retiring on the income of a single teacher’s pension,” continued Peg’s partner April Hess.

Endless views from the Los Islotes property

“Then we went to a neighborhood party,” April continued, “and a friend had just gotten back from Uruguay. He was talking about a waterfront community there for expats.

“I asked him: What’s an expat? I’d never heard the word before.

“The next day, Peg got on the computer and started researching the idea…”

“I found an article by a lady called Kathleen Peddicord,” Peg picked up the story, “and I saw an ad for her book, ‘How To Retire Overseas.’

“Twenty minutes later, I was in line in Barnes and Noble buying the book.

“When April came home from work that day, I told her, ‘I’ve figured it out. We’re going to retire to another country.’

“I showed her the book and told her it was the answer for us.”

“The trouble,” April continued, “was that we had no idea where to go. We knew we needed someplace cheap because we had only the small, fixed income. And we needed someplace safe. Safety was critical for us. We were two women thinking about making this move on our own. We also wanted good health care and easy access to the States for visits with family.

“We’d been to Costa Rica. In our research, Panama and Uruguay got our attention. We decided Uruguay was too far and Costa Rica was too expensive. So we focused on Panama.”

“April was still working, but I was retired, so I was spending all day every day researching Panama,” Peg explained. “I mean, I was on this!

“Online I stumbled onto two development projects in Pedasí, Panama. I contacted both developers and started conversations. One of them had me convinced after one day that if I didn’t buy right then, right away, the opportunity would be gone.

“So that night when April got home, I said, ‘OK, we’re buying this lot. And we need to move quickly. But don’t worry. I got this. We just need to send 20% of the money tomorrow…

“April looked at me as though I’d lost my mind.

“‘We’re not buying anything until we’ve seen it first!’ she told me.

“The next day, April went to work, and I was back online. This time I found the Live and Invest Overseas website and a link to a project in another part of Panama called Los Islotes. The developer, Lief Simon, was offering an excursion tour.

“Well, April told me we should go see for ourselves, I thought… and so I signed us up.”

“That night when I walked through the door,” April jumped in, “Peg told me she’d booked us a trip to Panama in two weeks. Fine, I said, but we’re leaving the checkbook at home.”

“That was February 2011,” Peg continued. “We traveled with Lief and a group of six other people out to see the property at Los Islotes. It was jungle. There was no road. We hiked in with machetes in hand. I was like, where’s the beach house? These were very early days. There was nothing there yet. But we loved it. It was amazingly beautiful. We were sold.

“We didn’t have our checkbook, but we did have PayPal. We bought lot 68 on the spot. We were moving to Panama.”

“Then we went back home,” April continued, “and we told our families what we’d done. They all thought we’d lost our minds. The enormity of what we’d set in motion began to settle in.

“We’d both lived in the United States our whole lives, but neither of us had seen more than a handful of states. Now we were leaving.

“So I had a great idea,” April told the group. “We’d take a year to tour our home country before moving to a new one. We bought a fifth-wheel RV and drove from coast to coast, seeing almost every state.”

“Now, neither of us had ever driven anything like this in our lives,” Peg added, flipping her slideshow to a picture of the RV they’d bought. “But the salesman told us we could do it.

“What a trip that was. We had three flat tires and got rammed and then stranded in Massachusetts for six weeks. One morning we woke up and a tire was gone. We still don’t know where it went.

“We didn’t plan it this way, but that trip was great preparation for our move to Panama in every possible way. We learned how to travel, how to keep in touch, how to keep up with mail, how to live in a small space with only bare necessities, and how to rely on ourselves for everything. We learned how to problem-solve on the fly. We had no choice.

“And that’s what life is like here in Panama. You just have to figure it out.

“After that year on the road in the States, we were ready. We began getting all our documents together and facing the practical logistics of a move like this. How would we get ourselves, our stuff, our two dogs, and our two cats to Panama? How much luggage should we plan for? What should we bring with us?”

“We made a deal that we’d each bring four suitcases,” April said. “Peg packed all her knives and kitchen things. I packed high heels and winter clothes.”

“She’s used my stuff way more than I’ve used her stuff,” Peg added.

“Our pets were the biggest problem,” April continued. “Finally, we thought we had everything figured out, but then we found out that the cage for one of the dogs was too big for the plane and that the cats had to go cargo, not in the cabin. Then we found out that, if a plane is too full, they can bump the animals, even at the last minute, no notice. In the end, we hired a pet relocation company and were glad we did.

“Finally, we were all in Panama.”

“We decided to begin our new lives with some language study,” Peg explained. “We found a Spanish immersion program in Pedasí, so that’s where we went first.

“Pedasí is a nice little town on the east coast of Panama’s Azuero Peninsula. We found a cute local house that we rented for US$600/month. This was very basic living. No hot water, no oven, no washing machine, no closets, no TV…

“It was simple and basic, but we loved it. We had a great time.

“After a few months in Pedasí learning Spanish, we were ready to move closer to Los Islotes, where we planned to build our house. We moved first to Santa Fé, which is a beautiful mountain town in Veraguas, then, about a year ago, we moved to Palo Seco, which is where you’ll find us until our house is finished.

“Here’s what our house will look like,” Peg told the group, flipping to a drawing of the façade of the Spanish-colonial-style home she and April are building at Los Islotes.

“We broke ground last year,” Peg said, “and we couldn’t be more excited.

“We never could have predicted that this new life in Panama would be our retirement. Years ago, we never would have imagined this. It’s been a great big incredible adventure, and we’re really only just getting started…”

Kathleen Peddicord