Cerro Punta is a small city in the western highlands of Panama, in the province of Chiriquí. Cerro Punta’s altitude is 6,500 feet (2,000 metres) above sea level just south of the Continental Divide. Many of the inhabitants of the village and the surrounding areas are indigenous Native Americans. The climate, like the rest of Panama, is tropical with a short dry season and rainy season that extends about 9 10 months of the year. Night time temperatures are often cool due to Cerro Punta’s relatively high elevation. During the 1970s much of the land was used for cultivating strawberries; households also maintained small mixed-vegetable gardens. The village can be reached by traveling north from the Pan-American highway.
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