Time Zone |
Europe/Madrid |
Standard Time GMT / UTC |
UTC+1 |
Daylight Saving Time |
UTC+2 |
Time Zone |
America/Tegucigalpa |
Standard Time GMT / UTC |
UTC-6 |
Daylight Saving Time |
Daylight saving time is not observed in the current region. |
Marinaleda, located in the province of Seville in the Andalusian region of Spain, is a village known worldwide as a "happy town". Under the impetus of Mayor Juan Manuel Sánchez Godoy, the village has implemented collective land ownership, free housing policies and democratic community decision-making, and its residents have achieved economic autonomy through cooperative agriculture, with a very low unemployment rate. The town advocates the concept of "slow life" and focuses on community cohesion, and has been awarded "Europe's Best Rural Tourism Destination" many times. Its unique "happiness model" has attracted tourists from all over the world and has become a living example of equality and community development, and has been described as an "anti-utopian utopia".
Yocón is a municipality in the department of Olancho, Honduras, located in the mountainous interior of the central part of the country, about 180 kilometers from the capital city of Tegucigalpa. The municipality covers an area of about 248 square kilometers, with an average elevation of about 600 meters above sea level, and a tropical highland climate, with an average annual temperature of about 22 ℃.
Yocón has a predominantly mountainous terrain, surrounded by coffee plantations and pine forests, and agriculture is the mainstay of the local economy, producing mainly coffee, corn and beans. According to the National Institute of Statistics of Honduras (INEH), the population of Yocon is about 12,000, and most of the inhabitants are Mestizos (of mixed Spanish and Indian descent), with Spanish as the official language.
The region maintains traditional Catholic festivals such as the patron saint's day. Transportation is mainly based on the highway network, with connections to major cities such as Juticalpa via the CA-6 highway. In recent years, the local government is promoting ecotourism, utilizing mountain waterfalls and forest resources to attract tourists.