Feb.10,2001Dear Gary,We've used canned butter that we bought in the Pacific northwest - Oregon or Washington state, I can't remember which, and it was excellent. It seems to keep indefinitely in the tin. Seems to me we also found it in Mexico, Costa Rica, Panama and Venezuela. Couldn't find it in the countries in between. All of the locally made varieties were very good as well. Once you open the can it has the life span of regular butter, which in a hot country without refridgeration is a few days.I would suggest that you simply phone the local grocery wholesalers in your area and find out if any of them are selling canned butter to the local stores and if so which ones.In the alternative you can make your own salted butter:(1) clean out a canning jar with boiling water and wipe dry . The usual recommendation is to boil the jars and lids for 20 minutes. The problem is that hot jars melt butter and the milk solids seperate out.(2) Let cool by turning them upside down on a clean paper towel. This limits the entry of air born bacteria. (3) When the jar has cooled fill it with room temperature butter to about 1/4 inch from the top and fill the remaining space with salt and then put the lids on tight. Works great, requires no refridgeration, preserves the buttter, and doesn't ruin the taste. Just scrape the salt off when your ready to use it. I hope this helps.Fair winds,Brian Pickton of BeneteauOwners.netAboard The Legend, Rodney Bay, St. Lucia