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Caribbean and Atlantic Uncategorized

Why You Should Go to the Bahamas Right Now

I sat at the edge of the little fishing boat, peering down into the clear Bahamian sea to spot my husband. Under the water, I could make out his shape as he took careful aim with his Hawaiian sling. A moment later, he rose to the surface of the water to show off the fish he had captured with the long, sharp spear. I snapped a photo, and he disappeared again under the water. A warm sea breeze blew playfully through the boat, cooling the warm air. It was the perfect day for being on the water at Paradise Cove in Grand Bahama Island. I turned to the boat driver to make conversation. 

“So,” I asked, “Do you ever spearfish?” 

“Me?” He barked a short laugh, “No, there are too many sharks for me.”

Nervously, I peered into the water again, hoping I wouldn’t see sharks encircling my husband as he fished. Of course, there were none to be seen. The ocean was calm, and all that was visible was the watery outline of the colorful reef below and a few bright flashes as tropical fish darted to and fro. 

Spearfishing in the Bahamas
Photo: Breana Johnson

A Sad Reality

What do you picture when you think of the Bahamas? Idyllic beaches? Sprawling resorts? Sun-drenched ocean? How about flattened, flooded buildings?

Sadly, this last description is what characterizes much of the Bahamas right now, as the archipelago nation recovers from Hurricane Dorian. The beaches are still there, but they’ve been damaged. Resorts have flooded. And yet, this is the best time to visit the Bahamas. Don’t believe me? Read on. 

What the Media Has to Say

As often happens during disasters, media publications around the globe covered the Bahamas intensely during and immediately after Hurricane Dorian. You probably read about the damage, the horrifying death count, the problems faced by evacuees. But how much have you heard in the last several weeks?

Unless you’ve been searching for information, you probably haven’t heard anything about the Bahamas. However, the archipelago is still suffering and is working hard to pull in the resources they need to rebuild. 

Bahamas photo by Breana Johnson
Photo: Breana Johnson

Still so Much Need

The people my husband and I fished with during our trip to the Bahamas are having a hard time. We found the GoFundMe page for Paradise Cove’s cleanup efforts, and it was sad to see how much damage the place has suffered. That destruction translates to a lack of employment, financial distress, and water-damaged homes, as well. 

Two years ago, Hurricane Irma careened through the Caribbean, wreaking havoc on several islands. At the time, it had only been five months since I had lived on the island of Sint Maarten, and the catastrophic damage suffered by my friends there was incredibly distressing. Parts of the island were without electricity for several months. Many people lived with tarps instead of roofs for the better part of a year. Today, over two years later, some people are still homeless after losing everything in the hurricane, and nearly everyone is dealing with financial stress. Sadly, this is what the Bahamas has to look forward to. 

The reality is that there is a lot of need in the wake of hurricanes — and not just during the few weeks when fundraisers are trending and media attention is high. It can be easy to forget that the Bahamas is not just a tourist destination. It’s a community of people who need homes and jobs, education for their children, grocery stores, and means to get to them. Even when the tourism industry has repaired itself, it will take months (if not years) for the Bahamas to begin to operate as normal again. In the meantime, Bahamians need support. And fortunately for you and me, it’s not hard to offer precisely what they need. 

bahamas-view under a palm

How You Can Help

There are several ways you can help the Bahamas recover from Hurricane Dorian. The easiest way, of course, is to donate. There are many reputable organizations, such as UNICEF, currently working in the Bahamas. I donated to the people my husband and I met while spearfishing at Paradise Cove; if you have visited the Bahamas and know someone personally, why not reach out and see how you can help?

Another wonderful way to help people directly is to offer your home to asylees. For a while, Airbnb was helping volunteer hosts and hurricane victims connect, but their program for Hurricane Dorian has ended. However, if you live in the Southeastern United States, you can reach out to your local homeless shelter to see if there is any way you can be of assistance to people who are still displaced by the hurricane. 

Travel lovers, you can also go to the Bahamas and help by offering your services. Medical and mental health professionals are always in need after such traumatic events, and there are many ways people with other skill sets can lend a hand. Contact an organization like Project Hope or Samaritan’s Purse to get involved.  

Finally, the top thing you can do for the Bahamas is to simply go vacation there. Earlier in this post, I mentioned that NOW is the best time to visit the Bahamas. Here’s why. 

The Bahamas, like many tropical destinations, has a tourism-based economy. When natural disasters hit, they have the long-term effect of hurting the tourism industry. After all, it’s hard to rebuild, and even harder to overcome the reputation as a “damaged” destination. If you go to the Bahamas this year, spend your money, and take lots of photos for your social media accounts, you’ll not only boost the economy, but you’ll also have a part in combatting the misconception that the Bahamas aren’t worth visiting anymore.

Right now, the world has an image of the Bahamas that looks like flattened palm trees and smashed beach houses. That’s what sells news stories, after all. But who wants to visit that? If you go and take lots of nice photos of cleaned-up beaches and the wonderful Airbnb you stayed in, you’ll help vacationers see that the Bahamas is still a great place to go. The more people who visit, the more money locals will have to rebuild. The more they rebuild, the better it will get, and the more tourists will visit. But someone needs to start the cycle. Why not be that someone?

Lighthouse with Atlantis in the background taken in the Bahamas

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Caribbean and Atlantic Conservation Environment and Nature Uncategorized

Eco-tourism in Barbados

Life in the modern world is often a high stress and fast paced wild ride and sometimes, we all just want to get away from it all and go to some tropical island and get there fast and take it slow. When that need takes hold of you, there is no better place to find yourself than in the natural splendor of the island nation of Barbados in the Lesser Antilles. Located in the Atlantic Ocean, just north of South America and east of the Caribbean Sea, this tropical island is host to a number of beautiful natural sites that have made it one of the leading destinations for eco tourism in the Caribbean.

Harrison's cave.
Photo:  Berit Walkin

Harrison’s Cave One of the most striking natural features of Barbados is the spectacular Harrison’s Cave. This cave system is a testament to the amazing wonders of geology. Discovered in the 1700’s, Harrison’s Cave was left mostly alone until 1970 when Barbados commissioned it to be surveyed and mapped. In 1974 the cave began to be developed to serve as a beacon for tourism to Barbados. Visitors are driven through the site inside an electric tram down to the lowest point of the cave. Throughout the caves are a host of stalactites and stalagmites, formed over the millennia that in some places have reached such size that they have joined together to form majestic pillars. Streams of water cascade in waterfalls into deep pools colored emerald by the limestone. At the bottom of the cave, visitors exit the tram to walk alongside a large waterfall that plummets deep below. Harrison’s Cave is a must see for anyone seeking a casual yet spectacular spelunking experience.

Welchman Hall Gully If what you are looking for is a tropical jungle getaway, then look no further than Welchman Hall Gully. Formed on the top of collapsed sections of Harrison’s Cave, this spectacular gully was once a plantation owned by the Welshman General William Asygell Williams and is believed to be the birthplace of the grapefruit. The gully is a mixture of tropical forest and orchard that stretches along for ¾ of a mile and maintains the feeling of pre-colonial Barbados. Throughout the walk, comingled with the exotic plants are rock outcroppings still adorned by stalagmites and stalactites that have survived the threat of rain erosion. The development of Barbados and demands of sugar plantations destroyed most of the native plant life on the island and the gully is the sole location where much of the native flora was able to survive. The gully is also the home to two troops of green monkeys which can be seen throughout your walk and have two regular feeding times in which you can watch and take pictures.

The Peacock Flower is the pride of Barbados.

Flower Forest The Flower Forest Botanical Garden is a 53-acre sprawling attraction that is host to a wide plethora of tropical flora. Nestled in the center of the St. Joseph region, paths meander and crisscross through 7 acres of purely wild gardens and up through maintained tropical landscapes, with all sorts of flowers and greenery such as heliconias or bird of paradise. Green monkeys often spend their time in the Flower Forest and have become quite accustomed to the comings and goings of tourists. Your stroll will be enriched by the many varieties of tropical birds that serenade travelers with their beautiful songs. Along the path are many benches and people are encouraged to sit and enjoy the sights, or even stray from the path to get closer a closer look. The paths are all wheelchair accessible and guided tours of the Forest last about forty-five minutes.

Barbados Blue Once you have finished your submarine guided tour, you can make your way to Barbados Blue to take in the sights up close and personal through scuba diving and snorkeling. Located at the Hilton Hotel, Barbados Blue offers gear and classes for anyone interested in heading down under the sea through their own power. Their classes will teach you all the basics of scuba diving and snorkeling and will get you on your first dive the very first day. Their trained experts can take you to a series of dive sites and can support anyone healthy enough to dive above the age of 10. With a climate that allows for diving 365 days a year, it is certainly a must for any rounded Barbados experience. If you are inclined to visit the island, don’t be too scared of the price tag, as these days there are plenty of fast holiday loans available. With such a wide plethora of amazing sights and experiences that can be enjoyed by the whole family, it is an exciting and rejuvenating destination for any vacation. Whether swimming with sea turtles and exploring sunken ships, or delving deep into the earth and cavorting with mischievous monkeys, if your journey takes you to this tropical paradise, it will be certain to make memories that will never be forgotten.

 

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Caribbean and Atlantic Culinary Travel Culture and Heritage Uncategorized

Aruba: One Happy Island

Located some nineteen miles north of Venezuela, Aruba surprises the imagination and tantalizes the senses of the most intrepid traveler.  A warm Arubian smile and “Bon Bini” welcomes one and all to one of the most multicultural and ecologically diverse seventy-seven square miles anywhere on the planet.  As the “A” commonwealth in the “ABC” chain of

View from our room at the Marriott Stellaris.  Photo:  Tonya Fitzpatrick

Dutch-claimed islands comprising the Netherlands Antilles (the others being Bonaire and Curacao), Aruba lives up to its claim as “One Happy Island.”  The first-time visitor to Aruba will discover white-sand beaches, rugged terrain, windswept brush-covered cactus trees and a rocky, New England-like coastline, all harmoniously co-existing, making Aruba unique among Caribbean Islands.   Just five hours away from most East Coast gateways and average year-round temperatures of 80 degrees Fahrenheit, anytime is a good time to visit Aruba.  Aruba’s high season runs December through August, and hurricanes are rare in the low season because of its westerly Caribbean location which makes the island a convenient port-of-call for many cruise lines.

The beautiful white sand and palm tress of Palm Beach welcome thousands of visitors annually to this quintessential Caribbean beach.  Home to major hotels, Palm Beach offers sun, fun and water sports for the beach enthusiast.  Whether it’s a day spent beneath a seaside palapa umbrella, an evening enjoying a romantic candlelight dinner beneath the stars or the nightlife and excitement of casino gaming, Palm Beach offers something for everyone.   Just a short ride from Palm Beach, Aruba’s capital, Oranjestad, provides an array of shopping, dining, and entertainment options.  Let’s Go Latin!, a high-energy cabaret style show featuring the best in Latin music, dance and awe-inspiring acrobats, packs audiences nightly at the Crystal Theater, part of the chic Renaissance Resort hotel-casino and shopping complex.  For a memorable underwater experience, the Atlantis Submarine beckons after a high speed boat ride from dockside in downtown Oranjestad to the submarine launch site.  From there, a 90 minute adventure to the reefs and shipwrecks awaits as Atlantis reaches depths of 150 feet below the sea.

The eclectic mix of natural beauty and imposing man-made structures creates some of the most stunning sites to be found in the Caribbean.  The aptly-named Baby Beach, at Aruba’s southern tip, has shallow and calm waters inviting to big and little kids.  Not more than five feet in depth, Baby Beach’s protective breakwater and reefs offer excellent aquatic sightseeing.  In nearby San Nicolas, the towering Valero Energy’s refinery provides a stunning backdrop to the white sands of Baby Beach.  Minutes north of Baby Beach, Arikok National Park offers a myriad of recreational and nature viewing opportunities.  Arikok has several noteworthy caves, including Guadirikiri and Fontein Caves.   Along the rugged eastern windward coast resides a

A jeep tour will likely take you to visit the lighthouse on Aruba.  Photo:  Tonya Fitzpatrick

stunning saltwater tidal pool known as Natural Pool.  Enveloped by the rocky terrain, Natural Pool provides a spectacular location for cliff diving and snorkeling.  If one can tolerate the bumpy roller coaster ride and somewhat challenging walk to get there, an experience of a lifetime awaits at Natural Pool.  A short ride north of Natural Pool stood Aruba’s beloved Natural Bridge.  Reclaimed by the sea on September 5, 2005, the remnants of this limestone bridge carved by the force of thunderous waves pounding the shoreline remains worth seeing.

No trip to Aruba would be complete without touring the island.  While the most adventurous travelers rent jeeps or SUV’s to traverse the rugged terrain from any of the island’s many car rental companies, several local tour companies offer half-and full-day excursions where one can either do the driving or leave it to someone else.  The notable ABC Tours’ extremely popular Land Rover-powered safari guided tours provide an exhilarating and uniquely Arubian experience.

From the rugged off-road trekking to the opportunities for snorkeling and swimming at two of Aruba’s best natural attractions—Natural Pool and Baby Beach, ABC Tours’ are an exceptional value.  Be sure to bring sunscreen for any touring activity given the intensity of the morning and midday sun.

Whether after a lazy day at the beach or high-intensity off-road touring, Aruba restaurants offer even the most discriminating

There is no better way to finish a day on Aruba than with a sunset.  Photo:  Tonya Fitzpatrick

palate a wonderful culinary treat.  Not far from Palm Beach’s high-rise hotels in the Noord district, Papiamento and Gasparito, serve some of the finest Arubian cuisine anywhere on the island in the most romantic of settings. Sole Maré blends Italian and the finest of the sea into a gastronomic tour de force. The Aquarius at the Renaissance Resort in Oranjestad has an impeccable seafood buffet.  Some of the other popular restaurants highly recommended by Arubians include Flying Fishbone (offering private beach dining), Marandi and Driftwood for seafood.  Other noteworthy restaurants include Madame Janette’s for Dutch-style cuisine and Simply Fish, located on the beach of the Marriott Resort.  Couples can enjoy romantic sunsets at Flying Fishbone, Marandi, and Simply Fish while running your toes through the sand, savoring wonderful island bouillabaisse and enjoying the light ocean sounds.   With so much to offer the “happy island” promises to fill you with many delightful memories.

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Adventure and Outdoor Travel Beach and Water Sports Caribbean and Atlantic Conservation Environment and Nature Culture and Heritage Uncategorized

The Cayman Islands: Fifty Shades of Bay

This is part 1 of Richard Bang’s 4-part travelogue

Over the years I’ve caressed many of the Caribbean gems, but never a set like the Cayman Islands. An accident of geography and geology, the three coral islands, cursed with terrible soil, minimal terrestrial relief, no rivers or lakes, but a bask of crocodiles, was not settled by the Caribs, Arawaks, Tainos, or any other autochthons, by the time Christopher Columbus sailed by in 1503. The sharp, black dolomite outcroppings in some places evoked Hades rather than any sort of haven. The first recorded English visitor was Sir Francis Drake in 1586, who reported that the crocs, or caymanas, were edible, as well as the many turtles, but that note didn’t persuade immigration until around 1700, when the first recorded permanent inhabitant of the Cayman Islands, Isaac Bodden, of Welsh descent, was born on Grand Cayman. After him came pirates, refugees from the Spanish Inquisition, shipwrecked sailors, and slaves, but not many as the barren land couldn’t really support plantations or communities of consequence, as nearby Jamaica and Cuba could. So, it grew up a place with few people. Instead the world came to Cayman, into its coves, sounds, channels, runs and bays.  And that diversity of settlers may have saved it from the worn-out, overtaxed fate other islands have suffered. It became a place where everyone was from somewhere else—over 100 different nationalities are represented today— and that ripened into an ethos that invites strangers into the conversation.

Aerial of Cayman Islands.  Photo by Didrik Johnck
Aerial of Cayman Islands. Photo: Didrik Johnck

The Caymans Islands float at a magical inflection point influenced by three continents, and a radiance of nearby islands. Buccaneers prowled about in search of provisions, safe harbors, and remote spots to bury doubloons. The anchored ships were in a way like bees pollinating flowers in gardens far from where they started, spreading ideas, arts and cultures over this trinity of islands. They brought different music, dance, foods, customs, crafts, beliefs, and new human constructs….the travelers and adventures found shelter and social interaction, and the seeds of multiculturalism were sown. I take the Bird of Paradise, Cayman Airways, from Miami, a Boeing 737-300, and am delighted to find the carrier allows two free checked bags, the exception these days. It is also the only carrier I’ve ever flown that offers rum punch on the service tray. Turns out the punch is supplied by the Tortuga Rum Cake factory, started by a former pilot, Robert Hamaty, whose son, Basil, is our captain. As we pull to the gate at Owen Roberts Airport there is a giant green iguana on the tarmac. No ordinary airport, this. No ordinary airline. There have been dozens of airlines in the Caribbean that launched and then fell into the ocean of bankruptcies. But Cayman Airways has been around since 1968, and now serves half a dozen cities in the U.S., as well as Cuba, Jamaica, Panama and Honduras.

On the taxi ride to the Westin Casuarina, the driver, almost to the point of overprize, crows about how safe Cayman is…. “You can walk anywhere, anytime, mon. The beaches have no litter, no vendors, no hassles, no homeless, just pure sugar sand.” I live in Venice Beach, near the Google offices, and despite the home prices and wealth, there is a large indigent population, and a crime rate not to be envied. How do they do it here? In 1966 legislation passed enabling the banking industry in the Cayman Islands, and that changed everything. The British Overseas Territory went from a sleepy backwater with scarce resources to the fifth-largest banking center in the world with trillions on deposit. Today it has branches of 40 of the world’s 50 largest banks. One five-story building in the capital George Town, The Ugland House, no bigger than a boutique hotel, houses over 18,000 corporations.  Business and financial services contribute 30% of the GDP, and employ more than 20% of the labor force. The Cayman Islands has the highest per capital income in the Caribbean, no taxes, and almost no unemployment. And it has evolved into a matchlessly clean, pristine and pleasing destination for travelers.

A couple strolling along 7-Mile Beach.  Photo: Didrik Johnck
A couple strolling along 7-Mile Beach. Photo: Didrik Johnck

At the northern end of Seven-Mile Beach (it clocks in at five miles and a few minutes long, but that’s the nature of Cayman….everything is a little bigger than reality), I check into the hotel and take a room where I can see the powdery sweep of sand, the tufted tops of palms soughing in the breeze, and the tourmaline waters that will somewhere to the west brush the shores of Central America. The tumbling sun bathes the remnants of the day in gold, the norm here I’m told, and radiates romance. Barefoot couples stroll the seam between sand and water, hand-in-hand, while others sip champagne on lounge chairs as the tropic air seduces. By the reckonings of a number of sand experts, this is the most romantic beach in the Caribbean.  It’s as close to living brochureware, or a set for a diamond commercial, as I’ve seen in real life. Later I chat with Joanne Brown, CEO & Creative Director of a company called Celebrations, a wedding planning company, and she says business is booming. Many folks come here, she says, and are bewitched by the beaches, the diving, the sunsets, the food and wine, and decide to return to tie the knot. Shuttles of birdsong nudge me awake the morning next. After a tropical fruit breakfast I drive east to Queen Elizabeth II Botanic Park to see first-hand one of the most remarkable species comeback stories in modern history: the back-from-the-brink saga of the blue iguana. Just a decade ago, the Grand Cayman blue iguana teetered on the cliff of oblivion, with only 10 to 25 left in the wild, all on this one island. Unaccustomed to predation, it fell victim to an invasion of stray dogs, feral cats and rats. Many ended up as road kill as they sunbathed on increasingly busy streets. But as of my visit the turquoise-colored reptile has returned to promising numbers, and is no longer listed as a critically endangered species. It dodged the bullet of extinction. With a switchblade strut that telegraphs sense of purpose, John Marotta, head warden of the Blue Iguana Recovery Program, shows me around the captive breeding facility. He says the blue iguana now has a population of about 750, and is on the path to achieving the goal of restoring 1,000 blue iguanas to Grand Cayman’s shrub lands. “If I’m successful, I’ll work myself out of a job,” John volunteers. “And I’m happy with that.”

Blue Iguana. Photo: Didrik Johnck
Blue Iguana. Photo: Didrik Johnck

The blue iguana is the largest native species on Grand Cayman, up to five feet in length and weighing in at more than 25 pounds (the native crocodiles were bigger, but they are all gone.) The Blue Iguana once ranged over most of the island’s coastal areas and interior dry lands, but without anyone paying attention, they almost vanished. Blue Iguanas are beautiful, with a pimpy fashion sense, but they also have that red-eyed Godzilla look that evokes menace, and they are in fact dangerous. John has 37 stitches from various bites over the seven years he’s worked to help the coldblooded critters, as well as a dislocated thumb. But one friendly fella, Methuselah, 27-years-young, lets John hold and pet him, and even allows me to rub his spikes and scratch the back of his head. John says the charismatic nature of the blue iguanas has helped raise the monies needed to bring them back, but also has helped habitat protection, as the unglamorous scrubland that few value, but which is important from an ecological standpoint,  is now being set aside and protected. John explains the program helps give juvenile iguanas a head start by protecting them for their first two vulnerable years of life, when they are still small enough to be easy snack food. Then, with radio monitors attached, they are released into the wild. After an hour of barely containing his feral enthusiasm for saving the blue iguanas, John excuses himself, as a school group is approaching, and he wants to direct energies to them. A dozen years ago I did a stint as president of Outward Bound, and one initiative under my watch was “expeditionary learning,” in which students participate in outdoor, hands-on education, rather than from books or lectures.  “This is the way to get them involved in life-long conservation,” John echoes, and bolts off to his outdoor classroom, where the future is being written with lightning.

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Caribbean and Atlantic Historical Travel Uncategorized

Discovering small treasures on St. Vincent

Fisherman pulling in their catch on St. Vincent.  Photo (c) Tonya Fitzpatrick.

On the grand scheme of world travel, the small island of Saint Vincent can be easily overlooked  because of more developed islands or more convenient travel options.  One could argue that this area of the world is a place that should be left alone so as to not be affected by mass tourism.  However, it would be a shame to keep this beautiful paradise a secret and not share it with the world.  Saint Vincent, part of the Grenadine Islands, is a veritable oasis of authenticity and exoticism. The small Caribbean nation is more than a pretty face.  There are also fascinating historical attractions, many of them going back to the colonial age.

A historical tour of Saint Vincent can uncover a handful of unexpected marvels, starting with the capital of Kingstown, a charming town dating back to colonial times, with picturesque stone houses, archways and cobblestone streets, brought to life by the colorful weekly market. Just a leap north of Kingstown, travelers can discover the impressive Fort Charlotte, perched atop a hill and offering unforgettable panoramas of the capital and the Grenadines to the south.

A view from Fort Charlotte on the island of St. Vincent.

The fort is over 200 years old, built to house about 600 soldiers and equipped with strong cannons that some still remain today. Named after the wife of King George III, visitors should also explore the officers quarter in order to admire some interesting paintings about the history of the Black Caribs.

The old history of St. Vincent can be uncovered by visiting the small village of Layou, an authentic destination in itself, it is surrounded by a rocky landscape, dotted with mysterious carvings of most probably Amerindian origin. However, the Layou Petroglyph Park are still intriguing signs of the old habitants of the island. Back in the capital of Kingstown, the remnants of the past, starting with the first settlers and passing through the British and French colonization and including the African and East Indian influences are displayed inside the National Trust Museum. Still inside the city, the small St. Mary Catholic Cathedral and the St. George Anglican Church are dated two centuries ago and could be considered as historical attractions. Closely, the Black Point Historic and Recreation Park features the Jasper Rock Tunnel, dug by Caribbean and African slaves through solid volcanic rock. Throughout the island of Saint Vincent, there are other artifacts and heritage sites coming from the old Amerindian groups or from more recent colonial ages and a historical tour of the island is well worth the experience, greatly augmented by the unbelievable natural beauty of the place.

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Caribbean and Atlantic Culture and Heritage International Travel Uncategorized

Garifuna culture and history throughout St. Vincent and Grenadine Islands

Traveling throughout the Caribbean and especially the West Indies, one can experience the cultural influences of the Garifuna people in the food, music, dance and island traditions.  The Garifuna people are the mixed-race descendants of Carib, African and Arawak people.  When indigenous Amerindian inhabitants of these Caribbean islands, intermarried Western and Central African slaves who shipwrecked or escaped from colonial slavery on neighboring islands, their descendants became known as Black Caribs or Garifuna. The Garifuna became a larger ethnic group than the Amerindians or “Yellow Caribs” and, as a result, conflicts ensued with the British colonists who occupied St. Vincent.

Photo:  WikiMedia

At the end of the 18th century the British exiled 5,000 Black Garifuna to the island of Roatan, close to Honduras.  The Yellow Caribs were “allowed” to stay.  Although the Garifuna community has settled in Central America, this interesting ethnic group still has a deep connection to the islands of St. Vincent and the Grenadines and thousands travel from Central America to St. Vincent each year to celebrate their indigenous legacy.

A trip through St. Vincent and the idyllic Grenadine islands offers a unique chance to trace lineage, uncover history and enjoy this fascinating culture. The Garifuna Heritage Foundation on St. Vincent helps keep the Garifuna language and heritage alive with festivals and educational resources.  Travelers can also discover more about the Garifuna culture, language, music, dance, food, art, spiritual heritage and history by visiting the National Trust Museum in the Carnegie Building in Kingstown.  There are also paintings that share the stories of the Garifuna people that are displayed on the walls of the old barracks inside St. Vincent’s Fort Charlotte, north of Kingstown.  The Garifuna’s cultural heritage and history lessons are being preserved among Garifuna peoples and the importance of Garifuna heritage is being acknowledged worldwide.  Garifuna language, dance and music was declared as a Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO in 2001.

 

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Caribbean and Atlantic Travel Tips Uncategorized

Tiniest “Everything” in Tortola

Whereas other travel destinations are famous for the tallest building, the highest mountain, etc. I have found in Roadtown, capital of the Caribbean island of Tortola (BVI) four attractions which are the tiniest of their kind I have ever come across. Small they maybe, but they are full of charm and reflect the laid back island character perfectly.

Photo:  Denise (cc)

The first is the O’Neil Botanical Garden, about a 20 minute walk along Waterfront Drive, Fleming Road and slightly uphill past the Recreation Ground. If it weren’t for a brass plaque on the corner, you would walk straight past.  A nice lady at the entrance will take your admission fee of $1 and leave you to roam the tiny paradise at your pleasure.  You can tour the botanical garden in about 10 minutes, but they have a great variety of tropical plants, marked with signs (some of them handwritten), so you know what you are looking at.

What strikes the visitor is how beautifully this tiny vegetation haven is kept.  A little hut shelters the visitors’ book and, if nature calls, you can answer in the most picturesque rest-rooms I have ever seen, an entire wall adorned with a mural of island life and plants.

The second is what’s grandly called Main Street. It’s extremely narrow, twisting and turning off Fleming Street and then leading parallel to Waterfront Drive towards the cruise ship terminal. Hardly two cars can pass and there is no real sidewalk, so that a pedestrian is forced to quickly jump into a shop entrance if a car comes barreling around a corner.

Main St.  Photo:  Dock & Sue

It’s great fun however, because Main Street is lined with many shops and art galleries, among them what to me is the tiniest bookshop I have ever been in, aptly called “Books”. The shop is located in a brightly painted wooden house just as many houses bordering Main Street are made of wood. I entered “Books” and had a hard time to remember that I had to leave eventually, as otherwise I would have, literally, missed the boat. I got carried away, leafing through books on island history and listening to the owner who was only too pleased to tell me anecdotes about local celebrities, past and present.

I dragged myself away eventually, because I had another destination in mind: the Folklore Museum, also located on Main Street. It takes keen eyes to find the entrance to that tiny stone building, set back from the street and up rather steep stone steps. The museum features all of two tiny rooms, crammed with a collection of local craft, dolls and sepia photographs from times gone by.  Everybody I met in Tortola is happy to talk to you and if you express an interest, they will tell you their life story.

Photo:  Danny Nicholson

After all these “tiny” things, I did however have the biggest and best fruit smoothie I have ever tasted at a stall near the harbor. I don’t know how many different, exotic fresh fruit went into it, together with coconut milk, cinnamon and crushed ice. It was so thick I could hardly suck it through my straw and as I had to rush to get back to the ship in time, a top up was poured into another cup for me take with me and  enjoy later. Tiny island, big on fun!

 

 

 

 

Categories
Adventure and Outdoor Travel Beach and Water Sports Caribbean and Atlantic Uncategorized

Richard Bangs’ Cayman Adventure: The final leg

This is part 3 of Richard Bangs 4-part Cayman Islands aventure travelogue

The hours melt away as I snorkel the brilliant reefs, hike the filigreed interior, draw figures in the sand, collect lovely shells, even paddle around the island in a leaky plastic kayak. I finish reading my one book, Explorers of the Nile, and then stare at a palm tree. I come to admit I’m bored. All these studies about how continued connectedness leads to attention deficit disorder may be true. I’m restless, and anxious. I need a fix. It’s time to get back to civilization. So, I pull out my cell, and push the on-button. But nada. It’s out of juice. I panic. But then reach deeper into my pack, pull out an Energizer portable charger, plug it into the phone, and make the call. But it goes to a robot voice saying the mailbox is full; call again later. I’m castaway on a desert island.

So, I decide to swim for it. I stash my pack and sandals, towel, hat and sunglasses, and head into shark and jellyfish waters towards the shore of Little Cayman.

I make it, and after arranging for a pick-up of my left-behind gear and electronics, head to the Edward Bodden Airfield, and catch the first flight back to Grand Cayman, and then straight to Camana Bay, the new cosmopolitan development packed with so many high-end restaurants, glam shops and luxury labels some call it Brand Cayman.

I first stop at Books & Books, carrying the kind of collections the best Borders used to offer, and pick up several new titles, in case I’m stranded on a desert island again, or a hurricane hits. I step by the sports stadium, where the Rugby team “No Woman No Try” is practicing.  I stop for a delightful meal at Ortanique, a Nuevo Latina Carib-Asian eatery. And I run into Kenneth Hydes, the VP of Product and Experiences, who tells me the billion dollar development is the brain child of Kenneth Dart, heir to the Dart Container Corporation of Michigan, world’s largest manufacturer of foam cups. Kenneth gave up US Citizenship in 1994, moved to Cayman, becoming an investor, and a champion of recycling initiatives.  His refined taste is represented in Camana Bay, which is more Rodeo Boulevard than Caribbean sugar shack, more Waterford and Cartier than watermelon and giclée, and it gives Cayman, already the most sophisticated stop in the region, an extra lift.

The perfumed tropic air is Sunday’s, and at the crack of noon I head out for the contrast to Camana Bay, the Grape Tree Café on the beach in Bodden Town with its locally-famous Sunday Fish Fry. This is where the islanders come, and bask in deep-fried bliss. “It humbles the stomach,” says Alex Bodden, related to the first settler on Cayman back in 1700, and who owns, with his family, the adjacent Texaco gas station and liquor store. The perfect combination platter.

The café itself is the size of breadfruit basket, and sizzling away inside are chunks of snapper, mahi, wahoo, swai, chicharrón, as well as conch fritters, plantains, cassava, and sweet potatoes, all for a fraction the price of the fusion appetizers at the resort hotels and trendier west end eateries. And outside, around thatch-roofed tables, an array of well-nourished Caymanians sit and nosh, swap stories and jokes, and generally enjoy the island life and food.

Samuel Rose with the Swanky Kitchen Band on the Cayman Islands
Musician Samuel Rose with the Swanky Kitchen Bank.  Photo:  Didrik Johnck

After lunch I’m hungering for some island music, so head over to Hopscotch Studios, where the Swanky Kitchen Band is in full practice mode for an upcoming wedding performance.

It’s an incredibly energized jam—it’s music that softens rock, and could bend the ironwood tree. Between takes I chat with the electric violinist Samuel Rose, the leader. He explains that “swanky” is a Cayman word for lemonade (made with brown cane sugar), and that Cayman kitchen music represents the melting pot that is Cayman, tracing influences back to Irish fiddling and Scottish jig traditions, mixed with African slave rhythms. Then it blends in ostinatos of calypso, reggae and jazz.

“In the old days the kitchen, or caboose as we call it, was the center of Caymanian homes, a detached room in the back where everyone gathered, and so it became a natural place to socialize, celebrate, dance and create music, using cassava graters and other kitchen utensils. We’ve picked up on that tradition, and are carrying it forward with our own signature.” But Samuel doesn’t want to jab too long; he wants to skank, and I’m not suffering from an overabundance of good sensations, so I step to the back of the room, pick up my feet in terpsichorean splendor, and surrender to the swank.

* * * * * *

A photobomb went viral recently, three women in midst of a vacation photo pose being hugged from behind by a pin-eyed stingray:

So, this final soft-blue morning I catch a fishing boat named Heavenly Hooker and head out to find the scene of the slime.  We cruise out to a shallow bank in the North Sound, drop anchor, and beneath crystalline waters see a dozen gray-hued underwater bats, the size of pterodactyls, gracefully circulating at our stern.  Captain Stacy leaps into the waist-deep brine with a bucket of smelly squid. Immediately the rays lap him, coddle him; cats to catnip. The captain motions me to join, but I’m a bit hesitant, remembering too well Steve Irwin’s untimely death by stingray barb in the Great Barrier Reef.

Sting "eagle" rayBut what good is travel without a little fear?  So, I take the leap, and though my mind is trembling on the edge of danger, the soft Portobello mushroom skin of the rays against my own is rather silky and sensuous. It is an agreeable kind of horror.

This interspecies dynamic came about some years ago when fishermen, to avoid the once mosquito infested coastlines (so bad it was, they say, the mosquitos could suck a cow to bloodless death), started cleaning their catch in this calm off-shore channel, and the Atlantic Southern stingrays gathered to nibble at the gut scraps. Soon the stingrays began to associate the sound of a boat motor with food. Now, it’s a daily ritual, and the wild rays have gone gentle, gliding about torsos, through splayed legs, planting hickies on exposed human skin while suckling for food, and wrapping wings around their guests in puppy-like hugs, all in symbiotic exchange for morsels of sea meat. “Oh, it feels good to be touched by a stingray,” beams Captain Stacey. It is undeniably, ahem, a “raydiant” experience.