Between Winston and
Cutty we have now driven the entire road system of Grenada, including the two
100 meter straight stretches.
Cutty picked us up in his mini bus at 9 am and we joined a small group
including one man from Florida, another from Alaska, a young couple from
Ottawa, and a retired couple from Britain that had just concluded a
round-the-world sail in their 36-foot boat.
|
Our New Bus Friends
|
We cannot recommend
strongly enough to hire an endorsed local as a guide. Cutty took great pride in his country and made every effort
to ensure our individual needs were met.
The tour itself was a little hilly, much windy, and included mostly
narrow, mountain roads that required a little backing up to let others pass but
well worth the drive.
Grenada seems to have this
foreign aid concept down pat.
According to Cutty, the fact that the United Nations provides one vote per
nation, plays very well in favour of smaller nations. Grenada is an equal to the U.S. in voting power and
therefore is courted (as many tiny nations are) by many countries to ensure voting
support on specific U.N. resolutions.
On our tour we passed: 1) the National Stadium completely rebuilt by
China, 2) housing developments built by Venezuela, 3) the modern hospital built
by Cuba, 4) a large secondary school built by Canada, and 5) several bridges built by Japan. As well,
Japan has cornered the market on used vehicles. Every vehicle we have seen in a used, Japanese right-hand
drive.
Our first stop was in
the jungle surrounding Concord Falls. We arrived in a squall so the water was running strong. So
was the Rum Punch we enjoyed, 10 am seemed the right time to imbibe. Due to the protection of the mountains,
this area’s vegetation was spared the 2004 hurricane Ivan and is home to many
concentrated moutainside farms.
The drinks made the narrow road return drive much more bearable.
|
Concord Falls
|
|
Two Spices in One: Nutmeg Pod with ripe Nutmeg surrounded by Mace
|
|
For Sale
|
Our second stop was
the nutmeg factory in Gouyave. We
had a short-guided tour of the process in a working factory. While tourism has surpassed farming as
an economic factor it is still an important industry. Male workers earn as much as $44 EC a day (about $16 U.S.)
while the women earn $22 EC.
|
Arriving in Gouyave
|
|
Nutmeg Drying Racks
|
|
Nutmeg Ready for Shipping
|
The third stop was
Carib’s Leap. As mentioned in an
earlier post, the cliff was the Carib’s last stand on Grenada. Superior French weapons made the war
fait-a-complete so the Caribs tried to kill as many Frenchman as they could and
then leapt to their deaths off the cliffs. There is a cairn to commemorate the event and a wire mesh
fence to guard against tourists from falling but this has been well
trampled. My former elementary
principal mind turned quickly to risk management, as the area and adjoining
cemetery, serves as a playground for the elementary children next door.
|
Every Playground Needs a Cemetery & Cliff
|
|
Guard Fence Fully Trampled
|
|
It is a Long Way Down
|
The fourth spot was
the chocolate factory in Belmont Estate.
The entire process, from cured beans to wrapped bars takes place in
three rooms. We were witness to
the process and tasted chocolate with different gradients of cocoa; we
preferred the 60%, compared to the 82% and 100%. Each bar is produced singly and hand wrapped. They have an order of 50,000 bars to
make in the next month. I am not
sure how productive they will be, the supervisor giving the tour finished his
beer as we entered and picked up another before we exited the building.
|
After a Short Argument with Worker (and his beer) Ready For Tour
|
|
WCB and Food Safe Are Foreign Concepts
|
Our lunch spot was the
rum factory at River Antoine. We
enjoyed a lunch of local dishes that was comprised of: pigeon peas, okra, turmeric noodles, plantain,
breadfruit, green bananas, fish, pork, chicken and Stag beers and Sorrel juice
from local flowers. We ambled over
to the rum factory that still produces rum using traditional methods that
remain unchanged since the 1700’s.
|
Arriving at Rum Factory
|
|
Lunch Spot
|
Our next stop was the chocolate
factory in Grenville. Unlike the
factory that make the bars, this processing plant took the raw beans from the
cocoa pods through the drying process to the finished cocoa beans ready for making chocolate.
We ended the trip
with a last drive over the mountains back to St. George’s. We made one stop at the summit to see
the monkeys. At first they were
not there but Cutty took a walk in the woods and called for a few to join
us. Ten years ago, after the
hurricane devastated the monkeys’ habitat, Cutty made daily trips to the mountaintop
to provide them food. They know
his call and were eager to entertain.
Deborah volunteered to have one jump on her shoulder, leave some muddy
footprints on her blouse, and get a banana for its troubles’.
|
Deborah and Her New Friend
|
|
Cuban Plane - Landed in Sept. 1983 - Didn't Leave
|
|
Cutty is the Man for Touring
|
|
The Country is Covered with "Janet Houses" provided by Venezuela after Hurricane Janet in 1955 |
|
Narrow Mountain Roads
|
|
Pinapple
|
|
Heading Home at the End of the Day
|
We arrived home in
time to catch a dip in the pool and many drinks to end the day.