2 posts tagged “jamaica”

published:
Thursday | April 17, 2008

Reach Falls in Portland. - photos by Ian Allen/Staff Photographer
WHEN PRENTO, the short, round-headed chap who photographer Norman Grindley and I met near Reach Falls in Portland, shouted for me to watch my step, I couldn't hear him because of the sound of the water rushing down the rocks.
There was a hidden crevice in the ground that exposed a section of the gushing river. He was trying to point it out to me. All I managed to say was "huh?" before SPLASH! What happened after that, I have long tried to forget. Suffice it to say, I spent the next 10 minutes draining water from my shoes, much to Prento's amusement and to my own consternation. "Woi! A hope you boot nuh new! Hee Hee!" he chuckled. Smart Alec.
A willing guide
It was mid-afternoon when we arrived in Portland and the sun was still high in the sky. "Come this way man, you haffi walk dah way yah," Prento had shouted, as soon as we drove up. I should point out that we didn't go there to see him. For that matter, we didn't even know who he was. So it was with a quizzical look that we asked him where he wanted to take us. "Oh, mi did was think you did waan go a di falls," said he, pointing behind him and smiling, exposing a toothless mouth.
He said his name was Prento and he pointed to some nearby bushes and said, "Mi just live down over deh so."
I didn't pry. We told him that we were interested in learning more about that part of Portland and he smiled even wider than before. It was a smile only a mother could appreciate. "Is fi mi place dis you come, man. You deh right a Reach Falls, man. Is di prettiest part a Jamaica you ever see," he said. "Just follow me, man. Mi will take you there. Is dat mi do all di time," he said and started to walk. We were close behind him. "When people come here dem always say it more nicer dan di rest a di falls dem around di place. All Dunn's River and dem place deh caan nice like yah so."
Native battle call
I could hear the gushing water now and the air got noticeably cooler as we neared the falls. "Oy Prento!" someone shouted from the bushes. "Oy!" Prento responded and continued talking to us. My mind drifted and I started to think how funny that exchange was. It seemed like a native battle call. I chuckled to myself and somewhere between that and the sound of the rushing water, Prento's warning for me to watch out for the hole in the ground missed me. But enough about that. Ten minutes later, Prento was pointing out the tallest of the waterfalls at Reach.
"Dah one deh is di one weh di people dem say more lookable dan di rest a dem. A di biggest rock dat wi got round here so," he said. SPLASH! Prento was interrupted by the sound of a woman quite suddenly raising her head from beneath the water, almost right in front of me. I had not seen her before and so her sudden appearance caught me completely off guard. The shock of it all nearly sent me head first into the chilly water below. I suppose sensing my unease, the woman had a hearty laugh at my expense. "Woi! Mine you drop young bwoy! Nuh badda frighten, a just me! Woi, hee hee!" the woman laughed. Again with the jokes. She pulled herself out of the water with the help of a hanging vine and, dripping wet, she walked over to where we were standing. "Howdy do? No mind, you hear? You know from when mi see you? Mi know you never see mi but true mi see Prento a talk to you mi just say mek mi come say hello. What unu is about, please?" she said, using a bleach-stained towel to dry her face. She was a tall woman with thick thighs and a masculine chin. She said her name was Mavis and explained that she lived nearby.
Loving the falls
"Mi think unu was tourist, you know. All you weh look like you fraid a water. Hee hee," she quipped. I asked Mavis if she spent a lot of time at the falls. "Oh God man. Every chance mi get mi deh yah. As cock crow a morning time mi just spread up di bed and come out yah. Dat a before di crowd reach. Mi is a regular around here," she said.
Prento interjected. "Most a wi who live nearby come to Reach Falls more time. Dat's why we kip so haughty. Wi just cool out wid di water before we go get all stress and sickness go tek wi over," he said.
The pair explained that Reach Falls was one of the more popular tourist attractions in all of Portland and was a favourite among visitors from Europe. "Di people dem from over inna England and Germany dem love dah place yah bad bad. Even more dan di people dem from Merica. Is like dem nuh waan left. Dem jump and dem swim and halla. One piece a sinting!" he said.
Mavis spoke up again. "We tek care a dem when dem come too. More time dem go a di edda falls dem and get harass. Not yah so! No sah! Portland people dem nuh talarate dem sinting deh. We love people so we always try fi mek dem comfortable!"

published:
Thursday | April 17, 2008
Shelly-Ann Thompson, Staff Reporter
Minister of Agriculture Dr Christopher Tufton makes his
contribution to the 2008/2009 Budget Debate in the House of
Representatives yesterday. - Rudolph Brown/Chief Photographer
AN APPEAL for Jamaican consumers to decrease their dependence on food imports was yesterday put out by Agriculture Minister Dr Christopher Tufton, who warned that the developing world food crisis posed a "clear and present danger" to the nation.
Tufton, in making his debut presentation in the annual Budget Debate in Parliament yesterday, spent just under three hours stressing the necessity for the nation to increase its agriculture output and feed its own people.
Noting that some 61 per cent of the country's basic food items were imported, the agriculture minister said data from the Statistical Institute of Jamaica showed that the nation's food import bill had increased from US$479 million in 2002 to US$662 million up to November 2007.
"The frightening reality of increasingly high food prices, together with the daunting projections, are in fact a summons to action now," Tufton said. "Countries the world over, regardless of size or economic profile, are taking conscious and deliberate steps to combat this emerging threat."
Food-planting project
However, though the agriculture minister outlined measures aimed at addressing the spiralling food bill, those measures will not immediately slash costs.
Chief among the measures announced is a national food-planting programme that is intended to be the highlight of Labour Day 2008.
Tufton said Cabinet agreed on Monday to place the focus of Labour Day, to be observed on May 23, on food security. The theme will be 'Eating What We Grow and Growing What We Eat'.
The school garden programme will also be expanded through the Jamaica 4-H clubs in collaboration with the ministry.
At a cost of $30 million, the ministry will distribute some 200,000 packets of vegetable seeds to each student from grades eight to 11 in every secondary institution. These seeds are expected to be planted at home or within their communities on Labour Day.
In addition, commencing this year, school gardens will be established within 966 public institutions.
Backyard gardening
"The intention is to encourage our young people to appreciate agri-culture, nature and the environment, and to impress on them the critical importance of food security," said Tufton.
Another initiative to boost agricultural production is an Urban Backyard Garden Programme, which will be implemented immediately within 400 households in Portmore and Spanish Town, St Catherine.
Initially, selected residents within these communities will be given free of cost a backyard garden kit, developed by the Rural Agricultural Development Authority.
Tufton said that, by planting two cycles of tomato, cucumber, sweet pepper and pak choi, the average household would save some $12,000 annually.
"This Government believes that we must return to the days when householders grew a little something for themselves in their backyards," said Tufton.
Agriculture Minister Dr Christopher Tufton says the successful implementation of a technology-driven programme and food security initiatives will require sustained funding. This funding will be secured through:
The Planning Institute of Jamaica, working with the Caribbean Development Bank to access some US$8 million at two per cent, with a payback period of 30 years. It is expected that these funds will be channelled through the Development Bank of Jamaica (DBJ).
The DBJ has approved a loan package of $250 million, at an interest rate of 7.8 per cent, to be on-lent through the PC banks and credit unions and other micro financing institutions.
The Government is currently finalising a US$2.5 million grant grant from the Chinese Government, to be used for agricultural development projects.
Through a $15 million programme financed by the International Development Bank, the DBJ, supported by the Agricultural Credit Board, will be conducting a restructuring exercise within the PC banks.