From St Lucia

Halsway Grace
Robin and Sue carter
Mon 5 Mar 2012 15:53
Here we are in Rodney Bay Marina again after 2 months travelling in the
more northerly islands. As we promised ourselves we have journeyed at a much
slower pace than in previous years and feel we have learned a little about the
Caribbean people and culture of the different islands. Each is quite
distinct.
While we were in Martinique we hired a car for day partly to shop in the
hypermarket in Fort de France and also to visit some of the interior of the
island. As it is officially a department of France and therefore an EU member so
it was very organised with good roads and signs, regular rubbish collections and
appeared wealthy. The agriculture was mainly sugar cane production with
intensively mechanised large plantations and distilleries for da rum man!
Hundreds of white egrets play ‘chicken’ with the harvesters looking for the
grubs churned up.
The architecture is, sadly, typical urban French concrete – high rise
blocks of flats in tidy grassy areas. Even the electricity pylons are the
ugly ones they have in France. Occasionally some towns have not been completely
redeveloped and there are some old single storey wooden buildings with shutters,
verandas and overhanging roofs.
For us a most disappointing difference between Martinique and the other
islands is the schoolchildren. Here the kids seemed bored, disaffected, scruffy
and hung around in large groups not making eye contact with passing adults. We
had previously been most impressed by the children elsewhere who wear quite old
fashioned uniforms (gymslips) but were immaculately turned out and wore them
with pride.
They were engaged, articulate, gave up their seats for adults on the local
bus and generally seemed to enjoy their schools and be proud of them. We were
told on Antigua that if an adult sees a child in uniform not in school during
the school day they can ask them why they are not in school and report them if
playing truant! Admittedly there is little opportunity for further education in
these islands and what there is is via scholarships in foreign universities. I
suppose the French islands have access to French unis and ultimately that is why
they are much wealthier generally. What do we make of it all? Maybe the non
French see education as a privilege still?
Any thoughts on the subject gratefully received!
Lastly, we experienced traffic jams for the first time here, many cars
leave the capital on the ‘expressway’ and come to a stop! All in all it seemed
very little like the laid back Caribbean we had experienced elsewhere, what a
shame.
So we are enjoying St Lucia again and the slightly shambolic way of doing
things, some poor roads, random refuse collection, variable water pressure,
lovely, helpful, polite people (except in the supermarkets!)
We are going to be moving on to Bequia in the Grenadines at the end of the
week where the water is supposed to be crystal clear.
I enclose a photo of the lampshade we asked Rasta Gary to make for us out
of palm leaves. It is very well done and he knocked it up in about half an hour.
Within a couple of weeks it will dry out to a straw colour. There is also
one of the sugar cane harvest.
With our best wishes
Sue and Robin |