June 2005
here
is an undeniable magic about Dominica, it hovers in the universal sound
of falling water, in the
misty green mountains and vowel-heavy Creole spoken on every village street.
Take care, this region of magic is inhabited by “jumbies”, entities who
are not known for their kindness to people.
We all know
that Dominica has one of the highest rainfall counts on planet earth. That’s
why its known as the Nature island, it doesn’t get that green without some
serious rain! And what other country not even forty miles long and a quarter
of that wide has a waterfall for every day of the year? Summing it up,
there are only two continuously boiling lakes in the Americas, and
they stay boiling because heavy rainfall never lets them boil dry! Dominica’s
lake is the largest of its kind.
So it was a
bit of risk when a Hollywood film production for the new blockbuster movie
Pirates of the Caribbean II decided to do most of the outdoor on location
shooting here in Dominica. What a coup this was for Dominica, against such
places as St. Vincent and St. Lucia. But this is also the wettest island.
Think about it, there was a real chance that it would rain every day and
instead of being here for two months, they would be looking at four months
eating heavily into the production budget. They started filming around
the island in late March and it went on though to the end of May in Vielle
Case and other northern areas of coastline and in the south around Scotts
Head.
In mid June,
walking down through the sloping streets of Roseau from a meeting at the
NDC which is at the top of the town on the edge of the Botanic Gardens,
with my brief case and power business outfit, it started to rain. Huge
black clouds brooded over the town moving westwards from the Morne Trois
mountains evacuating vast amounts of water.
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| Deb Andrews is with Caribbean
Land & Property - a company that has a very wide selection
of properties throughout the Caribbean including single family homes, raw
land, building lots, vacation homes, commercial & investment properties
as well as beachfront land - Caribbean Land & Property has real
estate across the Caribbean - Since this article was written Deb
Andrews has become the editor of the Caribbean Property & Lifestyles
Magazine - she can can be reached by
clicking
here |
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The Caribbean Property List has
current Real Estate Listings on the Island of Dominica - The Nature Island
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The streets went
from sunny and dry to blurred concrete and drains that turned into churning
rivers of white water. The background sound of soca and reggae was drowned
by the hiss of rain and the gurgle of running water. Everyone dived under
the nearest shelter and waited. The rushing clean streets were empty except
for the steady movement of cars splashing through the town.
n
less than five minutes it was gone, and as the rain swept away from the
town and out to sea, the narrow streets changed from depressed grey to
bright polychrome illuminated by the blurry sunlight. I was soaked despite
my umbrella, but at least it was after my meeting!
The amazing
thing is that it only started to rain on June 1st. Up until then Dominica
had a very unusual dry spell right
from March through to the end of May. On the first day of hurricane season
it began to rain, and it hasn’t stopped since then. Meanwhile the filming
was very succesful, the production team completed their on location filming
and have all left now and gone back to complete the film. The benefits
to Dominica are enormous and multi-levelled, and will continue to roll
in for years. |
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A group of
us stood outside the beautiful old Mill Centre which houses the offices
of the Department of Culture in Canefield. We shook hands and said goodbye
in the sunshine, and then it began to rain. “Ah rain,’ said my Dominican
colleague smiling, “when the sun shines and the rain falls at the same
time, we say in Dominica, the jumbies are getting married!”
Maybe the jumbies
arent so bad after all, they remained engaged till after the Pirates of
the Caribbean II finished filming!
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Bay
Rum, a popular face lotion for men, is made from a combination of bay
oil, citrus oil, spice oil, cane alcohol and water. It was first made in
the West Indies, where it was prepared by boiling the leaves of the West
Indian Bay in white rum and collecting the distillate. Dominica is famous
for its use of the Bay tree. Link
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Report is essential reading for anybody interested in the opportunities
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Earning a living whilst living on an idylic Caribbean Island or in a Beachfront
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The Caribbean Property List has
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ntiguans
are feeling their freedom. After many years of a single family regime ruling
the nation, they revel in the freshness of a new government voted in last
year in March 2004. Everyone has something to say about where Antigua is
going and how they are getting there, and what they are going to do when
they arrive.
And of course,
speaking cricket, each Caribbean island hosting the World Cricket Series
of
2007 has arrived, and Antigua is one of them. Other islands not included
in the series can only bathe in the reflected glory. This event has every
Caribbean country just blazing with pride and excitement.
Kids and adults
alike play cricket throughout the ex-British island nations on every street,
village, beach and bare patch of ground, flat or sloping. The names of
great cricketing icons such as Vivian Richards, Dennis Walcott and Clive
Lloyd are much more familiar within the average Caribbean home than Venus
Williams or David Beckham.
In the days
when Cable and Wireless Ltd was a monopoly in the English speaking West
Indies, the company made a shrewd decision to sponsor cricket with a big
budget and strong campaign, branding telecommunications and cricket inextricably
to generations of kids. Today, the long awaited competition has at last
arrived and as we start to move away from Cable and Wireless, the successful
job they did with uniting telecommunications and cricket has now been acquired
by Digicel. A cool move on their part, and just before the World Cricket
makes it positively stellar! Lets hope their cellphone services live up
to the world class cricketers whose names they promote.
So cricket,
which is normally around second on the chat list, is now outclassing even
politics in whichever country you are in. As we get closer to 2007, it
will become the only topic! In a local bus a Bajan said to the Antiguan
taxi driver, as we drove past the cricket stadium outside St. Johns, “are
you rebuilding your stadium where it is or making a new one for 2007? We
are building a new one.” “So are we,” responded the Antiguan almost huffily,
and launched into a detailed monologue on the new cricket stadium about
which he seemed to know an awful lot. But everyone’s a cricket expert these
days. |
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now I wonder whether cricket and national freedoms go together? A senior
government official told me “I am really quite scared of 2007 and what
its going to bring to us” she continued, “People here have no idea of what’s
going to happen, and we in government are quite worried.”
You
see global sponsors such as Coca-Cola and others have already bought the
advertising rights to the cricket stadiums throughout the region, where
the major games are to be played. This means for example that you cannot
wear a t-shirt, drive a car, sell anything, carry a bag or a bottle, with
any commercial logo or picture on it, inside and outside within a specific
radius of the stadium, of your own choice. Only advertising for the official
sponsor will be allowed, whether you like the product or not.
“Antiguans,”
she continued with concern, “aren't used to that. They like their freedoms!”
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Deb Andrews
is the editor of the Caribbean Property & Lifestyles Magazine.Deb
her husband Stewart sold their home in a remote villiage in the Yorkshire
Dales, England in 1985 and with their two children started to sail in the
Caribbean and Europe on a 45 ft steel yacht called the Safara that
Stewart built. After sailing from Trinidad to Puerto Rico, they fell in
love with the Caribbean sky and sea and decided to stay. Their children
were home schooled for the first four years in the Caribbean and then returned
to England to finish secondary school and university. To survive in the
Caribbean, Deb and Stewart worked in the British Virgin Islands administrating
a private plastic surgery clinic and managing huge civil construction projects
with EU and British funding. In their free time they sailed the Eastern
Caribbean. They are now planning to settle down in the mountains of Dominica.
- Since this article was written Deb Andrews has become the
editor of the Caribbean Property & Lifestyles Magazine - she can can
be reached by
clicking
here |
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More? The
Caribbean Property Magazine Has More Articles on Living & Investing
In The Caribbean - Click Here -
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