Saturday, July 20, 2013

Trip To Bequia Island - Meet PM



Saturday, July 20th. TRIP TO BEQUIA ISLAND – MEET PM

Today was another amazing day in paradise! We got up really early and Wayne drove us to the harbour to catch an 8:30 car ferry to Bequia Island. This was an outing organized by the SVGTU for their members and they gave us complimentary tickets. All of the union brass came along including our favourite, Jane. The ferry ride was about an hour over pretty rough seas (it has been very windy here the last couple of days with hazy conditions and some rain off and on). When we got there Jane hired a cab for us to have a tour of the island. The rest of the group went off to do other things. So the four of us headed off in a safari style jeep where we sat in the back of the pickup cab on benches, with a driver that Jane knew from school because she used to live on this island. The first stop was an old British battery that was on a hill and guarded the harbour. Then we went to a shop were a group of young men crafted scale model sailboats. After that we headed to the other end of the island to visit a hawks beak turtle sanctuary. It was closed but when Jane looked around she found the owner who also knew her and he gave us a guided tour that included seeing adult turtles and some new hatch-lings.

The next stop was at Queen Elizabeth Beach where we hung out for a couple of hours. I swam for a bit and caught some sun, while Irnice and Jane sat in the shallows and George sat in the shade. Then Jane had Kent pick us up in his car (that he brought across on the ferry) and take us to Toko’s Bar on the far side of the island. It was an incredibly remote, rustic, rundown place. The bartender/ waiter was drunk and telling us how he was drinking gin and milk as it was good for his ‘woo-hoo’. The owner was a nice man who also knew Jane. She brought us there to try some authentic Vincentian food: red snapper steaks, conch and humpback whale! On the table (which was a picnic table) was whole branch of a tree with flowers. It was put there for our benefit but we had to ask for it to be untied from the table so the four of us could sit together. Inside the restaurant was a ‘museum’of artifacts that they had recovered from the sea including an old iron, shark jaws, whale bones, and bottles and other flotsam. The owner told us about how they harvest conch (deep diving with poor equipment) and how dangerous it is and how many of the locals have died over the years. There are conch shells all over the shore, hundreds of them! As far as I have seen they are rare on any other island or beach. The waiter was very flirty with Irnice and Jane.

Then we started to walk back towards the harbour while trying to reach Kent to come and get us again, but we found out he was already on the ferry. So Jane flagged down a local bus van that was going the other way and we were jammed in with a bunch of other people. So we rode that back past the restaurant we just left and about ten minutes further to the end of the line where we turned around on an incredibly steep and narrow road – a three point turn - not for the faint of heart! It was a milk run ride with lots of stops and people getting on and off all the way to the harbour. We got to the boat about ten minutes before it left. The ride back was nice and relaxing. About half way we were followed by two dolphins and I got some good photos.

When we got back to St Vincent there was a cultural festival going on at the docks. We paid $5 EC each to enter. There wasn’t very much to see, but I bought a great waffle cone with chocolate ice cream and then Jane told us she was going to introduce us to the prime minister of SVG, Ralph Gonsalves! We walked over to where he was chatting with a group of young models and we waited and waited (he was having a good time chatting up the ladies). Jane knows him personally so she introduced us. He knew about CTF and our workshops and he talked shop with us a bit and we had our photos taken with him.

Then we walked to our waiting van and Wayne drove us home. As soon as we walked in it rained hard  for a half hour, timing is everything.






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