Westgate shopping centre, south east of the
town centre has a supermarket, wholesale liquor
store, bank, green grocer, gas station and
other necessities. Take the road just north
of here towards the Queen of Spain Valley
in the parish of Trelawney: narrow, winding
and shady it is punctuated at regular intervals
by rusty signs proclaiming "Bus Stop"
though sightings of a bus are mercifully rare.
At Portobello Heights crossroads the office
building on the R is the business place of
local member of Parliament and civil engineer
Arthur Nelson. Take the R fork towards SIGN
where the SIGN
GREAT HOUSE. On a breezy hill it
offers fine views, pleasant cottages, a swimming
pool, bar, restaurant and landscaped grounds.
At ORANGE
a sign painted on the wall of a small shop
announces "Welcome to Me Ameego".
At
SUDBURY
the old Baptist church - cut stone with
quaint peaked windows of coloured glass
-has been desecrated fore and aft with squat
concrete additions. The road branches 10.5
miles out at GLASGOW;
your landmark is a stone farm house on the
hill L of the road. The L fork will take
you to the coast at Rosehall, continue straight
ahead for ADELPHI
where the courthouse is conveniently
located on top of the police station. The
road L past the Shell gas station takes
you back to the coast at Salt Marsh; the
R fork continues to Hampden. At LIMA
there is a large pond on the L and the way
R leads to the hills of SOMERTON,
home village of Reggae star Jimmy Cliff.
Bear L to Hampden and enter the broad
QUEEN OF SPAIN VALLEY - with
cane fields on both sides and in the distance
the low conical hills that herald the start
of the COCKPIT
COUNTRY.
The
HAMPDEN junction is marked
by a large cut stone facade, sans legend,
and an antique sugar mill. Turn L here about
a mile along a bad road towards the factory
and great house. Hampden estate has been
in the sugar business for over 200 years.
The great house located immediately beside
the factory was built by Stirling in 1779
and originated as a functional stone and
mortar dwelling, the ground floor of which
served as a rum store until the early 1900s
when remodelling created spacious verandas
and a graceful profile. Hampden is one of
the 9 remaining sugar factories on the island.
It processes cane from its own 3500 acres
and from surrounding small farmers and is
famous for its high ester rum, all of which
is exported to Europe. Factory and great
house tours can be arranged. Beside the
greathouse driveway a tiny graveyard commemorates
former proprietors and their families. The
inscription on the tomb of John Stirling
who died in 1793 aged 25 attests to his
many virtues and the affection of his brother
Archibald.
In
the early days each sugar estate, no matter
how small boasted its own factory, slave-built
from limestone quarried in the island. Many
of these were architectural gems - like
the factory at nearby GALES
VALLEY which was donated by Hampden
owners and removed stone by stone to the
University at Mona where it was reassembled
as the Chapel. The road circles the Hampden
factory and passes through a cool avenue
of bamboo on its way to the village and
coast. Your route heads towards
WAKEFIELD a sprawling village
on the edge of the Cockpit Country. The
Queen of Spain Valley is the largest aquifer
in the island and the water table here is
very close to the surface making Wakefield
prone to floods and small ephemeral lakes.
By
the Wakefield Police Station turn L and
keep L towards BUNKERS
HILL.
After about 2 miles, at a sharp bend there
is a stone ruin on a hill overlooking the
Martha Brae river - the boundary of Good
Hope estate. The next cross is FRIENDSHIP
where you turn L again and travel past Ugli
orchards turning L again at the next junction
for GOOD HOPE GREAT
HOUSE. Once the domain of John
Tharp (1744-1805) the largest land and slave
owner in the West Indies. The great house
and stone coach house have been faithfully
and lavishly restored to create an exclusive
small hotel and the land produces export
crops: anthuriums, papayas and Uglis. The
last, a cross between a grapefruit and a
tangerine was named (the story goes) by
the then Princess Royal who on being offered
one exclaimed "What an ugly fruit".
Delicious uglis are now being marketed as
Uniques.
A
slave-built stone bridge crosses the Martha
Brae into the old slave village where one
building is still in use as a packing house
and leads up the hill below an eighteenth
century house currently the residence of
the farm manager. This was built by Tharp
for his illegitimate son and farm manager
Alexander Harewood - the only one of his
children who inherited the father's energy
and acumen. Through a gateway flanked by
two more elegant old buildings, one slated
to be a pottery studio, you get your first
glimpse of the great house on the hill L
and pass R the Good Hope Stables. The great
house has a magnificent 360 degree view
and exquisite informal garden - with the
contemporary bonus of a swimming pool and
barbeque tucked away behind shrubbery. The
house is replete with priceless antiques
from an original painting of the estate
by J.B. Kidd to Tharp's anti-arthritis lead
bathtub fed by a copper cistern. Good Hope
is unique in almost every way. For example
one luxurious suite is in Tharp's counting
house above the former slave dungeon and
staying here is predictably pricey. Manager
is gourmet chef Tammy Hall. Tours, meals
and horseback riding can be arranged through
Half Moon Hotel or by phoning Good Hope.
An
intriguing history of Good Hope written
by a former owner Patrick Tenison, reveals
that John Tharp was beloved by his slaves,
so much so that in 1802 he wrote in a letter
"My negroes have increased and are
happy. They kill me with their constant
visits and attentions. It gives pleasure
though I am fatigued to death before the
day is half gone, for I must talk and shake
hands with every one of them." His
favourite child was the daughter he had
by one of his slaves who with the help of
a generous dowry married well and went to
live in England. The tradition of integration
was carried on by a nephew William Tharp
who was rumoured to keep a mistress on every
one of the family's numerous estates.
Return
approximately 2 miles to the (so-called)
main road and bear left for SHERWOOD
CONTENT. About 200 yards onwards a sign
nailed to a telegraph pole points R down
a dirt road to PANTREPANT which has
some caves with Arawak petroglyphs (incised
rock carvings). Sherwood Content is a straggling
village which the Waldensia Baptist church
built in 1836. At the crossroads with the
Post Office L and a promising-looking bar
and grocery R, another road doubles back
into thickly wooded hills and a sign directs
you to the WINDSOR CAVES the largest
caves in the island. To explore them you
will need an experienced guide, several,
including a gentleman known as 'Sugar Belly'
live in the vicinity. Also necessary are
dependable lights and a measure of caution
because several cavers have been lost in
the outer passages. The cave has many levels,
one source of the Martha Brae river rises
in a subterranean cavern and the roar of
water is said to echo through the caves
in rainy weather. Like most Jamaican caves
this one is inhabited by bats (known locally
as ratbats). Bat manure, an excellent fertilizer
used to be mined here. The caves are now
owned by Mike Schwartz, a retired airline
mechanic who lives in the Windsor great
house. Campsites and accommodation may be
available here soon.
The
road straight ahead will take you to CLARKS
TOWN via KINLOSS. Take the left
fork towards PERTH TOWN another small
straggling village and on to the MARTHA
BRAE RAFTING VILLAGE. Situated on a
low hill almost encircled by the green waters
of the river this is a pleasant place with
a bar and restaurant, restrooms, craft shop,
swimming pool and itinerant calypso band.
From here you can float down the emerald
river on a bamboo raft with trees arching
overhead and cows grazing beside the banks.
Each raft accommodates two persons. Your
captain will stop on request to allow you
to swim, picnic or swing from jungle creepers
like Tarzan. En route you will glide past
the MARTHA BRAE ESTATE RIVERSIDE PARK
shortly before the disembarkation point
just above a stone bridge. From here, transportation
is provided back to Rafter's Village and
security is provided at their car park.
Retrace
your raft route, this time by road downriver
to the MARTHA BRAE ESTATE RIVERSIDE PARK,
which offers something for everyone: swimming,
boating, mini-raft rides, fishing, picnic
areas, hammocks under the trees, entertainment,
food and drink and a mini-island devoted
to souvenir shops. The most refreshing option
is the riverside nature trail along the
old stone aqueduct (different lengths for
different tastes) and a hike through limestone
forest up a low hill through groves named
Land of Look Behind, Me No Sen, you No Come,
Rest and Be Thankful after districts in
the Cockpit Country. At the top of the rise
the nature trail merges with a heritage
trail offering re-creations of a Maroon
settlement and a slave village complete
with 'obeahman' and meeting house.
Past
the potter's shop and kiln you get a fine
view of the river and open air mini-museum
where a number of relics and artifacts are
on loan from the National Heritage Trust.
These include tombstones, some with fascinating
inscriptions. Pride of place here is taken
by a poignant statue of a little slaveboy
who is crowned with a metal band commemorating
the abolition of slavery. This ambitious
holistic park is the brainchild of former
parliamentarian Keith Russell and his family.
Historian/sociologist Basil Ferguson acts
as cultural consultant and supervises a
genealogy service which can research and
supply the convoluted family trees of Jamaicans.
Access to the park is via a pontoon raft
and the all-inclusive entrance fee covers
everything except food, drink and souvenirs.
Back
on the main road and over the stone bridge
brings you into the village of MARTHA
BRAE. The river, legend says, was named
after an Arawak sorceress who drowned a
party of greedy gold hunting Spaniards in
it. On the Falmouth side of the bridge is
the Persian Water Wheel installed in 1798
to supply water, gravity-fed in an aqueduct,
to a large tank in the town square - hence
the name Water Square. Its installation
made Falmouth the first town in the New
World to have running water. Nearby, a new
attraction at THE ISLAND is
scheduled to offer swimming, canoeing, and
'tubing' down the river. An expanse of wet-
land extends from here to the coast and
man-made fish ponds produce tropical fish
for export. The Trelawny Environment Protection
Association had plans to use some of the
ponds as a snook and tarpon nursery in an
attempt to rebuild the decimated fish population
of the Martha Brae estuary.
The
original settlement gravitated towards the
harbour about 1794 and was later christened
FALMOUTH.
It became a thriving port, exporting sugar
and rum and importing slaves and other commodities.
In 1830 the Baptist missionary William Knibb
described Falmouth as a 'pleasant, fashionable
seaport'. Emancipation of the slaves (which
Knibb did much to engineer), and the subsequent
decline of King Sugar stunted Falmouth's
growth but it remains the best laid-out
town in the island with numerous examples
of fine Georgian architecture - most of
them neglected or obliterated with ill-conceived
renovations. MARKET
STREET is lined with historic
buildings including the erstwhile school
of the Misses Knibb, the post office and
the BARRETT
TOWN HOUSE. The last was just
one home of a family whose sugar estates
stretched over thousands of acres in St.
Ann, Trelawny and St. James. To date all
attempts to preserve the town's architectural
treasures have proved futile but the Georgian
Society continues to have high hopes of
restoring the Barrett house and Tony Hart
has endowed a trust to restore and maintain
the BAPTIST
MANSE.
The PARISH CHURCH
on Duke St. dates from 1796 and has
some interesting tombs. Craft vendors and
stilt walkers sometimes congregate at the
entrance. FORT
BALCARRES on Charlotte Street,
named for a governor Earl Balcarres, was
originally sited in the centre of town,
but was relocated when citizens complained
that firing the salute set their roofs ablaze.
It is now an All Age School. The old
ALBERT & GEORGE MARKET in
Water Square (named for two of Queen Victoria's
sons) has been transformed into a Craft
complex. The market was removed to the east
outskirts of the town where on Wednesdays
it draws thousands of shoppers and higglers
from all over the island - to the weekly
'Bení Down' market so-called because
most goods are spread on the ground and
you have to bend down to make your selection.
Clothes, shoes, hats and other drygoods
are purchased by higglers (small traders)
in freeports like Panama or San Maarten
and resold here, sometimes to smaller higglers
who then re-sell them in other markets.
An
optional excursion east begins at the Shell
Gas station opposite the cone shaped Phoenix
Foundry, one of the earliest built in 1810.
It will take you to ROCK and the former
studio of the late Muriel Chandler, a celebrated
artist who developed ingenious batik techniques.
The cool stone building displaying her silk
batik works has the atmosphere of a shrine.
The workshop is now closed, but pricey batik
garments are on sale in the showroom.
Just
next door is the phosphorous lagoon of OYSTER
BAY where
the water teems with microscopic luminous
sea-creatures: at night these create spectacular
underwater fireworks when disturbed by boats,
fish or divers. Night boat rides to witness
the phenomenon start at US$6 per person.
Perched on the edge of the lagoon with their
own mini-marinas are: FISHERMAN'S
INN a pleasant small hotel and
GLISTENING WATERS
an informal yacht club and restaurant both
very popular with locals and people who
like "messing about in boats".
Deep-sea charters are available here. Fisherman's
Inn has a Scuba package and Glistening Waters
has good seafood at very moderate prices.
One
mile east TIME
AND PLACE is worth a pause. Run
by Sylvia and Tony it is low-key, rustic
and yet sophisticated with hammocks and
swimming from a still deserted beach, a
bar and restaurant and piped music for all
tastes. Next on your L is the TRELAWNY
BEACH, a large hotel offering
a semi-inclusive package. Opposite the entrance
is the COUNTRY
CLUB bar. Just past the residential
subdivision of CORAL
SPRING with a cluster of cottages
and a lovely lonely beach there is a long
steep hill. At the top a sign may (or may
not) point you left down an unpaved road
towards STEWART
CASTLE. Built by James Stewart,
Custos of Trelawny in 1880, the homestead
comprised a great house and stockade heavily
fortified against pirates. Neglected for
years, - the ruins are now seldom visited.
R
of the approach to DUNCANS
there is a rootsy pub, the SOBER
ROBIN INN
which claims to be the childhood
home of Harry Belafonte. Opposite here OCEAN
POINT/DUNCANS BAY sprawls across
750 acres with three miles of pristine oceanfront
land. Plans are afoot for a comprehensive
residential resort with marina, hotels,
golf course and shopping area. Residential
lots are already on sale. Near the ruins
of an old great house there are two caves
with traces of Arawak occupation. It is
said that the emancipator Rev. William Knibb
and his family were hidden in these caves
by church members when irate slave owners
burnt his manse and were seeking to arrest
and arraign him for treason.
A
road L of the main leads to
SILVER SANDS, a cottage colony
perched above a fine private beach. Visitors
are welcome at the Beach Club where there
is a bar and restaurant and a charge for
water sports and swimming. Some of the houses
here are owner occupied, others are the
weekend retreats of business tycoons and
most can be rented.
To
the east of Silver Sands a secluded beach
front property is being converted into SWEPT
AWAY TRELAWNY, a luxurious sports-oriented
allinclusive hotel cloned from the original
in Negril.
In
the small town of
DUNCANS the town clock seldom
tells the right time and the bakery makes
delicious coco-breads & huge roll, spread
with margarine before baking and very sustaining.
At Stupart's gas station, head east towards
RIO BUENO. On your left the
Kettering Baptist church built in 1893 commemorates
the famous emancipator William Knibb who,
in 1840, founded a village here for freed
slaves, naming it after his native town
in Northamptonshire, England. He died here
in 1845.
The
road runs between pastures and pimento groves.
In season youths will flag you down to sell
bunches of guineps - resembling large green
cherries. They are tart and stainy and said
to be full of iron and enzymes. Descending
the hill at BRACO,
the great house R has been tastefully remodelled
and L is an erstwhile government airstrip,
formerly the site of several ganja plane
crashes.
At
BRACO GREAT HOUSE
R Queen Elizabeth II took tea on one of
her visits to the island. The seafront at
Braco has been transformation into BRACO
VILLAGE a large environment friendly.
Large fishes are the specialty of the woodcarver's
stall at the foot of the hill. L at PLANE
STOP,
the remains of one of the crashed ganja
planes is the centrepiece of a kiosk advertising
cold beer, jerk pork and clean restrooms.
The Braco stone crushing plant R processes
limestone quarried from the hill behind.
There is another traveler's rest stop at
RIO BRAC
on the R, and L as you enter RIO
BUENO.
Most
historians believe that Rio Bueno is the
place where Christopher Columbus first landed
in Jamaica. Having been chased from St.
Ann's Bay by Arawaks in war canoes, he put
in to Discovery Bay, but when his scouts
failed to find fresh water he weighed anchor
for the next horseshoe shaped harbour west
where he found a fine river hence the name
Rio Bueno.
A
natural harbour, Rio Bueno was once a busy
sugar and banana port. Among its historic
buildings, the Wellington Hotel, described
by Monk Lewis in 1816 "as a very good
inn" is in an advanced stage of decay.
The old tavern at the cross-roads is still
a popular drinking spot though its eighteenth
century character has been obliterated by
repairs. On the beach opposite is a rootsy
reggae centre and bar. On the hill above
is an eighteenth century Baptist church.
The photogenic St Mark's Anglican church
on the seafront built in 1833 was frequently
visited by Her Royal Highness Princess Alice,
aunt of King George VI and the first Chancellor
of the University of the West Indies.
At
the other end of the village, the RIO
BUENO TRAVEL HALT provides
snacks, beers, good craft items and clean
restrooms. Spanning the Rio Bueno and marking
the boundary between the parishes of Trelawny
and St. Ann is the Bengal Bridge an impressive
example of stonemasonry which was built
in 1789. The Rio Bueno river rises dramatically
a few miles south in the hills near STEWART
TOWN and
is actually a continuation of the Cave river
which sinks abruptly in the centre of the
island. A species of eyeless fish inhabit
its subterranean waters.
Return
to Montego Bay along the coast road from
Falmouth. At JAMAICA
SWAMP SAFARI
you can see captive crocodiles. These ferocious-looking
but shy reptiles were once abundant and
are depicted on Jamaica's Coat of Arms.
Today, with most of their habitat destroyed
they are a protected species and the fine
for killing one is hefty. Wetland areas
like this are nurseries for many marine
species and the islandwide dumping of wetlands
and destruction of mangrove forests is a
major cause of depleted stocks of fish and
crustaceans. SALT
MARSH is a village of fishermen
and woodcarvers. A wide range of carvings
some raunchy, some excellent) are displayed
along the road and you can negotiate a price
minus the middleman's mark-up. Your route
passes L on a high hill
GREENWOOD GREATHOUSE
Further on R SEACASTLES is a condominium
hotel with its own chapel and commissary.
At the junction just before ROSEHALL
BEACH & COUNTRY CLUB R, the
road L to BARRETT
HALL passes the SOS
CHILDRENS VILLAGE created many
years ago on the initiative of Heinz Simonitsch,
Managing Director of Half Moon Hotel.
Another
sponsor of this excellent home for needy
children is country singer Johnny Cash who
restored an eighteenth century great house
at Cinnamon Hill nearby. Past the Rosehall
golf course, the next landmark is ROSEHALL
GREAT HOUSE owned by U.S.
millionaire John Rollins, a controversial
figure here, whose plans to develop an upmarket
resort in this area have been in limbo for
thirty years. The homes of wealthy winter
residents overlook L the golf course of
HALF MOON CLUB. The Disneyworld confection
R of the road is Half Moon's luxurious Shopping
Centre and the next palatial building R
is actually the stables for the hacks at
ROCKY POINT RIDING STABLES. Elaborate
landscaping R embellishes the entrance to
HALF MOON HOTEL, the most enduring
and progressive of Jamaica's elegant resorts
and currently in the process of major expansion.
A
more functional shopping centre, frequented
by locals and tourists alike is the BLUE
DIAMOND SHOPPING PLAZA L of the road
with numerous shops, 4 restaurants, and
a cinema. Opposite the HOLIDAY INN
the HOLIDAY VILLAGE has a
variety of shops, nearby the very popular
DISCO INFERNO is the scene of beauty
contests, fashion shows and international
dance concerts. As you approach the outskirts
of Montego Bay the planes taking off from
Donald Sangster airport roar overhead.
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