Down South Perspective

The Caribbean On $25 A Day

The Caribbean on $25 A Day (make that $22.87, depending on how you figure the mayo)

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Words & Pictures
By Allan Weisbecker

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Like virtually all Down Islanders, my gypsy cab driver Kesler was out of his mind behind the wheel, but, God bless him, he did me sane, right and dandy insofar as leading me to accommodations goes, notwithstanding the rear end collision we sustained just outside the little hamlet called Betsy’s Hope on the island of Tobago’s rural windward coast.

The Restrite Sea Gardens�
The Restrite Sea Gardens…

The purple blush of dusk is just now fading beyond my veranda overlooking King’s Bay, a deep crook in the island below the village of Delaford, which is perched high over the water on a steep escarpment. The full moon flood tide is lapping at the very steps to the Restrite Sea Gardens Guest House, an establishment I guarantee is not to be found in any guide books to the Caribbean; nor does it exist, even in theory, in the cyberspace fantasyland of travel agent computers.

Morning coffee...
Morning coffee…

You don’t make reservations for the Restrite; you just show up, which is what I did. I in fact have no reservations for any of the seven nights I’ll spend on the island. This is part of my plan, or non-plan, in proving that a Caribbean vacation can be had for $25 a day.

Wait a minute. The Caribbean on $25 a day. Whaddam I, nuts?

Maybe, but so far so good. Since touching down on the island early this morning, I’ve spent a total of $17.09, and that includes ground transportation, breakfast, lunch, my room for the night and dinner, plus two Carib beers to wash it down with.

My room, by the way, is large, clean and airy, if peculiar in color scheme and appointments. The couch, I’m quite sure, was salvaged from the back of one of Kesler’s former gypsy cab wrecks, its previous automotive incarnation thinly disguised with a flowered antimacassar. There is a cavernous private shower in back, full kitchen out front, and neatly squared away double bed. The proprietress, Mistress Orr, a handsome lady in her mid-sixties, fed me to the bursting on stewed chicken, pelau rice, dumplings, plantains, sweetbread and callaloo soup, and seemed embarrassed when she said the meal would be an extra 15 TT (Trinidad & Tobago dollars), or $2.40, U.S., on top of the 40 TT ($6.42) for my cosy little palm-girded niche on the edge of the sea.

I dine in my room...
I dine in my room…

One of the reasons for choosing Tobago for my little low budget Caribbean experiment was that the island is in many ways representative of the economic and cultural transitions that have been taking place over the whole of the Down Island basin since I’d first visited here in the mid 1960s – the principals of cheap travel and living will be generally applicable to certain other islands that fit into its socio-economic mold. I’ve come in mid-October, which is off-season, the better for bargain hunting, especially with regard to room rates. (Although six bucks and change is the Restrite’s year ‘round price.)

Now I’m stretched out on my bed, cooled by the gentle nighttime trades wafting through my open door, contemplating my day’s exploration of the pristine shoreline of King’s Bay and Delaford proper high above it. I’m thinking about George, a young man of devout Rastafarian beliefs who shyly approached me on my veranda and was well read and opinionated about history and current world events. George was worried about the recent influx of land-buying foreigners, who “are stealin’ Tobago’s secret” – which I took to mean her culture.

George...
George…

But mostly I’m thinking about Miss Faith, wondering about her 97 years (or 96 or 92, depending on who you ask) here at Delaford. What kind of lady was she? What were her hopes and fears? Did she have a good life? A happy life? Was she loved?

I was the only non-local at the funeral up at the church this afternoon (I just wandered in), and I viewed Miss Faith, diminutive but not shrunken in her casket, which seemed tiny as a doll’s. Her ninety-whatever years rested easy on a bituminous black face, features soft though deeply lined around her mouth and eyes. I noticed that the borders of her lace dress and the soft lining of her coffin were the exact same shade of maroon as the uniforms of the little schoolgirls just then skipping down the street by the church. I wondered if this was coincidence, or a subtle, deliberate reference to her own youth so long ago, when she gamboled on this same sun-drenched street, pigtails flying in the seawind.

Caribbean Intermission

Ten AM the morning of my third day on-island, I’m in Speyside, a handful of miles up the coast from Delaford. Recumbent on the roadside in the shade of an almond tree, my knapsack as backrest, I’m wondering if a car will ever pass this way. Not just a “drop” taxi (gypsy cab), route taxi or maxi-taxi (a van or mini-bus); any car.

The Atlantic View�
The Atlantic View…

I’ve been lolling here for an hour, maybe more. No cars.

Mister Davis, a septuagenarian Seventh Day Adventist preacher, crosses the road from his Atlantic View Guest House, where I stayed last night. Newly renovated, with a huge kitchen and seaview veranda, I’d settled in after tactfully negotiating Mr. Davis down from 110 TT ($17.65) to 60 ($9.63).

Mister Davis�
Mister Davis…

Mr. Davis fastidiously arranges himself by me on the curb, all decked out in his Sunday best. His brindled, swaybacked old goat, tethered in the guest house yard (the perfect low-maintenance lawn mower) spots him and commences maaa-aaah-ing in recognition and concern, ears perked like a dog’s.
“Don’t worry,” Mister Davis says to the animal. “I be back ‘fore dark.”
Mister Davis, like myself, is going to Charlotteville on the northern tip of the island. He has a church service to attend, I remember from our conversation yesterday.

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Four-footed lawn mowers�
Four-footed lawn mowers…

Lawn mower races�
Lawn mower races…

Young lawn mowers�
Young lawn mowers…

Lawn mower and friend�
Lawn mower and friend…

We confabulate in the gathering heat of mid-morning. I want to talk about Miss Faith, whom Mister Davis knew. I’m concerned because Miss Orr hadn’t attended Miss Faith’s funeral and when I’d asked why, she’d shrugged and turned away, as if there’d been bad blood between them. So I want Mister Davis to say something nice about Miss Faith, but all he’ll say is that he intends to live to be older than she had.

A maxi-taxi blows by, Charlotteville-bound. Riding low, packed solid, it does not stop.

Time passes. Shadows shrink. No more cars come. I sit by the standpipe on the roadside, stick my head under the cool stream, drink my fill of sweet Tobago water.

David breezes by in the back of a pickup, on his way home from his morning’s work, going the other way. He yells out effusive greetings. I met him yesterday when that same pickup had taken me from Delaford to Speyside.

My wild ride to Speyside with David�
My wild ride to Speyside with David…

“No charge fo’ dis mon,” David said to the driver. “We got to take care of our visitors.” David led me down to his waterfront cottage –just one small room but with a million-dollar view – to meet his wife Annis and two daughters, Cheyenne and Swan, beautiful little girls. He pointed out the best, cheapest local restaurant, aptly named The Paradise – full island style fish dinner with trimmings and beer for about $6 on the rickety wood open-air porch overhanging the harbor.

David�s wife Annis�
David’s wife Annis…

After dinner I met up with David again and we’d bought each other Caribs at The Boats Men’s Pool Hall and “limed” (a cross between hanging out and lurking) with his buddies. Played a game of 8-ball.

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The Paradise�
The Paradise…

I blew them all away with an incredible three-bank combination that would take four million tries to pull off again.
Back on the roadside now, finally a drop car pulls up, but with room for only one. I gesture for Mister Davis to take it.

Mister Davis’s old goat watches, straining against his tether as the cab accelerates down the narrow, lushly fringed road. He lets fly a booming Maaaa-AAHHH, timbre rising sharply at the end like a question.

When I finally arrive in Charlotteville via a wild ride in the back of a fisherman’s pickup – I contributed 4 TT ($.64) for gas, which is what a drop taxi would’ve cost – my hunt for accommodations is tough going at first. All the waterfront rooms seem to be in the 100 - 120 TT ($16.05 - $19.26) range, which is beyond my means if I expect to eat, never mind drink and be merry, on $25 U.S. a day. Nobody is in a bargaining mood.

Charlotteville
Charlotteville

A kind-hearted fellow named Solomon takes me under his wing and leads me down a narrow, labyrinthine path past rooting pigs, brooding hens and scratching mongrels to a rooming house right on the edge of the seawall to the north of the village pier. “Dis place is cheap,” he says, but the rooms are all occupied.

I’m getting discouraged, but Solomon says not to worry. He points me up some stairs a half block off the waterfront and I soon find myself in conversation with a spry, kind-eyed gentleman I take to be in his mid-sixties, Mister Alleyne. I ask him how much for a single room. He tells me 100 TT ($16.05). When I sag visibly – it’s no act – he asks how much I can afford. Sixty TT ($9.63), I say, with an apologetic shrug.

“Jus’ you needs dee room?” Mister Alleyne knows I’m traveling alone, but I smile and play the game and say, “Yes, just me.”

“Then sixty be all right.”

Mister Alleyne
Mister Alleyne

“Did you know a lady named Miss Faith, from Delaford?” I ask as Mister Alleyne shows me my clean, spacious room, the full kitchen adjoining it.

“Only to say ‘good-day’ to, “he replies. “I hear she die.”

I’m hoping Mister Alleyne will say something more about Miss Faith, but he doesn’t.

I nap for an hour or so in the heat of mid-afternoon, then take a swim off the pier. I’ve crossed to the island’s leeward side now and the cerulean waters of Man O’ War Bay are unruffled like a lake.

Back at my room, I shower and dress, then hit the streets for a little Sunday afternoon walkabout. I’ve been to Charlotteville once before years ago and remember it as the quintessential small Caribbean town, with it’s fishing-based waterfront activity somehow at once bustling and indolent, the anchorage a winsome mix of net-laden dories and world voyaging yachts.

Charlotteville waterfront
Charlotteville waterfront

I pass by the bargaining clamor of the fishermen’s co-op, then find myself sauntering inland toward a high valley wall, lushly resplendent in its rainy season frippery, that nestles the town on three sides. My amble feels random as I cut down side streets and walkways between low rambling structures; but I soon realize I’m being aurally courted by the distant, dulcet resonance of human voices raised in song.

Following a narrow trace skirted by a panic of untended yellow and orange hibiscus, I find myself watching an assemblage of formally dressed local folk filing out of a little church cantilevered into the verdant hillside, and singing the hymn “Amazing Grace”.

I spot Mister Davis in the throng as he descends the church steps, head bowed. He looks up, notices me, and smiles warmly. The congregation promenades by, then on down the flower-fringed path. I fall in behind and find I’ve unconsciously joined in the singing.

A beach drowse�
A beach drowse…

After a dinner of fish and chips, salad and beer in a local bistro down by the pier (28 TT – $4.97), I’m sitting at my kitchen table with Mister Alleyne, leaning towards him in rapt attention as he describes what Charlotteville was like in the late 1920s, when he was a teenager; how it has evolved from a plantation economy over the decades. Turns out Mister Alleyne isn’t in his mid-sixties as I’d guessed, he’s in his mid-eighties. His memory is clear, his imagery detail-rich and enchanting.

He tells me how his mother’s father came to Charlotteville in the mid-nineteenth century and bought the land upon which his guest house now sits for the equivalent of $50. How he himself had rebuilt after the family’s original little wooden shack was severely damaged in a hurricane in the 1950s. He sighs but his smile lingers, eyes bright. “Dee houses and dee boats and dee people come and go but dee island, you know, is dee thing dot stay.”

I’m experiencing history, largely unrecorded except in the minds of the few like Mister Alleyne. These things he’s telling me are, as my Rastafarian friend George back in Delaford would say, the secrets of the island.

ISLAND PEOPLE INTERLUDE #2ISLAND PEOPLE INTERLUDE #2

Two mornings later I’m down the coast in the tiny fishing village of Parlatuvier, maybe eight miles as the booby flies from Charlotteville, raising some mean blisters as I help Jungle and his crew haul their seine net to the beach. It’s tough work – the drag of the huge semi-circular net is such that the six of us gain only inches with each heave – but I like the hell out of Jungle and anyway I owe him one, for the time he’d put in finding me a place to stay. So I’ve canceled my early workout swim and calisthenics and pump some net instead.

Hauling seine with Jungle and the boys�
Hauling seine with Jungle and the boys…

Jungle and I met up yesterday morning and come sundown sat sipping Caribs on the steps of the beachfront elementary school. We’d fallen into a conversation about haul seining, a method of fishing used by fisherfolk all over the world, including my baymen friends back in the States on eastern Long Island. “It’s interesting,” I opined, “That the methods and equipment have evolved identically in far-flung places, over many centuries.”
Jungle smiled and nodded. “It’s said dot Jesus Christ hauled a seine net.”

“He’d take one look at your gear and know exactly how to handle it.”

Now, early next morning and after a good two hours hard labor, we haul the net ashore and extract the catch, which is a meagre one basket of tiny herring and baitfish, and which must be divided up amongst the crew. The harvest, by anyone’s financial calculation, was hardly worth the effort.

Jungle�
Jungle…

But Jungle grins philosophically, slaps me on the back and thanks me for my help. “We do better tomorrow,” he says.

ISLAND PEOPLE INTERLUDE #3

ISLAND PEOPLE INTERLUDE #3

But I say goodbye to Jungle and move on that afternoon, to another little fishing village, Castara, some few miles further down the coast. I had trouble finding a cheap room at Parlatuvier and ended up paying an appalling 80 TT ($12.84) at Chance’s Guest House. After two hours of friendly haggling, with me crying poverty and going off with Jungle then coming back and sighing that I guess I’ll have to leave town, Mister Chance came down from 120 TT.

Mister Chance�
Mister Chance…

I get lucky in Castara. After roaming the beach facilities, talking up the local fishermen, I’m steered to a young fellow named Roger Wallace, nicknamed “Teacher”. (When pressed, he blushingly divulges that the local girls have hung that one on him.) Roger sets me up in a spacious, airy room with living area and full kitchen for 40 TT ($6.42). Like most of the better guest houses (clean, roomy, well situated and CHEAP) I’ve come across in my peregrinations, no reservations are expected, or indeed possible, at Roger’s, since there is no phone.

My $6.42 a night room in Castara

My $6.42 a night room in Castara

It’s early dusk now and I’m at Hazel’s little eatery on the beach having a stupendous “vegetarian delight” dinner (comprised of too much stuff to list) and a beer for 30 TT ($4.83). It’s been a good day, I’m thinking. I explored the rain forest behind Castara (Roger’d offered to come as guide, no charge, but I’d gone on my own), then bathed in a bracing deep water pool under a gushing waterfall up the little stream that empties into the bay. I rambled my way through the late afternoon photographing the doings of the waterfront in the sweet light of that time, then walked down the strand to Hazel’s for this salubrious repast.

I find a secluded beach�
I find a secluded beach…

It occurs to me that apart from glimpsed pale faces in fast moving rental cars in a fervid rush to see the island in a day then get back to their air- conditioned, satillite TV-wired hotel rooms down on the south coast, I have hardly been subjected to another of my kind (I am after all a tourist) since arriving on the island five days ago.

Tomorrow will be different, I know. I’m nearing the end of my tour and have no choice but to head for that south coast. I have decidedly mixed feelings about abandoning the charm, grace and serenity of the island’s hinterland.

ISLAND PEOPLE INTERLUDE #4

ISLAND PEOPLE INTERLUDE #4

It’s my last day on-island and I’m up before the sun — at “first chicken,” as the local saying goes.
I’ve never slept in a church before, which, aside from financial considerations, was why I approached Mother Cleorita Robinson of the Spiritual Baptist Church in Black Rock for my last night’s accommodations. The church is nestled in a banana grove on a bluff overlooking Grafton Bay, a stunning stretch of strand, notwithstanding the two hotels stentoriously dominating the slope above it. Like those $150-$250 rooms, my little chapel-niche has a water view and is within steps to the beach. I also have access to a full kitchen — which those rooms do not — in the adjoining rectory. The 60 TT ($9.63) I donated to the church included a sumptuous dinner last night with Mother Cleorita and her quick-witted, vivacious daughter Audrey.

A Spiritual Baptist service�
A Spiritual Baptist service…

As I sit on my mattress before the altar’s gold tapestries, brass chalices and bells and votive accouterments, a symphony of crowing cocks, warbling songbirds, maaa-aahh-ing goats and laughing children on their way to school lends perspective to my final fiscal tally.

Morning of my last day�
Morning of my last day…

Did I do the Island on $25 a day?

I notice that I still have half-full containers of mustard, mayo, peanut butter, guava jam and coffee. I subtract 50% of their cost from the total, since, having decided to bring them home with me, they fit my (admittedly loose) definition of souvenirs — and therefore are deductible. This saves me 21 TT ($3.37).

The grand total is $160.09 U.S., or $22.87 a day.

As I’m packing up my knapsack, Mother Cleorita’s clear, strong voice calls out my name as she enters the church with steaming coffee and warm sweet rolls. She sits by me and we talk.

I’ve broached the subject of my manner of travel with many of the locals I came to know over my time on-island and I do so again with Mother Cleorita.

“I only wish more folks would visit us dee way you have,” Mother says in her melifluous Down Island accent. “You stayin’ ovah at Grafton (the nearby tourist hotel), you think we be sittin’ heah talkin’ like this, gettin’ to know each othah?”

 Mother Cleorita�
Mother Cleorita…

Here, Mother has, of course, gotten to the heart of the matter of my experiment. My week’s wanderings weren’t about money at all; not about how to spend it, nor about how to save it; it was about experiencing this special isle, rather than just seeing it; about travel as opposed to tourism; it was about people, meeting them on their own terms, and making genuine contact.

There is a bit of silence between us, but which is not uneasy. Waves break down the hill, people walk by the church; there is laughter.

“Did you know a lady named Miss Faith from over at Delaford?” I ask on impulse.

Mother smiles. “Yes, I knew her a little,” she says. “I hear she die.”

I nod, thinking about Miss Faith, her tiny coffin with maroon lace.

“She was a kind person,” Mother says quietly. “I remembah her fo’ dat.”

 A magic isle
A magic isle

CARIBBEAN TRAVEL HINTS

  • Pick the right island. Go somewhere with a developing tourism industry, not one that’s out of control (like Barbados or Jamaica). Besides Tobago, consider Carriacou, St. Lucia (although it’s starting to get tougher there), Antigua (ditto), Dominica, the Dominican Republic or Isla Margarita (in Venezuela).
  • Don’t try this in Haiti! Choose an island that’s not only less-developed, but also economically and politically stable. The Dominican Republic, for example, although cheap and generally safe, has some areas you’ll want to avoid. Talk up the locals about this; don’t be shy about it. This is another way to meet people.
  • Visit during the off-season. The best time to go is April through October. If you go in high-season, guesthouses will be busy, their proprietors less willing to bargain.
  • Travel light. A knapsack.
  • Up dee road. Avoid the airport area and “hotel rows.” The best deals, most amicable locals and most pristine scenery will be somewhere else.
  • Early to bed. Find a room in the morning, when proprietors are easier to track down (and maybe sleepy and off-guard) and guesthouses less likely to be full.
  • Haggle. Don’t be shy about bargaining for room rates (but not meals), but be sensitive and discreet. Preface your haggling with an explanation about the way you’re traveling and why you need to pay less.
  • Fun for less. If you’re an experienced angler or diver and you want to go offshore, approach a commercial fisherman, as opposed to a tour operator. Fishermen are more interesting to hang out with anyway.
  • Use any excuse you can come up with to start conversations with the locals. You never know where it might lead. Once, many years ago on another island, I made what turned out to be a life-long friend by asking what kind of fish he was cleaning. I knew very well that it was a red snapper.

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