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The Visitors' Journal - Memorable Moments

Memorable Moments in Barbados! 
This section contains visitors' Memorable Moments, letters and insight from visitors about theater, arts or whatever made their trip to Barbados one to remember and cherish.

We would love to hear about your experiences  and memories, so please send us an e-mail and your comments will be added to this growing collection of Memorable Moments!

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Memorable Moments!
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Pampalam 
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Caribbean Christmas

Theatre Moments

Storytelling

A Visitor writes home
They came from all over the Caribbean, Trinidad, Jamaica, The Caymans, Guyana, Antigua and Barbados. Trinidad was the best represented, many of its story tellers, like Paul Keens Douglas, are known all over the world. Paul is the brother of Michael Keens Douglas, who host the show "Cloud Nine" on CBC radio in Canada. Nine story tellers regaled us with music, rhyme, comedy and drama. An invited guest from Boston, John Porcino, told a wonderful tail of the wisdom of an old jewish rabbi. The prose was so lyrical that the story slid into and out of song at ever turn.

My favorite storyteller was Amina Blackwood Meeks. Yes, West Indian storytellers have ample names. Amina lives in Antigua, and her accent, slow and del_iber_ ate, was strikingly different to the Bajans and the Trinis, particularly the Trinis with their sharp, machine gun fast, razor sharp twang. Amina was the most dramatic speaker, a deep rich voice punctuated the words. Terse, tight irony, contrasted with the others lighter verse. Her comedy was never light, it was passionate.

Dey is telling we, dat, we is a developing nation. How a nation does develop. We should put a big sign up by de airport, "Dis Island Under Construction". Or better still, "Future Site of ---". And dem big belly exec- cute-ive, acome from world organisation wit dey brief case and dey belly full of reco-men-day-tion....Dey coming to reco-men, we caint sell no more ripe banana cas, dem no tink de skin look like how dey does tink de skin should look like, before a little Caribbean sun ketch it.

Black people na have no shame. Why Ono dont just pack up and leave. Ono bad word cussing, water selling, goat peddling, good for nothing, lazy infestation. Ono is not include in the all inclusive, non productive, coconut drinking, fun seeking, beach combing, disinfected, sunblocked, sunstroked, sun worshippers, from all de places too numerous to mention... but I know dat.
 


Memorable Moments!
Storytellers 
Pampalam 
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Internet Postcard!
Caribbean Christmas

Comedy Theater

A Visitor writes about Pampalam
We went to "Pampalam". I thought it would be overacted and envisioned loud Bajans shouting out their lines. In fact it was very sensitive. At one point a young man transformed himself into an 80 year old, with only the aid of a hat. His face took on a slightly grim look, his actions and words were slow and deliberate. He became the 80 old he played, silent knowing looks, a slow nodding of the head and vacant stares, took the place of words. He was good. The play was all in verse and song. A tribute to the poetry of the West Indies. West Indians talk in prose;

"Politicians are so full of air, dey does open up dey mouth, before dey put dey mind in gear".

The play was about gossip, local folks meeting at the bus stop or the park to lime and old talk about the days events and other people's lives. Mostly, quite malicious talk about the friends who were not there. The audience was spontaneous, and because it was in verse, they often anticipated the lines and shouted them out, laughing in advance of the joke. A big black woman seated beside me, clapped her hands and slapped my leg with a hearty "Yey brother..., alright man". Very disconcerting really to Mother and I, the only whites in a sea of beaming black faces. "Give it to him sister", she shouted as one character encountered her husband telling tales behind her back. I was not able to participle to the full extent, but I did laugh out loud, now and again.


Memorable Moments!
Storytellers 
Pampalam 
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Caribbean Christmas

A Caribbean Christmas
Winters sting is cold out there 
So Christmas will not find me here 

Christmas will be Carib style 
Soca music, Steel Pan drum, 
Santas blackened by the sun 
drinking water with their rum 

Winter will be hot this year 
spicy fish balls, pepperpot, 
curry from the roti hut, 
hot sauce dished up with an egg, 
liver cutters, Baxters bread 

Jug jug, cou-cou, eddoes, yams 
okras cooked and turkey stuffed 
Hard sauce on a christmas pud 
aged with spice and flamed with rum 

Winter brings me spicy fare 
cooling off with cold Banks beer 

No winter will not find me here, 
Leaving now with my swimwear 
To the pulsing of the drum 
and Santas laughing with the Sun 


Memorable Moments!
Storytellers 
Pampalam 
Message Board
Internet Postcard!
Caribbean Christmas

Music Moments

Pavarotti Performs at Holders Hill

Hey !! I saw Pavarotti performing at Holder Hill in Barbados. I was sitting on a rug with my picnic basket and my sparkling wine and lovely company. Sitting under the stars on the wide open polo field. Imagine it !. There were shooting stars in the sky that night and he sang loud and strong across the field and to the sky. It was magical. Just beyond your Imagination !

Memorable Moments!
Storytellers 
Pampalam 
Message Board
Internet Postcard!
Caribbean Christmas


Activities Moments

An Awesome Trip To Barbados!
Hi! I visited Barbados last year in April and it was the most beautiful place that I have ever been to. The best thing that I did besides lay on the beach was take a submarine ride. It was an awesome experience. We even saw a rare sea turtle. The people in Barbados are among the friendliest in the world. I also enjoyed taking a ride on a catamaran for the day...complete with a champagne breakfast. Totally awesome!
Maggie
Take A Tour | Take A Boat Cruise!

Wildlife - A monkeys picnic ball
If you want to get up close and personal with the Barbados Green Monkey, go to the Barbados Wildlife Reserve at feeding time. It was about midday when we arrived, someone dumped a pile of bananas and corn and things in a heap just a few feet away from us. Someone else rang a bell or buzzer that sounded through  all corners of the reserve. I guess it was a dinner bell,and the guest were the reserves wild monkeys and other  animals. They came running, flying over our heads as they swung down from the trees and scampering  around us. So close you could touch them. They ran to the pile of fruit and vegetables and scurried off with arms full to find a quiet place to sit and eat. Some lazing under a tree, resting against the trunk looking like a holiday tourist without a hat. It was rather like a picnic, we thought. But there are no rules or social graces at the monkeys picnic ball. If  you are a big monkey and smaller guy has a better looking banana, you just take it.
The children loved it, it was a topic of talk for days and we all still remember whenever we think of holidays.

Take A Barbados Eco Tour!


Special Moments

I am a travel agent who visited Barbados for the first time in 1996 on an educational visit. The island and its people made such an impression on me that I longed to revisit. My husband and I have just returned from a glorious weeks holiday. The thing that strikes me most is the friendliness of the people - it is the only place I have ever visited were I feel safe walking about at night - rather than feel threatened as you might normally the people actually pass the time of day and ask how you are enjoying your holiday! A story I like to tell proves just how hospitable the people are: I had written a few postcards to post one day while out exploring the island in our hire car. Unfortunately one of them blew out the open window as we were passing through a sugar cane plantation but as we were unable to see it about we decided just to let it go and send a new one. On our arrival home 6 days later the recipient said she had received our postcard which she showed to us and to our amazement it was the original one that we had lost!! Obviously a passing local had discovered our lost postcard and posted it for us, which considering we had lost it literally in the middle of nowhere, probably meant he had to walk quite a distance to do so. They really are quite unique and are what make me want to return to the island again and again. I would recommend it to anyone!
Lindsey


I love Barbados because it is one of the most beautiful islands I know of with the most polite people, best food (all over), best music, fun activities, nice weather, and so on and so on and so on.......
I would love to find a spa on the island (ie: day spa which offers massage, various body wraps, aromatherapy, facials, nail & hair treatment). I've been to Barbados many times and have never had a bad experience! I always travel there with someone who has never been and they to have a great time!
Melissa


 

My wife and I have had the pleasure of visiting Barbados four times. We have been to 13 other Caribbean islands and Barbados seems like home to us because of one thing - the people. On our second trip there we hired a taxi to take us on a complete island tour. The driver not only showed us the whole island but brought us to his home for lunch! Although this memorable moment doesn't fit into any of the categories, the people of Barbados are a category into itself and will compel us to visit this wonderful island as often as we can!
Dave

Take An Island Tour


I have spent the last eight winters holidaying in Barbados. Although I've tried other islands in the Caribbean from time to time, none really match up to Barbados and the reason is chiefly down to the people. Bajans are the friendliest islanders. It is also one of the few places - in the world - where a single woman traveller can wander around feeling perfectly safe. Guess where I'm going next Christmas? In fact I've just booked up this morning, one month from Dec 15th. Heaven. I'm dreaming of a sunny Christmas...
Mary


My husband and I made our first visit to the Caribbean March 3-10, 2000. Having chosen Barbados as our destination, I am now telling all of my friends and associates "I have seen Paradise and it is BARBADOS!"

We enjoyed so very much the excruciatingly beautiful views, scrumptious meals, and (of course) a never-ending flow of rum punch...but it was the PEOPLE of BARBADOS that made our memories so special. Everyone we met (at the resort and out in the small villages) seemed to go out of their way to greet us, inquire as to how we were enjoying our visit, and offered suggestions as to what to see and what to do. The genuine warmth and hospitality of the Bajan people has left a lasting impression on us, and we hope to bring at least a bit of that into our own daily lives here in the often hectic United States.

We very much look forward to our next visit to Barbados...and will most definitely plan on a longer stay next time! I loved the trip so much, I created some special pages on my website to share: http://www.smallvillegraphics.com/html/barbados.htm
Kathi

 

Memorable Moments!
Storytellers 
Pampalam 
Message Board
Internet Postcard!
Caribbean Christmas

 

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