Friday, November 30, 2007



Building collapse in Martinique (left) and Barbados (right)




If you've been watching the news then most of you have heard about our little quake yesterday. Well, not so little. It was a 7.3 magnitude quake just off of the French island of Martinique. For us it felt like a 4.7-5.0, and I am just going by the tremors I felt in Cali that were that strength. No damage was done here, most of it seemed to be closer to Martinique and we heard from other volunteers on St. Lucia that the power was knocked out. The earthquake was felt from Puerto Rico all the way down to Trinidad and Tobago!! Crazy! One powerful sucker! But anyhow, all is well and now people are starting to wonder about all these volcanoes in the area. Only time will tell what's going on.

Not much new to report other than the rattle we had yesterday. I have put up and album of our Thanksgiving last week that took place at Marty's (fellow volunteer). There was lots of food and lots of people. It was American Thanksgiving meets Caribbean culture. We set up tables and chairs and feasted under a mango tree... but of course!! Now we are just gearing up for Christmas and Carnival. I'll post again closer to the festivities and will hopefully have pictures of a current project with Brimstone Hill that should be completed before then.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

A picture is worth a thousand words...





On Friday I had the pleasure of hanging out at Estridge Primary school for the morning. They had a workshop going on with Anthony and Stephanie from the nonprofit Art In All of Us. Stephanie had emailed me a month or so ago via the couchsurfing network. She informed me of her plans to visit my little island this month and was wanting to know if I knew of a primary school that would want to participate in her project. I told the volunteers about the oppportunity and Marty was the first, and most enthusiastic to respond. So I gave Stephanie all the info and set her up to work with the Estridge Primary fourth and fifth graders.

Stephanie and Anthony came in from Antigua on Thursday and had previously been to Jamaica, the Dominican Republic and Haiti. They reside in Belgium (Stephanie is originally from Madagascar) and have been "visiting primary schools worldwide to promote creativity and artistic activities, as well as cultural exchanges between schools". The aim of their project can best be put in a summary Stephanie sent me through an email:


- to promote creativity
- to create an awareness of other countries and cultures
- to prepare a book presenting all the countries of the world through the eyes and rhymes of the children (every country will be presented through one photograph, as well as one drawing and poetry prepared by the kids). We will select the best poetry and the best drawing collected in every country
- to create an ART Pen Pal network of schools, encouraging schools throughout the world to communicate using ART (drawings, paintings ...) on specific themes. The themes are chosen to increase the knowledge of other cultures and tolerance (friendship, my dreams, my daily life, the United Nations' Millenium development goals...)

The kids spent the morning taking pictures of their friends and learning to capture images using different spontaneous poses and actions. They also drew pictures depicting their island and culture which in theory will then be used to initiate the pen pal process. I had so much fun watching them try different poses for the camera and observing their drawing skills that the whole morning seemed to speed by so fast. It was a great ending to my week and just what I needed to get grounded again after being in vacation mode for so long.


If you're interested about this project and want more info, check out their website, www.artinallofus.org, though I think they are currently having some technical difficulties with the site. I put all the pictures, or most of the pictures I took on Friday , in a new album in My Photos. I also finally have up my Dominica pictures. So be sure to check them all out.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

"All I need is a dollar coin and a band-aid"







Things are starting to slowly return to normal, whatever normal is anyway. I guess the better way to put it, is that I am nearly out of vacation mode. I’ve been back for almost a week now from my MST (mid service training), and an extended vacay in Dominica. To sum it up, I did a lot of river bathing/splashing/wading, playing in waterfalls, jumping off rocks into freshwater pools, hiking, twisting ankle while walking, scuba diving, tourist shopping, and one long trip to KFC that ended with us sipping white wine in a hot tub… It was definitely hard to leave beautiful Dominica!!

Along the way I met a couchsurfer who was staying with some volunteers in Dominica, he had told me he was coming to my tiny island and within 3 days of my return here I had found myself with a visitor. So I decided to keep in vacay mode for a little longer, but he has left now and I guess it’s finally time to get that trimester report done… oops, sorry Mavis!

Anyhow, I am still trying to make some headway in this flora and fauna project I am doing with Brimstone Hill. We have at least 70 plant species I need to make profile pages for. These pages include info on scientific names and origins, and local uses and desricptions. It’s become more tedious than I thought. The pages will be put into a folder that documents the flora and fauna of Brimstone Hill and will go along with our display of specimens and pictures in one of the rooms at the fortress. We’re hoping to be done at the end of this month, but I’m thinking it won’t happen.

Now that it is October I also find myself helping out again with the exchange students that are visiting from Guadeloupe (French-speaking students in for a month of training). It’s been a little more difficult this time because these students know very basic English, and I wish I could speak or understand French so it wasn’t so frustrating for all of us, but we are getting there. I’ve already missed a week because I was gone, and now it seems like I only have next week with them, so who knows how far we’ll make it, but hopefully I can make the whole process just fun for them. Along with their English classes I am resuming teaching Kayako, my Japanese friend, English. We were doing well in the classes before we all had vacation and got real busy over the summer, so now we’ll squeeze in some more lessons before her and her husband have to move back to Japan.

As for the rest of this week, I have my first Science Club session on Thursday at Maurice-Hillier Primary School in Basseterre. It’s for 4th graders and lasts an hour. I need to try and think of something fun we can do for our first day, anything that can include a big mess with glue, crayons, paper, and a mix of learning should be just right!

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

I'm half way through

I know, I know. It's been a while but sometimes I just don't see the point of writing anything down. I am not the best with words and no matter what kind of flowery language I use it could never illustrate this experience. Things have been awful and wonderful and amusing and sad and downright frustrating, and I look back on it all, half way through now, and I wouldn't trade this adventure for anything! I am anxious for this last year, and a little apprehensive on how I will feel when it comes time to go back home. Anyhow, here's a slide show to make up for the lack of updates. It might take a bit for all the photos to load, there are about 50 in all taken throughout the year... or perhaps more than 50...





Create Your Own

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Emancipation Concert on Brimstone Hill

About a week and a half ago, I attended the emancipation concert that is held annually up on Brimstone Hill. It is concert that features many local artists from musicians to poets, to drummers and dancers. Here are just a couple I managed to film (thanks Robin for letting me "borrow" your camera). I must remember my camera next time. It was a lot of fun though I had a tiring weekend and was drained by the end of it all. Enjoy!

*the last video has a little glimpse into the crowd and the set up there on Brimstone Hill

Also, I will be sure to put up pictures and videos from the Cry Freedom concert that will be held tomorrow night in Basseterre. This is part of the celebration of the 200th year since the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade.



Masud Sadiki-"I Wonder How"

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Okolo Dancers with Drummers

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Okolo Dancers part 2

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Okolo Tegramantine part 3

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Thursday, August 16, 2007

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

I feel like I need to write something to commemorate my first year out here.... I have been very nostalgic lately since we have a new group coming in this weekend. It keeps making me think about the year and what it will be like for my last year... but I am just too damn excited/anxious/obsessed with watching the weather at the moment!! We have Tropical storm Dean playing out in the Atlantic, and all predictions so far have it hitting the Leeward Islands (that's me!) within a few days!! I guess we won't really know it's course a day or two before it passes over the Lesser Antilles, but they are for sure it will pass over these little islands.

Guess we'll see!! Then I will try and recap my experience out here so far.

Friday, August 10, 2007

Camp recap

Things have now quieted down for a while. I finally feel like I can enjoy a bit of summer before the madness begins again… whatever that madness might be! I know one thing though, it won’t be camps anymore! My whole July was filled with day camps and I finished the last one last week.

I have put some more pictures up of all the camps. In total I did three, the Environmental Day Camp, the Sea Turtle Day Camp, and Camp Abraham. I finished Camp Abraham last week. They had a variety show last Thursday night, in which I had several kids that I helped come up with skits and presentations for the event. I was so stressed out the whole time with this camp since I was the one they asked to head the drama sessions. By the time the variety show rolled I was just intent on it finishing so I could go home. I got there at 4:30 pm and didn’t see my house until after midnight!! I ended up having a lot of fun and even joined in some of the skits since a couple of kids got stage fright. I loved it!


Here are some videos of some of the singing and drumming acts. The boys used plastic bottles and wooden blocks to drum on chairs, doors, and the wall. The video doesn’t do it any justice. I was expecting a cacophony of sound, but they really did beat out a rhythm.

camp variety show


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veriety show


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Though I got home after midnight, the ladies at the camp made sure to send me on my way with a bowl full of goat water and a huge piece of bread pudding. So I got home, turned on Scrubs, and ate my bowl of goat water and took some bites of bread pudding (that goat water ended up having some liver in it… I need to tell Mrs. Simon she tricked me!!)

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Kids say the darndest things

Interacting with kids is always interesting, no matter what part of the world you live in. Here's some stories from the last week:


Friday, July 27th: I was helping out with the St Kitts Sea Turtle Monitoring Network's day camp. We had crafts and games, and mini lectures set up for the kids. All of this was themed around learning about sea turtles and what the kids could do to help in the conservation effort of one of mother nature's most beautiful creatures. Come the end of the day the kids were eating popcorn and gathering their things to leave. One little boy walked right up to PCV Nate, tugged at his arm and said, "When do we get to see the elephants?"


Tuesday, July 31st: I was at Camp Abraham in the afternoon helping the kids prepare skits and performances for Thursdays talent show thing. I was working with little Levencia when 4 yr old Abby came up to me and said, "You're white"

"I know", I said chuckling.

"What happened?"

"I came out this way. When I was born"

"When you were a baby?"

"Yep."

Then she ran off down to the other room to watch the dancers

Yesterday: I am walking up the hill in my community to go to cricket practice. When I hit the corner at the main road there are always a bunch of kids playing at some tire swings there. This time there were 2 toddler-aged kids throwing what looked to be rocks at each other. As soon as they saw me one came running over, toting a rock of some sort in her hand. She was smiling and talking to me and I could tell she was wanting to launch it my way. I kept telling her "Don't throw that", but she just grinned and said something inaudible in dialect as I kept walking past. I thought I was safe as I made it past their yard, but then, to my surprise, something exploded behind me and then a stench of manure filled the air and I couldn't help but laugh. "Did she really throw a dry cow pattie at me?" I wondered. I didn't turn around, I just laughed to myself and trudged up hill and noted this as another this-is-the-peace-corps kind of moment.

Monday, July 16, 2007

Camp

Last week was wonderfully tiring! We had our day camp, which was themed "Protect our environment, our future depends on it". It was held at Violet Petty Primary school in Shelagh's village of Lodge. Each day we had kids from all over the island, about 140 total, come from 9 am to 3 pm.

The first half of the day was always a bit educational. There were speakers from the various branches of the government ministries who talked about what they do to help the natural environment of St. Kitts. There were some field trips to the bottling company and the landfill, and the Ag Dep labs. I don't think the kids were too impressed though, and I don't blame them. It all seemed a bit boring for young kids. They were more into activities that got them dirty and involved. They mainly looked forward to crafts in the afternoons, which were facilitated by Peace Corps volunteers. We showed them the glory of paper mache and how to make egg cartons into bugs and flowers. We taught them how to make paper from old newspaper and what wonderful window decorations you can make from plastic bottles. It was all good dirty fun!! I always ended up with paint or something else in my hair and on my clothes by the end of the day.

The main craft project that came out of this was a mural that the kids helped fellow PCV Shelagh paint. It is on a cobblestone wall right off the main road. A project that will hopefully be there for quite a while and something the kids can be proud of and say they had a part in. But I must say, there is quite a funny story that goes with it as well!!

On Thursday, the children all went on various hikes around the area. Fellow PCV, Bob, was with one group. I think it was the younger group of 7-9 year olds. Anyhow, when they were returning back from their hike, Bob took them by the wall that at that point had only the sketching and some painting of the mural done. Bob explained what it was going to say (it had the camp theme on it and a picture of the ocean and St Kitts) and how Shelagh and the older kids were working together on it. Well, one little kid, Kalvin (8), was standing next to Bob with his cricket bat resting on his shoulder and staring at the wall. After Bob explained the wall, Kalvin looked up at him with quite the serious face and said, "Seems like a big waste of time to me Bob". This took Bob off guard and he just chuckled and shook his head, but it was quite the comic relief for the rest of us volunteers that were back up at the school, and whom the story was promptly retold to. This is now a very favorite quote among all the volunteers, and I don't think Kalvin understands the lasting impression he has made!!

I put up some pictures of the camp in an album on my photos link. You should definitely have a look at them. I am also posting this video of 2 boys from the camp that showed off their dancing skills at the talent show the last day of our camp. Enjoy!!

Boy steals show

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Sunday, July 08, 2007

No more turtles...














I don't know what to do with my nights anymore!! The St Kitts Sea Turtle Monitoring Network wrapped up its Leatherback nesting season this weekend. For the last couple of months I'd go out with this group from 8 pm - 4 am twice a week, in search of one of St. Kitts most fascinating creatures. We'd walk up and down the Keys beach (over a mile long!) looking for any sign of a sea turtle's emergence. Once we found a girl we would tag her and collect data on things such as carapace length and width, number of eggs laid, and location of nest. Blood samples would also be taken by Dr. Stewart (director of the network) for a study she is doing on hormone levels within the turtles.

On average for most nights we would see 2-3 girls, but in the beginning and here towards the end of the season we were lucky to even see one!! Even if we never saw a girl I still enjoyed spending my nights out there. We'd walk the length of the beach, and if we had no sign of a turtle, we'd sit for about 4o minutes or so. By 2 or 3 am I'd be napping during those stops, but early in the night I'd just be awake chatting with the other volunteers or staring up in the sky for glimpses of shooting stars. So take note those of you who want to visit... if you come between April and July to this tiny island of mine, be sure to make it out onto the beach with us.

As for what to do with myself now that I have more free time... camps!!! I have a camp this week based around an environmental theme, then the following week is the sports camp. Then after that is the sea turtle camp with the SKSTMN. I am also still working at the Heritage Society. I had a meeting with Kate Orchard, the Environmental Coordinator for the SCHS yesterday. We were looking at writing a proposal for projects with the SCHS and Brimstone Hill Fortress National Park. It would include creating a flora and fauna display at Brimstone Hill, along with an herb garden, and purchasing additional supplies to work on the herbarium located at SCHS. If we can get it approved before the end of this month I can hopefully be working on it come August, and subsequently be real busy for my last year here on the island. Yay!!!

Monday, July 02, 2007

My Sundays

I have yet to really discuss some of the trials and tribulations of being a Peace Corps volunteer here in the Caribbean, and I am not sure if I can speak for the other islands, but as far as here in St. Kitts our biggest challenge, and want, is making friends and feeling accepted within our communities. One smile, one good morning, or just one happy encounter can erase at least a week’s worth of discriminatory slurs, vulgar comments, and unprovoked harassment. It’s what we cling to when we feel like it’s just not worth it anymore, and for me, I feel like I am renewed for months ahead with the love and comfort I get from familiar faces I see each weekend.

My absolute favorite day has to be Sunday, and sometimes, depending on what I do the day before, Saturday can be a close rival. Most times though I am out and about on Saturdays, but if I stay home I get sucked into the local routine of cleaning house and blaring music. I joke that my Saturdays seem to be a culture exchange day. My neighbor on one side blares oldies or Christian music, while on the other side the young men like to vibrate the neighborhood to dancehall reggae or socca. Then there is little ol’ me, right in the middle, with my little speakers I brought from home. I’m usually rockin’ out to some new indie/punk band, or have some old school 90’s rock that makes me miss home. Sometimes I give up and decide to just savor some of the tunes from next door rather than listen to my familiar music. I always like it best when my neighbor Stokes and his wife and daughter get into it and sing along and clap to “Under the Boardwalk”.

Ahh, but Sunday, yes, Sunday takes the cake on all days of the week. I spend most of the day at church, nearly 5 hours total, broken up into 2 services. It sounds like a lot, and it is. I’ve gotten use to it though, and I love seeing the familiar faces of the tiny congregation. I am always greeted with a warm smile and a hug from Mrs. Davis and Mamma (my host grandmother). From Auntie Joyce, I get a grab at my waist or a pinch of my tricep flab and her subsequent “Amber, you getting fat gyal”. My host mother Betty will smile and look me up and down, and like any mother will give an honest yet gentle critique of my Sunday attire. These days I get a compliment on a shirt or skirt or the like. In the beginning I was getting some chastisement for not ironing properly or not hand washing a certain skirt so those damn lint fuzzy things don’t cling to it. I’ve improved though. Then there are the kids who just give me the usual shy smile, yet when sitting behind me will take any opportunity to touch my hair or poke at my arm. The novelty of my white skin and blonde hair is wearing off as I am no longer a stranger to them anymore, but there are still a few who are slowly opening up to me, and now feel confident to touch me and get their curiosity filled.

Church services are at 10 am and 6:30 pm. Between those times I spend my day back at the Chapman’s home because Betty doesn’t think it’s right for me to not have a proper Sunday dinner, and even on days that I’ve had to bow out of hanging with them, she has sent me on my merry way with a plate full of food. It’s pretty much my second home over there. After we eat lunch I, along with little Avi, will do dishes and clean up the kitchen. I feel it’s the least I can do after she has just filled me to the gills with food. I then head downstairs to a spare room they open up for me and lay down to read/nap while the rest of the family does the same. I get up just in time to hang out on the balcony while one of the girls is getting her hair platted or braided and chat with Charles or the girls before heading back to church.

It doesn’t hit me till that evening service about how much I love Sundays and how much of my determination to see myself through this is due to these people. I think it hits me somewhere between the vibrant choruses sung to the beat of the tambourines, or during open devotion when some of the ladies go up to sing solo their favorite hymns. I always find myself closing my eyes and letting that cool, Caribbean night breeze brush across my face while their sounds give me a new sense of home and family. It is then that I take in the day and wish for Sunday again in the morning, but I know that it will come again, if only after another 6 days of character degrading harassment, lost patience and fried nerves.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Mango is my new enemy!!

How sad is it to live on a tropical island and not to be able to enjoy the splendor of its most popular fruit?!!!! Well... very sad indeed!!! It's mango season once again, and only 3 mangoes into it and I have developed a rash and burning lips which lead us (Michele and I) to believe Mr. Mango is the culprit. Apparently the mango is related to poison oak and ivy, and recently I developed a rash on my wrist that looked like poison oak... and I wondered how could that be?! But alas, this rash followed by the most uncomfortable burning sensation on my lips left little for us to ponder. This is too bad, because I really LOVE mangoes. Guess I'll just stick to bananas :(

A little side note: be sure to tune into the new reality show "Pirate Master", it was filmed on Dominica, one of our Peace Corps Eastern Caribbean islands. Hopefully it will show some beautiful shots of the Nature Island.

Sunday, May 20, 2007

A lovely Saturday :)














New skill to write on resume: hairdresser. Liz and I decided to make good on our promise to do each other's hair. Nothing fancy, a simple trim. We decided to go to Marty's house and do it since she has a decently spaced back yard and some new puppies!! And as always, she offered us
some great food and sweets!! It's like going to grandma's house!!



Monday, May 07, 2007

Whoa... it's been 3 months!!!!!!

Wow, time has flown by. I remember after Christmas I just couldn't wait until my mother came to visit in February, and now that has come and gone and other things happened and before I knew it we are in May!!!

The last few months have been a hodge podge mix of activities and projects and travel. I spent most of March caught up in the whole World Cup Cricket frenzy. The entire region of the West Indies hosted the event, and some of the first round matches were played here on St. Kitts. We hosted matches between Australia (who subsequently won the World Cup in Barbados), South Africa, Scotland, and the Netherlands. I volunteered at the gates during matches and loved the fact that I basically got to meet everyone that came through! Hearing all the different accents was a trip! Here are the Australian fans after their team beat South Africa:

Australia wins



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It was then a week after the cricket chaos before I headed out onto the Easycruise for my week long vacation. I embarked here on St. Kitts and then "cruised" on over to neighboring islands St. Barts, St. Martin, Antigua, Anguilla, and even sister-island Nevis!! It was a long needed break. It felt so nice to just be me again, and to be able to wear shorts and spaghetti strap tanks and to once again know how a Nachos Bell Grande tastes.... ahhhh. For one glorious week I was no longer a 24/7 Peace Corps volunteer, instead I was a 24/7 young American... woo hoo!! Beach and tropi drinks helped me wash away the last 8 months. It was spectacular!

Though my cruise was great, I was actually very eager to get back from my vacation. I felt like I had been renewed and was now ready to tackle my many issues with working on the island, and I felt like I could finally see what my role would be here. But as soon as I got back and checked my hundreds of email, I forgot that I was signed up to travel to Trinidad for an HIV/AIDS capacity building workshop. So 4 days after for stepping off my Easycruise, I was on a LIAT jet heading over to the island nation of Trinidad and Tobago. I went with a local HIV/AIDS support group here on the island, as well as with fellow volunteer Elizabeth. We spent the week attending sessions and participating in group exercises all aimed in educating and empowering the groups we worked with to become stronger voices and advocates for PLWHAs (People Living With HIV/AIDS). But as well all know, all work and no play can make people go crazy. So we did have our chances at the end of each day to venture into the heart of the Capitol, Port of Spain, or to rendezvous out by the pool. And near the end we all enjoyed a farewell party.

Now that it is back to work as usual, I find myself trying to figure out what work is. I have been affiliated with the St. Christopher Heritage Society, and while I was on vacation the Executive Director resigned. So when I got back I needed to establish my relations with them again and am now working with their interim management (their council members). So far it has gone well. I do 2 days a week with them, and am currently working on doing a medicinal/traditional plant display for their office. I've also been gaining some interest in helping them do a display garden with medicinal plants and herbs. It seems to be a project that many other locals would be interested in helping with. So we'll see.

I also spend 2 nights a week volunteering with the St Kitts Sea Turtle Monitoring Network and the nest surveys that they are doing with the Leatherback turtles. We monitor a nesting beach of theirs here on the island from around 9 pm to 5 am. It is very tiring come morning, but well worth it. I was able to see 2 the other night and it was amazing to see how big these girls can get. The first one had a shell length of over 5 ft!! Yep, that's bigger than me!!

And lastly, I am now having English/Japanese lessons 2 days a week with my friend Kayako from Japan. Her husband is a Japanese UN volunteer here on the island and myself and another volunteer have split the week in teaching her English. I teach her one hour and then she teaches me another hour of Japanese!! Just another thing to do to help kill some time, and trust me, there is a lot of it over here!


Well, that was just a short summary of the last few months just so I can catch ya'll up on what is going on over in this region. I will really try harder from now on to update a little more often so that I may be able to elaborate on some of my experiences, and even indulge on some of the funny things that can happen over here.

Check out my albums because I do have some up from cricket, the cruise, and some extras.

Monday, February 19, 2007

Just a note...

Enjoyed having The Madre visit for the week. Took lots of pictures and put a few up in the St. Kitts and the Caribbean Critters albums. Also made a new album, Nevis Botanical Garden. Enjoy! Nothing much new to report. Hope all is well with everyone!

Friday, February 02, 2007


This is Jo-Anne Sewlal from Trinidad. She is a PhD student at the University of the West Indies, and is doing a survey of the spiders of St. Kitts. So my adventure for the week was helping her collect spiders out at the salt pond in the Southeast Peninsula. Forgot to get any pics of the spiders... but will try and get one of our tarantulas, if I ever see them!
This is why I can never sleep in! Mother Nature's alarm clock! This is the other pair of doves roosting on my bedroom window. I have 2 couples, a pair of mourning doves, and a pair of collared doves. Haven't named the collared doves yet... James and Vivi are the mourning ones, and they sound a lot nicer than these 2.

I've also seen some type of finches playing on this window during the day. They don't seem to like any of the other windows. I guess they like the coconut palm that gives them a little cover on that side of the apartment.

Friday, January 12, 2007

Work

The first full week of work since the holidays, and I couldn't be happier! I love to stay busy and this week kept me going for sure.

I now help out at the St. Christopher Heritage Society, a local NGO, and am working on updating/redoing their herbarium. A herbarium is a collection of dried, pressed plants. I will be collecting and archiving species from here on the island, which in turn can be used for future reference and study. I'm pretty excited about doing it because that gives me a real good excuse to go out hiking, and all the other volunteers are more than eager to help me with that! Right now I am working on writing a proposal for funding so I can order materials.

Working with the Heritage Society will also afford me some great opportunities to get involved with other local environmental projects. On Thursday I was kind of thrown into the mix when the director for SCHS couldn't make a meeting and sent me instead to take notes. It ended up being a meeting with representatives from the various ministries, and they were discussing and assessing the effects of essentially planning an ecotourism scheme up in our Central Forest Reserve. I am very interested in the proposal of this project and am hoping to tag along to some of the other meetings. The area of environmental policy and management is something I am very interested in, and I would love to see the planning and politics that go into undertaking huge tasks like these. Especially since here in St. Kitts, ecotourism is essentially non-existent. This is another reason why I believe this herbarium will be useful. I plan on collecting plants in the areas of existing trails, which are also the ones they want to build from, so it will be interesting to see how the flora and fauna of the area will change.

I have also been volunteering with the St. Kitts Sea Turtle monitoring Network. On Tuesday I had the opportunity to go out with the group to White House Beach and help with in-water tagging. A Kittitian named Darren Browne, came in from Barbados where he is doing genetic research on Hawksbill turtles in the Eastern Caribbean. What we did was just snorkel in the bay and alert Darren when we saw a turtle. He would come over and catch it then take it back on shore to get tissue samples and tag it. On Tuesday we caught 2 Hawksbills and 1 Green turtle. The Greens are really pretty and that is what is pictured. I also got to see a few sting rays buried in the sand, an eagle ray swim past me, and a giant puffer fish. It was an amazing day and can't wait untill they do it again!!! The nesting season starts in March and will more than likely get to see some huge Leatherbacks then.


All these things are keeping me busy, but am hoping that will ultimately help me in creating some sort of environmental program for the youth. I really want to get them involved with projects like the sea turtle program and into the environmental issues here on the island, but I am not quite sure where to start. For now I am thinking of just creating activities with the youth members of the Heritage Society. Then maybe I can branch off from there. The main problem will be trying to make it sustainable for after I leave...

Monday, January 08, 2007

Holidays 2006

It’s been quite a busy time out here on St. Kitts! Things are just starting to settle down and get back to normal out here, or some form of normalcy I guess. For the last 3 weeks or so the island has been stirring with activities from Christmas programs and dinners, to carnival shows and parades, to weddings, and also New Year’s celebrations. Needless to say, it has been quite chaotic but fun nonetheless, and I thought I’d catch you all up on how I spent the holidays.

First, I had the opportunity to take part in a Christmas program at my local church. They had nominated me to play the mother in the children’s play, and I couldn’t refuse! It reminded me a lot of the plays we did at New Hope, my church when I was growing up. I was just glad to know that they wanted me to be a part of it. It went well and I think an acting career might be in my future!

Then on Christmas day I received a phone call at 5:30 am. It was my host father Charles. He just wanted to be sure I was still going to the 6 am church service. I was so tired that morning. I thought I was going to die before the service ended. You really can die from exhaustion you know! But I didn’t, and I got to go home and sleep afterwards. I must tell you though… while napping in my room my neighbor was blasting some music, like always. This time, instead of dancehall reggae, it was some Celine Dion, a little Shania, and I distinctly remember hearing “Hungry Eyes” playing. I figured they must have slowed it down for Christmas!

For the rest of Christmas day I enjoyed a family dinner at my host-aunt Paula’s house, complete with saltfish cakes, macaroni pie, and mauby! The men sat around and watched football, just like back in the states. Except, it was “soccer” not American football! Then the meal ended with some intense dominoes playing. Dominoes is the past time out here in the Caribbean.

The next day I rode into town with my friend Eddie around 5 am and got to watch some of the first J’ourvet troupes start jamming outside of town. We then headed to the circus (picture with the clock tower) and met with other volunteers. Once the troupes started jamming through the circus they started having little mini jams on the side roads, and we all found our way to the wet-down. It was great!! I ended up not going home till about 8:30 pm… only after heading to the beach to relax after all the jamming (“jamming” is basically a mixture of dancing, moshing, and plain old jumping… it was like being at a rock concert).

The following weekend I had a wedding to go to. It was my host-sister’s wedding. I along with my friend Rushi, manned the guestbook and programs. It was a hard job, but they knew I could handle it. I really enjoyed getting all dressed up and wearing make up and feeling like a girl again. I realized though, Kittitian weddings are not that different from American weddings. I still got pestered about getting married myself, and they were actually scoping out guys for me there. The locals in my community are quite convinced that I will marry a Kittitian and never leave!

Well, that then leads me up to the New Year. I spent New Year’s Eve at home relaxing. I thought my only options were church or an expensive party out at the hotels. Most the other volunteers went to church, but I was all churched out that point, and I just wanted to be home. I quite enjoyed it until I saw fireworks over on Nevis and then told myself I would be over there next year. I then went the next day to take part in the grand parade in town. I was part of the Small Island Voice clean up troupe at the end of the parade.

So, that’s basically the last 2 weeks in a nutshell. I’ve put up pictures of it all. Please take a chance to look at them because they illustrate a lot more than what I can write. Happy New Year to everybody, and I’ll inform you soon on projects I am working on.