Ins & Outs of Barbados 2015 Edition

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Ins & Outs of Barbados 2015 Edition

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Ins & Outs of

Barbados

20 1 5 E d itio n

The Sea featuring

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Ins & Outs OF

BARBADOS

Welcome to our 32nd annual edition of the Ins and Outs of Barbados featuring the sea. Senator Prof. Henry Fraser, Geoff Ward, Sarah Venable, Daphne Ewing-Chow, Niki Farmer and our team at Miller Publishing have written very entertaining articles relating to the wonderful sea and the important role it has played in our island for centuries. This year we’ve also come up with new concepts to make Ins and Outs even more useful! • Planned Tours - for history buffs, thrill seekers, families, yoga lovers, photographers, people with just one day to go out touring, and fans of rum shops! • ‘At a Glance’ contents pages give a preview of the guide and all the phone and page numbers. • The Events Calendar explains the ‘ins and outs’ of attending local events. • Thoughtful Ins and Outs Tips are scattered throughout the guide. • The wedding section is a handy planning guide for getting married in Barbados. • A comprehensive index where you can easily find everything. AND, inserted into our 10,000 hard back copies... • Our new LookBook of great finds for shopping at fantastic duty free prices! So a warm welcome to Barbados and to the pages of Ins and Outs. Have a fabulous holiday!

Ins and Outs is the official in room guide of the BHTA. Miller Publishing is the recipient of the BHTA’s Lifetime Achievement Award. PUBLISHED BY Miller Publishing Company ADVERTISING SALES Sally Miller Christine Wilkie CONTRIBUTORS Sarah Venable Senator Prof. Henry Fraser Dr. Karl Watson Geoffrey Ward Sally Miller Keith Miller Christine Wilkie Daphne Ewing-Chow Niki Farmer ARTWORK & LAYOUT Sally Miller Christine Wilkie Tao Howard Janelle Bryan Lyn Armstrong PRE-PRESS CO-ORDINATOR Janelle Bryan MY DESTINATION BARBADOS WEBSITE CO-ORDINATORS Janelle Bryan Tao Howard DESIGN Tao Howard DISTRIBUTION Lyn Armstrong Frank Collymore

Sally Miller

On the Cover

“Deep Blue” by Janice Sylvia Brock

4  Credits

A master of colour and form, Janice Sylvia Brock has gained international acclaim. Her work has been likened to that of Matisse and Chagall, though the vibrant hues and sense of movement are uniquely Brock. Her paintings resonate with life, sensuality, and occasionally humour. In the USA, the White House has two of her pieces, while in the UK she was recently invited to exhibit in the prestigious Saatchi Gallery. At ‘Brocklands’, her studio gallery overlooking the ocean in St. James, much of her recent work is on display, as well as prints of selected paintings, in over 500 square feet of exhibition space. You can also see work in progress and chat with Janice about her art. Read more about Janice Brock and her art on page 161. Tel: (246) 432-6061 or (246) 237-7670

Miller Publishing Co. Ltd. Edgehill, St. Thomas, Barbados Tel: (246) 421-6700 Fax: (246) 421-6707 Email: miller@caribsurf.com MyDestination.com/Barbados insandoutsofbarbados.com BarbadosBooks.com While every care has been taken in the compilation of information contained in this guide, such information is subject to change without notice. The publishers accept no responsibility for such changes. © 2015 MILLER PUBLISHING CO. LTD. All rights reserved.


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Shopping

A|X Armani Exchange | 624-4444 Cartier | 271-8234 Cave Shepherd | 227-2121 Colombian emeralds | 227-2121 Diamonds International | 430-2400 Hugo Boss | 622-3333 Limegrove | 620-5463 Little Switzerland | 431-0031 Milano Diamond Gallery | 429-2900 Ralph Lauren | 621-0070 Royal Shop | 429-7072 Sheraton Mall | 437-0970 Un Dimanche à Paris | 271-8205 Vilebrequin | 624-2222

Island Style

Always Summer | 434-6745 | p. 132 Beth & Tracie | 422-0401 | p. 124 Crocs | 622-7777 | p. 131 DFB Boutique | 832-3572 | p. 136 Dingolay | 435-6482 | p. 135 Gaye Boutique | 432-1396 | p. 128 Gregory Paul Salon | 432-2220 | p.139 Lola Beach | 422-1594 | p. 126 Tiyi by Design | 422-6816/252-0184 | p. 134 Whispers on the Riviera | 439-2573 | p. 136

Interiors

Blake Coral Stone Designs | 437-5779 | p. 149 Designers’ Choice | 432-2093 | p. 142 Exclusive Cottons of the C’bean | 433-3108 | p. 151 Fusion Metal Design | 228-9736 | p. 149 Jenny Blanc | 432-0989 | p. 144 Natz’ | 424-2661 | p. 147 Stephanie Barnes Interiors | 826-1749 | p. 146

98

shopping island style interiors art & craft

6  Ins & Outs At-a-Glance

Art & Craft

Gallery NuEdge | 621-0067 | p. 155 On the Wall | 438-9246/426-3380 | p. 157 Gallery of Caribbean Art | 419-0858 | p. 159 Janice Sylvia Brock | 432-6061 | p. 161 Catherine Forter Chee-a-Tow | 262-6238 | p. 161 Jean Blades | 428-7150 | p. 162 John Stuart | 823-0065 | p. 162 Ronnie Carrington | 230-9170 | p. 162 Sue Holder | 433-9759 | p. 162 Vishni Gopwani | 823-1099 | p. 163 Gina Foster | 430-0338 | p. 163 David Alleyne | 624-2183 | p. 163 Earth & Fire | 439-9318 | p. 164 The Studio | 432-6765 | p. 164 The Shell Gallery | 422-2593 | p. 165 Best of Barbados | 421-6900 | p. 169 The Batik Studio | 424-0391 | p. 170 Earthworks Pottery | 425-0223 | p. 171


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Restaurants Animal Flower Cave Restaurant Asian Spice Atlantis Beach House Bert’s Café La Suite Café Luna Café Sol

Reservations Page # 439-8797 432-1321 433-9445 432-1163 435-7924 271-8242 428-6172 420-7655

Centro at Courtyard by Marriott 625-0000 Champers 434-3463 Chopping Board Kitchen At Mojo 435-9008 Cin Cin 424-4557 The Cliff 432-1922 Cobblers Cove (Camelot) 422-2291 Coral Reef 422-2372 Crane, The D’Onofrios 423-6220 L’Azure 423-6220 Zen 423-6220 Daphne’s 432-2731 Juma’s 432-0232 Lancaster Grt. House 266-8752 Lobster Alive 435-0305 The Lobster Pot 432-0287 Lone Star 419-0599 Mama Mia 434-3354 Mullins Beach Bar 422-2044 Nishi 432-8287 Port St. Charles 419-1000 Relish Epicurea 621-0077 The Sandpiper 422-2251 Sandy Lane L’Acajou 444-2030 Bajan Blue 444-2030 The Country Club 444-2030 The Spa Café 444-2030 Southern Palms 428-7171 The Grille (Hilton) 426-0200 Tapas 228-0704 Un Dimanche à Paris 271-8242

308 322 350 323 341 321 344 345 338 334 343 332 330 311 319 349 348 346 328 312 310 336 313 316 339 315 320 309 314 318 324 326 327 327 342 337 340 321

restaurant guide

302

8  Ins & Outs At-a-Glance



Villa Management Companies Alleyne Real Estate | 432-1159 | p. 255 Altman real Estate | 432-0840 | Insert, p. 257 Bajan Services | 422-2618 | p. 268-277 Realtors Villa Rentals | 432-6930 | p. 265 Realtors Real Estate | 432-6930 | p. 263 Island Villas | 422-3333 | p. 93 Property for Sale | p. 284-287

Residential Developments Apes Hill | 432-4500 | p. 77, 280-283 Ocean Two | 418-1800 | p. 267 Port Ferdinand | 272-2000 | p. 261 Port St. Charles | 419-1000 | p. 253 Royal Westmoreland | 419-0394 | p. 279 Saint Peter’s Bay | 419-9602 | p. 259 The Crane | 423-6220 | p. Insert-295 Vuemont | 422-6639 | p. 266

250

“Eventually this place becomes so intertwined with your soul – with the very core of your family – that you integrate with the culture, making lifelong friendships, celebrating milestones and returning every chance you get.” “Multigenerational Villa Life in Barbados”

property

10  Ins & Outs At-a-Glance

270 All things considered, Gardenia represents a very attractive opportunity for longterm investment. Gardenia’s new owner will not be buying the past - he or she will be buying the future. “Gardenia”





Sailing Charters Cool Runnings | 436-0911 | p. 86, 87 Island Yachts | 432-4627 | p. 93 Seaduced | 432-8387/234-5382 | p. 91 Silver Moon | 435-5285 | p. 88, 89

Fishing Predator Fishing Charters | 230-1845 | p. 97

Surfing & Windsurfing DeAction Beach Shop | 428-2027 | p. 97

Diving Barbados Blue | 434-5764 | p. 97

Power Boat Tours Thriller | 429-5337 | p. 212

Off-Road 4x4 Tours Island Safari | 429-5337 | p. 212

Attractions

86

sailing adventure exploring

14  Ins & Outs At-a-Glance

Animal Flower Cave | 439-8797 | p. 205, 308 Barbados Museum | 427-0201 | p. 225 Barbados Wildlife Reserve | 422-8826 | p. 208 Earthworks Pottery | 425-0223 | p. 101, 171 & 215 Flower Forest | 433-8152 | p. 221 George Washington House | 228-5461 | p. 222 Harrison’s Cave | 417-3700 | p. 218 Hunte’s Gardens | 433-333 | p. 220 Mallalieu Motor Museum | 426-4640 | p. 224 Sunbury House | 423-6270 | p. 228 Exclusive Cottons | 433-3108 | p. 151, 229 St. Nicholas Abbey | 433-8152 | p. 230-233

Car Hire Courtesy Rent-a-Car | 431-4160 | p. 203

200


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Ins & Outs OF BARBADOS

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Events Calendar 38

Weddings 172 Meetings & Incentives 186

26

Feature Articles

32

“Maritime History of Barbados”

Island Hopping 196

Beaches 236

Nightlife 296 Tailor-made Tours 204

Geoffrey Ward Geoff Ward is a PhD candidate studying at the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus. His research interests include Caribbean military history, naval warfare and maritime culture. His bibliography includes articles for the ‘Journal of the Barbados Museum and Historical Society’, and the History Dept. of the University of The West Indies amongst others, including work on the UNESCO World Heritage Nomination for Historic Bridgetown and its Garrison with Pedro Welch et al.

“The Amazing Postal Service of Barbados” Senator Professor Emeritus Henry S. Fraser Henry Fraser is a Professor Emeritus of the UWI, Independent Senator and national public orator. He writes a Sunday column ‘Things that Matter’ in the Barbados Advocate, and his bibliography includes some 110 medical scientific papers, ten books (chiefly on the heritage of Barbados, such as ‘Historic Houses of Barbados’ and ‘Barbados Chattel Houses’), almost 400 newspaper columns and many other articles and essays. He recently completed production of ‘Pillars of Worship’ and ‘Parliament 375’, two new documentary series for CBC TV, following the earlier ‘Treasures of Barbados’, and a splendid second edition of ‘Historic Churches of Barbados’ has just been published, with photos by Mike Toy.


90

92 94

120

213 Trevor Hunte Keith & Barbara Armstrong   Ivan St. Claire Harvey Dame, the Hon. Maizie Barker-Welch Amelia Payne Alan Emtage Chelsea Tuach Merton Blackman

300

240

90 92 94 120 138 213 240 300

138

meet a Bajan   Ins & Outs of Barbados  21



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Maritime History


By Geoffrey Ward

B

arbados has a rich and diverse maritime history and culture spanning many centuries. Since colonization in 1627, the island has

played a significant role in English (later British) economic and military expansion in the Western Hemisphere. Barbados’ geographical location, 100 miles to the windward of the island chain, provided a safety margin in the days before accurate navigation was possible. If a ship was to miss Barbados, easily found along the 13º north latitude, it would soon find the British leeward islands directly to the west. This strategic location provided significant advantages in war and peace, as information on the individual islands, enemy dispositions and trade concerns often found its way windward to Barbados. During the seventeenth century Barbados was attacked twice. In January 1652, after three months of sporadic fighting, the colony capitulated to Parliamentarian troops in the English Civil War. While a defeat, this record allowed Barbadians to claim that the island never surrendered to a foreign power.

There were fortunes to be made by the population of Bridgetown in catering to the merchant and naval crews in need of rest and relaxation and for the provisioning of the visiting craft. Photo courtesy Circa West Indies

Ins & Outs of Barbados  27


Governor Robinson going to church Circa 1730 Photo courtesy Barbados Museum & Historical Society

The shift in warfare from the Greater to the Lesser Antilles pushed Barbados into the forefront of the struggle for dominance in Europe between Britain and France

T

he second attack took place when the very able Dutch admiral Michel De Ruyter attacked shipping in Carlisle Bay in April 1665, during the Second Anglo Dutch War. During his attack, he exchanged fire with alerted shore batteries at Charles Fort and Willoughby Fort before retreating to Martinique to repair his ships. To the local government, these actions highlighted two major flaws in Barbados’ defences; that the island could be made to surrender by creating an economic blockade and that the defences in Carlisle Bay would not be effective against a determined attack. Over the following century, as additional fortifications and heavier guns were installed, Carlisle Bay became one of the most heavily defended anchorages in the Windward Islands. Though Barbados was militarily important during the seventeenth century, in the late 1740s the shift in warfare from the Greater to the Lesser Antilles pushed Barbados into

28  Maritime History

the forefront of the struggle for dominance in Europe between Britain and France. This struggle raged from 1756 to 1815 with a few breaks in between, allowing the countries to recover financially before resuming hostilities. Sugar was one of the major sources of income for the governments’ expensive military machines, causing a continued battle to control the sugar trade through naval and amphibious operations in every major conflict from the Seven Years War to the end of the Napoleonic Wars. During the American Revolutionary War the French put the British on the back foot until a British victory at the Battle of the Saintes in April 1782 saw the reestablishment of British naval dominance in the region. The British victory at Trafalgar in October 1805 ultimately ended this struggle as Britain wrested naval dominance in the Atlantic from the French. Britain’s poor performance during the American war, which resulted in the loss


of many islands, served as a catalyst for the formation of a permanent garrison in Barbados. During the Seven Years and American Wars, troops were stationed in temporary billets on the island. The construction of a permanent garrison transformed Barbados into what is now known as a forward operating base (FOB) for British forces in the region, including the West India Regiments that fought so well during the Napoleonic Wars. With the end of the Napoleonic Wars, Barbados reverted to its primary peacetime role of a major shipping hub. As the 19th century progressed and steam overshadowed sail in large transatlantic ships, Barbados’ maritime economy shifted to the schooner trade. The evolution of the steamship saw a dramatic increase in their cargo carrying capacity. For the small islands in the Caribbean, a single ship would often carry more produce than any one island would need. To this end steamships would offload their cargo with shipping agents in Barbados to be

distributed throughout the small islands by schooners. By providing a large anchorage to the windward of the island chain, the schooners could quickly and easily make their way to any of the other islands. Carlisle Bay was large enough to accommodate the ships and, crucially, Bridgetown had the infrastructure needed to support such commercial activities. Carlisle Bay can therefore be seen as a home port for commodities, supporting a vibrant maritime community. As the Windward Islands populations’ grew and ports were constructed to take large ships, the schooner trade faded away. While Carlisle Bay was the focal point for maritime endeavours on the island, Barbados’ maritime history is by no means limited to our main anchorage. Barbados has a long, rich and often tragic history relating to its saltwater fisheries. Fishing was one of the main sources of protein on the island, and with this lifestyle came a culture that has mostly been lost. Traditional Bajan fishing boats looked

Off-loading cargo in Bridgetown’s Careenage Photo courtesy the private postcard collection of Dr. Karl Watson

Ins & Outs of Barbados  29


Above > Racing in Carlisle Bay in the 1930’s

Traditional Bajan fishing boats ...... had no keels and rock ballast that was shifted in the boat. Add a large sail area and you had a very tricky boat to sail.

more like the double ended whaling boats found in Bequia than anything seen in Barbados today. They had no keels and rock (later iron) ballast that was shifted in the boat. Add a large sail area and you had a very tricky boat to sail. Training began at a very young age for children in fishing villages. Initially, children learned to sail pond boats, a small model boat on which the sail was set before letting it go, which taught the balancing of sails. Then, they graduated to small sailing boats which were raced in regattas while various villages competed. By the time the young sailors were ready to set to their trade they were already seasoned sailors. The local fishing industry and maritime culture in Barbados underwent a paradigm shift with the arrival of Hurricane Janet on 22 September 1955. Almost all of

30  Maritime History

the fishing boats in Barbados were destroyed as the Category 5 hurricane swept across the island wreaking massive destruction. In the wake of the disaster, the government of Barbados put a modernization plan into action, utilizing the cheap and dependable two stroke engines available from the UK. Almost instantaneously there was no need for skilled sailors to man the fishing fleet. Youths no longer needed to learn how to sail to survive and the once vibrant maritime culture that described sailing fisheries was replaced by the ubiquitous “put put put” of the day boats. Not that this was a bad thing for the fisheries. The mortality rate among fishermen dropped dramatically as the more stable and seaworthy motor boats replaced their sail driven predecessors.


The real loss was in the culture that surrounded the fishing village. Janet wreaked such total devastation that the change from sail to engine was instant and dramatic, unlike in the Grenadines where youth still race pond boats and sail their small craft in regattas throughout the islands. Since Hurricane Janet, sailing has become increasingly centred around Carlisle Bay, with purpose built racers replacing the small wooden training boats. As local fishermen became familiar with the original motorized fishing boats, design changes and modification began. This resulted in the long prowed, round bottomed Bajan fishing boat that can be seen across the island. As fishermen had to travel further to sea, day boats were extended and iceboats, which go to sea for multiple days, were introduced. Many early forms of these boats were lengthened day boats. Lately fiberglass and efficient four

stroke diesel engines, combined with a serious shortage of wood for traditional boat building, have changed the way local boats are built. These modern machines, while very efficient to be sure, lack the soul and panache of their wooden forbearers. Small boat culture is still thriving to this day. Small boats started as inshore fishing vessels and water taxis in the preceding centuries. Using hand lines to bottom fish on near shore bars, small boat fishermen also hauled fish pots. Over the centuries the small boat culture, while benefitting from modern designs, fiberglass and outboard engines, has retained many of its original elements. Small boat culture can be seen particularly along the west coast, starting in Pile Bay, moving northwards. Small boat culture can also be found along the east coast, based around Conset, Martin’s and Skeete’s Bay. Pots are usually left “soaking” for a week to catch bottom fish, primarily snapper and some spiny lobster on the east coast. Culture, by its nature, is ever changing. The vibrant maritime culture of Barbados has had a varied history over the past four centuries. This culture has encompassed a vitally important global role in Britain’s power projection in the transatlantic world, a regional role as a transhipment point and a local role in the fishing and coastal culture of the island. It will be most interesting to see where it takes us in the future.

Above > The fishing fleet in Tent Bay Circa 1930; Below > The fishing fleet in Tent Bay today

Ins & Outs of Barbados  31


THE AMAZING POSTAL SERVICES

of Barbados

By Senator Professor Emeritus Henry S. Fraser

A Royal Mail Steam Packet Company Service in 1842 reduced the passage from a month to three weeks … and Barbados was the first port of call in the Caribbean.

In 1905 a stamp was published celebrating the Olive Blossom landing in Barbados in 1605 and the captain claiming the island for the English. But the date was wrong - The Olive Blossom landed here in 1625!

B

arbados has had a sophisticated postal service for nearly 200 years, but communication of news has a long and rich history. It all began with couriers, on foot or on horse-back, and extensive courier services existed among the Persians and the Greeks, the Chinese, the Indians and the Egyptians long before the birth of Christ. Indeed there was a professional herald or “running courier”, Pheidippides the Greek, whose 25 mile run from Marathon to Athens to carry the news of a great Greek victory over the Persians at Marathon. And that famous run, known as the marathon, is now adjusted to an official length of 26 miles, 385 yards since the London Olympics of 1908 and made official in 1921. And it all began with a courier or messenger, who delivered his news with the words: “Joy – victory is ours” … with his last breath, and expired! But how did the terms post and mail come about? Messengers going long distances on horseback had to change horses at regular intervals, because galloping

horses “overheat”. So the posts at some 20 mile intervals would be the places to change horses and maybe have a meal – hence post houses and postal services! And “mail” is derived from a medieval word for bag, and hence the tautology “mail bag”! And somewhat amusingly, in Britain the Royal Mail delivers the post, while in the USA the US Post delivers the mail …. But just imagine the long wait for letters in the days of sailing ships, when it could take anything from a month to two months to get from Britain to Barbados. And now it takes just a click and a second or two, and some young people don’t know what an envelope or a postage stamp is! The real reformation in postal services began in the middle of the nineteenth century. The man who revolutionised the postal service forever was Sir Rowland Hill, in London, in 1837. He proposed a postal system based on the concept of penny postage, with pre-payment and adhesive postage stamps as the best way to get the sender

32  The Amazing Postal Services


to pay for the postage. And it began with the invention of the first postage stamp, the Penny Black – issued on May the first, 1840, with a portrait of the young Queen Victoria. But what about mail coming to Barbados? In the earliest days of settlement people had to make their own arrangements for getting letters to and fro, through acquaintances travelling by ship, or through the ship’s captain. … these were called Ship Letters. The captain was paid a penny to hand them over and they would then be delivered, hopefully, and the recipient paid a penny or more to receive them. A postmaster in Barbados was appointed by the governor Sir Richard Dutton in 1681 and a packet service just to carry mail and packets was started in Britain in 1688 – with faster ships than the usual cargo ships; a Royal Mail Steam Packet Company Service in 1842 reduced the passage from a month to three weeks… and Barbados was the first port of call in the Caribbean. Mail was prepared in London on the 1st and 16th of each month, transported to Falmouth and put on board the vessel which sailed via Corunna and Madeira, with Barbados the first stop in the West Indies. Here a postal delivery system was set up using the Mounted Police Force from July the 1st, 1848. Our Post Office Act was passed in 1851 and the Inland Postal Service was inaugurated on April the 15th 1852, from the main office in Lancaster Lane in Bridgetown, with the first issue of Barbados stamps, and the opening of ten rural post offices, one in each parish. Unlike many colonies we never used British stamps, but always had our own, and interestingly, when there was a shortage of one penny stamps in August and September 1854, they bisected the two penny stamp and used it as a one penny stamp! The “new”, beautiful Gothic Parliament Buildings, completed in 1872 and 1874,

Ins & Outs of Barbados  33


became the headquarters of the Postal Service, and remained so until 1984 when the massive new Post Office building was built in Cheapside. The Colonial Postmaster was an Englishman until the change to Postmaster General with Ministerial Government in 1954. Our first local postmaster, Mr. Robert Clarke, was appointed in 1958. When we were children, my mother paid visits to Mr. Sharpe, the last Colonial Postmaster, whose office was a huge room at the South End of the East wing of Parliament, and we would sit upright in four chairs against the wall while they talked … it was an awesome experience. That room is being turned into the Parliament Library’s research area. Post boxes on walls were put in place in 1881. But the post office in each parish became a kind of social gathering place. Let me illustrate this with reference to St. John, where I was born and grew up literally in the Post Office. The first District postmaster there was a Mr. Richard Robinson at Cheshire, near Small Hope, in the centre of the parish, and the next three holders of the post all lived in Small Town, and the post office was at their residences! My mother, Mrs. Lorraine Fraser, was appointed District Postmistress on transfer from St. Peter, on April the first, April Fool’s Day, at a salary of 85 pounds per annum, or seven dollars a week, or a dollar a day! Perhaps the coincidence of April Fool was not lost on her. The government placed a one unit chattel house in the front yard of our rented home, to serve as the post office. And that little chattel house in the yard at Spooners brought the whole population of St. John to our house, because my father then became the parochial treasurer, and the Vestry had the corner of the verandah enclosed to become his office. There he licensed all cars, bicycles and donkey carts, collected all land taxes, and paid all salaries. Every Friday he went to town and came back with There are still post boxes in Barbados today that were installed during the reign of HM King George VI Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

34  The Amazing Postal Services


a brown attaché case loaded with money to pay the wages of the parish’s weekly workers … the road workers et cetera… all stashed in the safe in the corner.… luckily he was known as the strongest man in St. John and no one ever tried to rob him. But that country post office was an institution, and a centre where the parishioners gathered and chatted, and we children were a part of that “community”. The post office opened at 7:30 in the morning for the arrival of the mail van and the customers doing their posting. The mail box was cleared and the mail bagged and sealed with a little soft lead disc … The postmen sorted and carried out the mail, to return at 2:30 in the afternoon to meet the mail van’s SECOND delivery for the day, to sort and deliver the second batch of mail! With this method, you could see that same day or next day delivery across Barbados was the absolute rule.

There is no doubt that the Barbados Postal Service has made a huge contribution to the social, economic and educational development of Barbados. Although Barbadian emigration to Guyana and to other Caribbean islands was significant in the late nineteenth century, in the search for jobs to better the lot of the underpaid and suffering working class, it was the era of the Panama mass migration that produced the greatest impact on our social development. In building the Canal some 40,000 Bajan workers, possibly more, were recruited to work under appalling conditions to produce the greatest wonder of the modern world… It was known as Hell’s gorge, and workers died like flies from horrific conditions, malaria and yellow fever, landslides and accidents. But while mountainous masses of earth were moved, masses of money were moved by those silver men – paid in silver while the white

There is no doubt that the Barbados Postal Service has made a huge contribution to the social, economic and educational development of Barbados.

The day of departure for Barbadians going to work on the Panama Canal Photo courtesy The Barbadian Museum and Historical Society

Ins & Outs of Barbados  35


Three of my personal favourite stamp issues, Lighthouses of Barbados, Barbados Places of Worship and The Seven Wonders of Barbados.

Americans were paid in gold - and remitted to families in Barbados. And the Post was obviously the main means of communication between migrants and families at home, and the money order was the means of remitting earnings. The remitted money did several things. It dramatically boosted the number of small holders, with almost twice as many people owning small plots within the first decade of the twentieth century. The increase was estimated at some five percent of the land acre of Barbados, or more than 5,000 acres. And between 1897 and 1929 it’s been reported that the percentage of Bajans owning property doubled from 18 % to 40 %. Even whole plantations were purchased, while people opened bank accounts, the Friendly Societies multiplied and prospered, homes were improved and living standards were boosted in every way. After the Second World War there were organised programmes to recruit West Indian workers, especially to run the transport system, buses and tubes, and to train as nurses. The rate of migration increased after the McCarran Act in the USA in 1952 curbing Caribbean immigration, and the Barbados Government established a Sponsored Workers Scheme for emigration to Britain, to solve the employment problem. I was a small boy in St. John when this grew to mass migration in the early fifties, and the post office was deluged with family members coming to receive money orders from young Johnny and Mary who had gone off to Britain. One source says that some three million dollars were remitted from Britain in the late 1950s ‌ a somewhat rough figure and it could have been much, much more. It was estimated that some 27,000 or 9% of the Barbadian population went to the UK over the decade of early 50s

36  The Amazing Postal Services


to 1962, compared to something like 20% to Panama fifty years earlier. In the year 2000 the US census estimated that there were some 53,000 living there born in Barbados… the figure for Jamaica was 550,000 …. Ten times our numbers! The British census figures of 2001 found there were 21,000 people living there who were born in Barbados, while there are 34,000 in Canada. So more than a third of all born Bajans live in Britain, Canada or the USA! The Barbados Philatelic Bureau was established in August 1968 “to coordinate the design, production and marketing of Barbados postage stamps and to cater to the needs of local and international collectors.” It came out of a recommendation by then Leader of the Opposition in the House of Assembly Mr. J.M.G.M. “Tom” Adams, himself an avid stamp collector, who saw the potential of a Bureau. Some of our heritage and history is captured in our stamps. They provide visual snapshots of the past, and the themes are carefully researched by the Bureau, and can be described as the custodian of our country’s history, geography, culture and people, with four to five Commemorative and special feature stamp issues each year and one definitive issue every four or five years. In the past fifty years, there have been more than 200 commemorative issues and ten definitive issues – my own favourites are The Lighthouses, Places of Worship and the Seven Wonders of Barbados. These many beautiful stamps can all be purchased from the shop at the GPO headquarters on Cheapside, or on the internet. Finally, I think the The Barbados Postal Service has also played a role in the popular perception that as Kofi Annan said, “we punch above our weight.” As a result of involvement in the Universal Postal Union, Barbados hosted an international postal conference, the pre-Congress Conference of Commonwealth Postal Administrations, in

1979, and this served as preparation for the 1979 Universal Postal Congress in Rio de Janeiro, in September of that year. Today, some aspects of postal services are replaced by email and the internet, and others, ironically, by couriers… no longer running couriers or couriers on horses, but in little vans and jet planes! But the Barbados Post can boast of door-to-door delivery to more than 60,000 households in Barbados, thus contributing to our reputation as a developed country, with efficient services and a place where things work. And I believe many of our postal workers, especially those risk-taking, motor cycling postmen and postwomen, delivering in rain or shine and risking life and limb on the roads today, are unsung heroes … so vive la poste!

Ins & Outs Tip Many beautiful stamps and first day covers can be purchased from the Philatelic Bureau’s shop at the GPO headquarters in Cheapside, Bridgetown, or from their website.

Ins & Outs of Barbados  37


Events Calendar


B

arbados is a happening little island. Here’s a list of events to tell you when, where and how to attend. Events

40, 42, 44  The Year at a Glance 46, 48  Crop Over Festival and Cultural Festivals 50 Motor Racing 52, 54 Water Events 56 Cricket 58 Full Moons 60 Bridge 62, 63 Open Houses and Gardens 64 Museum Events 66, 68 Musical Events 70 Food Festivals 72, 78 Horse Racing and Polo 74 Golf 80, 82 Other Sporting Events Kadooment is an explosion of fun and colour Photo: Barbara Secher-Greenidge

Ins & Outs of Barbados  39


­JANUARY 2015 1 New Year’s Day (BH) 4 Sagicor Family Golf Tournament at Barbados Golf Club 5   Full Moon 10 Barbados Golf Club Medal Championship 11 BHS Open Garden 11 Taylor’s Cycle Centre J24 Regatta 14 BNT Open House 15-18 Naniki Caribbean Jazz Safari 16-24 Mount Gay Round Barbados Race Series 17 Sandy Lane Charitable Trust Inv. Golf at Sandy Lane 18 Kenya Polo Tour (Clifton) 18 BHS Open Garden - Woodland, St. George 20 Mount Gay Regatta Polo Exhibition (Holders) 21  Errol Barrow Day (BH) 21 Mount Gay Rum Round Barbados Race 21 BNT Open House 21 BHS Open Garden 22 Kenya Polo Tour (Lion Castle) 25 Kenya Tour (Lion Castle) 25 BHS Open Garden - Windermere, Reservoir Road, Brittons Hill, St. Michael 28 BNT Open House 31-1 Barbados Horticultural Feb. Society’s Annual Flower & Garden Show Every Sun. Hike Barbados

FEBRUARY 2015

‘Blue Peter’ Mount Gay Rum Round The Island Series Photo: Peter Marshall

1 1 3 4 4 4 5

40  Events Calendar 2015

BHS Annual Flower & Garden Show Ladies Polo Tour (Holders) Ladies Polo Tour (Holders) Full Moon BNT Open House Diamonds Int’l Substance Abuse Charity Golf at Royal Westmoreland Ladies Polo Tour (Apes Hill)

6 Gun Hill by Moonlight 7 Annual St. James Harvest Garden Party 8 Ladies Polo Tour (Holders) 8 BHS Open Garden - Glendale, Golf Club Road, Christ Church 9-13 Beach Culture World Tour World Championships 10 Villages Polo (Holders) 11 BNT Open House 12 Villages Polo (Holders) 14 Villages Polo (Clifton) 14 The Crane Classic at Barbados Golf Club 14-15 Waterman Festival 15 Tiki Bar J24 Regatta 15 The Villages (Holders) 15-22 Holetown Festival 17 Roger Gooding Polo Memorial (Apes Hill) 18 BNT Open House 19 Roger Gooding Polo Memorial (Holders) 19-21 Broadway to Barbados 21 Roger Gooding Polo Memorial (Apes Hill) 22 BHS Open Garden - Gardenia, St. James 24 Roger Gooding Polo Memorial (Lion Castle) 25 BNT Open House 25-28 Broadway to Barbados 26 Roger Gooding Polo Memorial (Apes Hill) 27-28 Buchanan Trophy at Royal Westmoreland 27-1 Agrofest Mar. 28 Roger Gooding Polo Memorial (Apes Hill) Every Sun. Hike Barbados

MARCH 2015

1 Agrofest 1 Cheshire Polo Tour (Holders) 1 Frutee Veteran’s Cup J24 Regatta 3 Cheshire Polo Tour (Holders) 4 BNT Open House 5 Cheshire Tour Polo (Lion Castle) 5 Full Moon 6 Gun Hill by Moonlight



Cricket, lovely cricket Photo: Nick Reid

6-8 Davis Cup Tennis - Barbados vs Dominican Republic in the first round of BNP Paribas Americas Zone Group I 7 Sandy Lane Gold Cup 8 BHS Open Garden 8 Cheshire Polo Tour (Holders) 10-11 Barbados Ladies Open Golf Tournament at Royal Westmoreland 11 BNT Open House 12 Barbados Polo Open (Holders) 12-28 Virgin Atlantic Holders Season 12-28 England vs. West Indies (T20) Matches 15 Barbados Polo Open (Apes Hill) 15 BHS Open Garden 15 BKC All Breed Championship Dog Show 16 St. Patrick’s Day Golf Tournament at B’dos Golf Club 17 Barbados Polo Open (Lion Castle) 18 BNT Open House 19 Barbados Polo Open (Holders) 22 Barbados Polo Open (Holders) 24,26, Lion Castle Polo Tour 29 Lion Castle Polo Tour 25 BNT Open House 30-5 ITF B’dos Junior Apr. International Tennis Championships Every Sun. Hike Barbados

Association Challenge 19-26 Digicel Barbados Reggae Festival 26 Massy Stores J24 Regatta 28 Heroes Day (BH) Every Sun. Hike Barbados

APRIL 2015

2 Full Moon 6-7 Harris Paints J24 & Offshore Regatta 6-7 National Golf Trials at B’dos Golf Club 27 Banks Fun Day at Barbados Golf Club 27-28 First Citizens J24 Open Championships 28 Canada Dry Charity Golf at Royal Westmoreland Every Sun. Hike Barbados

1 BNT Open House 1-5 ITF B’dos Junior International Tennis Championships 3 Good Friday (BH) 4 Full Moon 4-6 Oistins Fish Festival 6 Easter Monday (BH) 7, 9 Lion Castle Polo Tour 12 Lion Castle Polo Tour 9-13 Barbados International Fishing Tournament 10 Gun Hill by Moonlight 18 Barbados Golf

42  Events Calendar 2015

MAY 2015

1 May Day (BH) 1-5 England Third Test Cricket Series - England Vs West Indies 4 Full Moon 7-10 Sir Garry Sobers Festival of Golf Int’l Tournament 8 Gun Hill by Moonlight 9 Boatyard J24 Regatta 9 Presidents Cup/Kearns Trophy - Polo (Holders) 15-23 28th Central American and Caribbean Bridge Federation Zonal Championships (CAC) 16-17 Top Gear Festival 21-24 Barbados May Regatta 22-25 Wanderers Masters International Football Tournament 22-25 BMEX Trade Show 23-24 Scrutineering & Scotia Bank King of the Hill 23-24 Digicel Barbados Golf Club Open at BGC 24 Chefette Restaurants Fun Run 24-31 Gospelfest 25 Whit Monday (BH) 30-31 Sol Rally Barbados Every Sun. Hike Barbados

June 2015


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July 2015 2 3-24 4 4-5 12 25 31 Every Sun.

Full Moon Sir Garfield Sobers International Schools Cricket Tournament Barbados Golf Association Trophy Lucky Horseshoe J24 & Offshore Regatta Barbados Cruising Club Regatta Mount Gay Championship at Barbados Golf Club Full Moon Hike Barbados

August 2015

1 Emancipation Day (BH) 1-2 Bridgetown Market 2 Cohobblopot 3 Grand Kadooment Day (BH) 20-1 Barbados Historic Rally Sep. Carnival 23-29 30th Barbados International Hockey Festival 29 Full Moon Every Sun. Hike Barbados

September 2015

5-6 Barbados Surfing Association Nationals 11 Massy United Insurance Barbados Golf Open (TBC) 19 Mr. Caribbean Barbados Fitness Competition 28 Full Moon Every Sun. Hike Barbados

October 2015

Photo: André Williams

1-15 Last Waterman Standing 4 BKC All Breed Championship Dog Show TBA National Triathlon Championships 23 Barbados Chamber of Commerce Golf Tournament at BGC 27 Full Moon Every Sun. Hike Barbados

44  Events Calendar 2015

November 2015 1 Independence Lighting Ceremony & Bajan Folk Brew Nat’l Independence Festival of Creative Arts (NIFCA) Food, Wine & Rum Festival 7-8 Sizzlin’ Sand Beach Volleyball Barbados Sunsplash 8 Barbados Open Water Festival 12-15 November Surfing Pro 14 QEH Tournament at B’dos Golf Club 15 BKC All Breed Championship Dog Show 21 Barbados Golf Club Independence Trophy 21-22 J24 Barbados Match Racing Championships 25 Full Moon 28-29 RBC Classic at Barbados Golf Club 30 Independence Day (BH) Every Sun. Hike Barbados

December 2015 4-6 Run Barbados Int’l Marathon & 10k Series 6 BGA President’s Putter at Royal Westmoreland Golf Club 6 Senior Golf Assoc. Hamper at Barbados Golf Club 25 Full Moon 25 Christmas Day (BH) 25 The Royal Barbados Police Force Band Christmas Concert at Queen’s Park 26 Boxing Day (BH) 26 Boxing Day at The Races Every Sun. Hike Barbados


Elegance is an attitude Simon Baker

Conquest Classic


Kadooment Photo: Mike Toy

How to Join a Kadooment Band: Get in touch with one of the Bands below to order your costume:

Baje International Tel: (246) 622-2253 mascamp@baje-intl.com Online Orders: www.baje-intl.com Betty West Kadooment Mas Band Tel: (246) 428-2863 west1943@outlook.com www.bettywestmasband.com Blue Box Cart C/o Harbour Lights Night Club. Tel: (246) 436-7225 contactus@harbourlights barbados.com Gwyneth Squires Mas Band Tel: (246) 434-0751/427-3590 festivalqueen1985@gmail.com

Crop Over Festival Crop Over Festival is Barbados’ premier cultural festival and is celebrated islandwide, usually over an eight week period from June to August each year.

Popular Crop Over Events: BNB Crop Over Opening Gala and Ceremonial Delivery of the Last Canes Pan Pun De Sand Pic-o-de-Crop Semi-Finals Junior Kadooment Sweet Soca & Soca Royale Pic-o-de-Crop Finals Foreday Morning/Jouvert Bridgetown Market Cohobblopot Grand Kadooment For specific dates and venues on the above mentioned events call The National Cultural Foundation at 424-0909 or visit www.ncf.bb Grand Kadooment takes place on the first Monday in August. It is the grand finale to the

Crop Over Festival and while joining a band is the best way to enjoy Kadooment, many locals and visitors also like to watch from the sidelines. If you wish to enjoy the sights and sounds of Kadooment without joining a band, we suggest that you catch a taxi and go to the Black Rock area. There is shade and food and drink are available. You can enjoy the music and revelry of the bands as they pass on their way to Spring Garden Highway.

Craft stalls at Bridgetown Market Photo: Mike Toy

46  Events Calendar 2015 - Crop Over Festival



The Barbados Landship By Sarah Venable

Members of the Barbados Landship doing the Maypole Dance By Henderson Reece

Cultural Festivals Holetown Festival February 15 - 22 The Holetown Festival takes place in Holetown, St. James and commemorates the anniversary of the first settlement of Barbados in 1627. A few highlights of the Festival: Sun. 15th to Thu. 19th Shows featuring gospel, calypso, etc. Seaside Theatre (behind Police Station) at 7:30pm. Mon. 16th, Wed. 18th & Fri. 20th Alfred Pragnell Memorial Lectures Holetown Methodist Church at 10am. Fri. 20th Royal Barbados Police Band Tattoo Maple Cricket Club at 7:30pm. Sat. 21st Street parade including Tuk Bands, Bajan Dooflicky, Stilt Walkers, Vintage Motor Cars, Etc., on the main coast road at 11am.

Sun. 22nd Spiritual Baptist ceremony Seaside Theatre (behind Police Station) Queen of Holetown Show Frederick Smith Secondary School at 7:30pm. For further details visit: http://www.holetownfestivalbarbados.org

Agrofest (National Agricultural Exhibition) February 27 - March 1 Queen’s Park, Bridgetown. For further details visit: www.agrofestbarbados.com

Oistins Fish Festival April 4 - 6 Oistins, Christ Church.

National Independence Festival of Creative Arts (nifca) October & November For further details call The National Cultural Foundation at 424-0909 or visit their website at www.ncf.bb

Unique to Barbados and full of apparent contradictions, this entertainment is more than meets the eye. When you watch your first Landship performance, you wonder: Why are the males’ costumes nautical, while the females are garbed as nurses? Why is a boss-man shouting orders at them? Whoever heard of a ship on the land? What does all of this mean? Always accompanied by a Tuk band, this cultural expression at first appears to be a satirical ceremony, whose military overtones don’t jibe with occasional outbreaks of hip movementations or the plaiting of the Maypole. In coded dance, the Landship mimics the British navy. The choreography represents shipboard actions such as hoisting a sail or swabbing the decks. But performing is a fraction of their function. Landships are grassroots organisations that arose shortly after Emancipation. They served as friendly societies to help Bajans of African descent remember the middle passage and to progress out of poverty. Members pooled contributions in order to leverage their resources and provide mutual assistance in the days before pensions, welfare services and even banking were available to them. Many communities found cohesion when they “docked a ship.” Research into the Landship’s African roots is ongoing, as are efforts to keep it afloat.

48  Events Calendar 2015 - Cultural Festivals


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Lewis Hamilton about to go head to head with Ken Block at the Top Gear Festival 2014 Photos courtesy Bushy Park Circuit Inc. Barbados

Motor Racing Race of Champions took place in Dec. 2014 and is slated to be here again in Dec. 2015 Photo courtesy Bushy Park Circuit Inc.

Ins & Outs Tips Some of the ROC cars have stayed on at the Bushy Park Circuit, which is hosting a range of unique ROC driving experiences throughout 2015 For further details: www.bushyparkcircuitinc.com

The Club House at Bushy Park Racing Circuit is the best vantage point from which to enjoy motor racing events. Remember your hat and sunblock!

Top Gear Festival Barbados May 16 - 17 Top Gear Festival made its debut in Barbados in 2014 at the newly renovated Bushy Park Circuit in St. Philip to resounding success. Hosted by Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond and James May, Top Gear Festival will return to Barbados in 2015 and will once again feature an aweinspiring line up of cars and driving talent including The Stig, the Top Gear Stunt Team and guest drivers from the world of motorsport and entertainment. For further details: tgfbarbados@bushyparkcircuitinc.com www.topgearfestivalbarbados.com

A host of driving legends from the major forms of motor sport assemble for the ROC’s annual end of season to discover who’s the fastest of them all. Some of the cars have stayed on at the Bushy Park Circuit, which is hosting a range of new and unique ROC driving experiences throughout 2015. For further details: www.bushyparkcircuitinc.com

Race of Champions ROC December TBA

Sol Rally For further details: rallyoffice@rallybarbados.bb www.rallybarbados.net

2014 Race Of Champions took place at the Bushy Park Circuit in St. Philip on December 13-14 and is slated to be repeated in December 2015. Our venue saw off a strong field of rivals to win the right to stage the annual end-ofseason motor sport event in 2014 and it is hoped that 2015 will see a repeat.

Sol Rally Barbados May 23 - 24 Scrutineering & Scotiabank King of the Hill

May 30 - 31

Barbados Historic Rally Carnival August 20 - September 1 (Unconfirmed up to press time) For further details: greg@huzier.com www.barbadosrallycarnival.com

50  Events Calendar 2015 - Motor Racing


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Photo: Courtesy Boozy’s Surf School

Water Events Windsurfing, Kitesurfing, SUPing & Surfing February 9 - 13 Beach Culture World Tour World Championships Photo: Sofie Warren

February 14 - 15 Waterman Festival The Waterman Festival is a pro invitational event that takes place at Silver Sands each year, where major international windsurfing events have been 1983. For further details: Tel: 428-2027 | deaction@briantalma.pro www.briantalma.pro/portfolio/water-man-festival

SUPing October 1 - 15

Photo courtesy Brian ‘de Action Man’ Talma

Last Waterman Standing The last man standing event is one of the most challenging stand up paddle (SUP) events in the world. Competitors must paddle against the wind, maneuver through choppy swells and navigate through waves at night. For further details: 428-2027 | deaction@briantalma.pro www.briantalma.pro/portfolio/last-man-standing

Surfing September 5 - 6 Barbados Surfing Nationals Soup Bowl, Bathsheba, St. Joseph.

November 12 - 15 November Surfing Pro Soup Bowl, Bathsheba, St. Joseph The best junior surfers in Barbados take to the waves to show their skill in competition with international rivals. For further details: info@barbadossurfingassociation.org www.barbadossurfingassociation.org

Swimming, Kayaking, SUPing November 8 Barbados Open Water Festival (1.5K and 5K Swims, Kayak & SUP Relay Races) Carlisle Bay in Barbados can easily be considered one fo the best places in the world for open water swimming. This event is attracting world champions along with over 300 swimmers from all over the world. For further details: 437-2121 | info@swimbarbadosvacations.com www.swimbarbadosvacations.com

52  Events Calendar 2015 - Water Events


HUGO BOSS BARBADOS Phone: 1.246.622.3333 hugobossbarbados@casablancafashiongroup.com

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Barbados - Limegrove Lifestyle Centre, Holetown, St, James - Tel 1 (246) 624 2222


Junior Royalist Regatta 2014

Sailing & Fishing Events Sailing January 11

Taylor’s Cycle Centre J24 Regatta

Barbados Cruising Club Regatta

Mount Gay Round Barbados Race Series

J24 Barbados Match Racing Championships For further information: sailbarbados@gmail.com | www.sailbarbados.com

January 16 - 24

January 21 Errol Barrow Day PH Mount Gay Round Barbados Race

February 15

Tiki Bar J24 Regatta

March 1

Frutee Veteran’s Cup J24 Regatta

April 26

Massy Stores J24 Regatta Photo courtesy Barbados Game Fishing Association

July 12

May 9

Boatyard J24 regatta

November 21 - 22

Game Fishing April 9 - 13 Barbados International Fishing Tournament Port St. Charles marina, St. Peter For further information: www.barbadosgamefishing.com

May 21 - 24

Barbados May Regatta

June 6 - 7

Harris Paints J24 Regatta & Offshore Regatta

June 27 - 28

First Citizens J24 Open Championships

July 4 - 5 Photo: Peter Marshall

Lucky Horseshoe J24 Regatta & Offshore Regatta

Ins & Outs Tip Sailing teams or individuals can contact Island Yachts about charters and crew positions in Barbados’ sailing regattas. Contact: info@island-yachts.com

54  Events Calendar 2015 - Sailing & Fishing


Sundek Barbados Limegrove Lifestyle Centre - Holetown, St. James - Barbados tel: 1.246.622.1111 - mail: sundekbarbados@casablancafashiongroup.com


Ins & Outs Tip Cricket Tickets ... Go online to www.windiescricket.com to purchase adult’s tickets. Children’s tickets are issued only at the local box office at Kensington Oval. It is advised to take along cash in the event that credit cards are not accepted. The West Indies team in a huddle Photos: Nick Reid

The England team celebrate a wicket

Cricket July 3 - 24 Sir Garfield Sobers International Schools Cricket Tournament For further details: www.visitbarbados.org

March 12 - 28 England vs West Indies (T20) Matches Kensington Oval, Bridgetown. For further details: www.windiescricket.com

May 1 - 5 England Tour of West Indies (Third Test) Kensington Oval, Bridgetown. For further details: www.windiescricket.com

56  Events Calendar 2015 - Cricket


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Ins & Outs Tip The full moon rises in Barbados between 5.30 and 6.30 pm. From a couple of vantage points you can sometimes see the sunset and the moon rise at the same time. From anywhere on the east coast moonrise is usually spectacular!

Moonrise over Bathsheba Photo: Jon Farmer

Full Moons

Photo: Dan Christaldi

January 5 February 4 March 5 April 4 May 4 June 2 July 2 & 31 August 29 September 28 October 27 November 25 December 25

Barbados National Trust’s Gun Hill By Moonlight

Not only is full moon night a spectacle in Barbados but a couple of nights before and after are pretty wonderful as well. The night after full moon, moon rise is 45 minutes later and guaranteed to be in the dark and a more convenient time to be dining. Restaurants on the east coast that enjoy a view of the full moon rising include The Atlantis Hotel and The Round House in Bathsheba and L’Azure and Zen at the Crane Resort.

2015 Gun Hill By Moonlight Dates are as follows:-

Gun Hill By Moonlight at Gun Hill Signal Station in St. George takes place from 5:30 to 8:30pm from February to July every year. Go and enjoy spectacular panoramic views with cocktails and tasty refreshments and admire the beautiful full moon! A ceremonial lowering of the flag will take place at sunset and music will be supplied by local volunteer musicians.

February 6 March 6 April 10 May 8 June 5 July 3 July 31 - Blue Moon

Gun Hill Signal Station Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

58  Events Calendar 2015 - Full Moons


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Bridge Where & When To Play Bridge: Jimmy Cozier Bridge Centre Barbados Bridge League 23 Pine Road, Belleville St. Michael Mon.: 9.30am - 1.30pm (approx.) Tue.: 7:00 - 11:00pm (approx) Wed.: 9.30am - 1.00pm (approx) Thu.: 7:00 - 11:00pm (approx) Fri.: 9.30am - 1:30pm (approx) Saturday 2:30 - 5:30pm (approx) Tel: (246) 427-4839 barbadosbridge@gmail.com www.barbadosbridge.org Visitors Always Welcome! Refreshments and snacks available at morning games

May 15 - 23 The 28th Central American and Caribbean Bridge Federation Zonal Championships at Barbados Beach Club, Maxwell Coast Road, Christ Church. The Barbados Bridge League will be celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2015. As part of its celebrations, it is hosting the 28th Central American and Caribbean Bridge Federation Zonal Championships at the Barbados Beach Club, Maxwell Coast Road, Christ Church from May 15th to 23rd under the distinguished patronage of Sir Everton Weekes, an avid bridge player. The zonal championships are held every other year. In 2013, it was held in Panama and in 2011, Cuba. The winners of these championships go on to represent the zone at the World Bridge Championships. Our zone comprises all of the English, French, Spanish and Dutch territories in the region.

It is of interest to note that in 1971, the then President of the Barbados Bridge League, E.L. “Jimmy” Cozier, conceived the idea of a regional festival and this later evolved into the Central American and Caribbean Bridge Federation. Teams from Barbados have been well represented at these tournaments with some level of success. In 2009, the Barbados Ladies National team won the tournament which was held in Guadeloupe, and, along with our Seniors team went on to represent the zone at the World Championships held in Sao Paulo, Brazil, later that year. In 2011, the Barbados Open National team was runners-up to Guadeloupe at the tournament held in Cuba. Barbados is considered to be an attractive destination and we are hoping to host many bridge players from the region and outside of the region as the tournament does not only cater to regional players. There are as many games for transnational players as regional players. Please visit our website at: www.cacbridge2015.com for more details.

60  Events Calendar 2015 - Bridge


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Ins & Outs Tip Clifton Hall Great House, St. John, the home of Massimo and Karen Franchi, was a BNT Open House in 2014. It is now available for events and private tours by appointment. info@cliftonhallgreathouse.com Tel: (246) 240-5198 www.cliftonhallgreathouse.com

Barbados National Trust Open House Programme The Open House Programme is a winter season tradition presented by the Barbados National Trust on Wednesdays from January to April each year. The Barbados National Trust was founded in 1961 to preserve the unique heritage of Barbados - be it historic buildings, places of natural beauty or our flora and fauna. The programme features some of the island’s most historic and elegant private homes, opened one day a year with the generous permission of the owners. Locals and visitors alike are allowed access to some of the island’s most beautiful houses enabling them to discover more about our island’s diverse history and architecture. From stately old plantation houses rich with centuries of history, to the newer, more luxurious Bajan-style villas. The grounds and gardens are included in the attraction.

You will also find crafts people with a selection of interesting items for sale, including books. Refreshments are also served, so you can either sip your rum punch or enjoy a cup of tea in spectacular tropical surroundings. In addition, the Trust provides historical and architectural information to take home at no additional cost. Arrive at 2pm for the tour and then sit to enjoy your tea and listen to the lectures which start at approximately 3:15pm. by Professor Henry Fraser, a past president of the Barbados National Trust and the author of ‘Historic Houses of Barbados’ and ‘Treasures of Barbados’, and Dr. Karl Watson, the Trust’s current president and the editor of the journal of the Barbados Museum & Historical Society. There is always excellent parking, and if the house is some distance away, a shuttle service is also available.

Open Houses confirmed up to press time: • Codrington College, St. John • Hopefield Manor Christ Church • St Lucy’s Rectory & Church • Pandanus, Mullins, St. Peter • Ben-Mar, Pine Hill, St. Michael - Home of the British High Commissioner • Chimborazo Great House, St. Joseph (pre-sold tickets only) For further information call The Barbados National Trust at (246) 426-2421 or email: natrust@caribsurf.com www.barbadosnationaltrust.org

62  Events Calendar 2015 - Open Houses


Glendale Garden at the home of Audrey Thomas in Golf Club Road will be open by the Barbados Horticultural Society on February 8th 2015. Mrs. Thomas opens her garden from 10am until 5pm. Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

Barbados Horticultural Society Open Gardens January 11 Venue to be confirmed

January 18

Woodland, St. George

January 21 (Bank Holiday - Errol Barrow Day) Venue to be Confirmed

January 25

Windermere, Reservoir Road, Brittons Hill, St. Michael

February 8

Glendale, Golf Club Road, Christ Church special opening hours of 10am-6pm

February 22

Fustic House, St. Peter

March 8

Venue to be confirmed

March 15

Venue to be confirmed

The Open Garden Programme is presented by the Barbados Horticultural Society on Sundays from 2:00 to 6:00 pm, during the months of January to March each year. The general public are invited to view the beautiful gardens of private home owners and tour them at their own leisure. Knowledgeable BHS members are also on hand to answer any questions and tea and refreshments are on sale.

Entrance Fees: BHS Members BB$10, Non-members BB$15, children are free. For further information call The Barbados Horticultural Society at (246) 428-5889 or email: hortosociety@caribsurf.com www.horticulturebarbados.com

Ins & Outs Tip Open Gardens are on Sundays from 2:00 to 6:00pm, January to March and also on Errol Barrow Day. BHS signs are placed along the road to help you find your way to each location.

Events Calendar 2015 - Open Gardens  63


The exhibition - ‘We Were Giants’ - The Story of the Barbadians Who Built The Panama Canal - runs until the end of February 2015. This photograph shows the arrival of Barbadian labourers in September 1909. Photo from the cover of the Journal of the Barbados Museum & Historical Society

Museum Events January

June

November

Genealogy Group: Wed. 28 - A meeting place for family researchers to share ideas, problems, solutions and resources. Ole Time Bus Tour: Sat. 31

Crop Over Craft Works: Sat. 6 Celebrating Barbadian craft and culture. Hike/Walk: Sat. 6 Turtle Walk: Sat. 27 (Richard Haynes Boardwalk) Ole Time Bus Tour: Sat. 27

Hike/Walk: Sat. 7 Genealogy Group: Wed. 19 Ole Time Bus Tour: Sat. 28

February Hike/Walk: Sat. 7 Ole Time Bus Tour: Sat. 28 Scarlet Gala Fundraiser: Sat. 28 Exhibition: We Were Giants - The Story of the Barbadians who Built the Panama Canal. Exhibition closes: February 2015.

July Genealogy Group: Thu. 16 Turtle Walk: Sat. 25 (Richard Haynes Boardwalk) Ole Time Bus Tours: Sat. 25 & Fri. 31

March

August

Genealogy Group: Thu. 19 Ole Time Bus Tour: Sun. 29

Ole Time Bus Tours: Mon. 10 & 24 Turtle Walk: Sat. 29 (Richard Haynes Boardwalk)

April Hike/Walk: Sat. 4 Ole Time Bus Tour: Sat. 25

May Leatherback Turtle Walk: Sat. 16 (morgan Lewis Beach) Genealogy Group: Wed. 20 Ole Time Bus Tour: Sat. 30

September Hike/Walk: Sat. 5 Genealogy Group: Wed. 16 Ole time Bus Tour: Sat. 26

October Ole Time Bus Tour: Sun. 25

For further details on all events call the Barbados Museum & Historical Society at 427-0201 or visit: www.barbadosmuseum.org

Ins & Outs Tip The shop at the Barbados Museum & Historical Society has an excellent selection of interesting holiday reading. The librarian at the BMHS is very helpful with research.

64  Events Calendar 2015 - Museum Events



Gala Night at Virgin Atlantic Holders Season Photography Alwyn Kirk

NEW CLASSICAL POPS FESTIVAL A new Classical Pops Festival was held for 4 days at Apes Hill Club for the first time in December 2014. It is slated to become an annual event in December. With classical music and contemporary hits performed by members of America’s premier orchestras and vocal superstars, it is sure to become Barbados’ most popular holiday musical tradition.

Music Festivals Jazz January 15 - 18

Reggae April 19 - 26

Naniki Caribbean Jazz Safari A unique jazz experience performed through the Caribbean, featuring world-renowned musicians performing in lush, tropical settings and appealing to lovers of a mix of culture, nature and much more. For further details: 433-1351 | tom.hinds@lushlife.bb www.nanikicaribbeanjazzsafari.com

Digicel Barbados Reggae Festival A very popular event with a loyal following from the most diverse audiences in the island. Reggae is by far the most popular Caribbean musical genre and this festival is famous for bringing together the best in reggae entertainment with well sought after, worldrenowned performers. For further details: http://thebarbadosreggaefestival.com

Opera, Music & Theatre March 12 - 28 Virgin Atlantic Holders Season Founded in 1993, this is the premier performing arts festival of the Caribbean. A celebration of opera, music and theatre. Adding to the entertainment is the ambience - an open-air theatre set under the stars on the beautiful grounds of the famous Holders House. For further details: 432-6385 | theseason@holders.net http://holders.net

Gospel May 24 - 31 Gospelfest Barbados The premier international Christian music and arts festival. Devoted fans from Barbados, the Caribbean and the international community attend this festival each year. Known for a high standard of excellence, it has become a vital festival fixture over the years and features top local, regional and international gospel talent. For further details: 426-5128 | info@barbadosgospelfest.com www.barbadosgospelfest.com

66  Events Calendar 2015 - Music Festivals


©T&CO. 2014

INTRODUCING TIFFANY T BARBADOS COLONNADE MALL BROAD STREET BRIDGETOWN 246 431 0031 TIFFANY.COM


Photo: Caroline Reid

Broadway to Barbados February 19 - 21 & 25 - 28 Frank Collymore Hall, Bridgetown The popular Broadway to Barbados show is back again for 2015! Having run successfully between 2001 and 2007 the show was recently revived in 2013 after benefactors Robert and Mary Ellen Bourque and Jacob and Michal Hassid led the charge to bring it back to our shores. The show is a musical journey of popular Broadway hits throughout the years performed by Broadway’s biggest stars at the Frank Collymore Hall in Bridgetown. Every year the show brings down fresh talent as well as crowd favourites to treat patrons to an array of material from leading Broadway shows. Audiences are dazzled by performances from stars of classic hits such as Jesus Christ Superstar, Les Miserables and Phantom of the Opera and newer award winning productions such as Dreamgirls and Legally Blonde. Each production features new material and different experiences; ensuring that it’s one show on the annual calendar that remains sold out each year. Indeed many repeat visitors to Barbados reach out to project coordinators early to ensure they are on island for the experience. The initiative was undertaken in support

of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital (QEH) and more specifically, to provide state of the art diagnostic equipment for the new Medical Intensive Care Unit at the hospital, which is now in operation as the Dr. Richard Haynes MICU. To date the Broadway to Barbados Charitable Trust has raised over $700,000 in commitments used to purchase in excess of $600,000 worth of vital critical care medical equipment, office furniture and specialized staff training costs. Project Coordinator Robert Bourque oversees the disbursement of funds in association with the Charity’s Trustees; working closely with the Head of the Department of Medicine Dr. Anne Marie Hassell, while the administration of the Charity including all management of the stage performance itself is provided gratuitously by the major show and project sponsors. The Broadway to Barbados Charitable Trust encourages corporate sponsorship and donors as well as individuals to join them in elevating the standard of critical medical care for the benefit of all families, friends, employees, fellow citizens and visitors to the island. This critically acclaimed Broadway to Barbados production is not to be missed! For more information please email broadwaytobarbadosct@gmail.com or call Diamonds International at (246) 430-2400.

NEIL BERG: PRODUCER Neil is the creator and coproducer of Neil Berg’s “100 Years of Broadway,” which is now the number one Broadway touring concert in the United States. As owner of Leftfield Productions, Inc., Neil has produced over a thousand Broadway concerts worldwide and worked with such stars as Michael Crawford, Bernadette Peters, Liz Callaway and Sir Cliff Richard. He is currently the composer for the new Broadway-bound musical “Grumpy old Men,” based on the Warner Brothers movie classic starring Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau and is the composer/ lyricist of the hit Off-Broadway musical “The Prince and the Pauper,” which ran for two years at the Lambs Theater in New York City.

68  Events Calendar 2015 - Broadway to Barbados


See your holiday from our perspective‌

Join us at:


Dhruv Baker

Famous Chefs visit Cobblers Cove by Special Invitation

Garth Stroebel

Food Festivals January 16 - 18 Barbados Chocolate Festival & Conference Savannah Beach Hotel, Hastings, Ch. Ch. A chocolate, pastry, and sweets festival. Celebrated chocolatiers, pastry chefs, and confectioners will come together to create a unique tasting event to benefit The Asthma Association of Barbados. For further details: Tel: (246) 240-3801 info@BarbadosChocolateFestival.com www.barbadoschocolatefestival.com

November Food & Wine and Rum Festival Barbados welcomes top international chefs for this annual festival. Visitors and locals are treated to six days of the very best international cuisine and cooking demonstrations. For details of the lineup of events visit: www.foodwinerum.com

Cobblers Cove, the only Relais & Chateaux hotel in Barbados, is launching a new visiting chef’s programme, with Masterchef 2010 winner, Dhruv Baker and South African award winning chef, Garth Stroebel, in residence this coming season. The chefs will cook four dinners each in the Camelot restaurant, which was recently awarded Best Restaurant in Barbados 2014 by the Barbados Hotel Association and is headed up by Barbados-born Chef Michael Harrison. Chef Michael trained under Michel Roux Jr. at Le Gavroche in London before returning home to Cobblers Cove. The visiting chefs will build on the already successful reputation of Cobblers Cove as a foodie haven and will complement Chef Michael’s gourmet island tours, which are offered to guests at the resort. Garth Stroebel will be in residence at Cobblers Cove from January 28 to 31, 2015. Garth is an award-winning South African chef, at the forefront of innovative modern South African cuisine. Formerly executive chef for the African Collection of Orient-Express Hotels, Garth’s style combines the

traditional foods of South Africa’s culinary heritage – including African, Malay, Indian, Dutch, French and Portuguese – with the exotic new flavours and influences of the modern world. Dhruv Baker will be cooking at the hotel from March 25 to 28. Born in Mexico and then moved to India at the age of 4, his passion for food stemmed from his mother. Masterchef judge, Greg Wallace, said of him: “He is probably one of the most amazing talents I’ve ever seen. He has the palate of an angel.’’ Since winning Masterchef he has worked with Michel Roux Jr at Le Gavroche, Jonnie Boer at De Librije in Holland and Tom Kitchin. He owns and runs Earlsfield Kitchen, a private events and catering company and is launching his first restaurant this month. Dhruv released his first book, Spice: Layers of Flavour, in July 2014. Chef Michael Harrison started cooking at the age of 12. He studied at culinary college in Barbados and had his very first job as a waiter at Cobblers Cove. As well as working for Chef Michel Roux Jr at Le Gavroche in London, he has also worked at Gleneagles in Scotland and North Island Resort in the Seychelles. He’s cooked for President Bush, the Beckhams, Michael Winner and Salma Hayek among others. For more information and reservations visit: www.cobblerscove.com

70  Events Calendar 2015 - Food Festivals


GET AWAY FROM THE EVERYDAY. Powdery white sands, crystal turquoise waters and warm Caribbean breezes await you at the Hilton Barbados Resort. Escape to this tropical paradise and fulfill your heart’s desires.

For room reservations visit hiltonbarbadosresort.com or call 426 0200. Needham's Point St Michael | Bridgetown | BB 11000 | BARBADOS

©2014 Hilton Worldwide

Ins & Outs of Barbados  71


Apprentice jockey Antonio Perch wearing the silks of G. DeVere Davis, followed by jockey Noble Abrego wearing the silks of D.D. Haynes, leading the way to the parade ring Photo: Barbara Secher Greenidge

Horse Racing Saturday afternoon races at the Garrison Savannah are a great way to spend your day! If you care for a flutter, you can wage a few dollars in the pari-mutual pools. It is an exciting spectacle with a happy, relaxed atmosphere and many tremendous characteristics and interesting sights of all kinds. There are three racing seasons per year - January to April, May to September and November to December.

“SEE YOU AT THE RACES” Entrance Fees: (normal rate): Grandstand (individual seat) BB$20 adults; BB$10 children under 12. VIP Grandstand (better vantage point, cushion and cup holder) BB$35ea. General admission (general seating /standing room) BB$10ea adults; children under 12 are free. Day memberships are available at BB$100ea to the Incitatus Members’ Lounge (VIP air-conditioned area). Bookings are limited and must be arranged and paid for in advance with the Barbados Turf Club. There is a different pricing structure in place for all areas on public holidays and the Sandy Lane Barbados Gold Cup. Food and beverages are readily available for purchase from the various bars and vendors on and off the compound. Parking is available on the outskirts of the track (under one of the many beautiful trees) or on the infield (centre of the grounds). Starting Time: Gates open one hour before the post time of the first race, which is generally, between noon and 1:45pm.

Dress code: Normal raceday Grandstand / General admission - Casual, NO beach wear. Sunscreen and hats are recommended for open areas. Incitatus Members’ Lounge: Semi-formal. Gold Cup: The Sandy Lane Barbados Gold Cup is a very prestigious raceday. As such the ladies dress up in their finest outfits and stylish matching hats, even in the stands! Please dress formal for the Members’ Lounge. Betting: - Racebooks contain past performances of the day’s entries. - Sheets with jockey and betting information (to fill in your book) are on sale at the main entrance, so take a pen! - There is a minimum of BB$1 on all betting types and seven different types of wagers: Win, Place, Superfecta, Pick-4, Forecast, Trifecta and Hi-5. - State the race and the number of the horse(s) you are betting on - avoid using the horses’ names. Check your tickets, count your money after placing your bet and always keep your tickets until the race is official. For further information call the Barbados Turf Club at 626-3980 or visit their website: www.barbadosturfclub.org

Ins & Outs Tip Sandy Lane Gold Cup: March 7, 2015 On race day look for your tipster sheet which is handed out at the gate!

72  Events Calendar 2015 - Horse Racing



Royal Westmoreland, St. James Photo: Mike Toy

Golf

January 4

June 6 - 7

Sagicor Family Golf Barbados Golf Club

National Trials Barbados Golf Club

Barbados Golf Club Medal Championship

Banks Fun Day Barbados Golf Club

January 10

Apes Hill Golf Club St. James Tel: (246) 432-4500 email: info@apeshillclub.com www.apeshillclub.com

Barbados Golf Club Christ Church Tel: (246) 428-8463 email: teetime@barbadosgolfclub.com www.barbadosgolfclub.com

Rockley Golf Club Christ Church Tel: (246) 435-7873 email: teetime@rockleygolfclub.com www//rockleygolfclub.com

Royal Westmoreland Golf Club St. James Tel: (246) 419-7242 www.royalwestmoreland.com

Sandy Lane Country Club St. James Tel: (246) 444-2500 www.sandylane.com

January 17

Sandy Lane Charitable Trust Inv Golf Sandy Lane Golf & Country Club

February 4

Diamonds International Substance Abuse Charity Golf Royal Westmoreland Golf Club

February 14

The Crane Classic Barbados Golf Club

February 27- 28 Buchanan Trophy Royal Westmoreland GC Members and Guests

June 27 June 28

Canada Day Charity Golf Royal Westmoreland Golf Club

July 4

Barbados Golf Association Trophy Barbados Golf Club

July 25

Mount Gay Championship Barbados Golf Club

TBA

Massy United Insurance Barbados Open

March 10-11

October 23

Barbados Ladies Open Royal Westmoreland Golf Club

Barbados Chamber of Commerce Golf Tournament Barbados Golf Club

March 16

St. Patrick’s Day Tournament Barbados Golf Club

April 18

Barbados Golf Association Challenge Barbados Golf Club

May 7 - 10

Sir Garry Sobers Festival of Golf International Tournament Barbados Golf Club, Royal Westmoreland Golf Club, Sandy Lane Golf Club & Apes Hill Club. www.sirgarrysobersfestivalofgolf.com

May 23 - 24

Digicel Barbados Golf Club Open

74  Events Calendar 2015 - Golf

November 14

QEH Tournament Barbados Golf Club

November 21

Barbados Golf Club Independence Trophy

November 28 - 29

RBC Classic Barbados Golf Club

December 6

BGA President’s putter Royal Westmoreland Golf Club Senior Golf Assoc. Hamper Barbados Golf Club


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Ins & Outs of Barbados  75


Apes Hill Golf Club Officially opened on December 5, 2009, Apes Hill Club has now firmly established itself as one of the finest and most spectacular golf courses in the Caribbean. Occupying 470 acres of some of the most beautiful land in Barbados, on an elevated ridge 1,000 feet above sea-level, this magnificent 7,150 yards, par-72 course not only provides superb golf challenges but also unsurpassed panoramic views of both the west and east coasts with a signature hole around every corner! The latest exciting news for golfers all around the world is that, while access to the course is generally restricted to club members and their invited guests, it is now possible to book a tailor-made Golf Holiday at Apes Hill Club, with accommodation in one of the resort’s elegant and stylishly appointed villas. Various holiday packages are available for individuals and groups, which include a ‘Meet and Greet’ Service at the airport, fast-tracking through Customs and Immigration, transfer to Apes Hill Club in a luxury vehicle, accommodation and golf. However, in all cases, the basic package can be enhanced with the inclusion of any of a wide variety of activities that take place in Barbados year round, ranging from dinners at the top restaurants to cultural events, island tours, boat trips, sailing, surfing, diving, many other watersports, cricket, horse racing,

polo and whatever else is happening at the time. As just one example, the kind of big events that could be combined with a fantastic golf experience in December 2014 include Classical Pops, which is actually being hosted by Apes Hill Club, and the ROC motorsports Race of Champions at the Bushy Park Race Circuit. Golfers can simply map out their choice of activities in advance and once they arrive everything is laid on for them, on and off the course. Golf heaven! Throughout the year, in addition to the regular Members Competitions, Apes Hill Club also generally hosts a number of major events such as the Sir Garfield Sobers Festival of Golf and the Barbados Open; as well as a rich variety of social golf events as diverse as the British Airways Football Legends and the HRH Prince Edward Golf Day, staged in support of the Duke of Edinburgh Award Scheme. Apes Hill Club was also chosen to stage the World Finals of the Virgin Atlantic Swingers Golf League in November 2014. Regardless of the occasion, whether a casual 4-ball with friends or a major championship, visiting golfers always thoroughly enjoy the challenge and thrill of playing the Apes Hill Club course.

76  Events Calendar 2015 - Golf



Ins & Outs Tip Polo fixtures may change due to inclement weather. Check www.barbadospoloclub.com Lion Castle Polo Club

Polo “How To” go to polo Entrance Fees: BB$20 adults BB$10 children 12 and under. All are welcome at The following Clubs: Holders Polo Club, St. James, Tel: 432-1802 Apes Hill Polo Club, St. James, Tel: 262-3282 Lion Castle Polo Club, St. Thomas, Tel: 622-7656 Clifton Polo Club, St. Thomas Tel: 432-1802 Attending polo is a casual and exciting pastime in Barbados. Play begins around 3pm and includes two matches of 4 chukkas each . There is covered seating in the club houses and outside in small stands or seating areas. If you bring your own folding chairs you can enjoy the game from the side of the field. Avoid sitting too close to the edge and pay attention when play is on. All of the polo clubs have bars. Afternoon tea with finger foods is served on most match days. Dinner is typically served after weekend tournaments and tour matches. Patrons are not permitted to bring picnics or coolers.

January 18 (Clifton) 22 & 25 (Lion Castle)

March 1, 3 & 8 (Holders) 5 (Lion Castle)

Kenya Tour

Cheshire Tour

January 20 (Holders)

March 12, 19 & 22 (Holders) 15 (Apes Hill) 17 (Lion Castle)

Mount Gay Regatta Exhibition

February 1, 3, 8 (Holders), 5 (Apes Hill) Ladies Tour

February 10, 12 & 15 (Holders), 14 (Clifton) The Villages

February 17, 21, 26 & 28 (Apes Hill) 19 (Holders) 24 (Lion Castle) Roger Gooding Memorial

78  Events Calendar 2015 - Polo

Barbados Open

March 24, 26 & 29 April 7, 9 & 12 (All at Lion Castle) Lion Castle Tour

May 9 (Holders) Presidents Cup/ Kearns Trophy For further details: Tel: 432-1802 clubsecretary@barbadospoloclub.com www.barbadospoloclub.com



Sports Festivals International Tennis March 6 - 8

Football May 22 - 25

Davis Cup Americas Zone Group 1 The Barbados Davis Cup Team of Darian King, Haydn Lewis, Russell Moseley and Seanon Williams made history for Barbados, when they won promotion to Americas Group I for the first time ever. They defeated Mexico 3-2 in the Group II promotion play-off in 2014. Barbados plays Dominican Republic at home in the Group 1 tie at the National Tennis Centre, Wildey, St. Michael. First day - reverse singles matches. Second day - doubles. Third and final day - the head to head singles.

Barbados International Masters Football Festival For further details: g.trebble@caribsurf.com

March 30 - April 5 ITF Barbados Junior International Tennis Championships For further details: tennisbarbados@caribsurf.com www.tennisbarbados.org

Hockey August 16 - 22 30th Barbados International Hockey Festival For further details: www.barbadoshockey.org

Beach Volleyball November 7 - 8 Annual Sizzlin’ Sand Beach Volleyball Barbados Sunsplash Competition The best of beach volleyball featuring players from across the Caribbean, North and Central America. Great beach parties with live entertainment and music. For further details: sizzlinsand@gmail.com

80  Events Calendar 2015 - Sports Festivals


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This is a football autobiography with an exciting and refreshing difference. It smashes the mould of the typical sports book. Mike Yates tells his own compelling real life story of what it is like to be one of the many thousands of young players who pass through the academy system, get very close to the first team and believe that they are about to make it, only to suddenly find themselves rejected. To purchase a copy please contact Miller Publishing at 421 6700 or Keith Miller at 262 5874/keith@millerpublishing.net. Also available at Pages Bookstores, The University Bookshop, and at Sheraton Mall at The Soccer Fan Store.

Search Steven Gerrard,

Michael Owen and Me

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Ins and Outs of Barbados  81


The FRB’s (runners) at the Hash House Harriers find the “ON” and the walkers follow “On On!” to the various check points. In the end, everyone arrives back at the Hash Bar, at roughly the same time, to a convivial atmosphere of fun and relaxation over a drink or two and the option of having your supper outdoors. (BBQ provided - you bring your own food). Photo: Franz Phillips

The Hash is 30! In November 2015 the hash will celebrate its 30th Anniversary with 5 days of activities Nov. 12 - 16, 2015. Activities will include 3 hashes, a night time hash bar crawl, a beach fun day and Anniversary dinner. All are welcome! On on.

Hiking & Running Every Saturday

May 24

Barbados Hash House Harriers The Barbados Hash House Harriers was founded in November of 1985. Although they are a group primarily focused on running and walking events, they also promote charitable projects for the less fortunate. Boasting over 100 regulars, they meet every Saturday and Bank holiday at different locations throughout the island of Barbados. Runners, walkers, young and old, all are welcome to join. No need to pre-register, call or email - just show up at the posted location. For further details: www.barbadoshash.com

Chefette Fun Run This is a 6 mile run or walk, the proceeds of which are donated to the Aunty Olga Needy Children’s Fund. In 2013, Chefette took over as the title sponsor. It was previously known as the Ship Inn Fun Run. The run/walk starts at Chefette, Rockley and continues to Chefette, Fontabelle in Bridgetown. Buy your t-shirt and support this worthy cause. For further information Tel: 429-9123.

Every Sunday Hike Barbados Presented by the Barbados National Trust every Sunday throughout the year. There are two hikes per day at 6:00am and 3:30pm. There are also moonlight hikes every month which take place at 5:30pm. For details and a full hike schedule call the Barbados National Trust at 426-2421 or email at: natrust@caribsurf.com | www.barbadosnationaltrust.org

Running December 4 - 6 Powerade Run Barbados Series Spearheaded by the Barbados Tourism Marketing Inc., the Run Barbados series continues to be one of the most prestigious distance running events in the Caribbean. For further details: Tel: 467-3600 | info@runbarbados.org www.runbarbados.org

82  Events Calendar 2015 - Hiking & Running


Sports Associations Directory Amateur Athletic Association of B’dos President: Catherine Jordan Tel: (246) 427-4684/231-1071 glydor23@yahoo.com

Barbados Equestrian Association President: Monique Archer Tel: (246) 422-0607/422-0400 barbadosequestrian@gmail.com

Barbados Rugby Football Union President: George Nicholson Tel: (246) 233-1945/429-1998 gnicholson@adebbarbados.com

B’dos Amateur Basketball Association President: Derrick Garrett Tel: (246) 243-1517 baba.president@gmail.com

B’dos Federation of Island Triathletes President: Peter Gibbs Tel: (246) 417-4374/256-2133 pgibbs1947@hotmail.com

Barbados Sailing Association President: Peter Thompson Tel: (246) 234-5229/429-1998 peter_thompson@tmrservice.com

B’dos Amateur Gymnastics Association Contact the Barbados Olympic Association at 429-1998 or visit: www.olympic.org.bb

Barbados Football Association President: Randy Harris Tel: (246) 228-1707/256-1404 randyharris@barbadosfa.com

Barbados Squash Association President: Craig Archer Tel: (246) 231-6332 carcher@caribsurf.com

B’dos Amateur Swimming Association President: Andrew Kirby Tel: (246) 429-7946 basa@caribsurf.com

Barbados Game Fishing Association President: Joe Brooker info@barbadosgamefishing.com

Barbados Surfing Association President: Christopher Clarke Tel: (246) 266-0842/429-1998 para_digm@hotmail.com

B’dos Amateur Bodybuilding & Fitness Federation President: Andrew LeR. Forde Tel: (246) 427-5863 skindeep@caribsurf.com Barbados Archery Association President: John Annel Tel: (246) 253-6240/429-1998 johnannel@gmail.com Barbados Badminton Association President: Kevin Wood Tel: (246) 231-7390/429-1998 kevinl78@hotmail.com Barbados Bridge League President: Roglyn Hinds Tel: (246) 427-4839/231-0149 roglyn@caribsurf.com

B’dos Clay Target Shooting Association President: Bruce Skeete Tel: (246) 231-1619 president@bctsa.com

Barbados Cycling Union President: Keith Yearwood Tel: (246) 228-1699/429-1998 kyearwood@hotmail.com

Barbados Hockey Federation President: David Rouse Tel: (246) 233-7259/228-5042 hockey@olympic.org.bb Barbados Judo Association President: Hoskins Caddle Tel: (246) 436-2608 president@barjudo.com Barbados Karate Association President: Paul Bernstein Tel: (246) 435-6734/230-2812 barbadosikd@yahoo.com Barbados Netball Association President: Nisha Cummings Tel: (246) 231-4344/429-1998 netball@caribsurf.com

Barbados Chess Federation President: Rohan Waithe Tel: (246) 269-3607/429-1998 rohanwaithe@hotmail.com

Barbados Cricket Association President: Joel Garner Tel: (246) 274-1325 theoffice@bca.org.bb

Barbados Golf Association President: Hadley Byer Tel: (246) 262-4653/826-3626 bgagolf@hotmail.com

Barbados Olympic Association President: Steve Stoute Tel: (246) 429-1998 info@olympic.org.bb Barbados Polo Club President: Wayne Archer Tel: (246) 432-1802 clubmanager@barbadospoloclub.com Barbados Rally Club Chairman: Mark Hamilton Tel: (246) 836-0957 mhaminc@gmail.com

Barbados Table Tennis Association President: Lt.Col. Trevor Browne Tel: (246) 233-8113/429-1998 trevor.browne@blpc.com.bb Barbados Tennis Association President: Dr. Raymond Forde Tel: (246) 433-3889/429-1998 raydoc@caribsurf.com Barbados Turf Club President: Sir David Seale Tel: (246) 426-3980 rpierce@barbadosturfclub.org Barbados Volleyball Association President: John Griffith Tel: (246) 231-1848/429-1998 jfgriffith@olympic.org.bb Barbados Water Polo Club President: Cheryl Forde Tel: (246) 423-3881 cherylwforde@gmail.com Barbados Windsurfing Association President: Roger Millar Tel: (246) 262-7086 rogerlmill@hotmail.com Paralympic Association of Barbados President: Wesley Worrell Tel: (246) 426-0049/232-7185 pab18@hotmail.com Synchro Barbados President: Morgan Brown Tel: (246) 243-5222 synchrobarbados@gmail.com

Sports Associations Directory  83


On the Sea


A

s with all islands, the sea influences many of our leisure activities and the island is blessed with a full range of sea conditions

from flat calm to pounding surf. When combined with our crystal clear water, this means that we enjoy superb conditions for just about every water sport under the sun. Swimming, surfing, windsurfing, kitesurfing, stand-up paddle boarding, snorkeling, diving, sports fishing – they are all practiced here and many companies offer services in these areas, including rental of equipment and lessons. Learning how to surf or dive can be a great souvenir to take home! Sailing is also a big part of the Barbados experience, especially when it includes a chance to swim with the sea turtles. If you are lucky enough to be on the island around the full moon (see page 58), take advantage of one of the evening cruises on offer – few things can compare to the sublime beauty of being on the water under the light of the moon. Feature Articles 90  Meet a Bajan - Trevor Hunte 92  Meet a Bajan - Keith & Barbara Armstrong 94 Meet a Bajan - Ivan St. Claire Harvey Sailing along the west coast is considered one of the highlights of a Barbados holiday. Photo: Thomas Byrne

Ins & Outs of Barbados  85


Cool Runnings Experience one of the most pleasurable days of your holiday!

Ins & Outs Tip Book your cruise early in your holiday, chances are you will want to go again before you leave!

This unique charter company specialises in personalised cruises, ensuring the utmost in comfort, service and enjoyment. These elegant, custom-built catamarans sail with a limited number of passengers, to guarantee a superb day of sailing in an uncrowded atmosphere. Owners, Robert and Annika Povey, run a professional operation – this is apparent from the moment you step aboard – the captain and crew are a good humoured group of well-trained, experienced sailors who know how to look after and entertain their guests. The boats are immaculately maintained, spacious and comfortable, and the atmosphere is friendly and relaxed. • Lunch Cruise: A 5-hr. sailing cruise with three stops along the way ... swim in a secluded bay; snorkel with the sea turtles; explore a shallow shipwreck where you can feed schools of tropical fish. • Sunset Cruise: This 4-hr. cruise is a wonderful way to enjoy a dazzling tropical sunset. Includes stops for swimming, snorkeling with the turtles and an old shipwreck. • Private Cruises: These are ideally suited for weddings and corporate entertaining with many options available for specialized catering. • Lunch/Sunset Cruises: Delicious meals are served with wine, and there is an open bar. Transport included.

86  On the Sea


t: (246) 436-0911 info@coolrunningsbarbados.com www.coolrunningsbarbados.com

pure pleasure!

a day on Cool Runnings...


Silver Moon An unmatched level of comfort and service ... Away from the crowds

Ins & Outs Tip Because they cater exclusively to small numbers, you get more room to relax and more attention from the crew who cater to your every need.

Silver Moon Catamarans are owned and operated by Captain Nick Parker, a hospitality pioneer who introduced his first catamaran to Barbados almost 30 years ago. With the launch of the Silver Moon brand, Nick and his wife Nicky reinvented this now classic Barbadian experience by adding comfort and luxury to the beauty of our calm and inviting waters. Guests can enjoy the ultimate sailing experience onboard the Silver Moon catamarans, both carrying only 12 passengers each. On each vessel, Nick’s vision rings true – sometimes, less is more. From Presidents and Prime Ministers and Grammy award winners to regular travelers seeking a premium experience, those in-the-know choose Silver Moon. On Silver Moon your glass is never empty, a classic Bajan buffet lunch is served and all snorkeling equipment and safety gear are provided. This experience has earned them a Trip-Advisor Certificate of Excellence each year since the award was introduced. In January 2015, Silver Moon will be introducing a Luxury Power Catamaran to their fleet – the only one of its kind in Barbados! It will be offered for private day, evening and overnight charters in addition to providing unique coastal lunch cruises for up to 24 passengers. It is perfectly laid out with guest comfort in mind, offering large cushioned sun areas on the foredeck, comfortable shaded seating on the flybridge, a well-stocked wet bar and a seated dining area for up to 16 guests. It will also be available for charter in the Grenadines, with Captain and crew, for up to 10 passengers from May to October. Silver Moon Private Charters: The most discerning clients can book Silver Moon for private charter; you choose the time to sail, day or night, the refreshments and either the classic buffet menu, or a custom dining option from one of their partner Chefs. From weddings to birthdays, or evenings for two, there is no experience like Silver Moon.

88  On the Sea


Sometimes,

Less is More

LESS PEOPLE. LESS STRESS.

MORE TO ENJOY. Tel: (246) 435-5285 www.silvermoonbarbados.com reservations@silvermoonbarbados.com


Trevor Hunte

Intrepid Round the Island Windsurfer By Keith Miller Tanned and fit, with a likeable, cheeky sense of humour and an infectious zest for life, Trevor Hunte is one of Barbados’ most adventurous windsurfers. He is also a qualified horticulturalist, who manages C.O. Williams Flowers and has helped Barbados win Gold Medals at the Chelsea Flower Show. But that is another story. Trevor is most at home on the open ocean. “I love being far offshore, zipping along, on my own amongst big swells. You have to watch out for Turtles and especially Flying Fish. They smack you in the head. Little ones get stuck in your pants! If you hit a submerged tree trunk then you are done. Last year I got caught in a huge squall miles out at sea and the wind snapped my boom. I thought I was a goner, but luckily I managed to paddle to a remote beach in St.

Lucy. I like the adrenaline that fear creates. It makes me a better windsurfer.” In 2014 Trevor was the only windsurfer to race against the yachts in the 70-mile Mount Gay Rum Round Barbados Race, but dead winds killed his chances and it was dark by the time he finished. Nevertheless, his time of almost 8 hours currently stands as the race record for windsurfers. “It’s really tough out there, battling with the big boats, but bare sport too. And my personal best time ever round the island is under 5 hours so, with good wind, I should easily beat my own Mount Gay record this year. One day I’d like to windsurf to Martinique. Imagine arriving on a board with nothing but my passport. That would be a blast!”

meet a Bajan 90  On the Sea



Photo: Niki Farmer

Keith & Barbara Armstrong BadAss’n Divers By Niki Farmer It is not everyday that one gets the opportunity to meet such an inspiring couple as Barbara and Keith Armstrong. At the tender age of seventy eight their zest, energy, love for life and adventure oozes from their every pore - especially when they are kitted up in their wet suits, poised to take another plunge into their all time favourite activity - diving the magical underwater world of ‘the big blue’. Having both grown up in the Caribbean they are well rooted in sea culture. But for Keith, his love of the undersea began in his boyhood play days on Hastings rocks, where he and his mates would make their own dive masks from inner tubes and a piece of glass. This leaky makeshift contraption provided hours of fun and wonder, inspiring many soon to be divers. Years later, after Keith had done the BSAC and PADI courses with his children, weekends were spent diving the reefs of Barbados from their boat. Barbara, not to be outdone, also took her PADI at age 50, and from then there was no stopping them. They dived extensively throughout the Caribbean and as far as New Zealand and Australia.

In 1990 they became one of the earliest members of BADASS’n, (Barbados Aquatic Divers Assocation) - a recreational dive group that’s now a fifty strong multinational membership of locals, expats, residents and diplomats where visitors are always welcomed. To this day Barbara and Keith are still active members. Even after their respective back and heart surgeries in 2011, they were back diving with the club in early 2012 and haven’t paused since. So if you are lucky you can meet Keith and Barbara, who have just returned from hiking the Rockies – another hobby – at one of the BADASS’n Sunday dives. A chat with them at the post dive lime about one of their diving adventures could be about the shark lurking above Barbara’s head while she was holding the bag with the lobsters, or the time when their boat went adrift in a squall while they were peacefully diving below. Such tales, such energy, such inspiration! Barbara and Keith Armstrong - still diving, still rocking.

meet a Bajan 92  Under On the the Sea Sea


Island Yachts Island Yachts is a premier company offering services such as yacht sales, charters and management to yacht owners. Their administration services for yacht management include coordination, payment and management of all yacht charges, all third party management services, booking agreements and waivers and onland coordination to include accommodation and full concierge services. They also offer online marketing in the latest and most appropriate channels, trade marketing and exhibitions to establish strong partnerships with members of relevant corporations, newsletters and print media. Their exciting portfolio of charters includes a TP52 sailing yacht and speed boat. The Transpac 52 is famous in the sailing world for its speed and agility on the water. For those seeking an adrenaline rush, day charters are available to experience regatta like conditions and racing. They also offer corporate charters for team building and regatta charters for sailing teams looking for a new challenge!

Ins & Outs of Barbados  93


meet a Bajan 94  On the Sea


Meet a Bajan

Ivan St. Claire Harvey Shipwright, cricket fan By Sally Miller

Photos: Andrew Hulsmeier

“I worked seven days a week – except when the West Indies were playing a test match at Kensington Oval!” Beginning with his first dinghy at age 12 and retiring from full time work at 83, there’s a wealth of knowledge about boat building under Ivan Harvey’s hat. These days he can still be found around his lifelong haunt of Carlisle Bay, swimming and walking with his friends, his trademark bicycle parked nearby. Harvey’s young life revolved around boats. He grew up in Carlisle Bay when sailing was popular as both a gentleman’s sport and the poor man’s right of passage to survive in the fishing industry. His father, Evan Harvey, taught him his trade while he was still at school. He regards his work ethic and retirement age as par for the course as he recalls colleagues working into their 90’s in an era when heavy manual work defined his field. In those days inter-island schooners were hauled up onto the beach by hand, using tree trunks as rollers! Pond boats, dinghies, racing yachts, schooners, fishing boats – he’s used his skills on thousands of boats. He built the island’s first catamaran – the popular choice for leisure craft today. Harvey lived through an interesting

time in Barbados for both politics and cricket and he loves to share his extraordinary memories. He reminisces watching Sir Grantley Adams (first and only premier of the ill-fated West Indies Federation and Premier of Barbados) play draughts with the ‘fellas’ in Queen’s Park; getting lifts to school with Frank Worrell and observing and advising Garry Sobers’ (both later to be knighted) stroke play as he developed his craft at the local YMPC. He complains that too many shots today are swipes. He misses the masterful stroking, driving and cutting that characterized West Indies Test Match cricket in his younger days. Harvey’s vast knowledge of working with local mahogany and white wood, caulking with cotton wicks and white lead and securing with bronze and copper is not in such demand now. Today’s boats are usually made with fibreglass. But he has passed on some of his knowledge to his youngest of five daughters. He proudly tells me that even though she works full time with a BA in Finance and plays volleyball for Barbados, she still found time to help him work on his last boat.

Ins & Outs of Barbados  95


B

arbados is truly a coral island, totally encircled by coral reefs, with uniquely blue and crystal clear water (50-80 foot visibility) most of the year. This explains why Barbados has over 40 dive sites and many more reefs yet to be dived. With the help and support of the Barbados Dive Operators Association, as well as the University of the West Indies biologists, repeat guests should notice that the fringing reefs, patch reefs and barrier reefs all now have more dive sites, more fish and more turtles than just a few years ago. With two marine parks and one more opening soon, recreational divers and snorkelers will continue to see more fish, while fishermen can also catch bigger fish that have hopefully already spawned hundreds of thousands of eggs.

Critically endangered sea turtles’ numbers appear to be slowly increasing. They head for the same beach that they first crawled down after hatching some 3070 years before. All turtle habitats are very sensitive and divers are urged to have only passive interactions with our turtles. Barbados has a very safe diving record. The Barbados Dive Operators Association comprises of 10 dive shops ranging from the smaller one-boat operations who focus on small groups, to larger teaching facilities with bigger boats and more instructors who teach several PADI courses and dives daily. All are professional, either locally owned or staffed and any one of them can take you to see one or more of the 40 dive sites that recreational divers in Barbados enjoy year round!

Underwater

Life

Eprature perovit aturest aut eaque sunto explab ius re, quunda Photo: Photographer

96  Under The Sea


Predator Fishing Charters All-inclusive private fishing charters for groups of up to six persons; very competitive rates and true Bajan hospitality. Captain Chris will make your fishing experience in Barbados the best it can be. On his new Blackfin 32 Charter boat, ‘No Limits’ you can fish for many species of game fish, including Marlin, Wahoo, Mahi Mahi, Tuna and Sailfish. These charters are very popular and everything is included (pickup, tackle, bait, drinks, snacks). Ask about their Combo Trips: snorkeling, swimming with the turtles, fish/swim/ BBQ lunch stop cruise, or any combination of these.

Barbados Blue

Tel (246) 230-1845 www.fishbarbados.com | chris@fishbarbados.com The Careenage, Bridgetown

Barbados’ PADI 5 Star Dive Centre & Highest rated instructors. On staff Marine Biologist & locally owned. 3 Dives Daily & 30 dive sites (Beginners to Dive Masters). 2 covered dive boats and Scubapro & Cressi Dealers Located at the Hilton next to the marine park & FIVE Wrecks!!! Scuba and Snorkel combos daily.

Tel (246) 434-5764 www.divebarbadosblue.com barbadosblue@caribsurf.com

deAction Beach Shop Experience Barbados Beach Culture with Brian “deAction Man” Talma and his professional crew at deAction Beach Shop, located on the best beach for kite and windsurfing. Surfing Lessons & Rentals: guaranteed you’ll be standing within an hour! Kitesurfing Lessons & Rentals: 6-hour introduction packages divided into 2 or 3 sessions. Stand Up Paddling (SUPing): after a five minute introduction you will be into deAction!! Windsurfing: equipment rentals and professional beginners lessons. Food: after a session on the water, relax with a drink and some tasty grilled fish.

Tel (246) 428-2027 or 826-7087 www.briantalma.pro | deaction@briantalma.pro Silver Sands, Christ Church

Ins & Outs of Barbados  97


Shopping & Lifestyle


H

ey, great news - Barbados is a duty free shopping destination and on presentation of your departure slip,

prices are VAT free as well as duty free which makes the cost of most of the beautiful things featured in the new Ins and Outs Look Book, 30-40% less than those in stores in the UK , USA and Canada. So, go ahead, you’re on holiday - indulge yourself with things that make you feel and look wonderful. You deserve it!

Feature Articles 100  Duty Free Shopping 108 Walking Tour of Historic Speightstown

Sections 110 The Bridgetown Experience 122 Island Style 140 Interiors 152 Art & Craft

Hugo Boss store at Limegrove Lifestyle Centre Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

Ins & Outs of Barbados  99


Free Shopping

DUTY

When you shop duty free, you also get your purchases VAT free - you automatically save 30% off the prices in North America and the UK

T

he overall quality of shopping in Barbados continues to improve. Bridgetown is the grand dame of shopping centres and it is still the only place with a department store, Cave Shepherd or where you can buy a Rolex. We suggest the slightly extravagant idea of hiring a speedboat to take you there followed by a lobster lunch at Lobster Alive in the stunning Carlisle Bay. Holetown has always been worthwhile for a shopping expedition with the West Coast Mall, Sunset Mall, Chattel Village and the Indigo Courtyard. Now, with Limegrove Lifestyle Centre, the overall area has become a major shopping destination in Barbados. Holetown is actually much more than a shopping destination with the fabulous cinemas in Limegrove along

with the many notable restaurants. And, being bang in the centre of the west coast, it is very convenient. If you’re staying on the south coast, located just a few minutes from St. Lawrence Gap and just off the ABC Highway, Sheraton Mall is Barbados’ largest shopping destination including over 120 stores and services in one convenient location. They feature duty free shopping, a multiplex and VIP cinema, pharmaceutical services, spa and salon services, banking services, doctor and homeopathic services, taxi services, and so much more! They are open for longer hours than most shopping centres in Barbados, Mon. - Sat. 9am until 9pm. The south coast also has shopping at Quayside Mall in Rockley, Lanterns Mall in Hastings and Cave Shepherd’s branch at The Vista in Worthing.

The pretty Chattel Village in Holetown Photo: Mike Toy

100  Shopping & Lifestyle


Ins & Outs of Barbados  101


Limegrove Lifestyle Centre The most stylish place to shop, dine, lime and live in the Caribbean For people who are accustomed to enjoying the very best that the world has to offer, Limegrove Lifestyle Centre is providing the most unique and exciting ‘living’ experience ever witnessed in Barbados. Limegrove has been conceptualized to provide major improvements in the upper echelons of life in Barbados such as: the opportunity to purchase the world’s leading brands and luxury goods; a superior level of shopping; a place to meet friends and enjoy good food; more sophisticated leisure and entertainment options; and the injection of greater vitality and variation into the island’s calendar of social events. The outstanding Limegrove leisure and entertainment facilities include restaurants, delis, cafés, bars, a roof deck, a VIP High Definition cinema, an art gallery, a spa, and several other spaces for special events. In a nutshell, ‘everything one could desire’. While walking around this magnificent complex, one of the striking characteristics of Limegrove is that there always seems to be something different and exciting going on around every corner - and there are lots of corners! To make life at Limegrove even more interesting and appealing, a regular events programme will ensure that there is always something new happening; ranging from art shows to culinary events to live entertainment to cultural displays - indeed anything that the public will find engaging. To find out what’s on when you’re here, check out facebook.com/Limegrove.

102  Shopping & Lifestyle





IN OUR BOUTIQUES... WE ARE

INSPIRED

WE EXPRESS

OURSELVES

SLEEVES WE ARE SENSITIVE WE ROLL UP OUR

WE CREATE

WE IMPROVISE

WE DRESS TO KILL FASHION ADDICTS WE ARE COLOURFUL WE ARE

WE SEARCH FOR THE BEST FROM THE CLASSIC TO THE ECLECTIC FROM THE ICONS OF YESTERDAY TO THE INNOVATORS OF TODAY

US

WE ARE

.


Ready to Wear Limegrove Lifestyle Centre, St. James +1246 271 8205 ISABEL MARANT, VANESSA BRUNO, BA&SH, IRO, STELLA FOREST, ANTIK BATIK, FALIERO SARTI, FORTE_FORTE, LAURENCE DOLIGE, MES DEMOISELLES, JEROME DREYFUSS, KJACQUES, MAISON MICHEL, JAMIN PUECH, ASTIER DE VILLATTE

Concept Store & Café Chic Limegrove Lifestyle Centre, St. James +1246 271 8242 CARIOCA COLLECTION, MARIAGE FRERES, AMERICAN VINTAGE, SANTA MARIA NOVELLA, PHILIPPE MODEL, WAITING FOR THE SUN, HARTFORD, SUNDAY SAINT-TROPEZ, EUROPANN, MARISYA, INDIES, REMINISCENCE, LIN'N LAUNDRY


Walking T ur

of Historic Speightstown Speightstown was originally settled around 1630 and in the earliest days of settlement was Barbados’ busiest port and commercial centre. It has a long and fascinating history dating back to the 17th century when it served as one of the main ports connecting the island with the “mother country”. Ships laden with sugar and other commodities left Speightstown bound directly for London, and especially Bristol. For this reason the town was sometimes referred to as Little Bristol. Today, it is a relatively quiet and charming little town and more of a fishing port, with several businesses supplying the needs of the northern parishes.

Arlington House This is an excellent place to start your tour as it gives a wonderful insight into the history of Speightstown and illustrates its prominence as an ocean trading “hub” to the New World. This interactive museum, housed in a beautifully restored eighteenth century “single house”, features three floors of fascinating exhibits.

St. Peter’s Parish Church

seum ton House Mu

Arling Photo courtesy

Located on the corner of Church and Queen Streets, St. Peter’s is one of the island’s earliest churches, originally built around 1629.

The Speightstown Boardwalk The boardwalk runs along the seafront between the Speightstown jetty and the northern end of town.

Speightstown Beaches There are two lovely beaches in the area, so take along your swimsuit and enjoy a cooling dip after lunch. One beach is at the northern end of the boardwalk, the other is in front of Juma’s Restaurant in the heart of town; complimentary beach chairs and umbrellas are available.

Gallery of Caribbean Art Featuring over 300 exhibits by local and Caribbean artists, this gallery is a must for art lovers.

Ins & Outs Tip Speightstown is full of photo opportunities, however, you should always think before snapping and be sensitive to people’s feelings; be sure to ask first before taking someone’s photo!

108  Speightstown


Above > Lovely little beach at the northern end of the Speightstown Boardwalk - good snorkeling just off shore. Below > Fisherman’s Pub serves delicious local food at reasonable prices. Middle > In the heart of town local vendors sell all kinds of local fruit and vegetables. Bottom > An award winning line of exquisite hand-crafted art jewellery by Barbadian metalsmith/jeweller, Ichia Tiyi. Visit her Art Jewellery Studio - Tiyi By Design - located in the Town Square Mall. Photos: Gina Francesca Photography

Speightstown Eateries There are some delightful restaurants scattered around Speightstown - here we list a few of our favourites: Island Plates - a casual bistro located in Town Square Mall serving fresh, wholesome meals. Juma’s - open for breakfast, lunch and dinner, great spot to catch the sunset! Lobster Pot - On the beach, opposite Gallery of Caribbean Art, specializing in lobster dishes. Fisherman’s Pub - a Speightstown institution, full of local flavour, lots of local dishes and very reasonable prices. The Orange Street Grocer - Located right on the boardwalk, wonderful ocean views and great pizzas!

Photo courtesy Tiyi By Design

109


Bridgetown Experience


M

ost visitors to Bridgetown come to shop on Broad Street for the irresistible duty-free and VAT free

prices. But the bustling little city is also culturally rewarding, recently placed on UNESCO’s World Heritage List as an outstanding example of British colonial architecture. Highlights include St. Mary’s Church and graveyard, Cheapside Market, and the elegant, neo-Gothic 19th-century Parliament Buildings, one of which houses the excellent Museum of Parliament, covering Barbados’ road to self-government, and showcasing the country’s heroes. Also of great interest is the Nidhe Israel Synagogue, the oldest synagogue site in the western hemisphere along with its state of the art museum. But as Henry Fraser explains in his tour “there’s so much that we gloss over – smaller buildings and shops, stories of people and events – all colourful …”

Feature Articles 112 Walking Tours of Historic Bridgetown 120 Meet A Bajan Dame the Hon. Maizie Barker-Welch   Broad Street circa 1930 Photo: Circa West Indies

Ins & Outs of Barbados  111


Walking T urs

of Historic Bridgetown

By Senator Professor Emeritus Henry S. Fraser Historic Bridgetown, declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2011, is a fascinating place to explore. The historic core, from the Careenage to Coleridge Street, from Queen’s Park to Cheapside simply “breathes” the history of people and place, for those who know a bit about the colourful life of the city. And so it lends itself to walking tours, either on your own, exploring, questioning, photographing, alone or with a group, or with a guide who knows a bit about all the people and places. I fashion tours according to the people I’m with and their interests, and the time available.

My standard, core tour I like to start a tour in the old Lower Green, the Jubilee Gardens, by St. Mary’s Church. That way we can gather and meet and talk in the shade of the few remaining trees in the corner, but also because this is a “people place”. It was the site of the first old market place, known as “The Shambles”. In the bad old days, when hundreds of ships anchored in Carlisle Bay, and a shallow draft ship could go all the way up Constitution River, this market place was close to the many landings along the embankment by James Fort, and right in the centre of the 17th century town.

Jubilee Gardens Dr. Karl Watson and his teams of archeologists have dug in the square and in Suttle Street nearby – once a prosperous, elite address for early city merchants! Three centuries of dirt and detritus have so raised the level of the land that Dr. Watson designed a “viewing box” in the Southern corner of the square, where you can look through the Perspex to see the cobblestone paving of the old street, three feet below the present ground level of the square! This is a striking example of change over 300 years. Jubilee Gardens were designed to celebrate Queen Victoria’s 50th year on the throne, but the area also celebrates the famous old hoteliers of the past. The old Vestry Hall / City Hall / Town Hall to the West, with its elegant arches, restored and adapted as offices, was actually a Victorian composition, with balcony (now missing) created from four houses, several being hotels of old, with famous (sometimes notorious) and colourful ladies operating them. And down Canary Street and St. George Street were other hotels. This was the old “Platinum Coast” of historic Bridgetown! It’s well described in

112  Bridgetown Experience


Warren Alleyne’s book Historic Bridgetown. The most famous of these “madames”, of course, was Rachel Polgreen Pringle, but Warren tells delightful stories about them all – so his book is essential reading.

St. Mary’s Church To the North is the elegant St. Mary’s Church, built in 1825 in the Olde Churchyard of the first Church of St. Michael … the wooden church built soon after the settlement of Bridgetown in 1628. The first stone church here was abandoned after the much larger “new” St. Michael’s church, now the Cathedral of St. Michael and all Angels, was built in the late 17th century but the graveyard was always in use. The most important tomb, I would suggest, is the splendid little tomb and gravestone of our National Hero, the Right Excellent Samuel Jackman Prescod, close to the chancel, on its South side. Samuel Jackman Prescod was perhaps my favourite National Hero, because he fought passionately for rights of the common man, and he used his mighty pen, editing and publishing the Liberal newspaper. He was one of the two first MPs for the new constituency of the City of Bridgetown, elected in 1843 and for the next 20 years continuously. St. Mary’s Church is a handsome Georgian church, designed when this style – symmetry, harmony, simplicity, with Roman arches for windows and doors – was at its height. The corner stone was laid by Bishop Coleridge, just a few months after his arrival to lead the country through the period of Emancipation and bring Christianity to the slaves. And perhaps he decided there must be a tower with castellations, unusual in a Georgian church, but he loved the neo-Gothic style! This was the second of over 25 beautiful chapels of ease that were constructed during his tenure. Also in the churchyard are the graves of Mr. E.D. Mottley, Mayor of Bridgetown, and Amaryllis Collymore, famous ancestor of Frank Collymore, our great literary hero, immortalised in the Frank Collymore Hall and the Barclay family, famous for their role in the founding of Liberia. If you like public markets, Cheapside is nearby. It is particularly colourful on Saturday but open every day.

Milk Market & James Street My tour then goes behind the Plantations building into Milkmarket, past the site of the old John Bull Bar, the first shop of the famous “rags-to-riches” Joseph Nathaniel Goddard, founder of the J.N. Goddard’s empire. From there we turn into James Street, and pause to view the old Wesley Hall of the Methodist Church, and their James Street Church opposite. The church is built on the land of National Heroine the Right Excellent Sarah Anne Gill – Methodist convert who bravely defied the mobs. Her grave is in a small plot behind the Top > The Chamberlain Bridge a hundred years ago Photo: Beachgate Images Page 112 Inset > The Chamberlain Bridge today Photos: Andrew Huslmeier Page 113 Inset > The entrance to St. Mary’s Church and graveyard Photo: Mike Toy Left > The interior of St. Mary’s before the stained glass was mysteriously removed Photo: Henry Walter Parkinson with the kind permission of the Parkinson family

Ins & Outs of Barbados  113


church. These two buildings illustrate dramatically the difference between Georgian architecture (the church) and Gothic (the church hall). Gothic is often characterised simply as “pointy” architecture – pointed arches, steep roofs, and slender, pointed structures called finials, at the corners; in bigger buildings buttresses and castellations complete the picture. This Wesley Hall was the site of the first primary school, hence the name of the famous Wesley Hall Boys School, long since relocated and now in King Street. Our next stop is at the corner of James Street, where it intersects Lucas and Coleridge Streets. This is almost the centre of the historic core of the city. On one side is the old Nicholls building, most probably the oldest surviving building in Bridgetown. It’s famous for its beautiful curvi-linear gable at the very top – a Dutch style, and popular in the 17th century, when the Dutch owned much of Bridgetown. The brick construction and the small doors are typical of 17th century city buildings. The damaged curvi-linear gable has been ordered to be restored by the Chief Town Planner. On the other corner is the beautiful three storied, green shop house, which reputedly once changed hands as a result of a gambling debt! It was also once the site of a theatre. It has the old-style wide arched door on the left, leading into the courtyard behind. Next to it is the Mottley House, for some years sadly abandoned but now undergoing restoration; this was once the home and office of the famous patriot the Reverend James Young Edghill, famous first Bajan Moravian priest, who started so many “ragged schools” for poor children and wrote a book About Barbados. To the North, on Coleridge Street, is the Central Police Station, with well-matched extensions on either side of the original building. Opposite was Codd’s House, site of Parliament in the mid eighteenth century, and where the emancipation bill was passed – scandalously, and unnecessarily demolished some 30 years ago, for a car park. And then comes the Supreme Court, built in 1733 and the Carnegie Library, a gift of Andrew Carnegie to the people of Barbados, especially the children, and opened in 1904. Both are now empty and abandoned. From the top > Wesley Hall, James Street Methodist Church, You can make a quick detour into Suttle Street and pick up some good quality nuts from The Nut House Photos: Andrew Hulsmeier

114  Bridgetown Experience


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What a betrayal of a benefactor, and the children of Barbados! This is top priority for the Task Force for the Preservation of Barbados’ Built Heritage, which I chair, and the Preservation (Barbados) Foundation Trust - a charity - is seeking funds of 1.75 million Barbados dollars to restore it and bring it back into use as the Free Public Library for the people of Barbados. I can be contacted at henrysfraser@ gmail.com as Chairman of the Trust. Opposite the library is the Montefiore Fountain, donated to the city by John Montefiore in memory of his father, who died in the cholera epidemic of 1853… a suitable tribute, as dehydration is the cause of death from cholera. It was originally in Lower Broad Street. On James Street is a splendid row of 8 craftsmen’s workshops … there used to be tailors, shoemakers and, I’m told, a basket maker there … the shoe maker on the corner made me sandals and repaired my shoes as a youngster.

Nidhe Synagogue and Museum On Synagogue Lane, around the corner, is the splendidly restored Jewish Synagogue – built about 1654, badly damaged by the hurricane of 1831 and rebuilt on the same footprint, sold in 1929 and restored by the new Jewish community 20 years ago. The Nidhe Israel Museum in the corner of the cemetery and the amazing Mikvah, the ritual bath filled by fresh, pure spring water, are a moving, almost living museum accompanying a visit to the Synagogue – open every day except Sundays. The last leg of my most popular tour takes us through Roebuck Street and Palmetto Square, past the old Olympic theatre and the old city bar, in sight of the magnificent Neo-Gothic Parliament buildings (1872 and 1874) and the Museum of Parliament and National Heroes Gallery, and turning left by the grey abomination of a market building that replaced the historic Trafalgar Hotel, demolished in 1978; and on through Moll’s Alley to Spry Street. Moll’s Alley is graced by three splendid sisters – three storey, balconied buildings with gable windows… two badly altered. We emerge under the monumental Central Bank, and next to the Top > The Carnegie Library Photo: Henry Walter Parkinson with the kind permission of the Parkinson family

Inset > The Old City Bar in Palmetto Square Right > Nidhe Israel Synagogue Museum Photos: Andrew Hulsmeier

116  Bridgetown



splendidly restored Masonic Lodge.… the original Harrison School, built by Thomas Harrison and later acquired by the Masons in the 1880s, when Harrison College moved to Roebuck Street – a superb example of restoration with a complementary and harmonious addition. The final stop on this two and a half hour tour is the Cathedral of St. Michael and All Angels. Our splendid cathedral is no longer in the best state of repair, but it justifies a full, leisurely visit on its own. The building goes back 350 years, but most of the present structure is the 1784 restoration after the hurricane of 1780. The stormy history is documented in Historic Churches of Barbados (out of print for some years, but a lavish second edition has just been published by Miller Publishing), and the memorial tablets inside and tombs outside are totally fascinating. The tour can continue through the Central Bank’s piazza into the beautiful, newly created Church Village Green, if time permits, but otherwise finishes with a stroll down Broad Street, past the site of the Cage, the ancient Collins Pharmacy, the site of my own ancient Fraser family’s shop home, and the grand, twin-domed Barbados Mutual building – now Sagicor and soon to be the UWI City Campus! My longest walking tour begins at Independence Square, under the watchful eye of National Hero the Right Excellent Errol Barrow. This little amphitheatre provides a great meeting point and introduction to Bridgetown. We then set out across the Charles Duncan O’Neale Bridge, turn right at the lights up St. Michael’s Row and enter the Cathedral by the South Gate … we then browse for the tombs of Mr. Spry and our several Governors General and Prime Ministers! We then take the reverse route to that described for the shorter tour. Everyone should have a copy of Morris Greenidge’s splendid book Bridgetown, Barbados: A Walking Tour, and keep walking and discovering our fascinating city. I’ve only scratched the surface here! From the top > St. Michael’s and All Angels Anglican Cathedral, Independence Square, The Chamberlain Bridge and Careenage with the old warehouses Photos: Andrew Hulsmeier

Ins & Outs Tip It’s better to tour during the week when the splendid Museum of Parliament and Nidhe Israel Synagogue Museum are open.

Longer Tour A slightly longer tour is one which takes a detour half way down Broad Street left into Prince William Henry Street, and onto the Wickham-Lewis Boardwalk. This provides a view across the Careenage to the old Sugar bonding warehouses with the Chamberlain Bridge to the left and the Charles Duncan O’Neale Bridge beyond, the Independence Arch, and to the right across the water, the unique Screw Dock or Dry Dock … the last remaining one in the world. To the far right of the Screw Dock is the site of the old Baggage Warehouse, on the site of Fort Willoughby, where every passenger arrival and departure by ship took place. A short walk leads back to the Jubilee Gardens.

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meet a Bajan

Dame the Hon. Maizie Barker-Welch

This sweet, little old lady has a powerhouse under her hat By Sarah Venable

At 88 years of age, Dame the Hon. Maizie Barker-Welch, CHB, BCH, is the Energizer Bunny of our political and social landscape, and shows no sign of slowing down. A former schoolteacherturned-politician (MP, then Senator) Dame Maizie has always been comfortable communicating with the public. For many years she acted with the now defunct Green Room Players, and still performs occasionally at events. She has always been an active campaigner for the rights of women. A stalwart of the International Federation of Business and Professional Women, she was instrumental in creating their development programme for unemployed young mothers and in opening a shelter for battered women. In her service on the OAS’ Inter-American Commission of Women (CIM) she applied her energies to fighting human trafficking in the region. Dame Maizie also chairs the Barbados branch of the Royal Commonwealth Society, whose purpose is “to promote an understanding of

the Commonwealth as a community and as an organisation working for peace, human dignity, and the economic and spiritual wellbeing of its people.” One of the things they do here is to give exercise books to all secondary school children. In February 2013, the RCS was central to the parade marking the 375th anniversary of Barbados’ Parliament—the oldest continuous Parliament of an independent Commonwealth country outside the British Isles. In addition to her other duties such as squiring Prince Edward the Earl of Wessex, and his wife Sophie, Countess of Wessex, Dame Maizie also infused her special flair by helping to arrange for four Beefeater Guards from London to attend. The celebrations began in the morning, lasted all day, and were followed by a reception in the evening. How does she get through a gruelling day like that? “I generally take a nap, but not that day!” A little snooze enables her to “just keep going,”

120  The Bridgetown Experience


not only with her work on behalf of fellow man, but also with her hobbies. She plays classical music on the piano—beautifully—does crosswords and cryptograms, and a bit of gardening. “I cannot live without trees and greenery,” she says, happily displaying her trees and kitchen garden. “And I do exercises every day, with the computer as my fitness teacher. Have you seen what’s on there? It’s amazing. Just Google exercise for seniors.” She also chairs the National Committee on Aging, and helped draft the new policy paper on aging. “In 2014, we had 58 centenarians,” she points out. The Committee also visits shut-ins and senior activity centres, sponsors the annual Alzheimer’s seminar, and sends competitors to the international Senior Games in Utah. This tiny powerhouse recalls growing up in the rural parish of St. Thomas, where the family always grew vegetables to eat and flowers for their beauty. “My father taught us how. In those days schools always had gardens, and his won prizes at the annual agricultural fair for 20 years.” Dame Maizie was the eldest of twelve children. Her seamstress mother taught her to sew, and young Maizie made clothes for herself and her siblings. She enjoyed it, and started a dressmaking business. She gave up the craft only when Parliament started taking her time. Her father was a schoolmaster. “He was like a father to the whole village, and taught us always to give back to society. Whatever we learned at school, we would go and teach others. Treat everyone equally and look out for each other—those were values we grew up with.” Recalling her childhood, she can describe every phase of the multi-day task of washing, bleaching, starching and pressing clothes.

At university—first at UWI here and then at Carleton in Canada—she learned to speak French and Spanish, which she taught at a succession of local schools. Spanish later came in very handy when working with the OAS and travelling on their behalf throughout South America. She can still lapse into it easily, with an excellent accent. In 1964 she and her husband, a civil servant, bought Kew, a 1914 vintage plantation house on the outskirts of Bridgetown. This put the family close to cultural activities but still provided a place for the children to play. They divided the rest of the land into lots and sold it off. There they raised four children “to mix freely with all kinds of people and to love reading,” just like their mother. Dame Maizie’s son, Dr. Pedro Welch, is a professor of history at UWI, as well as its Deputy Principal. She loves hearing him lecture. “He makes things come to life.” Her daughter, Sonja, is Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Social Care, Constituency Empowerment and Community Development, and like her mother, speaks several languages. Her daughter Yolande is a fitness expert at Surfside Gym, where Dame Maizie used to attend their classes for seniors. Son Peter is a banker in Switzerland. There are eleven grandchildren altogether, eight of whom live in Europe. She was awarded her DBE (Dame of the British Empire) in the Queen’s 2014 New Year’s Honours, and in October 2014 was made an honorary Doctor of Law by the University of the West Indies. Her legacy will surely reflect her lifelong philosophy: “Life is for living. Be able to contribute to life and do whatever you can for others. I cannot let down my people; I am giving them grounds for hope.”

“Life is for living. Be able to contribute to life and do whatever you can for others. I cannot let down my people; I am giving them grounds for hope.” Dame Commander of the British Empire Maizie Barker-Welch being presented with the Queen’s New Year Honours 2014 at Government House, Barbados by Governor General Sir Elliott Belgrave

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Island Style


A

s a result of the increasing demand for the best and the latest designs from the world of fashion, the boutiques

in Barbados have made such tremendous efforts to improve the quality and the range of their merchandise that they now compare favourably with the kind of top boutiques usually only found in the world’s more sophisticated cities. Indeed, when taking into consideration the excellent value for money on the duty free and VAT free prices, it can be argued that the boutiques in Barbados provide an even more attractive opportunity for the purchase of high quality apparel and accessories. So whether you head to the elite designer stores or search out the island’s exquisite boutiques, buying clothes in Barbados is good retail therapy and will give you a lovely wearable memento!

Feature Article 130  How to Beat the Heat

The focus of many of the island’s boutiques is on elegant, high quality resort wear. Photo courtesy Gaye Boutique, Holetown, St. James

Ins & Outs of Barbados  123


100% of all profits on a selection of sea turtle themed merchandise in-store is donated to the Barbados Sea Turtle Project to assist with transport needs during beach patrolling and towards funding for reptile incubator equipment needed for hatching rescued sea turtle eggs.

“Beth & Tracie’s fresh, pretty boutique embodies island life like frangipani flowers, clear turquoise waters and chilled rum punch.” Beth & Tracie An effortlessly sophisticated yet relaxed boutique, where you’ll discover an array of breezy tropical clothing, beach wear and accessories for women and girls, in beautiful tropical hues with exquisite embroidery and sequins.

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Lola Beach Located in the picturesque Chattel Village in Holetown amongst the tropical flowers and trees, Lola Beach boutique is your one stop retail ‘must’ for affordable ladies resort wear and day wear. They source easy breezy silhouettes from Indonesia, linen sundresses from Italy and flamboyant printed kaftans from the US.

126  Island Style



Super Stylish & Oh-So Cool Stylish and practical for days at the beach and hanging out by the pool, you’ll love Gaye’s fantastic range of designer swimwear and casual clothing for girls and boys of all ages.

Leonard Menswear Adjoining Gaye Boutique is Leonard Menswear, catering to the well-dressed man, with a wide-ranging selection of casual menswear, beachwear and footwear.

Gaye Boutique The chic and elegant Gaye Boutique in Holetown is especially known for their fabulous lines of imported designer beachwear by Maryan Mehlhorn, Gottex, Ralph Lauren and Lidea, all of which are available duty free to visitors.

128  Island Style


Indigo Courtyard, Holetown, St . James |

Tel: (246) 432-1396


How to

Beat the Heat

Besides dressing in the very cool outfits we’ve highlighted on these pages, here are a few tips for keeping your cool when the temperatures are soaring.

Cool as a Coconut In Sanskrit the coconut palm is called “kalpa vriksha”, which is defined as “the tree which provides all the necessities of life”. A single coconut has as much protein as a quarter pound steak. Coconut oil, is thought to have healing properties particularly for the skin. The water, a clear liquid that pools inside green coconuts is high in electrolyte potassium and is so pure it was used as plasma in WWII. Coconut water is sold island wide along the highways and on beaches, as well as the chiller counters at the supermarkets. It should be consumed soon after purchase or frozen, as it does not keep very well. For those who enjoy a tipple, it is very nice with a little rum. Healthy imbibing!

Take a Dip There is nothing quite as refreshing as a cooling dip in the sparkling waters which surround Barbados – check out some of our favourite beaches on pages 238 and 239. For the adventurous, you can take a delicious swim in the natural rock pool at the Animal Flower Cave, then have lunch in their breezy clifftop restaurant overlooking the Atlantic. We cannot emphasize enough the importance of wearing sunscreen when outdoors; Barbados is just 13 degrees north of the equator and you will burn very easily. Apply sunscreen regularly and drink water religiously to prevent heat stroke.

Hallo, Aloe Although its origins are in Africa, aloe has been on the island long enough for one major species to bear the name Aloe Barbadensis. In Barbados, aloe was farmed for export from as far back as 1693. The hardy succulent is now cultivated both as an ornamental plant and as a virtual medicine chest. The translucent inner pulp and the gooey yellow ooze that comes from just under the skin are both used to relieve skin discomforts, especially sunburn. Local men often sell the juicy leaves to reddening tourists on the beach. And freed from their green covering of skin, the slippery gelatinous pulp is indeed soothing. Bear in mind however, it leaves stubborn, brownish stains on fabrics and other surfaces. Many hoteliers ask their guests not to bring the plant on their premises.

130  Island Style


find your fun

Crocs™ Comfort is here, See what’s new at your Barbados Crocs™ store Crocs™ Barbados Limegrove Lifestyle Centre Holetown, St. James, Barbados +1 (246) 622-7777

crocsbarbados@casablancafashiongroup.com


“We embrace young and established designers who understand the feminine silhouette and a woman’s desire to be beautiful.” - Sharon Oran Owner, Always Summer Boutique

It’s Always Summer in Barbados Relaxed, elegant and easy-to-wear clothing with an emphasis on comfort and style. You’ll find lines by Camilla, Splendid, Melissa Odabash, Yosi Samra and many more.

132  Island Style



Tiyi

by design

Art Jewellery Studio

“Each piece is unique – a true collector’s item and an exceptional work of art!”

Exquisite Works of Art An award-winning line of exquisite, hand-crafted art jewellery. Each piece is individually designed and crafted by professional Barbadian metalsmith/jeweller, Ichia Tiyi. The intention is to show the jeweller’s art in true perspective where design and craftsmanship are valued above the material worth of the metal. Ichia’s designs portray an exceptionally unique imagination and a truly sophisticated primal energy, uncommon to the transient trends of popular, everyday jewellery. Visit her at her delightful art jewellery studio in Speightstown. Open Tuesday to Friday 10am-5pm, Saturday 10am-2pm. Store #12, Town Square Mall, Speightstown, St. Peter Tel: (246) 422-6816 or 252-0184 queen7metal@gmail.com | www.tiyibydesign.com

20  Island 134  IslandStyle Style

Dress: Lady Akin-Yemi


SEA

PLAY

SOAK FROLIC RELAX

SUN

SHOP

Since 1992 this locally owned boutique has clothed generations of Barbadian women, and countless Caribbean and international visitors who, having discovered this classy boutique, return time and time again. Known for their classic, Caribbean-chic attire and ever-changing range of stock, Dingolay is always brimming with an amazing array of the latest styles and some of the hottest resort collections in the world of fashion. Sheraton Mall, Christ Church Just 12 minutes from Warrens. Tel: (246) 435-6482 Open Monday - Saturday 9am - 9pm Facebook: Dingolay Barbados

*Sheraton Mall operates a shuttle service to south coast hotels Mon-Sat, call 437-0970 to book.


DFB Boutique “We are the cosy home of gorgeous fashion. We cater to males and females who love eclectic, trendy clothing and enjoy making a bold fashion statement. Our typical shopper is, well, you!” - Tashida Cox Owner, dfb Boutique

136  Island Style

Whispers on the Riviera Exotic fashions by the likes of Analili, Isle and Mystique, designer bikinis by Tara Grinna, beach hats, kaftans and a beautiful selection of cocktail dresses ideal for a breezy day in paradise are available, alongside evening bags, sunglasses, wine totes and an exquisite selection of Swarovski jewellery and accoutrements.


Ins & Outs of Barbados  137


Amelia

A Bright new Bajan Star to follow Amelia Payne is a 17 year-old singer/songwriter from Barbados. She attended John Robert Powers in Florida, a prestigious acting school, responsible for producing and shaping the careers of celebrities including Diana Ross, Betty Ford, Josh Duhamel and Ryan Locke and is currently studying at Hurtwood House in the UK, pursuing her education in Performing Arts, Psychology, Sociology and Business Studies. Not only does Amelia hold creative qualities but she also strives to combine it with her academic training. This bright young star is already established in her homeland with her three songs ‘To The Top’, ‘Gimme Good Love’ and ‘Say Goodbye’ being some of the most requested songs on radio here. When ‘To The Top’ was first recorded in early January 2012 she was only 14 years old. Since then the talented recording artist has

quickly learnt that the industry is not only about glitz and glam but hard work, talent, passion, knowledge and discipline and has started to build on her artistry by songwriting not only for herself but others. Amelia has also taken great interest in building her brand in the fashion world as she has a unique style and aspires to own her personal clothing and accessories line. Amelia’s music is a fusion of Pop and R&B. She has been gearing up for her career in the entertainment industry both as an artist and as an actress. She performed in musicals including ‘Chicago’ in the United Kingdom. Not only has the young star been working on stage but she has also been in the studio recording, songwriting and honing her craft with top producers - working with Tinie Tempah and The Weekend - as she continues to build her artistic skills. A lovely new star for us all to follow!

meet a Bajan 138  Island Style



Interiors


O

ur local architects, contractors, artisans and designers, interior decorators and landscapers have all played a role in

creating some of the most desirable residences to be found anywhere in the world. Not only do they know how to translate the owners’ personalities into an ambience, they also know the territory, and are well versed in reliable sources of local materials, labour, custom joinery and soft furnishings. In addition to knowing what looks good, they are aware of which materials best resist insects and harsh weather, how to make the most of the views and cooling breezes, and even how to design-out dampness in the humid months. Astute homeowners might ask if the sun would fade the fabrics, but it probably wouldn’t occur to them to build-in storage for verandah cushions so that intruding monkeys don’t cavort on them when nobody’s home!

Feature Article 148  Barbados Coral Stone

Offering refined indoor-outdoor living, Gardenia is a superb example of a beachfront villa that maximises the benefits of the Caribbean climate and scenery. Photo courtesy Bajan Services

Ins & Outs of Barbados  141


Aubrey Carew

Charlie Brooks

One of the Caribbean’s leading full-service interior design companies.

Designers’ Choice Creating Rooms of Memorable Distinction Designers’ Choice mission – to provide exquisitely detailed interiors for your home – is certainly evident in the work they have produced for their growing list of clients. Heading up the exceptional interior design team are co-founders, Aubrey Carew and Charlie Brooks, who started the company nineteen years ago. After all this time, they still find themselves ‘on call’ with most of these projects, as clients constantly upgrade their homes. Over the years the Designers’ Choice team has worked on many prestigious projects on the ‘Platinum Coast’ areas of St. James and St. Peter, at resorts such as Royal Westmoreland, Sandy Lane, Sugar Hill, the Port St. Charles Marina, and throughout the Caribbean and Central America. They work in close alliance with Barbados’ top architects and builders and maintain close links with a network of carefully selected artisans who supply custom-designed furnishings and unique creative support. It’s not surprising that their work has graced the covers of high profile trade publications such as Architectural Digest!

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Design for Living

DESIGNERS’ CHOICE I N T E R I O R D E S I G N C O N S U L T A N T S #8 Frangipani Row, Sunset Crest, Holetown, St. James Tel: (246) 432-2093 | designerschoice@caribsurf.com | www.dcdesignerschoice.com


For Jenny Blanc, the sea is an important source of inspiration when designing Caribbean interiors. The Trends > Marine blues and greens against a sand background | Coral, shells and sealife in furniture designs, fabric schemes, accessories, artwork and coralstone bases. | Shells decorate mirror frames and create attractive accessories and table settings. | Traditional ‘pickled’ wood, often used in Jenny Blanc’s furniture range made by local artisans, is reminiscent of sun bleached driftwood.

< Bespoke glass art designed by Jenny Blanc & inspired by waves < Terrace overlooking the sea

144

Jenny Blanc Embroidered fabrics, shell lamp and pickled wood drawer unit >

An Endless Sea ofPossibilities You are never more than 12 miles away from the sea in Barbados. It influences the climate and the way of life and leisure while attracting the many visitors which make it one of the most popular destinations in the Caribbean. For the Jenny Blanc team, the sea is an endless source of inspiration and design intelligence when creating homes for clients in Barbados and the rest of the Caribbean. Barbados is surrounded by coral reefs and the island itself is composed of fossilized coral limestone. An important indigenous resource, the stone is white, light and porous, slow to heat and quick to cool, making it a natural insulator against tropical weather. Many of the oldest houses in Barbados are built of coralstone and newly built homes use coralstone dust and white cement render on the interior and exterior faces of walls. It can also be carved, and Jenny Blanc has designed beautiful architectural features, sconces, consoles and fabulous bases for coffee and dining tables in this versatile material. Jenny Blanc has been designing interiors in Barbados for over 12 years and has acquired handson, practical knowledge of the best furnishings for homes by the sea. Moisture, salt, heat, wet bathing suits and suntan oil are all tough on furniture and fittings and the designers will only specify those items they know will withstand these rigours and retain their quality. Fabrics and soft furnishings chosen are practical and washable without compromising the look. Holiday homes open out onto covered terraces and gazebos ideal for relaxing out of the fierce sun while taking advantage of cooling sea breezes. The company offers a wide range of outdoor furniture suitable for a tropical maritime climate, much of which can be viewed in their Barbados showroom. Jenny Blanc has selected an outstanding product range which is available from both the Barbados and London showrooms. Both practical and beautiful, these extend from matchless fabrics and furniture, marine-grade stainless steel storm lanterns, exquisite marine-inspired art and accessories adding those finishing touches, to soft, luxurious beach towels in tropical colours and stylish tableware for outdoor dining.



Award Winning Full-service Interior Design Studio

INTERIOR DESIGN

««««« BEST INTERIOR DESIGN PRIVATE RESIDENCE BARBADOS ‘Umoya’ (Place of Wind), Apes Hill Club by Stephanie Barnes Interior Design Studio Inc

Embroidered fabrics, shell lamp and pickled wood drawer unit >

Stephanie Barnes Bespoke Designs Suited to Your Lifestyle Stephanie Barnes Interior Design Studio is an award winning full-service interior design firm specializing in private residences, restaurants, hotels and commercial design. Born and raised in Vancouver, Canada with family heritage in Barbados, Stephanie received her degree in Interior Design in Vancouver. Her training was just the start of a life-long passion and appreciation for design, the environment and architectural preservation that has led to a vibrant array of projects both in Barbados and Canada. Stephanie’s designs and ideas have received both local and international recognition, and for two years running the company has been awarded the prestigious Five Star International Property Awards both in the Leisure Interior Category, and the Best Interior Design Residence in the Caribbean for 2014-2015. Well known for her eclectic designs and intricate attention to detail, Stephanie’s work is often admired in a number of Barbadian establishments such as Cin Cin By the Sea, The Mews Restaurant & Lounge, Sheraton Mall Food Court and Pisces Restaurant among others, and with a look forward to her latest project, the new rooftop restaurant at Limegrove. For projects small or large, from initial planning to the final installation, bespoke design is key; for Stephanie, ‘design’ is not just an aesthetic but a lifestyle that encompasses everything the studio believes in.

Tel (246) 826-1749 | (246) 271-0447 www.stephaniebarnesdesign.com | studio@stephaniebarnesdesign.com ‘The Bungalow’, Small Ridge Plantation, Christ Church, Barbados

146  146



Barbados

Coral Stone By Sally Miller

Our coral stone is a durable, versatile and very beautiful building material with a wonderful history. It is quintessential Barbados – the coral island of the Caribbean.

R

oughly 35 million years ago, the huge tectonic plate below the Atlantic Ocean cracked and started to slide under the newly created Caribbean plate. For the next 34 million years ocean sediments were crumpled together and raised up at about 30cm every 1,000 years. As they got close enough to the surface of the ocean and sunlight, coral reefs started to grow. As a result, the island of Barbados rose slowly up out of the sea – a geologically fascinating island comprised of sedimentary rocks from the sea floor of the Atlantic and almost completely covered in a 10-100m thick cap of fossilized coral limestone. From the time of settlement in 1627, coral limestone blocks were quarried by hand to build just about

Coral stone blocks at Chapel Quarry in St. Philip Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

everything – stately plantation mansions, splendid churches, over 500 windmills, foundations for wooden chattel houses, guard walls and even stables. The gravel was used to build roads, the marl to fill foundations and the finer dust to make plaster and white lime. Most plantations had their own quarries, making them selfsufficient in their main building material. Today, there is only one coral stone quarry that produces blocks in the entire Caribbean. Chapel Quarry, which is owned and run by the Manning family, produces varying sizes of blocks along with a by-product of coral stone dust. Moving from the days of quarrying blocks by hand, as recently as the 1960’s, to mechanization, was not a simple process. Although the coral stone is considered

Beautiful coral stone work at Cane Heaven showing the pillars, archway and hand carved dining table base Photo: Mike Toy/Reproduced from the book, Architecture and Design in Barbados

148  Interiors


Blake Coral Stone Designs Alpheus Blake is an exceptionally skilled coral stone craftsman offering customized, hand-made coral stone works of art. Whether working with a client designing a custom piece for a specific space, or fabricating a one-of-a-kind, solid coral stone dining table, the utmost care and craftsmanship is given to each and every piece – guaranteed to get a “wow” reaction every time! Each piece is made to order and he has worked on projects ranging from high end residential, to commercial applications, including a variety of designs such as wall sconces, façades, over-sized plant pots and dining tables.

Tel (246) 267-2196 or (246) 437-5779 blakecoralstonedesigns@ ymail.com

Fusion Metal Design For Stuart McChlery, what started as an interest in metal design at a young age, soon turned into a passion and, eventually, he turned his skill into a working trade over 10 years ago. His company, Fusion Metal Design Inc. specializes in bespoke wrought iron gates, windows and doors, railings for stairs and balconies, fencing and pool enclosures and numerous other custom designs, including furniture and chandeliers. Each custom piece produced is a one of a kind hand crafted creation that is made to order. The timeless appeal of each decorative design is sure to add a sense of style and elegance to any home. Stuart welcomes the challenge of creating new pieces to fit the needs of his clients and broad array of projects.

Tel (246) 228-9736 or (246) 262-7149 fusion1@caribsurf.com Frere Pilgrim Factory Yard, Christ Church

Ins & Outs of Barbados  149


Pineapple console table in local coral stone, designed by Sue Thomas Richardson of Jenny Blanc Interiors.

Carved coral stone is a rich element of Barbadian heritage and the work of local carvers and sculptors today, from simple lighting sconces to elegant dining tables and elaborate fountains, is still highly regarded internationally.

For further reading get hold of a copy of ‘Barbados – A Coral Paradise’, written by University of the West Indies Professor, Hazel Oxenford and Marine Biologists, Angelique Brathwaite and Ramon Roach. As Prof. Leonard A. Nurse says in his foreword, “This book showcases the beauty of Barbados’ coral reefs and invites us to ponder the strong bonds between these organisms and our everyday lives”. Available at Pages Bookstores, Best of Barbados and all leading bookshops.

150  interiors

to be wonderfully pure, its density varies greatly between fossilized coral sand and fossilized coral reef. Because of this, the imported cutting machines with gears were constantly breaking. Using pieces of various machines, Brian Manning built a cutting machine with hydraulics that can automatically gear down as the saw hits the harder seams. The result is a beautiful coral stone block that they produce efficiently, and in large quantities, for local builders and artisans, as well as for export around the world. With the advent of electricity and plumbing in buildings, it became more practical to build with manufactured concrete breeze blocks and then clad with coral stone slabs or coral dust render. It is very beautiful and very practical. A wall faced with coral stone blocks or render never needs to be painted! Coral stone is also a versatile medium for fine art, carved and sculpted into exotic interior and exterior design features. Carved coral stone is a rich element of Barbadian heritage and the work of local carvers and sculptors today, from simple lighting sconces to elegant dining tables and elaborate fountains, is still highly regarded internationally. Sandy Lane Hotel is replete with fine examples – the signature dolphins and the Monkey Bar to name two. The late Bill Grace produced fine art with carved coral stone combined with beautifully coloured glass that he made using local silicone. An example of his work is featured in the Limegrove Lifestyle Centre. Local coral stone craftsman, Alpheus Blake, works with designers like Sue Thomas Richardson of Jenny Blanc Interiors, to produce custom pieces of a wide range of products such as wall reliefs, console tables and elaborate table bases. Our coral stone is a durable, versatile and very beautiful building material with a wonderful history. It is quintessential Barbados – the coral island of the Caribbean.


The best sheets that money can buy


Art & Craft


A

rt in Barbados has evolved tremendously over the past decade, and Caribbean art in general is receiving unprecedented

international attention. This is particularly evident from the number of art galleries which have sprung up across the island in recent years. There is a wide variety of beautiful local craftwork, much of it created out of the island’s readily available natural resources such as clay, wood, palm leaves, bamboo, shells and leather. Pottery, batik, basket making, wood and coral stone carving and jewellery are among the prominent local skills. In Barbados there are many diverse festivals to celebrate aspects of the island’s culture. Most of them provide opportunities for local craftspeople to showcase their work.

Feature Articles 154  Gallery Crawl 160  Art & Craft Shows 166 Sailor’s Valentine 168 In the Best Hands Artist > Alison Chapman-Andrews Cane or Grass, Claybury Acrylic on canvas 36”x48”, 2014 Photo courtesy Gallery NuEdge

Ins & Outs of Barbados  153


The island’s ‘artsy side’ provides a cultural haven among the action-packed activities on offer, so be sure to take some time to explore and meet our art and craft producers to enjoy not only their work, but also their stories which paint vivid pictures of Barbadian life.

Gallery

Crawl

Gallery NuEdge Gallery NuEdge Fine Arts Ltd. exhibits art in the form of multi-media, sculpture, photography, painting and installation. This eclectic and dynamic contemporary art gallery features the most sought out contemporary artists from local and international markets. Currently on display are works by local artists Terrence Rupert Piggott, Alison Chapman-Andrews, Neville Legall, Cuban artists Kadir López Nieves and Alexander Poll Doval and international artists Amel Chamandy, Dennis de Caires and Charles Richard. For a complete list of our artists please visit our website. We have an exciting calendar of exhibitions planned for 2015 which will include the most recent works by Canadian artist Amel Chamandy, abstract paintings by Terrence Rupert Piggott as well as other acclaimed artists. Gallery NuEdge Fine Arts Ltd. is affiliated with Galerie NuEdge Fine Arts International L.P. S.E.C. established in Montreal’s prestigious Quartier du Musée, located at 1480 Sherbrooke Street West. For more information on our upcoming exhibitions or to join our mailing list please contact us. Limegrove Lifestyle Centre, Holetown, St. James (246) 621-0067 galerienuedge.com | gallerynuedge@galerienuedge.com

Barbados Arts Council

Brocklands Gallery

Pelican Craft Centre, Bridgetown - Tel: (246) 426-4385 Established in 1957, the Barbados Arts Council is home to several of the island’s most accomplished artists. Located in Pelican Craft Centre, the Gallery features original paintings in a variety of media and also offers for sale a wide range of prints. The gallery opens Monday to Friday from 9:30am until 5pm and on Saturdays from 9:30am until 1:30pm.

Halcyon Heights, St. James Tel: (246) 432-6061 or (246) 237-7670 The studio gallery of acclaimed artist Janice Sylvia Brock. Much of her recent work is on display, as well as prints of selected paintings, in over 500 square feet of exhibition space overlooking the ocean in St. James. You can also see works in progress and chat with Janice about her art. Viewing is by appointment only.

154  Art & Craft



A Gallery The Garrison Historic Area, St. Michael Tel: (246) 262-6241 or (246) 262-6238 Artist Catherine Forter-Chee-a-Tow welcomes art lovers to her authentic, cosy studio, nestled in the historic Garrison area which is now a World Heritage Site. Visitors will enjoy the vibrancy of tropical living through the palette of renowned Caribbean artists. Viewing by appointment.

#17 Art Gallery Tel: (246) 424-3695 | www.corriescott.net Corrie Scott’s studio/gallery featuring original fine art and photography, limited edition lithographs, prints and cards. Corrie’s website is a fountain of information about art happenings in Barbados.

Gang of 4 Art Studio The Hope Sanctuary, St. John Tel: (246) 271-6270 or 822-3462 Contemporary Caribbean art and sculpture on display in the home studio of artist Gordon Webster. In addition to Gordon’s pieces, this informal studio also features the work of Lillian Sten, Aziza and Ras Bongo Congo.

On The Wall Gallery On The Wall Gallery’s well known location at Earthworks Pottery in the breezy hills of St. Thomas, features the work of many of the island’s best known painters and offers a wonderful selection of fine craft from talented Caribbean craftspeople. Owner and curator Vanita Comissiong, a well known artist herself, also runs the gallery at the superb Champers Restaurant on the south coast. The Very Vanita line features her artwork on home accents and accessories, such as cushion covers, throws and handbags. The adjoining café at On the Wall Gallery at Earthworks, is a lovely spot to sit for a chat and enjoy their delicious range of sandwiches, paninis, wraps and garden fresh salads, all served on the al fresco gallery with panoramic views across the island. Earthworks Pottery, Edgehill Heights, St. Thomas Tel (246) 438-9246 or (246) 234-9145 Champers Restaurant, Rockley, Christ Church Tel (246) 426-3380

156  Art & Craft

Frangipani Art Gallery Sugar Cane Club Hotel & Spa, Maynards, St. Peter Tel: (246) 422-5026 Savannah Hotel, Hastings, The Garrison, Ch. Ch. Tel: (246) 228-3800 At these two wonderful galleries visitors will find an outstanding selection of artworks by owner/curator, Marilda Weatherhead, as well as other artists from Barbados, the Caribbean, and as far afield as Peru, Bali and Vietnam.

The Tides Art Gallery The Tides Restaurant, Holetown, St. James Tel: (246) 432-8356 This gallery offers strong Caribbean flavours with a lush display of Caribbean talent! Located within The Tides Restaurant, open 12-3pm Monday to Friday, and 7-11pm daily, and by appointment.



Gallery of Caribbean Art The Gallery of Caribbean Art is the largest and best appointed fine art gallery in the Caribbean. It is located in the scenic northern town of Speightstown and encompasses a large selection of Barbadian and Caribbean art with impressive exhibition space and continuously changing art pieces. The Gallery hosts monthly exhibitions by individuals or groups of artists. A wide selection of media, from metal, clay and wooden sculptures to batiks and silk painting, make the gallery a must see for all art lovers. Open weekdays from 9:30am – 4:30pm and Saturdays from 9:30am – 2pm. The staff are friendly and knowledgeable and make a visit to the Gallery a memorable experience. Shipping to anywhere in the world is easily arranged and all major credit cards are accepted. You may also visit the Gallery’s website to get a preview of all that is available. Northern Business Centre, Speightstown, St. Peter | Tel: (246) 419-0858

The ArtSplash Centre

The Batik Studio

“Santa Neta”, Hastings Main Road, Christ Church Tel: (246) 228-0776 | www.artsplashbarbados.com A vibrant, creative hub for all the family. With over 7 years experience in teaching art to children and young adults, the ArtSplash team offer private art lessons for all ages, creative birthday parties, after-school classes and their own exclusive art camps. They will find a medium that’s best for you and help you to explore your own creative path. They also provide studio and exhibition space for local artists. Don’t miss their Organic Farmers & Craft

Earthworks Pottery, Edgehill, St. Thomas Tel: (246) 424-0391 henderson@batikbarbados.com | www.batikartbarbados.com Henderson Reece creates stunning batiks that you can both wear and hang on your walls, depicting the Caribbean in vibrant tropical colours. He also offers classes (see page 170).

Market every Saturday from 9am-1pm.

Manipura The Milking Parlour, Walkers Dairy, St. George Tel: (246) 435-1952 or (246) 230-8897 Run by Barbadian artist Annalee Davis, the Manipura studio is located under a grove of mahogany trees on a dairy farm in the St. George countryside.

158  Art & Craft

The Pelican Craft Centre Princess Alice Highway, Bridgetown Tel: (246) 426-2300 Located near the Bridgetown Cruise Terminal, Pelican Craft Centre is the largest arts and crafts centre in the Caribbean with 25 shops and many workshops where visitors can watch the craftsmen making pottery, basketry and straw work, flame glass work, carving, weaving, moulded figure-making, sewing and cigar making. The Centre is well appointed with air-conditioned shops, disabled facilities and parking.


(246) 419 0858

www.artgallerycaribbean.com

artgallerycaribbean@caribsurf.com Northern Business Centre, Speightstown, St. Peter Mon - Fri 9.30am – 4.30pm, Sat 9.30am – 2.00pm


Artist: Michael Naemsch

Artist: Hilary Warren

Artist Anthony Haynes

ART & Craft Shows Gallery of Caribbean Art 2015 shows

Holetown Festival Feb 21

Tel: 419-0858 artgallerycaribbean@caribsurf.com www.artgallerycaribbean.com

This festival runs from the 15th but the main day for the artists and craftspeople to exhibit and sell their work is on the Saturday when there is a parade and street fair.

Dec 2014 - Jan 7 Elizabeth Stuart

Jan 10 - 29 Michael Naemsch

Jan 31 - Feb 20

Oistins Fish Festival April 4 - 6 Artists and craftspeople exhibit along the roadside in the annual festival held over Easter weekend.

Ins & Outs Tip There is art and craft on sale every weekend at the farmers markets:- Brighton Market on Sat., 6-10am; Hastings Market on Sat., 9am-1pm and Holders Market on Sun., 9am-1pm.

Carol Cadogan

Mar 14 - April 9 The Heidi Berger Women’s Show

May 2 - 15

Bridgetown Market Aug 1 & 2 Street fair with over 50 stalls of local craftspeople and artists along with local food and drinks.

Tracey William’s Students

160  Art & Craft

Artists and craftspeople also have open evenings at many of the large hotels. Call to enquire.


Janice Sylvia Brock The vibrant hues, the sense of movement, the free style and the sometimes offbeat treatment of subjects, imbue Janice Sylvia Brock’s paintings with joie de vivre. Brock’s vibrant paintings are keenly sought after by discerning collectors worldwide. Many of her paintings, recently completed or still in progress, are displayed in her St. James studio, with over 500 square feet of exhibition space overlooking the ocean. Janice’s autobiography, My Life on Canvas, can be ordered directly from the artist by email (or in the UK call 01625585744 or 07940744684).

Viewing by appointment Tel (246) 432-6061 or (246) 237-7670 www.brock-gallery.com | janice@brock-gallery.com Brocklands Gallery, Halcyon Heights, St. James

Catherine Forter Chee-a-Tow The art of Catherine Forter-Chee-a-Tow is very decorative, Caribbean in its essence, the celebration of a certain tropical art de vivre. Generous, vibrant in its colours and movement. A synthesis of the foliage, the flowers and fruits, the highlights of a cheekbone, the rim of a straw hat, a ribbon or simply the rays of the sun. Characters depicted are bubbly, rich in Caribbean antics and apparels. Keenly sought after, Catherine’s art may be seen by appointment in her Garrison Historic District Studio, at Tapas Restaurant, or in several galleries islandwide.

Tel (246) 262-6238 or 427-7859 caribbean-art-barbados-catherine-forter-chee-a-tow.com c.forter.cheeatow@gmail.com

Ins & Outs of Barbados  161


Jean Blades

John Stuart 1932 - 2011

Tel (246) 428-7150 | bladespaxamor@gmail.com

Tel Manty Cooper (246) 823-0065 www.johnstuartart.com | manty@johnstuartart.com

Ronnie Carrington

Sue Holder

Tel (246) 230-9170 www.ronniecarrington.com | info@ronniecarrington.com

Tel (246) 433-9759 or Mobile (246) 257-8724 whatever2photo@gmail.com

Growing up in Atlantic Canada, Jean developed a love of sea, sky and wilderness early while accompanying her father on his lengthy fishing trips, often by canoe. She brought these past memories with her to her second home, Barbados, where she has lived for over thirty years. These past and present experiences are depicted in her colourful, often emotional paintings of real places here in Barbados. She uses only palette knife with acrylic paint to simply express her world through her eyes. Represented by a number of local galleries, Jean also welcomes visitors to her home studio by appointment.

Join Ronnie on his unique Barbados Photo-Adventure and experience the soul of Barbados. These private or group outings come with or without instruction. Participants benefit from Ronnie’s years of recording our folk life and landscape, as he created the fascinating black & white images that make the Carrington Collection. His recent publication “Pathways, thoughts on the journey”, combines natural environment images and inspirational verses – a unique Caribbean souvenir. Images are available as prints, posters, on canvas and on note cards.

162  Art & Craft

John was born in London, however it was here in Barbados, in his mid-fifties, that he started to paint seriously and with great passion. Using a palette knife and oils he recreated the bright and cheerful rural scenes of his beloved Barbadian countryside. As John wished, his family continue his legacy on canvas and archival paper. Visit www.johnstuartart.com to view many of his paintings; for family favourites contact John’s daughter, Manty Cooper. Also on show at galleries islandwide.

Sue Holder makes and sells photographic canvases, acrylic paperweights, clocks, cards, calendars, ‘images of Barbados’ yearly (4 sizes) sold from June onwards, perpetual (birthday) calendar, notebooks, magnets etc. She sells them herself at Brighton Farmers Market 6-10am every Saturday, Holders Farmers Market 9am-2pm every Sunday, National Trust Open Houses 2:30-5:30pm every Wednesday, Jan-March, Christmas Markets or contact her directly. Also available at On The Wall and leading souvenir shops.


Vishni Gopwani The work of Vishni Gopwani encompasses many dualities. Born in India, Vishni has lived in Barbados since the age of 16. Her artistic output, both documentary style photographic studies and sensitive hand-drawn portraiture, presents a unique blend of Indian and Bajan Culture. Though nurtured by Bajan culture, Vishni remains strongly influenced by her vivid Indian up-bringing, resulting in an artistic output that is truly exceptional.

Tel (246) 823-1099 | vdespirit@gmail.com

Gina Foster

David Alleyne

Barbadian artist, Gina Foster uses vivid colour, bold strokes and texture to depict movement and mood. She paints in acrylics capturing the vitality of life on the island. Gina’s book, “Sweet Bajan Days” is a wonderful depiction of the true essence of life on our island – an absolute must for all lovers of Barbados. A variety of Gina’s art can be found at gift shops throughout the island. For original work please visit our local galleries or contact Gina personally.

David’s acrylic paintings have been collected by locals and visitors for over 20 years. His vivid depictions of Barbados are hung in numerous offices, restaurants and homes, including those of former prime minister, Owen Arthur and British singer, Sir Cliff Richard. Inquire about paintings, classes and “en plein air” (open air) painting tours.

Tel (246) 430-0338 or (246) 233-0999 gina@caribsurf.com

Tel (246) 624-2183 or (246) 257-8556 davidalleyne.webs.com davidalleyne.fineart@gmail.com

Ins & Outs of Barbados  163


Earth & Fire At Earth & Fire you can be assured of the highest quality in design and construction. Their products are individually hand-crafted with an emphasis on detail and authenticity. The entire range of Earth & Fire products is inspired by everyday life in Barbados, and features many aspects of the island’s beautiful people, architecture and fauna. Visit their workshop to see the artisans at work and be sure to look out for the lovely La Cuevita Souvenir Shop when visiting the Animal Flower Cave. All major credit cards accepted.

Tel (246) 439-9318 www.earthandfire-workshop.com earthandfireworkshop@yahoo.com

The Studio is the collaboration between renowned Caribbean photographer, Mike Toy, and British designer, Kathryn Horsfall. This exclusive and contemporary boutique offers a range of bespoke products, from wall art to textiles, that is unavailable anywhere else on the island. They offer custom prints and photo gifts such as beach bags, jigsaw puzzles, acrylic blocks and playing cards, while their range of home interiors is handcrafted in India using traditional block printing and includes cushions, bed linens, placemats, napkins and bathrobes.

Tel (246) 432-6765 #3 Chattel Village, Holetown, St. James

164  Art & Craft


A World of

Sea Shells

In her tireless search to obtain shells that are unique, Anne Smith, owner of The Shell Gallery, offers some of the world’s most rare and exotic sea shells.

T

he Shell Gallery is truly an exceptional place to visit, with its fascinating display of sea shells from all over the world. It is arguably the largest sea shell shop in the Caribbean and also carries a selection of ceramics, picture frames, jewellery, elegantly crafted shell boxes and other unique gifts all with a sea shell theme. Since its inception, this delightful gallery continues to captivate the avid shell enthusiast and all who visit. Anne and her charming staf f are very knowledgeable and helpful - it’s no wonder so many visitors return year after year. To get there, take Highway 1 north to Gibbes in St. Peter, turn right at the sign post which reads, “Highway 2A, Gibbes Glade, Rock Dundo” - it’s the 3rd property on the right. Or, travel north on Highway 2A/ABC Highway, turn left at Rock Dundo, Gibbes Glade, Highway 1, follow the winding road towards the coast until you see the Shell Gallery sign on your left. Open Monday to Friday 10am-5pm / Saturdays by appointment. Closed public holidays. Tel (246) 422-2593 or (246) 422-0943 contentment@caribsurf.com “Contentment” Gibbes, St. Peter


Sailor’s

Valentine

This Sailor’s Valentine is by local shell artist Daphne Hunte, renowned for her work here and internationally as both an exhibitor and judge at the Sanibel Shell Show in the USA. Daphne’s recent work along with an exquisite collection of sailor’s valentines by some of the world’s leading shell artists may be viewed at her home by appt. Tel: 423-6180

166  Art & Craft


One of the four floral sailor’s valentine arrangements in the Gold-medal exhibit of the Barbados Horticultural Society at Chelsea Flower Show 2014

What do you get when you combine a traditional Sailor’s Valentine, made of local shells, with the Barbados Horticultural Society and local flowers? A Gold Medal at the Chelsea Flower Show in London - the 16th for the Barbados Team.

F

or the theme of their exhibit at the 2014 Chelsea Flower Show, the Barbados Horticultural Society chose the Sailor’s Valentine, an extraordinary art form that represents a truly unique link between Barbados and Britain. During the 1800’s, when Britannia ruled the waves and Barbados was a major maritime hub in world trade, floods of British sailors poured into Bridgetown in search of ‘fun and frolic’. While there they also looked for special souvenirs to take home for their sweethearts, with the Sailor’s Valentine being the most special of all. Many of the finest examples still in existence today were originally

purchased at the New Curiosity Shop in Bridgetown, owned by the Belgrave brothers. The classic Sailor’s Valentine is housed in an octagonal mahogany box with a glass cover to protect an intricate, delicate and painstakingly assembled collage of tiny, naturally coloured seashells, often incorporating a floral motif, a heart shape and a verse or message. To make one of these beautiful pieces requires the talent and skill of a fine artist, the precision of a surgeon and the patience of a saint. That being the case, there was never any doubt that recreating a Sailor’s Valentine in a floral design would provide the Barbados team with possibly its greatest ever challenge. To their great credit, they rose splendidly to the occasion and earned the ultimate accolade in the horticultural world – a Gold Medal at Chelsea! Quite remarkably, the Barbados Horticultural Society has now won an impressive 16 Gold, 10 Silver-Gilt and 1 Silver in a highly commendable 27 consecutive years at the Chelsea Flower Show. Part of the BHS’s gold medal Chelsea Flower Show exhibit is slated to be reproduced at the Limegrove Lifestyle Centre for Valentine’s Day in 2015.

Ins & Outs of Barbados  167


Best

In the

Hands

In an age when much of manufacturing is automated, visitors are fascinated to learn that this family business still completes each screen printed design by hand.

B

est of Barbados Gift Shops has always celebrated Barbadian life through art. Started in 1975 by artist Jill Walker and her architect husband, Jimmy, the company involves three generations, boasts five retail outlets, and is unique on the island in the way it makes its extensive line of screen printed giftware. The process begins when the design is conceptualised and colour swatches are printed. Typically, four colours are used which, when overlaid, create up to seven colours. On completion of the painted design, each colour separation is painstakingly and accurately created. The screens one for each colour - are built and prepared. Several weeks on, the design is ready to print. Their very busy screen printing studio occupies a renovated sugar boiling house at the company’s Welches Plantation head office. On long tables, high quality, 100% cotton fabric is rolled out and each

Desiree Beckles printing the Hatchling Nest pillowcases Photo: Sue Trew

colour is printed in turn using a squeegee to press the ink through the silk screens. Step by step the original design is recreated. The first printing is always exciting to witness! Visitors are fascinated to learn that each screen printed design takes months to prepare because each stage is completed by hand. Afterwards, the printed fabric is distributed to cottage workers who stitch hundreds of tea-towels, aprons, pot holders and guest towels annually. New for 2015 is a lovely line of ‘Dream Barbados’ pillowcases designed by Jill and her daughter, Sue Trew. A quality check is the penultimate step; the finishing touch is a drop tag proudly displaying the screen printers in action. Now the items are ready to be enjoyed by all who appreciate the handcraftsmanship involved and continue to support Barbadian made products.


Background illustrations from Turtle rtle Tracks by Sue Trew

www.best-of-barbados.com

Made with pride in Barbados since 1975 Bring sunshine to your home with our hand screen printed gift ideas, lovingly designed and printed in Barbados using quality 100% cotton.


Batik Bajan-style

Meet Henderson Reece, a Barbadian artist who’s been mixing the business and pleasure of batik making for over 35 years. Capturing familiar local scenes in this globally-treasured medium is his speciality, and he is well known among art lovers for his fresh, vibrant and delightful batik creations. In fact, inspired by his craftsmanship, so many people asked Henderson about the possibility of learning to make batik themselves, that in 2012 he began offering workshops at his studio - a breezy, hillside house with a great view. The one day course costs BB$400 (US$200) and includes all materials and lunch. At the end you leave with your own batik, which his students often mount and frame for their homes. Mainly self-taught, Henderson’s work can be found in collections in Europe, America and the Caribbean. In Barbados the best place to find Henderson and his stunning portfolio is at The Batik Studio, Earthworks Pottery Complex, St. Thomas. Find out more about Henderson, the workshop and the art of batik itself on Henderson’s website.

Tel (246) 424-0391 or 240-4861 www.batikbarbados.com | henderson@batikbarbados.com fb: BarbadosBatik Earthworks Complex, Edgehill, St. Thomas

“Have just hung some more of your batiks... We visit every December and always come away with something lovely.” - Susan Kelley



Weddings


R

ich in colour and diversity, Barbados is most famous for its sandy beaches, resplendent gardens, fascinating sites

and romantic sunsets. The island’s idyllic land and seascapes provide the perfect backdrop for your wedding and honeymoon while its infrastructure of specialised services and activities allows you to ably host your guests. From the most luxurious bespoke shindig to the low-key affair, world-class wedding planners can take care of every detail to ensure a stress-free wedding day that you can fully enjoy. Award-winning photographers, decorators, florists, caterers and the like - our local professionals boast a wealth of island knowledge invaluable to the destination bride and groom. Feature Articles 174  Why Wed in Barbados? 176  Entertaining Your Wedding Party 180 Call in the Experts Destination Wedding Planning Made Easier

182 The Right Way to Trash Your Dress Tips from a Local Photographer

184 Ten Ways to Take Your Wedding to the Water Out-of-the-box Ocean-inspired Ideas Sophie & Dolan’s Trash the Dress Photoshoot: Sunset in Speightstown Photo courtesy Gina Francesca Photography & Design

Ins & Outs of Barbados  173


Why wed in

Barbados?

It’s not difficult to appreciate why year after year Barbados successfully attracts destination couples to its shores. The scenic beauty, relative safety and all round warm hospitality to be found here are all noteworthy. Let’s consider some other factors that set Barbados apart as a wedding destination of choice, not just in the Caribbean, but the world. Ease of Process There is no minimum stay requirement in order to be married in Barbados. You can literally arrive and, having made arrangements with your marriage officer, get your documentation in order to apply for your marriage license. Present yourselves, valid passports, birth certificates and return tickets (along with a few other bits and pieces under special circumstances), a letter from the marriage officer and the requisite fees, and without hassle you can be wed. Photo courtesy Magical Moments Photography

Predictable Weather With only two annual seasons to consider, and each reasonably warm, chances are pretty good that your wedding day is going to be simply gorgeous.

Ins & Outs Tip It’s comforting for couples to know that Barbados has many of the comforts of home. If something is lost or forgotten, from medication to wedding rings, the likelihood is great you’ll be able to find a replacement without too much trouble.

Photo courtesy The Crane Left > Photo courtesy Diamonds International

174  Weddings

Accessibility and variety As an international hub accessed by many international carriers we’re both easier to get to, and in light of a sophisticated infrastructure, to get around. Whether subject to interest, taste or budget Barbados offers the proverbial ‘something for everyone’ in activities, accommodation, amenities, venues and services. Our local experts are well versed in helping you maximise your available resources. Choose to get married overlooking the sea under a do-it-yourself wedding arch, or in the stylish environs of an exquisite private villa. Whatever your requirements - your wedding day and stay in Barbados are sure to be unforgettable!



Entertaining your

Wedding Party By Malissa Blackman, Managing Director of BrideLifeMagazine.com and Weddings By Malissa

They’ve stuck with you through thick and thin, and now they’ll fly across the globe to help you get married. Your besties and best men shouldn’t be forgotten in the midst of your wedding planning. Here’s a few ways to show your appreciation and show your guests a great time!

N

ot only is Barbados great for a wedding and honeymoon, anniversary, or renewing of vows, but there are a myriad of activities across the island for you and your guests to enjoy. At the top of the list are the Catamaran Sailing Cruises where you can swim with the turtles and snorkel over shipwrecks. Or what about going on an Island Safari 4x4 jeep tour? See the island in a fun way while learning about our history and heritage and ending it with a proper “Bajan” buffet lunch. Host a spa party at The Crane’s Serenity Spa or spend a day at Limegrove

Lifestyle Centre exploring its expansive luxury shopping and lovely eateries. A few of them may even come back with a token for the bride and groom. There’s surfing and stand-up paddle boarding lessons on offer—great fun with a group. If you are an avid golfer, you have several world class courses to choose from: Apes Hill Golf Club has a beautifully designed course with amazing views of the west and east coasts, or the world renowned golf courses at Sandy Lane and Royal Westmoreland. On the south coast there is a lovely course at the Barbados Golf Club.

Photo courtesy Silver Moon Catamarans

176  Weddings


© Forevermark Limited 2014. Forevermark™,

™, The Diamond. The Promise.™, are Trade Marks used under licence from the De Beers Group of Companies.

LIMEGROVE LIFESTYLE CENTRE, HOLETOWN, ST. JAMES • 271-8230

A TRUE PROMISE WILL NEVER BE BROKEN Less than one percent of the world’s diamonds can carry the Forevermark inscription. A promise that each is beautiful, rare and responsibly sourced.

Forevermark is part of The De Beers Group of Companies. Forevermark.com


Ins & Outs Tip Many restaurants in Barbados have large tables or private areas you can book for intimate groups or private parties. You might also consider having a local chef cater a gourmet dinner at your villa. Photo courtesy Tiki Hut

If you’re looking for some lively nightlife, there are many hot spots where you can put on your dancing shoes, like McBride’s and Harbour Lights on the south coast. There are numerous bars and rum shops around the island where you can have a casual drink and a bite to eat, but the most popular ones for a relaxed evening out, or even part of your wedding weekend, are: Tiki Hut, Lime Bar at Limegrove Lifestyle Centre, Café Sol famous for their Margaritas, MOJO and Tapas. Everyone should experience the local flavour of the Oistins and Moon Town Fish Frys on Friday nights, where you can

listen to local music and mingle with the locals whilst enticing your taste buds with the freshest catches of the day from our local fishermen. A lovely detail that you can add for your wedding guests, and perhaps even as a surprise, is introducing them to our Bajan culture by way of a tuk band, stilt men, limbo dancers, a steel band and even the gyrating “Mother Sally”. Barbados is a perfect wedding destination. Everything you need to create the wedding of your dreams and a fun vacation for you and your guests at the same time, is right here under the Bajan sun.

Fun for the

Kiddies

Olivia Wilkie of Liv’s Party Box might just be a bride-to-be’s best friend, especially if her guest list includes lots of little faces. For weddings and special adult occasions, Liv’s Party Box can come in and and entertain the kids so they can have fun while the adults party! Why not consider a themed party, or an art & craft playdate? Olivia can recommend all kinds of fun activities for youngsters - face painting, jumping tents, magicians, real life characters, games, pony rides, photography and much more. Best of all you can fully enjoy your celebration knowing your children are both close to hand and in good hands.

Tel (246) 232-9249 | fb: /LivsPartyBox | liv@livspartybox.com

178  Weddings


Remember . . . That Moment!

PHOTOGRAPHY BY

STEVE CUMBERBATCH

magicalphotos.net

(246) 230-3732

stevec@caribsurf.com


Planning a destination wedding can be an exciting but overwhelming task. If it’s going to be done, it should be done right of course, but with so much to consider, what’s a bride and groom to do? We say...

Call in

Experts the

In order to have the wedding of your dreams it is essential that you have the right team with professional team players. Barbados has a high level of professional services - from photographers, cake designers, florists and decorators to hair stylists and spa service providers. Our professional wedding coordinators can create the most luxurious or bespoke wedding you have ever daydreamed about - all with as little stress as possible.

You don’t have to choose between planning and relaxing while in Barbados Malissa Blackman and her team will take care of all you need for any size wedding, from legal documentation to full planning and production of your event.

Florists Despite modern twists on wedding décor and budget friendly alternatives, it’s likely you’ll include some floral element when planning your big day. Whether for simple floral accoutrement or a spectacular bash full of blooms, Barbados boasts experienced florists and amazing tropical variety.

Tel (246) 437-6597 cmfoster@caribsurf.com Christina makes full use of her creative ability with local and imported fresh flowers.

Consultants

Christina Foster of Simply Flowers can take care of all the floral requirements for your wedding from simply elegant to the lavishly extravagant - bridal bouquets and head pieces to floral arrangements and fresh flower decorations for the wedding cake. They provide an early delivery service (for a fee) to help remove some anxiety from your day. Christina trained at Constance Spry and has deservedly earned an excellent reputation for the consistent high quality of her beautiful floral work.

Malissa Blackman is a professional wedding consultant specialising in the luxury wedding market. Certified with the Wedding Planners Institute of Canada, she has worked with international Destination Wedding Planners the likes of David Beahm Designs and 4PM Events from New York, and is the known and preferred wedding planner for The Cliff and Lone Star Restaurants. Her firm Weddings By Malissa celebrates ten years in 2015. When starting WBM, Malissa envisioned helping brides create their ideal wedding in a stress free environment. Since its inception she has done just that, while acting as Chairman of the BHTA Romance Product Club and starting her own bridal publication, BrideLife, with 4 issues to date. Malissa’s personalised service and attention to detail, with her knowledge and understanding of the island, ensures that your dreams become wedding day reality!

Tel (246) 262-1450 | malissa@barbadosweddings.net www.barbadosweddings.net


Venues For over 20 years Donna Simpson has been assisting couples wishing to wed at Sunbury House. This rural sugar estate is over 300 years old, lovingly maintained

Nothing sets the tone for your wedding like the perfect venue - historic churches, exquisite hotels, private villas or a classic option - plantations. Romance favours their fairytale ambience and rural tropical settings and often the owners and staff will assist and facilitate wherever possible to make your big day a success.

and authentically furnished. Sunbury can both accommodate and cater for parties from the smallest to...well, they haven’t yet found a limit. Due to their size and layout the plantation’s great house and grounds offer various permutations for ceremony and reception setup. Grandiose garden ceremonies with fully catered receptions, smaller intimate daytime affairs in the Bell House, lounge areas for cocktails under the stars and uplit tropical trees and always ample room for dancing - the possibilities at Sunbury are beautifully endless. John and Rain Chandler of Chandelier Weddings are the ideal team to work with you to make your dream day perfect. Lancaster Great House, their model plantation home, is a magical venue. Over 300 years old, it has been lovingly restored to enhance its old world charm, with exquisite garden settings. Wedding luncheons and dinners can be enjoyed in the antique splendour of their home or outdoors at the ‘Pavilion Garden Terrace’. More than a venue, John and Rain can coordinate exotic florals, sensational table settings, and exquisite gourmet cuisine delivered with style, panache and meticulous planning. St. Nicholas Abbey provides an unforgettable setting for intimate events. The venue ideally suits approximately 30-50 persons, however cocktail parties may be hosted for as many as 120. The museum has a terrace overlooking the gullies which provides chairs, cushions, tables & umbrellas for up to 80 persons. For evening functions, the Jacobean great house is dramatically lit; candelabras are hung in the main trees in the courtyard and terrace. Events can also be held on the front croquet lawn and gardens, a small 30-seater chapel or the rum bottling area which seats up to 14 persons for dinner. Heather Stoute can assist with co-ordinating various ancillary services for your event. Top > Sunbury Great House

Tel (246) 423-6270 sunbury@caribsurf.com | barbadosgreathouse.com Above > Wedding hosted by Chandelier Weddings

Tel (246) 433-1754 rainchandler@hotmail.com | barbadosbrides.org Left > St. Nicholas Abbey

Tel (246) 422-8725 reception@stnicholasabbey.com stnicholasabbeyrum.com

DJs

Of course, no wedding is complete without entertainment and the island’s DJs cover any genre. DJ Dusty Payne is one who will keep your guests on the dance floor all night long, guaranteed. Renowned throughout the Barbados wedding and party scene for his efficiency and professionalism, guests also appreciate DJ Dusty’s good-humour and easy-going manner. From the best of the Golden Oldies to all the latest hits, Adrian “Dusty” Payne knows his music and is great at reading his audience. That is why he’s known to spin the right tunes at the right time. DJ Dusty also offers Disco Lighting effects and PA system rental and is the preferred DJ of The Cliff. To book DJ Dusty or for more info:

Tel (246) 239-2972 | djdustyitm@gmail.com | Fb: /Adrian.Payne.355 www.mydestination.com/barbados/weddings/134576/dj-dusty


rash TDress your The Right Way to

Some call it an ‘I do’, some call it a fad, but whatever you call it, this latest trend in destination wedding photography has grown in popularity. Barbados’ gorgeous and varied scenery presents ample opportunity for trashing your dress in fine style. We’ve asked Gina Corbin of Gina Francesca Photography & Design to share her top tips for preparing for and enjoying your TTD photo shoot.

Tips from a Local Photographer

Photos courtesy Gina Francesca Photography & Design

sophie & dolan

SAY I

Do

SAY I

to...

- Wearing sunblock: No wedding dress has ever given desirable tan lines. Ever. - Bringing along some essentials ... towels, bottled water and a change of clothing ... Your car rental company will thank you for it. - DIY hair and makeup ... Brides are more relaxed when they’re not worrying about ruining their professional dos.

182  Weddings

Don’t

to...

- Winging it: Chat with your photographer beforehand about the type of scene and atmosphere you wish set. - Worrying about your dress: Dirt is dirt and salt water is surprisingly forgiving. Washing your dress in fresh water or having it professionally cleaned will in almost every case leave it as good as new. - Overdoing it on the drinks before shooting. Enough said.



Magical Moments Photography Atlantis Submarines Gina Francesca Photography Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

Magical Moments Photography

St. Lawrence Church

10

Ways to take your

Wedding to the Water Take your wedding to the next level... sea level, with these ocean-inspired out-of-the-box ideas.

At Sea Level Beach - A modern classic Yacht or catamaran - Elegant and impressive Paddleboards - For the non-traditional couple

Above Sea Level Cliffside cave - Holy matrimony, wicked TTD Seaside church - Sentimental and understated Oceanfront restaurant - Ceremony meets reception Coastal Villa - Wedding and honeymoon in one

Below Sea Level Scuba - Elopement? Just you two and a witness. Submarine - Go to your depths of commitment Underground cave - Like love, a force of nature

Jon Farmer Photography

40 years of making your image our business (246) 624-3772 or (246) 231-5008

jonfarmerphotography.com islandphotos@gmail.com

184  Weddings



Meetings & Incentives


C

ontrary to popular belief, the MICE market has absolutely nothing to do with furry vermin and everything to do with

Barbados as a unique Caribbean Destination which increases our international exposure and cements our name as the ultimate location for hosting events and meetings of all kinds. Here’s the lowdown on what the MICE Market really means for Barbados. First, let’s break it down: M – Meetings I – Incentives C – Conference E – Events As a destination, Barbados offers unrivalled diversity with an incredible offering of deep rooted culture, luxury retreats, world-class resorts and conference facilities and something that money just can’t buy – genuinely friendly, passionate and hospitable people. These factors combine to make Barbados a top class Caribbean destination for MICE buyers.

Photo courtesy Sunlinc & Curwin Cherubin

Ins & Outs of Barbados  187


Photo courtesy Sunlinc & Curwin Cherubin

This niche tourism market tends to focus on certain factors that make Barbados a clear choice. From Boutique Five Star properties to casual, chic getaways, Barbados has a hotel to fit every budget and just the right amount of hotel rooms to host even the larger conferences.

• Air Travel – with daily service from a multitude of international gateways, the island is easy to get to – no puddle hopping through mysterious airports and clearing customs in different countries. • Hotel options – from Boutique Five Star properties to casual, chic getaways, Barbados has a hotel to fit every budget and just the right amount of hotel rooms to host even the larger conferences. • Weather – 365 days of pure weather perfection, sprinkled with the occasional ‘liquid sunshine’ gives the Island a huge edge over other more unpredictable destinations. • Things to do – guests to the Island can indulge in a wide variety of activities and may only scratch the surface of what Barbados has in store. Catamarans, Segways, Crystal Caves, Hikes, Swimming with the Turtles, Plantations, Rum Tasting, Restaurants, Beach, Shopping, Submarines, Horseback Riding, Museums, Art Galleries, Polo, Cricket and great Nightlife.

188  Meetings & Incentives

• Currency – with a fixed exchange rate tied to the US dollar, companies can get more bang for their buck. • Infrastructure & technology – with a central highway system connecting all areas of the island, getting around is a breeze – add to that a stable technological environment and world class telecommunications, clients have all the ingredients for a stress-free stay. And just why, you may wonder, would a company go through this much trouble for its valued customers or team members? ROI of course – companies understand that offering travel as an incentive enhances performance, improves morale, creates a better work environment, encourages teamwork and makes people strive to exceed their targets. It’s a winwin-win for the company, their customers and team members and of course, Barbados!


Want to feel like a Rock Star? Count on our Concierge Five Star Fast Track Team to provide you with the very best. Why waste time on your arrival day? Save headaches and hassles with our luxury Five Star Fast Track arrival service. They will take the frustration out of your arrival experience and long lines in Barbados with personal VIP assistance immediately as you enter the Arrivals Hall. All guests are individually met and whisked through dedicated Immigration and Customs lines, assisted with baggage claim and escorted out to their waiting transportation. This is a great service not only for the most seasoned traveller but also great for families travelling with children, who want to enjoy a smooth arrival experience.

Five Star Fast Track

For more information please contact Andrea and our Five Star Fast Track Team at: (246) 421-6777 www.fivestarfasttrack.com info@fivestarfasttrack.com

Team Sunlinc Team Sunlinc is your reliable local DMC partner specializing in Barbados and the Caribbean region. Our paradise islands are famed for their magnificent scenery, excellent infrastructure, and the Caribbean joie de vivre. When combined, these factors make your choice of Barbados and our destinations an easy one. Our professionalism, creative approach and local expertise guarantee you complete peace of mind – we get everything done on time and with meticulous attention to detail. Working with a strong network of local vendors, services and venues, we are always up to date on the best offers and solutions available. Entrust your next programme to us and let us show you why our experience and creative approach enable us to offer spectacularly innovative events while incorporating some of the most fascinating and unique venues. You are our number one priority and our passion for your success shines through.

Helen Schur Parris, CEO

E: hsp@sunlinc.net | T: (246) 436-1710 | W: www.sunlinc.net

Ins & Outs of Barbados  189


Health & Beauty


W

ell-being. Such an elemental and essential thing. A healthy body, mind and spirit, working holistically

in harmonious balance. Life in Barbados is already conducive to well-being. Even so, we who live here sometimes need a bit of repair or a tune-up from time to time. We are fortunate: somewhere between the doctor and the spa, there’s a world of healing modalities that assuage our aches and soothe our spirits. How perfect too, for visitors! If holidays are for rest, recreation and renewal, then just think of the added boost that a bit of healing therapy can provide.

Jodie Boland gives yoga instruction on anchored paddle boards in Carlisle Bay on Saturday mornings at 9am and Tuesday evenings at 5pm. Call 234-4658 or check www.paddlebarbados.com Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

Ins & Outs of Barbados  191


Maxine is one of the leading providers of massage and body therapeutics, internationally trained and licensed to practice in Barbados, hosting a professional service menu for mobile and clinic appointments. Her mission is to promote health & well-being based on essential principles of a holistic practitioner and being mindful of individuals. Maxine offers an array of specialty treatments ranging from Massage, Aromatherapy, Reflexology, Deep Tissue, REN Bespoke Facial Care, Thermo Auricular Hopi Ear Candling, Indian and Aromatic Head Massages, Geothermal Basalt Stones, Chakra Energy Balancing with Reiki and Crystals. Body Brushing and Exfoliation, Ayurvedic treatments, both Hand and Foot Rituals, Pre and Post Natal treatments, Lymphatic Drainage and Palliative care.

For appointments contact Body Restoration: (246) 432-0090 or Maxine Harry – cell: (246) 823-1003 maxineharry7@gmail.com (mobile service) Body Restoration Clinic, West Coast Mall, Holetown, St. James

HealtH & Wellness

Maxine Harry -

Body Restoration

Bright and Energising, Cooling and Calming... Experience the delight of Yoga in Barbados with Pamela Harris, a sought after Yoga teacher with over 14 years experience. Pamela offers Anusara Inspired Yoga™ and Integrative Yoga Therapy classes, in the comfortable atmosphere of her spacious studio on the edge of Holetown. Fellow teachers bring more variety and styles. Classes cater to all levels, with dynamic sequencing and gentler flow, upholding that Yoga is for everyone. The uplifting, creative classes build strength, stamina and flexibility, aligning the body precisely and therapeutically to bring balance and vitality. Here you’ll find a joyful Yoga that encourages expression of the heart and looks for the good in all. Monday - Saturday, classes are held morning, noon and evening.

Tel: (246) 231-4468 or 432-8509 www.sunshinekula.com | pamela@sunshinekula.com fb: /SunshineKulaYoga Highbury House, Sandy Lane, Holetown, St. James A spray tan is the to finish yourhere holiday, to look John was born in perfect London,way however it was in Barbados, amazing for that special party, wedding, boat trip or simply a in his mid-fifties, that he started to paint seriously and with healthy way to maintain a year round tan without harmful exposure great passion. Using a palette knife and oils he recreated the to the sun artificialrural UV rays. Joanne at the Brazil Bronze bright andor cheerful scenes of histrained beloved Barbadian countryside. As John his family histheir legacy on Glow Bar in Soho, Newwished, York where they’recontinue known for famous canvas and PleaseEmmys visit and other award shows. clientele andarchival spray forpaper. the Oscars, www.johnstuartart.com to view many his paintings. The Brazil Bronze formulas she uses areofunique to themFor and she family favourites and pricing kindly contact John’s daughter, will determine which formula will look and work best for your skin Manty Cooper. John’s art can be found in many type. The activeAlternatively, ingredient in the formula is dihydroxyacetone galleries the island. (DHA). DHAthroughout is recommended on The Skin Cancer Foundation website www.skincancer.org, and works with the amino acids in the outer layer of skin producing an even, natural tan, fast! The best part is Joanne comes to you. Experienced, professional and discreet ... Call to find out more and book an appointment.

Tel: (246) 253-2175 | spraytanningbarbados@gmail.com

192  Health & Beauty

Sunshine Kula Yoga

Joanne Mobile Spray Tan



Emergency Services emergency clinics Decompression Chamber Barbados Defence Force Medical Unit, St. Ann’s Fort, The Garrison, St. Michael Tel: (246) 436-6185/6/7/8 ext. 2556

Elcourt Clinic Maxwell, Christ Church 7:30am to Midnight Tel: (246) 428-9452

FMH Emergency Centre 3rd Ave., Belleville, St. Michael Open 8am - midnight Tel: (246) 228-6120

Sils Dialysis Corner 3rd Avenue & Pine Road, Belleville, St. Michael Tel: (246) 228-5311 Email: info@silsdialysis.com www.silsdialysis.com

Sandy Crest Medical Centre Sunset Crest, St. James Open 24 hours every day of the year Tel: (246) 419-4911

police / fire Police (Emergency Only) Tel: 211

Fire - Tel: 311

ambulances Ambulance Service - QEH Tel: 511

Island Care Ambulance Tel: (246) 435-9425

Medic Response Ambulance Tel: (246) 228-8633

public hospital Queen Elizabeth Hospital Martindales Road, St. Michael Tel: (246) 436-6450

private hospitals Bayview Hospital St. Paul’s Avenue, Bayville, St. Michael Tel: (246) 436-5446 Web: www.bayviewhospital.com.bb

The Sparman Clinic 24-hr Emergency Service 4 - 6th Avenue, Belleville, St. Michael Tel: (246) 624-3278

Specialty Care Barbados Speech & Hearing Centre Mayfield Medical Services, 4th Avenue, Belleville, St. Michael Tel: (246) 426-3093

Carib Rehab Ltd. Medical and Homecare Nursing Supplies and Equipment as well as rentals Friendship Plantation, St. Michael Tel: (246) 427-9687/429-8266 Email: info@caribrehab.com

Dentists Barbados Dental Association Gertz Plaza, Upper Collymore Rock, St. Michael Tel: (246) 228-6488 Email: bdosdentalassoc@caribsurf.com For your dental needs call the BDA for referral to a dentist in your area

Pharmacists Collins Limited

Broad St., Bridgetown Tel: (246) 426-4515 Warrens, St. Michael Tel: (246) 425-4550 Email: colcar@caribsurf.com

Dasae Pharmacy

C/o The Sparman Clinic, 4 - 6th Avenue, Belleville, St. Michael Tel: (246) 624-3278

Elcourt Pharmacy Maxwell, Christ Church Tel: (246) 428-5323

Lewis Drug Mart

Optometrists Anka Optical/Eye Care Specialists

Rockley Main Rd., Christ Church Tel: (246) 435-8090/92 After Hours: (Emergency) (246) 429-7288

Massy Stores Pharmacies

Cave Shepherd, Bridgetown Tel: (246) 227-2164 Sheraton Mall, Christ Church Tel: (246) 437-0896

Cave Shepherd, Bridgetown (246) 429-2746 Oistins, Christ Church Tel: (246) 428-6057 Sargeants Village, Ch. Ch. Tel: (246) 429-7107 Six Roads, St. Philip Tel: (246) 423-3700 Sky Mall, Haggatt Hall (246) 434-1023 Sunset Crest, St. James Tel: (246) 432-1290 Warrens, St. Michael Tel: (246) 417-5231/3 Worthing, Ch. Ch. Tel: (246) 435-0020

Harcourt Carter Optical

Pearson’s Pharmacies

C.O.B. Business Centre, Bridgetown Tel: (246) 426-5719 Belleville, St. Michael Tel: (246) 436-0101 Speightstown, St. Peter Tel: (246) 422-1775

Express Optical

Belleville, St. Michael Tel: (246) 417-5650/429-5565 Sargeants Village, Christ Church Tel: (246) 417-5652 St. Michael’s Row, Bridgetown Tel: (246) 417-5653

194  Medical Informaton

Collymore Rock, St. Michael Tel: (246) 427-5521 Limegrove Lifestyle Centre, Holetown, St. James Tel: (246) 432-0118 Sheraton Mall, Sargeant’s Vlge., Ch. Ch. Tel: (246) 436-3784


Barbados Fertility Centre A Centre of Excellence

Albert Einstein is quoted as saying, “To continue doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results is the definition of insanity”. At Barbados Fertility Centre (BFC) breaking this trend with successful IVF techniques is making this clinic in the Caribbean the new Mecca for patients struggling to conceive a family. But what makes this IVF clinic so successful? The answer: Being the BEST. Since opening their doors in 2002, BFC has maintained its commitment to be a progressive clinic using only the latest technology. Their caring approach achieves success for those couples that need assisted reproductive technology in order to have a baby. In 2013, BFC boasted of a success rate of 80% for women under the age of 35 years! BFC specialises in all aspects of infertility management, but a major component in their proven success is their unique immunology testing, which is not standard practice at many other units in the UK and USA. For some women, the antibodies in their body attack the feotus when conceiving which results in a failure to achieve pregnancy or experiencing recurrent miscarriage. BFC has created a successful medication protocol for patients with these elevated antibody levels, which has resulted in thousands of babies being born. BFC also firmly believes in complimenting traditional medicine with a holistic approach. Treatments such as acupuncture, reflexology, and massage are available at their on-site spa the Life Wellness Centre; this allows couples to be at their optimum mentally, emotionally and physically to receive treatment. In this optimal and stress reduced state, BFC has seen a marked increase in patient’s successful outcomes when receiving these holistic treatments. If you have been trying to conceive with no success, Barbados Fertility Centre can help you with a proven successful approach.

Ins & Outs Tip World class fertility treatments combined with holistic therapies resulting in excellent success rates significantly higher than UK and USA average.

www.barbadosivf.com | contact@barbadosivf.com To speak with a fertility specialist call: (246) 435-7467

Ins & Outs of Barbados  195


Island Hopping


B

ecause of Barbados’ geographical position and as an airline hub, this is the perfect jumping off point for little jaunts to

neighbouring islands. A flight of about 45 minutes can take you to places that prove how diverse the Caribbean experience can be. For lush volcanic mountains, try Grenada, St. Lucia, St. Vincent or Dominica. For multi-cultural hubbub, visit Trinidad and Tobago. For a few days’ sailing from port to port, hop down to The Grenadines and charter a yacht through the little islands that time forgot. You can also sometimes go for the day – fly over in the morning, sail all day and come home feeling like you’ve been away for a week. If life is about making memories, this is one you won’t want to forget!

Feature Article 198  The Grenadines

The Tobago Cays, located in neighbouring St. Vincent & the Grenadines, are a cluster of five tiny, uninhabited islands, collectively sheltered from the open sea by the appropriately named Horseshoe Reef. Photo: kitesurfgrenadines.com

Ins & Outs of Barbados  197


Grenadines

The

There remain few places on earth today that can match the unblemished natural beauty, easy accessibility and ‘feel good’ tranquility of the Tobago Cays in The Grenadines.

T

he 32 idyllic islands and deserted cays which make up the Grenadines extend 45 miles to the southwest of St. Vincent like a kite’s tail. These include Young Island, Bequia, Mustique, Canouan, Mayreau, Union Island, Palm Island and Petit St. Vincent. Located just a short boat ride from Union Island, the Tobago Cays are a cluster of five tiny, uninhabited islands, collectively sheltered from the open sea by the appropriately named Horseshoe Reef. The shallow water of the lagoon surrounding the Cays inspires an everchanging kaleidoscope of blues, greens and seemingly limitless shades of aquamarine, creating a truly picture-

perfect backdrop for the islands themselves – namely Petit Rameau, Petit Bateau, Barabel and Jamesby. With their powdery white sand beaches, coconut palms, rocky outcrops and green-topped hills, the Tobago Cays are the epitome of the classic, deserted tropical island; an opinion clearly endorsed by Disney and the producers of the hit movie ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ when they chose to film here. Barbados is the gateway to these islands and local tour company, Chantours has been creating memorable holiday experiences in the Grenadines and throughout the entire Caribbean for almost two decades.

A

re you looking for a vacation with a difference, with a big emphasis on natural beauty, peace and quiet and rest and relaxation? If so, you need to know about one of the best-kept secrets in the Grenadines – the privately owned homes on Palm Island that are available for vacation rentals. These comfortable beach cottages, ranging from 2 to 5 bedrooms,

are located right on the beach with spectacular views of the surrounding Grenadine islands. It is an ideal holiday for families, couples or anybody who just wants to get away from it all. Palm Island has five beautiful beaches, all offering excellent conditions for swimming, snorkeling and water-sports. There is also a walking trail for the more exercise-oriented visitors. Villa guests wishing to go on a sailing charter to Mayreau and the Tobago Cays can do so by booking directly. The boats are based in Union Island but they will collect guests at the Palm Island jetty. Villa guests are not generally at liberty to use the Palm Island Resort hotel facilities, though it is possible to dine at the resort’s Yacht Club Restaurant and make purchases at the small boutique.

198  Island Hopping

PalmVilla

Palm Island, St. Vincent & the Grenadines For further information: Tel: (246) 262-5874 or (246) 262-5875 e-mail: keith@millerpublishing.net


Photo: Billy Black

Day Trips to the Grenadines, Mustique, Canouan, Grenada, St. Lucia, St. Barths & more Private Luxury Yacht Charters in Barbados and the Caribbean Bespoke Overnight Escapes throughout the Caribbean Inter Island Flights & Private Aircraft Charter

Tel: (246) 432-5591 • reservations@chantours.com • www.chantours.com • Plaza 2, Sunset Crest, St. James, Barbados


Adventure &

Discovery


I

t’s great sport to take an island tour around Barbados - no matter how many times you’ve done it before. In this edition we have come up

with six planned tours and estimated times to get from A to B, with suggested lunch stops. Head out in your hired car or give your plan to a taxi driver and get a quote for the day. Take one tour or take all six! Barbados is full of wonderful surprises!

Feature Articles 202 Getting Around 204 Tailor-made Tours - For Just One Day 222 - 225 Tailor-made Tours - For the History Buff 216 Tailor-made Tours - For Yoga Lovers 217 Tailor-made Tours - For Photographers 234 Tailor-made Tours - Rum Shop Crawl 220 Gardens to Visit 206 Fun in Barbados - For Kids 210 Fun in Barbados - For Thrill Seekers! 217 Fun in Barbados - For Wheelchair Users Animal Flower Cave Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

Ins & Outs of Barbados  201


Getting

Around

Visitors to Barbados can hire a car, hire a retainer taxi, call a taxi when needed or catch the excellent public and private bus services.

Bus

• Bus fare is BB$2. • Buses begin running between 5 and 6am until midnight. • There are two public bus terminals in Bridgetown and one in Speightstown. Just as all roads lead to Bridgetown, so do most buses. The bus stops clearly inform you if you are heading “Out of City” or “Into City”. Notable exceptions are the “By Passes” which run from Speightstown to Oistins - by passing Bridgetown and Speightstown to the Grantley Adams International Airport via the eastern side of the island. • The public buses are larger and blue with a yellow stripe, the private route buses are slightly smaller and yellow with a blue stripe and the private route mini vans are white with a maroon stripe. • All the roadside bus shelters have girl’s names!

Taxi - A Few Useful Numbers West Coast

Team Baywatch 249-5115 / 242-2108 Sunset Crest Taxi Stand 432-1006 Royal Pavilion Taxi Stand 422-1260

South Coast Accra Beach Taxi Stand 435-6727 / 435-8527 / 228-6591 Atlantic Taxi Assoc at the GAI Airport 420-2846

Bridgetown Bajan Transport Services 233-0864

South East Coast Emmanuel Tours & Taxi Services 824-4254 / 624-1999 The Crane Taxi Stand 423-6220 Ext. 7100

East Coast Sam’s Tours and Taxi Service 233-3181

You can catch the Route 1E bus to Bathsheba from the Harbour Road bus terminal in Bridgetown

202  Adventure & Discovery

Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier


Take in a drive-in movie “al fresco” - their equipment is state of the art!

Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

Rental Car • Visitors must obtain a visitor’s permit . • Car hire companies issue visitor’s permits at BB$10 each. • Visitor’s permits are also obtainable from the Barbados Licensing Authority in the Pine, St. Michael; Oistins, Christ Church or Speightstown, St. Peter. • A visitor’s permit is valid for two months from the date of issue. • Seat belts are compulsory by law. • The price of gasoline fluctuates. At press time the price is BB$3.42/litre. • The City speed limit is 40 km/h, Secondary roads are 60 km/h, and the ABC Highway is 80 km/h. • Download the MyDestination/Barbados App to help you find your way around. It is free but for a charge of US$6 you can get a good Sat Nav service. It also has a wealth of information about Barbados for visitors. • The roundabout system of lanes: when taking the first left exit off the roundabout you should remain in the left lane; when proceeding straight, take either lane and filter at the exit, all other exits off the roundabout remain in the right lane. Always give way to traffic on your right at the roundabout. • Visitors are easily identifiable on the road by the ‘H’ number plate and Bajans are usually accommodating of your confusion and always willing to point you in the right direction. • Authorized security personnel at all attractions and places of interest are usually in uniform, so do not pay anyone else who claims to be “security” to guard your vehicle. • Please be careful with your possessions and place them in the boot/trunk wherever possible and lock your car. • If you have an accident, leave your vehicle in its position and call your car hire company and the police immediately – do not admit liability. • For Police dial 211 and ambulance 511.

Ins & Outs of Barbados  203


Tailor-made T urs For just one day

9am Flower Forest or Hunte’s Gardens Go to both or either of these wonderful gardens. They are within five minutes of each other in the lush hills of St. Joseph and neither take that long to visit. Hunte’s Gardens serves fresh lemonade and rum punch and the Flower Forest serves snacks and light lunches including delicious fish cakes!

11am Bathsheba Drive towards the T junction at Blackmans where you turn left and follow the road until you descend down Horse Hill and past the St. Joseph Parish Church, abandoned due to land slippage. When you reach the four way juncltion at the bottom of the hill, go straight into the seaside village of Bathsheba. At the other end of the coastal road as you start to head up hill, you will see signs for Atlantis Hotel in Tent Bay. This is a good stop for a drink and one option for lunch.

1pm Ermy Bourne Highway (East Coast Rd.) Turn left at the junction after leaving Atlantis and head uphill. Turn right and follow the road back to the junction where you went down into Bathsheba. Continue straight downhill, turning right at the bottom and head down to Cattlewash. You can park at the bottom of the hill and check out the rock pools. This area is not safe for swimming.

1.30pm Belleplaine and St. Andrew’s Church Drive through Belleplaine where you have an option of stopping for lunch at the Sand Dunes Bar and Restaurant - they do excellent and very reasonably priced fish cutters (sandwiches). Turn right at the junction and follow the road to the roundabout by St. Andrew’s Parish Church - stop and take a look at one of the oldest Anglican churches in the island. Take the second exit off the roundabout and continue until you come to a sign marked ‘Shorey Village’ where you turn right. The aunt of former world middleweight boxing champion Nigel Benn has a charming old traditional rum shop on the corner - ‘Nigel Benn Auntie Bar’, which is worth a stop for a beastly cold drink and a chat with the famous auntie and proprietor Lucille Hall. Inset > The Café at the Flower Forest serves tasty local snacks and light lunches Right > Hunte’s Gardens Photos: Andrew Huslmeier

Ins & Outs Tip As you tour Barbados, take the same precautions that you would at home. The crime rate is low in Barbados but, as with everywhere in the world, it does exist.

204  Adventure & Discovery


Above > Morgan Lewis Windmill Below > Rum Casks at St. Nicholas Abbey; Coastal Scenery at the Animal Flower Cave; Inside the Animal Flower Cave

The Music Rocks in Bathsheba with the hills of the Scotland District in the background Photos: Andrew Hulsmeier

2pm Morgan Lewis Windmill and Cherry Tree Hill Drive up the hill, stopping at the last surviving windmill of over 600 that used to grind the sugar cane. Stop for a photo at the top of the hill.

2.30pm St. Nicholas Abbey Well worth stopping to see and taste! See pages 230-233.

4pm Animal Flower Cave Ending your day at the Animal Flower Cave means that you can have a swim in the cave, sea conditions permitting, or enjoy sundowners in their new restaurtant with the incredible clifftop scenery and tasty local food.

  205


Fun in Barbad s For kids

The Beach The calm sea of the entire west coast and Carlisle Bay is ideal for children. On the south coast, Miami Beach has a lovely shallow side that children enjoy. The end of Accra Beach close to the beach bar is also great for small children. Drill Hall is ideal for picnics with plenty of shade and pools for swimming. The rock pools at Bathsheba are great but they are tidal so check if it is low tide before you go.

Glass Bottom Boat A glass bottom boat is an easy way for young children to enjoy the coral reef. Shamon Too 233-6089 or Team Baywatch 249-5115.

Barbados Wildlife Reserve and Grenade Hall Signal Station and Forest This attraction is enjoyed by everyone. See overleaf.

Farley Hill Just across the road from the Reserve, Farley Hill has lots of space to run around and a small childrens playground. There are picnic tables throughout the park.

Concorde Experience It is a wonderful experience to step aboard this supersonic aircraft. Children tend to particularly enjoy the simulated flying machine and multi-media presentations which are shown on the side of the actual aircraft. It is located next to Grantley Adams Int’l Airport. For more information call 420-7738.

Welchman Hall Gully A lovely stroll through this gully includes sightings of monkeys, giant bamboo and the chance to search for nutmegs and cloves. Proprietor Deborah Brancker runs popular children’s camps during the school holidays. Inset > The Concorde Experience Right > Welchman Hall Gully - Fun adventure for kids = natural playground Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

Ins & Outs Tip Be sure that both you and your children are well protected with sun screen and insect repellant.

206  Adventure & Discovery


Above > The beach at Sandy Lane Below > Arlington House Museum; Bottom > Taking a ride on the tram at Harrison’s Cave Photos: Andrew Hulsmeier

Team Baywatch Glass Bottom Boat Tours Call: 249-5115 or 232-8157

Arlington Museum This small state of the art museum tells the story of the rich maritime past of Speightstown with multi-media presentations, interactive displays and a talking pirate that children particularly enjoy!

Animal Flower Cave These are sea caves in the cliffs of the northern coast with a restaurant, cliffside seating and a small playground for children.

Chefette Barbados’ own fast food chain, Chefette, has playgrounds at Warrens and Welches on the ABC Highway, Black Rock on Highway 1, Rockley on the south coast, Charles Rowe Bridge in St. George and Six Roads in St. Philip.

Harrison’s Cave Harrison’s Cave is an amazing underground cave stream system, with awesome caverns and crystallized formations. See page 218.

207


Ins & Outs Tips Feeding time is 2pm! Please leave all feeding to the Reserve staff!

Barbados Wildlife Reserve & Grenade Hall Signal Station Below > Reticulated Python is 30 years old and weighs 200lbs Above > Leron Bovelle holding an iguana

Things you might not know! • Baby Green Monkeys are born blue. • The largest collection of Red footed tortoises is here! Over 200! • Cuban Iguanas swim and can hold their breath under water for 30 minutes! • Our Reticulated Python is 30 years old and weighs 200lbs! • Brocket deers hide their fawns during the day to avoid being eaten! • Patagonian Maras look like rabbits in high heels! Open everyday 10am-5pm. Last admission at 4pm. Refreshment bar is open everyday, Snack Café is open Monday to Friday. Tel (246) 422-8826 bprc-wr@caribsurf.com | Farley Hill, St. Peter

208  Adventure & Discovery


Barbados Green Monkey Photo: Sue Holder


Fun in Barbad s For Thrill seekers!

Harrison’s Cave Eco Tours Buckle on your head lamps and knee guards and explore one of Barbados’ natural wonders as only the early explorers did. See breathtaking crystallized formations. The tour, which leaves daily at 9am and noon, lasts for four hours and has rave reviews in Trip Advisor.

Kite Surfing Silver Sands is the place for kite surfing in Barbados. Brian “deAction Man” Talma and his team offer 6 hour packages divided into 2 to 3 sessions that will get you going in this exciting sport.

Windsurfing The Sandy Beach lagoon in Worthing is the ideal place to learn to windsurf while Silver Sands is the place for intermediate and advanced windsurfers. De Action Beach Shop offers equipment rentals and professional beginners lessons.

Surfing Christian Boos of Boosy’s Surf School is mobile and goes where the waves are best. He teaches all the lessons himself and safety is his number one priority. He has Santa Cruz surfboards for rent ranging from 6’ to 10’2”. Call 267-3182.

Thriller and Island Safari See the wild side of Barbados in 4x4 Land Rovers and then in the high speed Thriller power boat. The Surf and Turf Tour runs on Thursdays and Saturdays and includes snorkeling and lunch. If your budget allows, their private tours are excellent. Call 434-8414.

Microlight Flights Fly in an open cockpit microlight aircraft with Paul Nugent from the airport along the stunning east coast. Call 261-1676.

Above > “Chippy” Bayne wake boarding at St. Peter’s Bay Right > Paul Nugent doing safety checks for his flying mate before they take off

Ins & Outs Tip Safety first! Exercise caution and use your common sense!

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Above > The Thriller high speed power boat is available for private charter. Take a cruise up the coast, stopping for swimming and snorkeling. Below > Brian “deAction Man” Talma paddle surfing at “Cow Pen” in St. Lucy with a good north swell. Bottom > You can now test your car racing skills in a ‘Race of Champions’ (ROC) car at the Bushy Park Circuit in St. Philip.

Silver Sands is THE place for kitesurfing. DeAction Beach Shop offers 6 hour packages divided into 2 to 3 sessions which will get you to the beginning stages of kitesurfing. Photo Courtesy of Brian ‘deAction Man’ Talma

Paddle Boarding (SUPing) In five minutes you will have the hang of this sport. Paddle Barbados (249-2787), What’SUP 243-7878 and De Action Beach Shop (428-2027) all offer SUP lessons, rentals and tours. Paddle in Carlisle Bay or along the west coast but when you’re more advanced call any of the SUP companies for an amazing SUP tour with waves.

Drive a Race of Champions Car As of December 2014, you can have unique ROC driving experiences on the spectacular parallel track and the new ROC Skills Challenge Course at the new Bushy Park Circuit in St. Philip. Specially designed to test a range of driving skills, you will have a unique chance to race in identical cars to the legends of motor sport on the very same track. You will be able to learn how to master the array of tricky corners, 180 and 360 degree turns. You will receive images from onboard cameras, photos and time sheets providing a direct comparison with the world’s best drivers! www.bushyparkbarbados.com info@bushyparkbarbados.com

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Island Safari Tailor-Made Charters Perfectly designed to suit your needs, a tailor-made charter is ideal for families, small groups or just someone who prefers to take charge of their holiday! You say when & where, stay or leave! Choose from 3hr, 4hr or 6hr charters. There is no need to worry if you are

Adventure Safari For a day of excitement and thrills, choose their Adventure Safari tour. Your driver/ guide will navigate you on and off road to some breathtakingly beautiful bays on the island. Equipped with his/her great sense of humour and knowledge of their homeland, your day will be spent in full awe of our island. See some of the historical masterpieces of Barbados such as the Lion at Gun Hill Signal Station and Morgan Lewis Windmill – one of the only two working sugar mills today and listed in the 1996 World Monuments Watch list. Or wet your feet at the Bathsheba stop, named to reflect how beautiful this part of the island truly is. Explore the rugged northern coast line and the blow holes of Little Bay before enjoying a sumptuous Bajan Buffet Lunch. Bring your camera along with extra batteries and extra film, you don’t want to miss a beat!

uncertain of where to go and what

Surf’n’Turf Adventure

to do, their professional guides are

This fun and unforgettable adventure combo offers an intimate look at Barbados as you explore our island overland and underwater - complete with a fantastic shipwreck snorkel experience and a BBQ lunch. First, board your driver guided and custom designed 4x4 Jeep to meander your way in convoy into the interior of the island, passing by the greenery of fields of sugarcane and the architecture of plantation estates in the countryside. These parts are considered ‘the heart of Barbados!” Enjoy a short eco walk through Welchman Hall Gully and its panoramic views of the eastern coastline before setting off again on your off-road adventure. Within 3 hours, you will be at the popular Carlisle Bay to head out into the bay by powerboat to snorkel with some of the most beautiful tropical fish you’ll ever see! The next hour of your life will be unforgettable as these tame, friendly creatures swim right next to you, so close you could touch them! Now it’s time to relax on the beach, recharge in the sun and have your lunch. Coach/van transfers will be provided for your return trip to your hotel or villa.

fully capable of planning a tour that’s enjoyable from start to finish. A private charter on the Thriller is amazing! Inquire about their add-on packages.

For reservations Call (246) 429-5337 www.islandsafari.bb | info@islandsafari.bb

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Alan on the slopes of Krakatoa

Alan Emtage Unsung Tech Hero By Sarah Venable

He invented a tool that the modern world can’t live without In the infancy of computing, before the internet allowed us instant access to untold volumes of information, finding archived facts took hours. There must be a better way, thought a young computer science student at McGill in the late 1980s. What if I could automate the process? He wrote some code to do this and called it Archie—Archive without the V. Thus was born the first search engine, predecessor to Google. The young man was Alan Emtage. A natural polymath, he was born here in 1964 to a distinguished Barbadian family that encouraged curiosity and investigation. When he won a Barbados Scholarship, he chose the

relatively new field of computing, and the rest is history for which he gets scant credit. Alan is now Chief Technology Officer at Mediapolis in New York City, but spends most of his time gaily globe-trotting between his property in Barbados, his cottage in Provincetown, Massachusetts, and far flung destinations in pursuit of peak experiences. (He’s a regular at the creatively extreme Burning Man Festival). He keeps followers posted on Facebook, and enjoys provoking debate on issues like civil liberties and intellectual property. “I’ve always been searching for something,” he said. “Go, Baje!” say we.

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Potteryin Barbados Barbados has had a sustainable pottery industry since the 17th century with a good supply of natural clays in the Scotland District

T

he excellent quality pottery made on the island is truly an authentic souvenir of Barbados. The traditional potteries in Chalky Mount in St. Joseph, Pelican Village in Bridgetown and Fairfield, St. Michael make beautiful turtle wall placques and other ornamental ware, lighting shades, the iconic monkey jar for serving water, the traditional pie crust plant pots to name just some of their products. Earthworks Pottery in St. Thomas has taken the pottery industry in the Caribbean to another level of quality and design. They produce an extensive selection of table ware that is lead free and can withstand the dishwasher and microwave ovens. Indeed they produce some of the best and most collectible functional ware in the entire region.

Their facility at Earthworks complex has twelve Barbadian master potters producing all kinds of everything and visitors are invited to tour the entire studio freely. It is friendly, fun and the pottery is very tempting - from a coffee mug right up to an entire dinner service. Happily, they arrange shipping to anywhere in the world or pack it up in a box for easy hand carrying.

Right > David Spieler ‘reworking’ the wheel Below > Earthworks will package your pottery for easy hand carrying or arrange shipping it home for you. Photos: Andrew Hulsmeier

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Above > The traditional Barbadian light shade from a pottery in Chalky Mount, St. Andrew



Tailor-made T urs For Yoga Lovers

Yoga instructor, Kristie Hutchinson, offers tours around the island to get in touch with the tranquility of nature and embrace the energy of yoga in the outdoors. There is no better place to experience the true essence of yoga than in a natural environment where peace resides. Don’t miss this unique opportunity to draw from the elements for a truly ethereal feel.

Option One St. Michael - Barbados Museum & Historical Society Christ Church - Sanctuary Café at Graeme Hall St. Philip - The Crane Resort cliff side and Foul Bay St. George - Gun Hill Signal Station St. Thomas - Welchman Hall Gully/Harrison’s Cave gardens St. John - Codrington College

Option Two St. Lucy - Little Bay St. Peter - Farley Hill/St. Nicholas Abbey St. Joseph - Bathsheba St. Joseph - Hunte’s Gardens/Flower Forest/Naniki Restaurant St. James - Sugar Hill

Option Three Any five of the above locations depending on our starting point.

Half day tours run on Tuesdays. Final booking for tour must be made by Monday at midday. Light snacks and local beverages will be served, however, feel free to walk with a packed lunch to eat as we travel around the island. Wear comfortable clothes so you are able to stretch freely. Bring a towel and a swimsuit for swimming. Yoga mats will be provided. Start time: 7:00am Price US$66 / BB$132 Adults Tel: Kristie Hutchinson (246) 236-9568

Ins & Outs Tip Make a memory. A yoga day in Barbados!

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Fun in Barbad s For Wheelchair Users

Wheelchair users can enjoy touring the island at all of the attractions listed below, safe in the knowledge that they can access some or all of the areas there. St. James Church Animal Flower Cave Restaurant (not the cave) St. Nicholas Abbey Farley Hill Barbados Wildlife Reserve - partial Flower Forest Welchman Hall Gully Harrison’s Cave Earthworks Pottery Gun Hill Signal Station Orchid World Exclusive Cottons of the Caribbean Tour Codrington College St. John’s Church Concorde Experience Pelican Craft Centre Barbados Museum & Historical Society George Washington House National Armory and Cannon Museum Mallalieu Motor Museum Changing of the Sentry Mount Gay Rum Tours - partial Museum of Parliament and National Heroes Gallery Nidhe Israel Synagogue and Museum

Ins & Outs Tip The Barbados Council for The Disabled rents beach/sea wheelchairs for US$50 per day with a US$150 deposit. Delivery service available if required. Tel: (246) 427-8136 | email: bcd@caribsurf.com

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Welchman Hall, St. Thomas | Tel: (246) 417-3700 | Fax: (246) 417-3709 reservations@harrisonscave.com | www.harrisonscave.com @HarrisonsCave /HarrisonsCaveBarbados

Harrison’s Cave is an amazing underground cave stream system, with awesome caverns and crystallized formations. This phenomenal underground attraction is one of Barbados’ premier visitor attractions, truly a must see when on vacation! Located in the central uplands of Barbados, it is a magnificent attraction with unmatched beauty anywhere else in the Caribbean. This world-class attraction continues to grow with exciting tours including their Scenic Gully Tours, WalkIn Cave Tours, Eco Adventure Tours and amazing educational programmes like the Harrison’s Cave Bat Programme and Junior Explorers Tour. Harrison’s Cave offers visitors to Barbados an entire new world to discover in one attraction. Unearth the Adventure! Harrison’s Cave is also the ideal picturesque venue for wedding receptions, meetings and corporate retreats, Christmas parties as well as lunch and dinner functions. Open daily (except Good Friday, Easter Sunday, 1st Monday in August and Christmas Day) with tours from 8:45am to 3:45pm.

Historic Churches of Barbados

This Second Edition follows a much smaller first edition published by Art Heritage Publications, Barbados, in 1984. It evolved from notes of the architect Barbara Hill, intended for a grant application to study the church architecture of Barbados. This edition is further expanded by Professor Fraser, with more church history and a much more in-depth analysis of Barbadian church architecture. It emphasises the enormous impact of Bishop Coleridge, with his passion for Neo Gothic architecture, on the design of all of our churches, from his arrival in 1825 until the 20th century. It is also much expanded to include many more of the Methodist, Moravian and Roman Catholic churches, as well as the splendid Nidhe Israel Synagogue. An entirely new suite of splendid photographs has been provided by Mike Toy, eloquently illustrating the richness of our many historic “Pillars of Worship”. The proceeds of sales are being given by the publishers and author towards the restoration of the Cathedral of St. Michael and All Angels. Available at leading bookstores or from church members throughout Barbados or telephone Miller Publishing at (246) 421-6700.

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Barbados PhotoAdventure With Ronnie Carrington Join professional photographer Ronnie Carrington, on the Barbados PhotoAdventure - a private or group outing to rural Barbados, tailored just for you! Experience the soul of Barbados, with or without instruction. Ronnie has been recording our folk life and landscape for many years, creating the fascinating black & white images that make the Carrington Collection. His recent book, “Pathways, thoughts on the journey”, combines natural environment images and inspirational verses – a unique Caribbean souvenir. Images are available as prints, posters, on canvas and note cards.

Tel: (246) 230-9170 www.ronniecarrington.com info@ronniecarrington.com Gallery: 20 Margaret Terrace, Pine Gardens, St. Michael

Ins & Outs Tip It is best to head out early when it’s still relatively cool. The soft morning light works best for photography.

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T

Gardens to visit

here are five gardens open to the public, each quite different and all well worth a visit. Flower Forest, Welchman Hall Gully and Hunte’s Gardens are close together in the lush highlands of St. Joseph and St. Thomas. Orchid World is a few minutes drive away in St. George and Andromeda Gardens is on the slopes of the east coast above Bathsheba in St. Joseph. Flower Forest offers a relatively easy walk with sweeping views of the Atlantic coastline. Owner David Spieler has been planting many specialist tropical hybrid flowers throughtout the forest which he generously shares with Barbados Horticultural Society for their gold medal exhibits at the Chelsea Flower Show in London. There is a spacious central facility serving light lunches including Angela’s delicious fish cakes, salads, sandwiches, icecream and drinks. The garden gazebo is lovely for weddings. Nearby, Anthony Hunte continues to develop his stunning garden, opening up several new areas at the end of 2014. His garden presents a riot of tropical colour for the eyes while the ears are treated to classical music. Rum punch or lemonade is served. Take a picnic – there are plenty of comfortable chairs and tables throughout! Orchid World has a fine collection of orchids. It is a wonderful place to photograph these extraordinary tropical blooms in colours that are quite rare in plant life. Historic Welchman Hall Gully was one of the Barbados National Trust’s first acquisitions. Today it is under the energetic stewardship of Deborah Branker who works tirelessly to keep the gully filled with an abundance of flourishing, exotic tropical plants and trees. A wild troop of Barbados Green Monkeys resides there. Andromeda Botanic Gardens is in the picturesque seaside village of Bathsheba on the east coast. It was founded over fifty years ago by world renowned horticulturalist Iris Bannochie. The lush gardens span 6½ acres and host a horticultural collection containing about 650 tropical species from around world. It is now owned by the Barbados National Trust under the stewardship of Sharon Cooke. Besides tours, they also offer several levels of courses on gardening and landscaping.

David Spieler has introduced beautiful hybrid tropical flowers at the Flower Forest Photos: Andrew Hulsmeier

There are several new areas at Hunte’s Gardens

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Find your tranquility...

Eprature perovit aturest aut eaque sunto explab ius re, quunda Photo: Photographer

Open Daily 8-4 Tel 433 8152 Richmond St Joseph Barbados


Tailor-made T urs For the History Buff

9:15am Each Thursday Historic Garrison Tour A UNESCO World Heritage Site Every Thursday there is a 3 hour award winning tour of the Historic Garrison put on by the Garrison Consortium with World Federation certified guides. This walk and coach tour describes the connections between the Barbados Garrison, the extension of the English Civil War to Barbados when Admiral Ayscue, under instructions from Oliver Cromwell, attempted to invade Barbados, and the roll of Barbados as a logistics and intelligence gathering centre during the American War of Independence. It starts at George Washington House with a movie about America’s founding father’s visit here in 1751, then a guided tour of the house and a viewing of the tunnels. (For a full tour of these fascinating tunnels check the Barbados Garrison website.) It then continues to Charles Fort in Carlisle Bay where you are invited to imagine the sea battles which raged there. From here it is on to the Officers Mess at the Barbados Defence Force for a drink and tour of St. Ann’s Fort and the National Armory Museum. Barbados has the finest collection of English 17th century cannon anywhere in the world. After that the tour goes to the former military prison at the Barbados Museum and Historical Society and then finishes with a flourish at the Main Guard Clock Tower with the changing of the sentry parade. Book on www.barbadosgarrison.org, BB$88. For BB$8 extra you can obtain transportation both ways.

8.30am or 12.30pm ‘Coffee Barbados’ Café You can have both breakfast before the tour and/or lunch after the tour at the relaxing café on the grounds of George Wahington House. Delicious freshly baked goodies and a good variety of salads.

1.30pm The Barbados Museum If you want to know about Barbados’ history going back 5-10,000 years this is the only place to go. You will need about 2 hours to enjoy it. It has the best heritage gift shop on the island with an excellent selection of books. See overleaf.

3.30pm Wildey House We finish our tour at Wildey House, the headquarters of the Barbados National Trust. This is a splendid mid 18th century house with a very good collection of West Indian furniture of the 18th and 19th centuries. It is located on the left just past Carter’s General Store on the ABC Highway.

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The Garrison Tunnels at George Washington House are now open for public viewing Photo: Peter Stevens


Above > The Officers Mess where members of Garrison Historic Tour enjoy a drink on Thursday mornings before the changing of the sentry. Photo taken from “A Complete & Concise Military History of Barbados”

‘George Washington’ awaiting his guests arrival for dinner at his home in the Historic Garrison, a UNESCO World Heritage site

Dinner with George A unique and prestigious interactive dining and theatrical experience, at which the 1st US President, George

Washington, regales dinner guests with entertaining vignettes of his life’s story. The ambiance of warm candlelight and live baroque music transports one to the year 1751. Enjoy a sumptuous 5 course 18th century dinner in the very dining room of the house that George Washington spent 6 weeks of his life, when just 19 years old. Call 228-5461 for reservations and further information. www.barbadosgarrison.org

Garrison Night Tours Every other Friday night. An entertaining night tour through the Historic Garrison dramatizing crime, punishment, murder and execution. Cost BB$20-25 - Reservations are not necessary. Call Peter 233-1648 or James 233-2601 or visit the barbadosgarrison on facebook or visit www.barbadosgarrison.org

National Armory & Cannon Museum Paul Wilton offers personalized tours for 1 to 12 people of this splendid 17th century fort. Converted into an interesting museum housing some particularly fine examples of cannon including an Elizabethan gun of 1593. Tel: (246) 829-1146 Adm: BB$50 per group Address: Historic Garrison. Open by appointment only Mon. - Fri. 10am - 12pm.

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Mallalieu Motor Museum B ill Mallalieu, owner of this charming motor museum, bemoans the fact that his newest car (the one that’s done the fewest miles) gives the most trouble. Although his love affair with cars goes back to the 1930’s when he was a child in Barbados’ Scotland District, he says that 99% of the fun at his Motor Museum is the wonderful and interesting visitors that he interacts with. Well, a large percentage of the fun that visitors have at his Motor Museum is meeting and chatting with Mr. Mallalieu. His passion for beautifully made motor cars is infectious and he shares his endless knowledge in an eloquent and entertaining manner. Along with his knowledge of the classics - “the older the cars, the better they work” - his knowledge of the global car industry today is extensive and he enjoys a discussion on the subject. Each year he has a couple of additions and some more items of interest to share with his visitors. Love cars? Drop by one morning when Mr. Mallalieu is there. Open during normal working hours | Admission BB$20 Tel: (246) 426-4640 Pavilion Court, Hastings, Christ Church | billmallalieu@caribsurf.com

Ins & Outs Tip

Mr. Mallalieu’s classic American Austin Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

- This is the only ‘old car’ museum in Barbados, many are in perfect working condition. - Cars on display include: Rover 75, 1955, Allard P1, Bentley Drophead Coupe 1947, Citroen Big 15, Triumph TR4, Volvo 122S, 1963, Chevrolet Master 6 and more...

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Barbados Museum & Historical Society Research Your Barbadian History and Lineage Barbados’ history is interwoven in many ways with the histories of other countries. Discover these connections and much more in the Museum’s Shilstone Memorial Library. Need help with family research? Contact the Museum’s Librarian at E-mail: library@barbmuse.org.bb. Delve into rare West Indian documentation, archival documents, genealogical records, photographs, maps and books. The Shilstone memorial Library is open Monday to Friday 9:00 am – 1:00p.m. Educational programmes for school children are conducted regularly and a range of talks and public programmes are also offered. In order to offer these programmes and educational activities, the Museum welcomes members and volunteers. Check the website for further information on current and upcoming programmes and opportunities to be involved.

The Home of Barbadian Culture and Heritage The best way to learn about the people of Barbados is through a visit to the Barbados Museum & Historical Society, located in the island’s sole UNESCO World Heritage property. Learn about a rich history, from the earliest inhabitants to folk life. There’s something for everyone – natural history, Barbadian social history, archaeology, decorative arts, military history, African artefacts and prints and paintings all within the Museum’s collection serve as mementos of your visit and can be purchased in the Gift Shop. The wide range of books on historical topics and merchandise reflecting the island’s heritage make great keepsakes and gifts. There’s always something new to see, as the Museum regularly offers special exhibitions and exciting activities and events.

Ins & Outs Tips In a 2 hour wander through the museum you will get a superb overview of 10,000 years of Barbados’ history. The museum has the best heritage shop on the island with an excellent selection of books.

Special Events The Museum’s lush gardens and cobblestone courtyard provide the perfect setting for weddings, special celebrations and photo shoots.

Open Monday-Saturday: 9am-5pm & Sundays 2-6pm | Closed on public holidays Tel: 427-0201 or 436-5946 info@barbmuse.org.bb www.barbadosmuseum.org

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Tailor-made T urs For the History Buff

St. James Parish Church There are tour guides in attendance to show you around the oldest church on the island. There is no entrance fee but donations are welcome.

Arlington Museum in Speightstown This is a small state of the art interactive museum telling the story of Speightstown and its roll in the sugar industry.

Farley Hill National Park This national park was opened by HRH Queen Elizabeth II in 1966. The ruin was once the home of sugar baron and legislator, Sir Graham Briggs when it was considered to be the finest mansion on the island.

St. Nicholas Abbey This is one of only three Jacobean houses in existence throughout the Americas. In addition to the house, they also produce their own rum and have a small restaurant and gift shop. See pages 230-233

Morgan Lewis Windmill This Barbados National Trust treasure is the last remaining working windmill from what was once over 600 on the island. Imagine, if you will, the island covered in fields of sugar cane, as far as the eye could see, and populated with these structures. This was what George Washington would have seen when he toured the island on horseback in 1751.

Chalky Mount Potteries These potteries are much the same as they have been for the past three hundred years.

St. John’s Parish Church A beautiful neo-Gothic church with wonderful views and a very interesting graveyard.

Codrington College An eighteenth century seminary with a small chapel, views of Conset Bay, a huge lily pond and a wonderful aura of peace. Inset > A special bonus at Codrington College is the small mid-seventeenth century mansion house of the Codrington family to the left of the main building. Right > The ruin of the mansion at Farley Hill.

Ins & Outs Tip Follow our route and stop at the places that interest you most

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Above > St. John’s Parish Church Below > Sunbury House serves afternoon tea and private dinners in the main dining room of the house. Bottom > There is a new walking path from Gun Hill Signal Station down to the lion.

Morgan Lewis is on the World Monuments List

Photo: Jonathan Farmer

Sunbury Great House See overleaf.

Gun Hill Signal Station and Lion This is the best preserved of the 6 signal stations erected by the resident British Army for inter-parish communications after the uprising of 1815. The lion was carved out of a single piece of rock in the nineteenth century.

St. George’s Parish Church This eighteenth century gothic church has a magnificent altar painting by the famous American artist Benjamin West.

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Sunbury House A Majestic Historic Barbadian Home Set in the heart of the St. Philip countryside, Sunbury is a superb example of a Barbadian sugar estate great house. Built over 300 years ago, Sunbury has a rich history. Originally known as Chapmans, then Branckers, the house was renamed Sunbury some time around 1767 when the new owners named it after their family home in England. The historically listed building is magnificently furnished and it contains one of the country’s superior collections of antiques,

china and silver, as well as a most interesting display of old prints. The cellars,

Ins & Outs Tip The traditional Bajan Buffet lunch, served daily, is delicious and great value for money!

originally used for storing root vegetables grown on the plantation, now house the Caribbean’s finest collection of antique carriages. In addition there is a fascinating assembly of household items that many years ago were part of everyday domestic life on a plantation. Sunbury is the only plantation house where every room is open to the public, and visitors are able to view everything from the cellars to the bedrooms. A leisurely stroll through Sunbury House in the company of an informative guide, will give you a very vivid impression of the gracious lifestyle of a bygone Barbadian era. Throughout the grounds can be found more fine authentic examples of old carts, mule and oxen drawn equipment once used on the plantation. According to the time of day you visit you may wish to enjoy breakfast, lunch, afternoon tea or a refreshing drink in the garden setting of the Courtyard Restaurant and Bar. For a special occasion you may have an elegant five course candlelight dinner in the very same dining room where the notorious Sam

Lord used to come for dinner back in the 1830’s. Sunbury is also an ideal location for any size wedding. For reservations or further information (246) 423-6270 www.barbadosgreathouse.com | sunbury@caribsurf.com

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Exclusive Cottons of the Caribbean From the Fields to the World’s Best Cotton! West Indian Sea Island Cotton (WISIC), a unique variety of the species Gossypium Barbadense, is an internationally certified fibre, considered to be among the finest, most brilliant cottons

in the world comparable to both silk and cashmere. It is also the most rare of cottons, composing only a fraction of 1% of the world’s supply and commands the highest price. It is carefully hand harvested in Barbados, put through a special ginnery, and shipped abroad to be converted into fabric by industry experts. Its resulting luxurious textile has been called “The Cloth of Kings!” It’s hard not to feel like royalty when wrapped in a supple robe, caressed by a fine garment, or reclining on satiny white bedding made of West Indian Sea Island Cotton. The cotton ginnery at Groves in St. George offers guided tours Monday to Friday hourly between 10am and 2pm. Calling ahead is recommended. At the Visitor Centre there is a display room where WISIC articles can be purchased or ordered, including but not limited to ladies’ and gentlemen’s attire, linens, shower mitts and wash cloths, interior decor and novelty items. These can be further personalised with hand-painting or embroidery. The team at Exclusive Cottons looks forward to sharing more with you about Barbados’ remarkable and regal cotton!

Ins & Outs Tip This year at their ginnery in St. George, Exclusive Cottons has West Indian Sea Island cotton fabrics by the meter, ladies lingerie, gents boxers and some of the best sheets that money can buy!

To arrange an exclusive tour of the Exclusive Cottons of the Caribbean’s ginnery and visitor centre, please call (246) 433-3108 www.eccicotton.bb.com

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St. Nicholas Abbey

350 Years and a New Generation By Senator Professor Emeritus Henry Fraser

The “New Generation” five year old St. Nicholas Abbey Barbados Rum celebrates a new generation of Warrens

I

’ve been to more than two dozen Caribbean countries and some 40 other countries around the world, and I can honestly say that there’s no historic site that moves me more than St. Nicholas Abbey. Steeped in history, beauty and romance, it’s not only the passion of the Warren family who now own it and have lovingly restored it, but for the visitor it has everything to admire and enjoy. It’s a piece of paradise all its own – a Jacobean mansion from an ancient time, sitting in beautiful formal gardens but hidden away in a mature tropical forest, with sugar bond and carriage houses, boiling house and syrup factory, ancient mill wall and state of the art rum distillery, a splendid café, and so much more. St. Nicholas Abbey is not actually an Abbey, although its antiquity and authenticity gives it an ethereal, almost holy atmosphere!

The plantation was originally owned by Benjamin Berringer and John Yeamans. Berringer built the mansion house around 1658, presumably with house plans he brought from England that year, as there are corner fire places at the front corners of the house, when our minimum temperatures rarely go as low as 20 degrees C. Some of the drama and romance of the house centres around the alleged procurement of the murder of Berringer by Yeamans, by poisoning, and Yeamans promptly married Margaret, Berringer’s wife. But Yeamans must have been a charismatic man – murdering for love, a Council Member, and knighted by King Charles the Second, he was appointed Governor of Carolina, a colony settled from Barbados after a proposal by Sir John Colleton of the Colleton plantation near to Nicholas. He was the “JR Ewing” of 17th century Barbados.

Built in 1658, just 30 years after Barbados was first settled, St. Nicholas Abbey is one of only three existing Jacobean Mansions in the Western Hemisphere


The “new generation� five year old St. Nicholas Abbey Barbados Rum will be on the market from January 2015


It’s a golden example and a splendid role model for working with local history, culture and materials to produce a distinctive, high quality, marketable product in every way, to complement the amazing place that is St. Nicholas Abbey.

Top > Larry Warren (right) with sons Simon (left) and Shae (centre) and twin grandsons, Arthur and Henry – the “new generation” of Warrens. Middle > The great house showcases a wealth of tradition, including antiques and artifacts spanning the home’s 350-year history Bottom > The Rum Bond

232  St. Nicholas Abbey

The plantation and the mansion house passed to Berringer’s granddaughter Susanna, who married George Nicholas, and the name was changed to Nicholas. It was sold in the 1720s to Joseph Dottin, who gifted it to his daughter Christian on her marriage to Sir John Gay Alleyne – the most eminent Barbadian of the 18th century, whose name is associated, of course, with Mount Gay rum, of ancient provenance. Sir John added the triple arcaded Georgian portico to the East front of the house. From 1810 until 2006 the property has been owned by the Cumberbatch family and their descendants the Cave family. It seems that Sarah Cumberbatch and her husband Charles Cave combined the names of the Nicholas Plantation with St. Nicholas Parish and Bath Abbey near their home in Bristol to create the romantic and evocative name St. Nicholas Abbey. The Caves lived in Britain for most of the last 100 years and in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century the plantation was managed for them by this author’s great grandfather, Thaddeus “Bush” Deane. The last Cave owner, Lt. Col. Stephen Cave, took up residence in 1978, and this author was his physician! Col. Cave managed the plantation with enormous, almost heroic energy and he opened the house to the public. Larry Warren, brilliant Barbadian architect and his equally brilliant (and charming) wife Anna acquired the property in 2006 and set about restoring it, interpreting it and building on its history to create the amazing “product” that is St. Nicholas today. The Great House itself is a work of art, and the antiques and collectibles include beautiful items from the 18th and 19th centuries, unique pieces like the bed of the Empress Josephine and iconic Sailors’ Valentines. These are elegant shell ornaments created in Barbados in the nineteenth century and now enjoying a re-birth. An entire book could be written about the house and its contents, the gardens, the famous coral dripstones for purifying water from the roof for drinking (and today’s research shows that they worked!), the outdoor family privy with four seats, the stables and sugar bond that now house the museum, the bar and delicatessen, the rum tasting parlour, the shop and the little cinema for viewing the 1935 film of the sugar industry at


Nicholas! And across the yard is the boiling house and syrup plant, which grinds sugar cane from December to June, and the distillery. The St. Nicholas labelled rum was originally created at Foursquare Heritage Park distillery – a molasses based rum – and it is a rum of distinction, highly praised by rum connoisseur Helena Olsen (see the website). But Larry’s vision has been to produce rum on site, using the plantation’s own freshly ground cane and the traditional pot still method, in the new (awesome looking) distillery installed in 2009. It starts with the cane juice, processed on site into syrup and distilled, rather than using molasses, the base for most rums. The syrup plant produces 20,000 litres of syrup each year. This in turn produces a distinctive rum, aged in bourbon oak casks in the bond at St. Nicholas Abbey. The rum is bottled in beautifully designed bottles etched with an image of the Great House and sealed with a mahogany cork made from ancient local mahogany trees. It’s a unique, totally sustainable Nicholas plantation package! Preliminary samples of the 5 year rum are earning rave reviews, and it will go on sale in January 2015. One more point about sustainability: every conceivable combustible item – paper, boxes, palm fronds and wood from the forest around – all go into the production of brickettes to fuel the syrup plant! But what is even more extraordinary is the coincidence of this new generation of sugar cane product… St. Nicholas Abbey 5 year rum … with a new generation of Warrens! Larry and Anna’s son Simon and his wife Camilla are the proud parents of twin boys, Arthur and Henry, just four months old. Life is full of extraordinary coincidences and wonderful connections and circles. And so the “new generation” five year old St. Nicholas Abbey Barbados Rum celebrates the new generation of Warrens, Arthur and Henry, and their names are inscribed around the neck of the bottle. It is a splendid celebration of love and of passion for the heritage of Barbados and particularly of St. Nicholas Abbey and a plantation whose boundaries have not changed in 350 years. And it’s a golden example – a splendid role model - for working with local history, culture and materials to produce a distinctive, high quality, marketable product in every way, to complement the amazing place that is St. Nicholas Abbey – a site considered by many to be of UNESCO World Heritage global value. Tel (246) 422-8725 www.stnicholasabbey.com | stnicholasabbeyrum.com facebook.com/stnicholasabbey

The state-of-the-art distillery

Made entirely from recycled material collected around the plantation, these brickettes fuel the syrup plant

St. Nicholas Abbey is one of the most fascinating historic treasures in the Western Hemisphere

Ins & Outs of Barbados  233


Tailor-made T urs Rum Shop Crawl

9am Begin your day with a pork cutter breakfast at Fredericka’s at the junction of Chelsea Road and the Historic Garrison, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. This shop is the home of the traditional Bajan “lead pipe” - a sweet bread that lives up to its name. If you’re lucky you may catch some live Premier League football on the flat screen TV in Mr. Grant’s back room or just get some of his horse racing memories that come from a life of living next to the track.

10am Lexy’s Bar in the Bay Garden at Oistins may be famous for ballroom dancing at the fish fry, but in the day it’s perched on one of the island’s beautiful beaches and you can enjoy seeing the turtles swimming around the Oistins jetty. If you’re still hungry, there’s no shortage of vendors selling fish cutters to give you a good foundation for the day! Remember to go easy on the Bajan Pepper Sauce.

11am On the island’s picturesque east coast, in the quaint fishing village of Martins Bay, you will find Junior - rum shopkeeper, restaurateur, undertaker and taxi driver. His family business is the Bay Tavern - a popular lunch spot - especially on Thursdays when there are throngs of people enjoying a fish fry with DJ music.

12.30pm At the top of the hill above Bathsheba, is the Sweet Spot Bar. It affords a great view of the Scotland District in a cool breezy verandah.

2pm You can play dominoes with a world class view at Chalky Mount Bar in the district famed for its pottery. Inset > The Sweet Spot Bar in Bathsheba Right > Lucille Hall of Nigel Benn Auntie Bar Photos: Andrew Hulsmeier

Ins & Outs Tip

Do not drink and drive. Handy taxi stand numbers on page 202.

234  Adventure & Discovery


Above > Junior’s Bay Tavern in Martin’s Bay, St. John Below > Chalky Mount Bar in St. Joseph; Frederickas Bar in St. Michael Photos: Andrew Hulsmeier

Bottom > Slapping some Dominoes Photo: Mike Toy

You never know who you will meet in John Moore’s Bar on the west coast Photo: Mike Toy

3.30pm Former world middleweight boxing champion Nigel Benn has proved very useful to his aunt, Lucille Hall. The name of her shop proudly proclaims their relationship and it has been attracting visitors ever since he became famous. Her drinks are beastly cold and she’s still going stong!

5pm Sitting on some of the most valuable rum shop real estate in the island, John Moore’s Bar is the perfect place to see the sunset.

235


Beaches


T

he pounding waves of the Atlantic Ocean on the east coast and the tranquil Caribbean Sea on the west coast are a short drive

apart. In this year’s edition we have included a planned tour that takes you to a wonderful variety of the island’s best beaches. If you’ve never seen them, it’s a must do - if you’ve “been there done that”, it’s still a really wonderful day! Pack a picnic, pick up a picnic or just enjoy stopping along the way at one of our recommended eateries. And, a word to the wise - Barbados is just 13 degrees north of the equator so be sure to protect yourself from the sun.

Feature Articles 238  Tailor-made Tours - For the Beach Bum 240 Meet A Bajan - Chelsea Tuach

You can walk for quite a distance along the west coast - it is most enjoyable in the early morning or late afternoon. Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

Ins & Outs of Barbados  237


Tailor-made T urs For the Beach Bum

9am West Coast The west coast is just one lovely beach after another. They are at their best in the morning. We recommend Alleyne’s Bay, where you can swim with the turtles and have a drink at the Lone Star, or Mullins Beach with its vibrant beach bar and a lovely walk south to tranquil Gibbes Bay.

11am Little Bay The main attraction at Little Bay is the dramatic coastal scenery and the wild Atlantic ocean. Swimming here is not safe but you can take a cautious dip on the edge.

Noon Cattlewash This spectacular beach starts just after Belleplaine and runs for a few miles south. Park at the southern end and walk either way. South takes you to the beautiful stones brought down by Joe’s River. Nowhere here is safe to swim except the rock pools at low tide but the scenery of the Scotland District is amazing.

1.30pm Bottom Bay One of Barbados’ most photographed beaches. Swimming is not advised without a local guide, but it is safe for a strong swimmer who knows how to handle large breakers.

2.30pm The Crane Beach Drive towards the beach from the roundabout. There is a beach access over stepping stones. You may be tempted to stay! Swim within your depth at all times. Inset > Beach loungers at Alleyne’s Bay, St. James, west coast; Little Bay, St. Lucy, north-east coast. Right > Cattlewash, east coast Photos: Andrew Hulsmeier

Ins & Outs Tip There are many more beaches to enjoy, each unique. Pick up a copy of the Barbados in a Nutshell Road Map and have fun discovering them.

238  BEACHES


Above > Crane Beach, St. Philip, south-east coast. Below > The lifeguard at Accra Beach in Christ Church on the south coast advises swimmers to stay within their depth, because there are strong currents, particularly at either end of the beach; Mr. Delicious on Miami Beach, Christ Church, south coast; Bottom > The gorgeous coastline at Carlisle Bay All Photos: Andrew Hulsmeier

Bottom Bay Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

3.30pm Miami Beach A favourite south coast beach with good swimming, shade and beach facilities. Mr. Delicious serves good food and drinks including hot afternoon tea and a good rum punch!

4.30pm Accra Beach One of Barbados’ most popular beaches, Accra sits at the start of the Richard Haynes Boardwalk that runs along the south coast. It takes about half an hour to walk to the end and back. Accra has dangerous undercurrents - always stay within your depth.

6pm Carlisle Bay There’s nowhere like Carlisle Bay for an afternoon swim while the sun sets.

239


meet a Bajan 240  Beaches


Meet a Bajan

Chelsea Tuach catching waves and making history

Photo: Nigel Wallace

By Nigel Wallace For those who followed Chelsea Tuach from the start of her career, there are extremely fond memories of her tenacity, a quality that more than anything else defined the budding pro-surfing career of Barbados’ most respected female surfer. Beyond her innumerable accolades, which include getting on to the podium for the first time in Bajan history as a Copper Medalist (4th) at the International Surfing Association’s (ISA) World Junior Championships in 2013, something that contributed to her iconic local status as Barbados’ Sports Personality of the Year, in 2013, the memories of Chelsea that truly stand out have less to do with winning and more to do with competing. Raised in the warm, surf filled waters that surround beautiful Barbados, Chelsea never shied away from the frigid waters up north. She never stopped paddling out, even when the waves got up to a size that forced more experienced surfers to consider watching from the sidelines. And she never gave up, even when she knew that it would take something miraculous to garner the points needed for victory. Causing her parents no end of heart failure over the years with her fearlessness, she’s also brought them no end of pride as the words Chelsea and unprecedented are practically synonymous in Barbadian surfing history. In fact when you consider just how much she has achieved, you realise she’s so much more than a great athlete, but also an incredible role model.

Starting her winning ways way back in 2006, Chelsea would have been the youngest surfer to ever be selected to a Barbadian National Team when she first competed at the ISA World Junior Surfing Championships held in Maresias, Brazil. She was 10 years old at the time. In 2007 she would amaze Barbados again, as she became the first female surfer to win the Under 12 Combined Division. In 2008 at age 12, we definitely knew something special was happening as she notched the 25th overall position at the ISA World Junior Championships in the Under 18 girls division. This would have been the highest placing of any of the Barbadian team surfers, and her notoriety saw her sign a contract with ROXY, a relationship that continues today with Chelsea as Barbados’ sole ROXY Team Rider. “The first female surfer” and “The first Barbadian” continued to be tag lines in Chelsea’s story over the next 6 years, and currently she has the privilege of not only being the first Barbadian surfer to end the Association of Surfing Professionals (ASP) North American Junior Surfing Championships as the North American Junior Female Champion (2013), but she’s also the highest ranked junior from the Caribbean. Chelsea is currently ranked 3rd in the world and with a bright smile, Chelsea will confess that it’s that feeling you get when you do well in a competitive heat that stokes her fires. “I want to keep getting that feeling for as long as I can... I want to keep making people proud.”

Ins & Outs of Barbados  241


Stocking

Up


W

e’ve included some useful tips to help you stock up with your vacation supplies. Locally grown

high quality produce is readily available in Barbados. You’ll enjoy visiting any of the farmers markets featured overleaf. If you are looking for specialty items, such as cheeses and fine wines, we’ve also given you tips on where to find those. If you’re in the mood to relax but don’t want to cook, check out our take-away suggestions. Make the most of the wide range of good food available in Barbados.

Feature Articles 244 Best Places to Stock Up 246  Farmers Markets 247  Eat Street

Saturday Morning, Cheapside Market, Bridgetown Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

Ins & Outs of Barbados  243


Specialty Foods and Epicurean Delights Relish in Port Ferdinand and Limegrove Lifestyle Centre has an eclectic selection of deli goodies, freshly baked baguettes, imported fresh produce and local organic and boutique cheeses. They also do catering for any occasion and provide a personal shopping service of both local and imported specialties.

Fresh Fruit and Vegetables

Sarah Hamilton of the Gourmet Shop

Best Places to Stock Up Full provisioning of everything Since Sarah and Leo opened their multiple award winning Gourmet Shop and wholesale business in 1991 they have been doing a great job supplying the best quality of just about everything, at reasonable prices, with a full provisioning and delivery service. This is the ‘Go To’ for housekeepers, butlers and chefs or anyone who needs their villa or apartment stocked up. Along with their assistants, Rosemary and Helen, they can be called on to source your fresh local fish and lobsters, premium meats, cheeses, Asian ingredients, fresh local and imported fruit and vegetables and all epicurean delights (incl. truffles, fine chocolates). They also carry an impressive selection of competitively priced champagnes, wines, liquors and beer. You will enjoy a visit to their shop in the Chattel Village in Holetown.

Supermarkets with a delivery service Massy Stores and their chain of 5 excellent supermarkets are conveniently located on the south and west coasts with their superstores centrally located at Warrens and Haggatt Hall, both on the ABC Highway. They offer a variety of shopping services to make life that much easier. E-mail, fax, or call in your orders and enjoy a free delivery service for orders over $100. Shop for your groceries from your nearest Massy Stores location and allow their reliable Massy Stores Shuttle Service to take you and all of your purchases back home.

244  Stocking Up

Massy Stores have a good selection of both local and imported produce. The public markets have a vast variety of very fresh local produce:- Cheapside is the main market and it is best on Saturdays, but open Monday to Friday as well. The vendors in Speightstown, Weston and Sunset Crest on the west coast, and Oistins on the south coast also have a good selection as does Brighton Farmers Market early on Saturday. Holders Farmers Market on Sunday and Hastings Farmers Market on Saturday have organic produce.

Fresh Fish The best place to find fresh local fish is the Public Fish Markets. On the west coast is Six Mens, Speightstown, Weston and Paynes Bay. The two largest are on Princess Alice Highway in Bridgetown and Oistins on the south coast. Along the east coast, Conset Bay is the main one with two small markets at Skeete’s Bay and Tent Bay while fish is also sold at a little facility in Martin’s Bay. Mahi-Mahi is delicious, locally referred to as dolphin definitely a fish not to be confused with the mammal, porpoise. Other recommended fish are tuna, snapper, barracuda, marlin and of course flying fish. Vendors debone the fish for a small fee.

Shrimp and Seafood Singapura in Limegrove has excellent raw shrimp with the tails on, imported lobster, crab etc. PriceSmart has good cooked shrimp and tins of crab. Lobster Alive sells fresh lobster, cooked or raw.

Celebration Cakes and Desserts Patisserie Flindt makes a superb line of desserts and celebration cakes. They also do excellent catering.

Beef Locally farmed beef is very good and premium imported beef is sold at PriceSmart and Cost-U-Less.


Ins & Outs of Barbados  245


Farmers

Markets

E

very Saturday morning all year round Hastings Farmers Market comes alive on the south coast road, just opposite the Hastings Band Stand. Everything at this market is made, baked or grown in Barbados. Whether it’s fruit and vegetables, cakes and coffee, paintings and pottery, music and books, milk and eggs or pizzas and pastries, there is something for everyone. There is also quite a lot of organic produce. Having a delicious breakfast, socializing and shopping under the trees at Brighton Farmers Market is a pleasurable Saturday morning ritual for many. A 17th century sugar plantation in the countryside starts brewing their coffee at 6am and the fun goes on until about 10am. Fresh bread (including a new gluten free range), eggs, fruit and vegetables and hot breakfast all sell at a fast pace. There’s also art, crafts and delicious take-away food on sale. It’s about 10 minutes drive east from the Norman Niles Roundabout on the ABC Highway. Go straight and take the right fork which is signposted. Cheapside Market, located in Bridgetown–a UNESCO World Heritage Site–is a charming, traditional city market offering the best quality and selection of fresh local fruit, pulses, vegetables, freshly ground spices, bread, salted cod and meat, as well as herb and vegetable seedlings, condiments, coconut water and much more. The airconditioned butcher’s section with over 20 stalls, sells fresh, local, government inspected and stamped pork, beef, black belly lamb and chicken at reasonable prices. Open Monday to Saturday 6am-6pm. The best time to go is on a Saturday morning. On Sundays from 9am-Noon is the Holders Farmers Market, just off the west coast. Stall holders sell a variety of fresh local produce with a strong focus on organic. Fresh local fruit, vegetables and herbs, take away food, plants, cut flowers, fresh cows milk, imported cheeses, sausages, fresh local fish, as well as stalls selling Barbadian arts, crafts, preserves and confections. There is also a holistic healing centre, juice bar, smoothie bar, coffee and a health bar. A perfect spot to have brunch.

246  Stocking Up

Hastings Farmers Market

Homemade, home grown or made in Barbados in the heart of the south coast every Saturday! • Children’s play park with zip lines and climbing frames • Fresh fruit smoothies and natural juice bar • Local and Organic fresh fruit and vegetables • Gluten-free Deli and French bakery stall • Trini roti & doubles, Tiki Pies & other breakfast goodies • Plants, Art & Crafts and Local Souvenirs • Covered coffee shop with cakes and treats

Market Open Saturdays 8am-1pm Gluten-free Deli Open for Lunch Tue-Sat Smoothie Bar Open Mon-Sat 8am-4pm The ArtSplash Centre, Hastings Main Rd, Ch. Ch. Tel (246) 228-0776 www.artsplashbarbados.com


5

lickin’

>

Finger Foods

you must try while in Barbados! Toss the knives and forks to enjoy these down-home Caribbean delicacies!

Eat

All Chicken Roti Fish Cutter Doubles Pudding and Souse Salt fish cakes

Street

5

Take-Away Meals

Barbecued Chicken From Fired-Up To Go Grill on the south coast with delicious local sides of cassava, pickled breadfruit, fried plantain and sweet potato to Just Grillin’ on the south and west coasts with their famous caesar salad, coleslaw and potato wedges. They also sell their caesar dressing and barbecue sauce which are superb!

Fish Fry Dinner Order grilled dolphin with “pie” and salad from Merton’s in Half Moon Fort on the west coast on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays or Oistins Bay Gardens every night.

Indian Specialties and Curry From Asian Spice and Sitar on the west coast to Apsara and Mamu’s Gazebo on the south coast.

Sushi From Zen at the Crane on the south-east coast to Naru on the south coast or Nishi on the west coast.

Lobster Order your lobster dinner from Lobster Alive, have a swim in Carlisle Bay when you go to collect and be sure to have the wine chilling at home!

Ins & Outs of Barbados  247


Property


T

he common thread that runs through all of the wonderful people seeking Paradise in Barbados is their love for the place, the

friendships they make, their contribution to our culture and their generosity to Barbados. So many who have bought homes here have been true and loyal friends. And that’s the secret – parents bring their children and their childrens’ families, friends keep inviting other friends, who come, buy and help to build a better Barbados and make it a better place for everyone.

Feature Articles 250  Multi-generational Villa Life 262  5 Things you may not know about owning a second home in Barbados 264 5 Things you may not know about villa rentals 284 Property for Sale

Leamington Pavilion Photo courtesy Blue Sky Luxury Villa Rentals

Ins & Outs of Barbados  249


Multi-generational Villa Life in Barbados I

s it possible to find your own little secret hideaway – somewhere so special, so magical that it begs you to come back time and again? Barbados has become the destination of choice for many families whose customary visits to the island have spanned generations and formed an emotional bond across the family unit. Says one traveller, “Eventually this place becomes so intertwined with your soul – with the very core of your family – that you integrate with the culture, making lifelong friendships, celebrating milestones and returning every chance you get.” This is the ethos of multi-generational villa life in Barbados. Lady Olivia Clark has been visiting Barbados with her family since 1995. When they were looking for a warm location that would serve as what she refers to as “a therapy of sorts”, they purchased a villa on the west coast, which they would frequently visit with their five children.

By Daphne Ewing-Chow

Eventually this place becomes so intertwined with your soul – with the very core of your family – that you integrate with the culture, making lifelong friendships, celebrating milestones and returning every chance you get. “We were instantly taken by the people and the beauty of the place,” says Lady Clark, .“My family still come every Christmas and I am here every chance I get.” Jodie Kidd speaks of frequent visits to her “happy place” as a child, explaining that “most Britons you see here are those who just regularly visit for their holidays. They have houses here – everyone from the Bamfords to the Rothschilds...”

Four Winds Photo: Mike Toy courtesy Architecture & Design in Barbados

250  Property


SUPing (Stand Up Paddleboarding), Saint Peter’s Bay

The Kidd family made their first visit to Barbados in 1950 and bought Holder’s House, which eventually became their permanent home and the location of the famous Holder’s Season that takes place every March. Indeed, this sort of integration and contribution to the rich culture of Barbados is not unheard of among villa owners. The Whelan family, for example, who have vacationed in Barbados for the past four decades, recently purchased and refurbished the Lone Star Restaurant and Hotel. As one of the island’s leading realtors says: “One of the most gratifying aspects

of being in the villa business is having the opportunity to form close relationships with families that have passed on the love of Barbados to their children and their children’s children – who return to our shores time and time again. To us, these families are not just visitors – they are honorary Bajans. They are who we are – what we stand for – loyalty, longevity and evidence of the impeccable beauty and service culture of our island.” So what is it? What lures so many families to these shores, to stay in villas where they are spoiled rotten by impeccably trained staff for extended periods throughout the year?

“One of the most gratifying aspects of being in the villa business is having the opportunity to form close relationships with families that have passed on the love of Barbados to their children and their children’s children”

Ins & Outs of Barbados  251


Port St. Charles

“the 11-acre estate Greensleeves even has a uniquely designed ‘grandchildren’s wing’ that has been appointed for the family’s younger members”

Fully managed villas have indeed become commonplace for many families who want the comfort of staying in a second home while still feeling like they are on vacation. “There is a certain status that comes with owning a vacation home in Barbados,” says Jamie Poulton, a well-known British horse trainer who is presently seeking to purchase a second home in Barbados. Homes such as Heron Bay, the home of the Bamford family, and Greensleeves, the home of the Rausings, are two exquisite beach-front villas whose well-known families have been visiting Barbados for generations.

252  Property

Indeed, the 11-acre estate Greensleeves even has a uniquely designed ‘grandchildren’s wing’ that has been appointed for the family’s younger members, whose interests include arts and crafts, a jungle gym and child-friendly dining options, from their very own specially outfitted kitchen. There is even a nanny’s quarters located in the grandchildren’s section of the house. Another reason that Barbados is so fitting for multi-generational tourism is that there is so much to do. Lady Olivia Clark refers to excellent standard of golf courses that are a lure for her golfloving family.



Footprints Photo courtesy Alleyne Real Estate

“The flexibility and comfort of having regular full time staff - a chef, butler and a housekeeper with whom our family can form a personal relationship is a priceless advantage of villa life”

Other activities that are enjoyed by the entire family include the Animal Flower Cave, Harrison’s Cave and shopping at the Limegrove Lifestyle Centre. Some families even enjoy the option of owning and racing horses with the Barbados Turf Club at the Garrison Savannah, where there are breeders’ auctions and stables that offer care and training. The Clark family enjoys picnics on the East coast and Caribbean-style meals at local restaurants such as Round House and Fish Pot, when they are not being catered to by the staff of their West coast villa. “The flexibility and comfort of having regular full time staff - a chef, butler and a housekeeper with whom our family can form a personal relationship is a priceless advantage of villa life”, says a Sandy Lane villa owner.

254  Property

Customized service is a highly coveted luxury for large families that span across generations. Children and adults can receive personalized attention that includes specially tailored meals, childcare and services. There is also the added benefit of privacy, which is guaranteed in the villa setting. The second home in Barbados has had such a stronghold that many families choose to regularly celebrate milestone events such as weddings, anniversaries and birthdays on the island. Sir Martyn and Lady Arbib, their children and grandchildren are a typical example. Having first visited Barbados in the 1990’s, the Arbibs immediately “fell in love” and would return each year with their four children, eventually purchasing and rebuilding the legendary Four Winds villa on Gibbes Beach - their family’s “home away from home.”



Porters Great House was the Barbados home of the Guinness family for many years Photo courtesy Altman Real Estate

Indeed, many happy families and generations of families have selected Barbados as their second home.

The couple rapidly integrated within Barbadian society. Sir Martyn became a regular on the horse racing scene and Lady Arbib developed an avid interest in shell craft. They also became lifetime patrons of the Barbados Community Foundation, giving back to the country that provided them with so much happiness over the years. Barbados has held such a special place in the Arbib family that their son was married on their two and a half acre estate, and now that their children are grown, the Arbibs’ fifteen grandchildren of whom they are most proud, have become regular visitors to the island. “A happy family lives here,” says Sir Martyn of his family’s second home which is currently for sale. The Arbibs plan on retaining a smaller beachfront villa in Barbados.

256  Property

Indeed, many happy families and generations of families have selected Barbados as their second home, and if these stories are not a sufficient testament, consider the fact that the global average time span for second-home ownership is five to seven years. Barbados surpasses this average by a significant amount as in the case of the Arbibs and the Clarks who have held on to their second homes since the 1990’s. Says one property owner, “Owning ‘a piece of the rock’ and returning year after year with children and grandchildren is not just about property ownership or ‘bricks and mortar’ for us. It is about a deep love and connection- the defining thread that binds our family. We hope that our grandchildren will share this love with their children someday.” Barbados is truly a timeless gem.


Porters Great House A rare opportunity to own a truly exceptional Plantation House set in 23 acres of private manicured lawns and woodland. Porters Great House, built in 1735 by Dudley Woodbridge, a wealthy merchant and landowner, is a villa full of colonial charm with 21st century amenities. Refurbished in 2006 this magnificent 6 bedroom, 7 bathroom property features an impressive driveway, grand foyer, large indoor entertainment room, spacious 1-bedroom cottage, swimming pool and pool pavilion and spectacular facilities for entertaining. A Doric Folley, fourteen seated dining pavilion and a private chapel add to the old world charm of this iconic piece of Barbadian history. Price: US$9.95M. Viewings by appointment only.


Saint Peter’s Bay Luxury Resort and Residences Comprising fifty-seven desirable homes, including six spectacular penthouse suites and three even more spectacular, deluxe penthouse suites, Saint Peter’s Bay Luxury Resort and Residences enjoyed its best ever year in 2014. As the first, fully completed resort operating under the luxury UNNA brand, Saint Peter’s Bay has settled smoothly into its role as a purveyor of the ultimate vacation experience. Through excellent training programmes, the UNNA group is successfully raising the natural hospitality of Barbados to a new level, where good-natured personality is complemented by a total commitment to ensuring that every guest is happy. This optimum blend of outstanding service combined with superb amenities and great fun delivers an unforgettable villa experience. Saint Peter’s Bay has recently hosted several A-list celebrities and they have enjoyed themselves enormously, but so too have other residents, usually for the same reasons. Saint Peter’s Bay can provide a tailor-made vacation for every category of guest, from one person to three generations of the same family. Thanks to the exceptional hospitality services provided in a safe and secure, relaxed environment, people of all ages and all tastes can be accommodated very happily. Guests looking for company can

258  Property

mingle around the cool and breezy gazebo bar, while those who prefer peaceful relaxation might choose the sanctuary of their own dining room, complete with the services of a personal chef. Everything is possible at Saint Peter’s Bay. Saint Peter’s Bay offers attractive incentives and privileges as part of the purchase package, including access to a wide range of facilities at Port Ferdinand, which can be reached by the group’s own private water-taxi. Boating enthusiasts will be delighted to discover that a select number of berths at Port Ferdinand are available for Saint Peter’s Bay owners, which allow for duty-free importation of a yacht. Prospective owners should note that the neighbouring area around Saint Peter’s Bay is being gradually upgraded by UNNA, including the highly prestigious Palazzate, thus creating real potential for a future increase in property values and assuring a pleasant local environment well into the future. Thanks to the Saint Peter’s Bay vacation rental programme, potential homeowners can enjoy the UNNA experience first hand prior to committing. And the many 5-Star Reviews posted on Trip Advisor certainly suggest that anybody staying at Saint Peter’s Bay will enjoy a happy and memorable vacation.



Port Ferdinand Marina and Luxury Residences Port Ferdinand Marina and Luxury Residences is an exclusive resort that has real potential to become the most spectacular development in Barbados. Occupying a dramatic, 16-acre, inland waterway site on the charming and picturesque St. Peter coastline, close to historic Speightstown, Port Ferdinand comprises 82 homes and 120 yacht berths. Phase One and Phase Two have already been completed and 46 luxurious waterfront homes are available for purchase, including a selection of two, three and four-bedroom residences, each one with its own berth of a minimum 50 feet. Should an owner not require a berth, it can be leased out. Sixteen of these splendid homes have been immaculately furnished and can be rented for short-term vacations, thus affording potential homeowners an opportunity to literally test the waters of Port Ferdinand. As the first defined UNNA development, which has been specifically planned and built to reflect the group’s ethos and values, Port Ferdinand encapsulates the spirit of ‘Luxury with Soul’. Laden with opportunities for multi-generational enjoyment of life and primed to deliver an enviable vacation experience, Port Ferdinand offers an unparalleled range of services and

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activities. The resort’s fine dining restaurant, ‘1359’, named after the Barbados latitude and longitude coordinates, overlooks the lagoon and provides ‘al fresco’ tables on the water’s edge or air-conditioned comfort indoors. For more casual fare, residents can choose between the pool-island bar and restaurant or the dockside gourmet store. General amenities include a watersports centre offering motorized and non-motorized activities, gym, full service spa, indoor and outdoor kids clubs, adult games room with a golf simulator, beach facility and bar, and a business centre. The resort’s Concierge Service can also arrange offsite activities such as island tours, a day’s sailing and fishing trips. Investors will appreciate that the purchase price of a home at Port Ferdinand includes an attractive suite of benefits, notably: Duty-Free Furniture Packages and Duty-Free Importation of a Yacht. Residents at Port Ferdinand also enjoy shared amenities at Saint Peter’s Bay, which is accessible via the group’s own watertaxi service. With its rare capacity to provide sumptuous residences and a diversity of outstanding leisure facilities, all within an exclusive marina community, Port Ferdinand is particularly ideal for families to holiday together.



Ariena, Sandy Lane Photo courtesy Realtors Real Estate Limited

5

Things you may not know about ...

Owning a SecondHome in Barbados According to the Telegraph newspaper in the United Kingdom, “Barbados is fast becoming the holiday home destination of choice.” Aside from Barbados’ impressive global ranking and purely emotional decision-making, here are some added incentives that you may not have considered about owning a second home in Barbados:

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1. Ownership of a second home in Barbados offers much more than just ‘bricks and mortar’. The wonderful staff who care for your home and look after you will seem like ‘family’. That is what many owners like most about their home. 2. With home ownership you can be eligible for special recognition with regard to spending longer periods in Barbados. That can also help you to get to know Barbados more intimately and enjoy it even more. 3. Historically, through capital appreciation and rental income, second homes in Barbados have generally proven to be a good investment. 4. With Barbados as your home base, you are closely connected to our Caribbean neighbours and can ‘nip off’ to the St. Lucia Jazz Festival, go hiking in Dominica, sail the Grenadines and so much more. 5. You’ll find it difficult not to boast about your home in Barbados!



Happy Trees Photo courtesy Realtors Luxury Villa Rentals

5

Things you may not know about ...

Villa Rentals in Barbados The informality, personalized service and privacy of a villa rental can provide a highly attractive option for your stay in Barbados. Here are just a few reasons why: 1. Villa rentals can be very affordable and good value for money, especially in the case of a family or a group of friends sharing accommodation.

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2. Renting a villa is a highly flexible option - you can dress as casually as you choose, eat when you want, choose your own menu, entertain if you wish and tailor your entire day to suit yourselves. 3. The well-trained and affable villa staff in Barbados will pamper you. Chefs, butlers, cooks and housekeepers serve meals and drinks whenever you require. They are there just to look after you! 4. A full concierge service is standard with villa rental agents, offering assistance with everything from spa treatments at the villa to delivery of flowers. Property managers are also on call 24-hours a day to deal with any problems that may arise. 5. Villa life is a fantastic way to feel ‘at home’ and really enjoy the best that Barbados has to offer. So don’t be surprised if you end up deciding to buy a villa as a result of this amazing experience.



5 Reasons people buy second homes atVuemont - Because they have stayed there many times and they want to start coming more often and for longer. - Because that ridge above Speightstown is stunning, secure and quiet yet close to everything on the west coast. - Because the prices are very attractive. - Because they love having all the facilities. - Because they love the private, tranquil grounds that are kept in great condition.

Life with a View At a time when investors are looking more and more for financial security, it is encouraging to know that Vuemont is a Barbadian owned and managed, prime residential community; a product of two of Barbados’ premier developers, Rotherley Construction Inc. and C.O. Williams Construction Ltd. Located in the beautiful surroundings of the elevated Mount Brevitor ridge in St. Peter, with landscaping to further enhance this already attractive natural environment, Vuemont is offering a range of elegantly planned, well-appointed, two and threebedroom villas and two-bedroom apartments, which are all available freehold. The Vuemont apartments are spacious, 1,134 sq. ft., 2-bedroom/2-bathroom units, providing ample living space for individuals or families. Dedicated parking spaces are provided for each apartment. The luxury villas at Vuemont provide an excellent opportunity to enjoy contemporary Barbadian living in either the 3-bed/2bath or 2-bed/2-bath styles, ranging in size from 1,218 to 1,560 sq. ft. Wooden decks and plunge pools are optional. All the units have spacious patios, are securely fitted with wooden shutters, finished with porcelain tiles, and the Italian kitchens feature full appliance packages and granite or corian countertops. Attractive furniture packages are also available and all units are cable and Internet ready. All bedrooms are airconditioned.

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(246) 422-6699 sales@vuemontbarbados.com www.vuemontbarbados.com



Indian Pond Plantation - St. Joseph |

US $4,000,000

Historic Indian Pond Plantation is set on almost 41 acres of land in St. Joseph. The traditional 17th century plantation estate, is enhanced by mature landscaping and a pond. This heritage property comprising a two-storey Palladian-style plantation house, a well-maintained, one-bedroom cottage, mill wall, and outbuildings, enjoys panoramic countryside views. Approved permissions are in place for the restoration of this unique estate with tremendous potential. Land Area: 41 acres approx.

www.bajanservices.com Newton House, Battaleys, St. Peter BB26094, Barbados, W.I.


LUXURY PROPERTY FOR SALE Senderlea - Derricks, St. James |

US $6,750,000 – Furnished

This enchanting 2-bedroom villa with study/3rd bedroom, boasting traditional appeal, enjoys uninterrupted ocean vistas from its rare cliffside vantage point. A private stairway leads past a sun deck to a pristine West Coast beach. • Majestic villa features spacious reception rooms and a generous-sized patio • Jacuzzi, pool, cliff-side gazebo and a small boathouse • Nestled within mature gardens on over 19,000 sq. ft. of prime beachfront

Firefly - Sugar Hill, St. James |

US $4,200,000 – Unfurnished

Set within immaculate gardens of a highly desirable lifestyle community is this elegant 5-bedroom villa and cottage with stunning Caribbean sea views. Firefly’s fine finishes and spacious living spaces celebrate Caribbean luxury living. • Large sitting room, wide terraces, pool with sun deck and pagoda, are ideal for entertaining • Access to excellent on-site fitness facilities and amenities including a bar and clubhouse • Golfing, fine dining, shopping and superb West Coast beaches are nearby

Voyager - Shermans, St. Peter |

US $895,000 – Furnished

This is an amazing ground level apartment with 3 bedrooms, within an intimate complex near Speightstown. One of the spacious home’s highlights is the master bedroom’s private verandah flowing out to a private garden. • Finely finished with recessed lighting and Italian porcelain tile • Accentuated by the renowned interior design of Nicky Haslam • Excellent on-site amenities include 2 pools, a spa and a gym

Specialising in luxury property for sale and rent in Barbados T: (246) 422-2618 E: sales@bajanservices.com



Gardenia Photos courtesy Bajan Services


F

rom 1627 to today, Barbados has been home to a steady stream of wealthy residents who have chosen to invest in the creation of some of the most magnificent houses to be found anywhere in the world. Since ownership of many of these splendid properties, both old and new, has been transferred on a number of occasions, a sophisticated real estate market has evolved and matured, especially over the course of the last fifty years.

Gardenia represents an extraordinary opportunity for the right investor.

As such, it always takes something truly extraordinary to create a buzz in real estate circles on this island. So whenever you do hear that buzz, you can be assured that a very special property has recently gone on the market, which more often than not also represents a once in a lifetime opportunity for some discerning purchaser. The West Coast of Barbados, most particularly the picturesque stretch of prime beachfront between Sandy Lane and Gibbes, has developed into a highly coveted location to own a home. Gardenia

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is nestled within the heart of that area, sharing a uniquely exclusive location with several of the West Coast’s most distinguished homes, including three designed by the revered Oliver Messel: Maddox, Crystal Springs and Mango Bay. It is very rare for beachfront houses of this calibre to be on the market, especially in such a peaceful and prestigious pocket of a location; and even more so when it includes spacious grounds, with beautifully landscaped gardens and a natural gully. With 3.3 acres of land, Gardenia is the


biggest private residential lot currently available for purchase on the West Coast of Barbados. While Gardenia is not a ‘Messel House’, the talented, much sought-after Barbadian Architect, Larry Warren, certainly created a beautiful home that exudes Messelesque elegance. The design cleverly incorporates many of the old master’s signature features that epitomize today’s quintessential Barbadian Style of refined indoor-outdoor living. Gardenia is a superb example of a beachfront villa that maximises the benefits of the Caribbean climate and scenery, while also reducing the traditional problems of excessive heat and glare. Gardenia’s bright and spacious openplan rooms, with expansive terraces and balconies, provide many sheltered sitting areas which remain cool and breezy, while still offering wonderful views of the sea and gardens below. The stone terrace around the swimming pool and the nearby gazebo are ideal locations for relaxation or dining al-fresco.

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An impressive master suite encompasses the entire first floor of the house and includes a grand bedroom with a private balcony, a terrace, an office/sitting room, bathroom and dressing room. Three stylish guest suites occupy the ground floor, each of which opens on to the western patio with access to the pool and gardens. The Gate House Annex has two further guest suites, while the Gate House itself provides two self-contained rooms for staff accommodation. Gardenia is a very comfortable house in which to live. The aptly named Gardenia, located in an area known as The Garden and surrounded by lush greenery, has one of the most spectacular gardens on the West Coast. From its elevated position on a rocky outcrop, the house overlooks a captivating scene of beautifully maintained lawns, tropical foliage, resplendent shrubs and mature trees. Plant lovers can luxuriate in these surroundings by strolling along meandering paths that wend their way lazily through

the gardens, passing a waterfall, lily ponds, a stream and over a bridge to a delightful cantilevered wooden deck that overhangs a natural gully and offers a very unusual view of the sea. Gullies that reach right down to the beach like this are extremely rare, so this dramatically positioned deck is a wonderful extension to the house. In addition to offering tranquillity and natural beauty, the gardens also serve the very practical purpose of giving the house a great deal of privacy, both in terms of blocking the view of outsiders and by cushioning any noise from the road. The strategic location of the tennis courts between the garden and the road also acts as a sound buffer to further protect the house from any unwelcome ambient noise. When combined with the extensive security systems in place, the end result is that Gardenia is a veritable oasis of undisturbed privacy. Apart from its expansive size and matchless beachfront garden location, one of the more unusual - and for the right

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person, potentially very attractive – aspects of Gardenia is that it offers enormous flexibility to any new owner. While the buildings, garden and grounds are all in immaculate condition, there is also plenty of scope for further development of the property. Thanks to the availability of ample land, plus the suitability of the existing design footprint of the house, it would be possible to extend and expand the buildings. Whoever invests in Gardenia will have the rare choice of being able to enjoy it in its existing absolutely faultless state or, perhaps in the future, use this rare opportunity to fashion their own dream house to suit their specific preferences. And as Gardenia is being sold unfurnished, this even applies to the interior design and furnishings. The new owner can start afresh with a clean palette or, since there is also an option to purchase the current furniture, instantly acquire an interesting ensemble of eclectic pieces collected from around the world. Perhaps the most attractive benefit to be gained by

acquiring such an exquisite residence as Gardenia is the enviable lifestyle that it can afford. The unique location of this richly green property beside the sea, the comfortable elegance of the house, with its pervasive tranquillity and secure privacy, complemented by everything else that Barbados has to offer, can provide a quality of life that would be seriously difficult to surpass anywhere. Fortunately, the Government of Barbados recently passed new legislation to better facilitate investors and homeowners who wish to spend extended periods on the island. These improvements include a new immigration policy that provides for a Special Entry Permit for High Net Worth Individuals and the capacity for them to apply for tax status. All things considered, Gardenia represents a very attractive opportunity for long-term investment. Gardenia’s new owner will not be buying the past - he or she will be buying the future.

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Gardenia - St. James - 3 Acre Beachfront Estate The unique location of this richly green property beside the sea, the comfortable elegance of the house, with its pervasive tranquillity and secure privacy, complemented by everything else that Barbados has to offer, can provide a quality of life difficult to surpass anywhere. www.BajanServices.com Newton House, Battaleys, St. Peter BB26094, Barbados, W.I.


A Rare Opportunity

Specialists In Luxury Real Estate From luxury beachfront homes to master-planned land developments, Bajan Services | Knight Frank offers a diverse portfolio of luxury real estate opportunities. With over 30 years of experience, you can expect exceptional service from any of our knowledgable, experienced real estate agents. Please contact Sam Mahon at

1 (246) 230-9058 | sam.mahon@bajanservices.com


Royal Westmoreland Royal Westmoreland has long been known as one of the most sought after addresses for the affluent home buyer in Barbados. A vibrant resort community of over 200 homes with extensive membership activities it is easy to become part of the resort lifestyle and meet the residents. The resort is spread over 700 acres, surrounding the beautiful 7,045 yard long - 18 hole Robert Trent Jones Jr. golf course, with two flood lit tennis courts, multiple gyms and pools, a stunning Club House with locker rooms, with restaurant/bar and pro shop; the Mullins Beach Club offering shuttle service, private members only parking and dining as well as full bell captain service creates an unmatched experience in resort living. Royal Westmoreland clients have been able to choose from luxuriously appointed Royal Apartments (US$500-$1M); the Sugar Cane Ridge semi-detached homes (US$1.45M to US$1.55M); and our signature Bespoke Homes (US$1.9M to $6M+). With 20 years of success to build on, Royal Westmoreland is launching its newest product: villa shared ownership, as a move from strength to strength. The West coast of Barbados and our resort community have built a robust villa rental business with many renters reserving their villa rental year after year. The repeat villa rental client has historically struggled with justifying a Barbados home purchase when typically their time to enjoy the villa in the immediate future is limited. The Royal Westmoreland shared ownership program is the first deeded, stand-alone luxury villa shared ownership available in Barbados. These four bedroom, four and a half bath Royal Palm Villas are being sold as one month periods in peak season and two week periods in the shoulder season. Each 3,700

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sq ft home is on approximately 22,000 sq ft of land with a private 12’ x 41’ swimming pool, they are each fully furnished with daily housekeeping. The owners of the Royal Palm Villas will enjoy Club Membership and preferred access to golf, paying running costs proportionally for only the time they own. In the past year of test marketing villa shared ownership at Royal Westmoreland it has met with significant market demand. When asked, the two primary reasons for clients to purchase shared ownership during our prelaunch phase have been: 1) They wanted a larger, more luxurious home for only the time they need, they could afford an apartment or semi-detached home for the year, but found that sharing a detached home offered privacy, space and lower risk to meet their current lifestyle goals. 2) They wanted to have the capital spent currently in repeat villa rentals to be used toward growing into a full ownership residence as opposed to being disposed of by being spent on a rental. They wanted to ensure that when their lifestyle allowed for the investment into a full ownership home, they would make use of the Royal Westmoreland trade in programme of their shared ownership toward their full ownership. We also found interesting from our test marketing that control of quality and expectations was an important decision factor in buying shared ownership. Royal Westmoreland has enjoyed a rapid recovery from the recession, setting a record breaking pace for full ownership property sales in the last year. The expansion of the ownership offerings for Royal Westmoreland to include shared ownership for the luxury villa client seems to have hit the perfect balance between market prudence and the lifestyle goals of today’s buyers.



Apes Hill Club In a post-recession era when home purchasers are more risk averse, Apes Hill Club stands out as a world class golf and polo community that can offer unquestionable pedigree and substance. Apes Hill Club is a joint venture between Sir Charles Williams, a highly successful Barbadian entrepreneur; Landmark Land of the USA, one of the world’s leading golf resort and residential developers; and Wentworth, the world renowned golf and country club. This eminently qualified, high calibre team possesses an enormous amount of combined expertise and experience, all of which has been diligently applied to establishing Apes Hill Club as one of the leading sporting and residential communities in the entire Caribbean and beyond. And given that they had 470 acres of remarkable, undulating landscape to work with, it should be no surprise that they have created a resort of stunning natural beauty. In a day and age when green living is considered good, Apes Hill Club can offer the best. Designed to be a people-oriented community, the overall Apes Hill Club plan incorporates a spectacular, world-class 18-

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hole golf course, the magnificent Apes Hill Club Polo Centre, a central Club House, a luxurious spa, a tennis centre, fitness centre and gardens. Life at Apes Hill Club is all about enjoying a healthy outdoors lifestyle, with residents participating in activities such as golf tournaments, tennis matches, nature walks and yoga; or simply relaxing around the pool. To retain ample open-space and inspire a real sense of country living, only 35% of the available land will be developed for real estate, with some 300 luxury homes discretely nestled throughout the 470 acres. Thanks to their environmentally sensitive approach, Apes Hill Club has qualified as a ‘Certified Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary’, becoming one of only 2% of golf courses in the world to earn that prestigious status. Apes Hill Club has saved some of the best pieces of land for last, including several half-acre lots at Holders Meadow; plus there are occasional re-sale opportunities. To better facilitate construction of the houses, Apes Hill Club offers a Project Management Programme to provide a ‘one-stop’ solution for owners by guiding them through the process of designing, tendering, constructing and fitting-out their home.


with the wide range of events and activities generally ‘on the menu’ in Barbados. Golfers can request a basic package for themselves, a group of friends, a golf society or a club, and then add their own personal preferences to create a tailormade dream vacation. The same applies to polo enthusiasts who can rent ponies and get instruction, prior to enjoying the privilege of actually playing on the superb Apes Hill Polo Club field. In all cases, the basic package includes a ‘Meet and Greet’ Service at the airport, fast-tracking through Customs and Immigration, transfer to Apes Hill Club in a luxury vehicle and accommodation.

A number of homes are currently under construction, while those that have already been completed are either occupied or available for rental or purchase. These include several at Moonshine Ridge, ranging in size from 4,100 sq ft to 8,000 + sq ft; as well as the very attractive and popular range of Garden Wall Villas. Long and short term rentals have proven to be very popular, especially for the Garden Wall Villas, and this has added another lively dimension to the community. Apes Hill Club is maturing into a genuine, healthy lifestyle and sports oriented resort that can offer something different to the seasoned traveller in search of more than just sun, sea and sand. Throughout the year Apes Hill Club hosts a number of major polo events and golf competitions, including the Sir Garfield Sobers Festival of Golf, the Barbados Open and in November 2014 the World Finals of the Virgin Atlantic Swingers Golf League. In addition to sports, Apes Hill Club has also been chosen to stage global cultural extravaganzas such as the celebrated Classical Pops in December 2014. Recent good news is that visitors can now take full advantage of customised Golf Holidays and Polo Holidays, which provide access to the very best that Apes Hill Club has to offer, along

A week or two spent on vacation at Apes Hill Club is an ideal way for potential homeowners to enjoy a taste of the enviable lifestyle that could be theirs for ever.

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Alleyne Real Estate (246) 432-1159 | www.jalbarbados.com Weston, St. James, Barbados | E: sales@jalbarbados.com | F: (246) 432-2733

Happy Days Sandy Lane Estate, St. James • Grand & Gracious Luxury 6 Bed / 6.5 Bath Sandy Lane Villa • Overlooking the fourth fairway of the Old Nine • Beach Cabana at The Sandy Lane Home Owners Beach Club • Tennis court, dining pavilion, sauna • Set in 2 acres of manicured, tropical gardens. Price on Request.

Penthouse 401 at Villas On The Beach Holetown, St. James • Stunning 4 bed, 4 bath beachfront apartment • Newly upgraded and re-decorated with a 24 foot wide patio, marble tiled baths, soaring pickled pine ceilings and a fantastic Italian kitchen with granite work tops • Sold fully furnished and completely outfitted, Penthouse 401 is a true gem in the heart of the West Coast US $2,750,000

Port St. Charles 364 St. Peter • Fabulous Top Floor Luxury apartment in an Exclusive, Private Marina Community in St. Peter • 3 Spacious Bedrooms each with their own En-suite Bathrooms • Stunning Views of the Caribbean Sea and the Marina • 50 ft. berth with direct access straight down the main channel • Communal Pool, Bar and Gym • Furnished (Excluding artwork) US $1,900,000

Villa Bonita Prospect Bay, St. James • The Platinum Coast’s newest luxury beachfront property • Prime elevated position with stunning sea views • Six magnificent bedrooms • Circa 9,286 sq.ft of covered living area • Approximately 80 feet of beach frontage • Private courtyard with salt water pool • Beautiful Italian designed kitchen US $13,750,000

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Bajan Services | Knight Frank (246) 422-2618 | www.bajanservices.com Newton House, Battaleys, St. Peter, Barbados | E: sales@bajanservices.com | F: (246) 422-3506

Serenity Sandy Lane, St. James • Amazing 3-storey villa on an acre of manicured gardens • 7 bedrooms / 7.5 bathrooms • Master suite with 2 patios encompasses entire first floor • Reception rooms, games room and home theatre • Gazebo and pool with expansive sun deck • Private Sandy Lane Beach facility access US $7,500,000 – Furnished

Miramar Sandy Lane, St. James • Situated in a highly desirable community • 5 bedrooms / 5 bathrooms • Stunning golf & sea views • Entrance with porte cochère flowing to inner courtyard • Lush gardens with swimming pool & gazebo • Access to beach facility with private cabana US $4,950,000 – Semi-furnished

Messel House Royal Westmoreland, St. James • Set within an exclusive lifestyle neighbourhood • 4 bedrooms / 4.5 bathrooms • Overlooks tropical gardens & championship golf course • Jacuzzi, private pool and access to resort pool • Offers perfect mix of privacy & comfort • Approved plans for building 2-bedroom cottage US $4,950,000 – Furnished

Bend Land Weston, St. James • Valuable West Coast beachfront property • Land area is approximately 14,725 sq. ft. • Westerly bound by Caribbean Sea & lovely beach • Pristine beach is ideal for fishing & swimming • Minutes from Holetown & Speightstown amenities • High potential for residential development US $3,500,000

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Realtors Real Estate Limited (246) 432-6930 | www.realtorsrealestatesales.com Holetown, St. James, Barbados BB24016 | E: info@realtorsrealestatesales.com | F: (246) 432-6919

Villa Hugo Queens Fort, St. James • Furnished 3 bed custom designed luxury villa • Self-contained 2 bed cottage with pool view • Beachfront land with mature and majestic gardens • Land Area: 1 acre (approx.) US $12,500,000

Ariena Sandy Lane, St. James • Furnished 4 bed luxury villa with a 1 bed annex • 2 bed self-contained guest cottage • Large pool and gazebo great for el fresco dining • Land Area: 1.79 acres (approx.) US $8,950,000

Oyster Bay Reeds Bay, St. James • Furnished 4 bed, 5 bath beachfront villa • Extensive beach frontage with excellent swimming • Large pool and spacious deck great for entertaining • Land Area: 13,267 sq. ft. (approx.) US $8,250,000

Miramar Sandy Lane, St. James • Semi-furnished Luxurious 5 bed, 5 bath villa on an elevated lot • Large patio with beautiful views of heated pool and gazebo • Cabana and access to Sandy Lane Beach facility • Land Area: 1.38 acres (approx.) US $4,950,000

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Altman Real Estate (246) 432-0840 | www.altmanbarbados.com “Rosebank”, Derricks, St. James, Barbados | E: realestate@altmanbarbados.com | F: (246) 432-2147

Whispering Palms Bellair Pines, St. Philip • Three-bedroom cliff front home with sweeping views over the Atlantic • 8,600 sq. ft. of living space with impeccable luxury finishes • Generous master suite with private balcony • Office, self-contained guest cottage and swimming pool • Land area 57,000 sq. ft. US $3,200,000

Bougainvillea Royal Westmoreland, St. James • Stunning 4 bedroom, 5 bathroom luxury estate home and cottage in the prestigious Royal Westmoreland resort • Spectacular views over the golf course out to the Caribbean Sea • Lush tropical gardens & Private swimming pool • Spacious Study which can be easily converted to a fourth bedroom • Access to amenities including golf, tennis, spa, and beach club US $6,500,000

Serenity Lancaster Ridge 8, St. James • Majestic 13,500 sq.ft. 6 bedroom home on approx. 1 acre in an exclusive ridgefront setting • Panoramic golf course and sea views • Library, office, state-of-the-art home cinema, gym and two wine cellars • Automated temperature, ceiling fan, lighting and audio control • Luxurious guest cottage providing private, comfortable accommodation Price on Request

The Dream The Garden, St. James • Stunning open plan 5 bedroom contemporary beachfront villa • Five luxurious, tastefully furnished air-conditioned bedrooms • Magnificent master suite with private balcony • Expansive outdoor living spaces with pool, barbecue area and bar • 45’ infinity edge swimming pool with sunbathing terrace • Located within minutes of the West Coast’s top amenities Price on Request

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The Barbados Community Foundation “The life of a man consists not in seeing visions and in dreaming dreams, but in active charity and in willing service.” - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

T

he Barbados Community Foundation is a trust that was established with the goal of “enhancing the quality of life in Barbados” by assisting charities and projects that are associated with local community affairs. Since its inception in 1999, the trust’s contribution to charitable causes represents one of the leading examples of sustained philanthropy in Barbados. The Trustees of The Barbados Community Foundation are Chairman Paul Altman, Brian Barnes, Sir Trevor Carmichael, Geoffrey Cave, Terry Hanton and Oliver Jordan. Individuals and organizations are reviewed for eligibility on an annual basis. Some examples of charities and projects that have been supported by the Barbados Community Foundation include Project PEARYL (Project for Enriching and Restoring Young Lives) and its Crisis Centre for the youth

Sarah Clarke, Manager of the Barbados Community Foundation presenting a cheque for the annual upkeep and maintenance of the Barbados Council for the Disabled’s bus which transports children to and from school. Looking on is Senator Kerry-Ann Ifill, President of the Senate and member of the visually impaired community.

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of Barbados, The Future Centre Trust, The Barbados Youth Business Trust, The Barbados Cancer Society, The Barbados Heart & Stroke Foundation, The Barbados Kidney Association, The Special Olympics of Barbados, Pinelands Creative Workshop, The Barbados Council for the Disabled, The Hope-Martin Foundation and The WISH Centre. The foundation has also provided support to local athletes, artists and musicians. Those who are interested in supporting the trust can either become a formal patron or friend, or make a contribution at First Caribbean International Bank (account number 12-3513479). For further information, please contact the Barbados Community Foundation at 429-7838, e-mail admin@ barbadoscommunityfoundation.org or visit the website at www.barbadoscommunityfoundation.org.











Nightlife


A

s the sun sets and the air cools, the island’s nightlife starts to heat up. Egrets head home to roost, the chorus of

whistling frogs starts singing and the island’s pulse takes on a different rhythm. From jazz to soca to steel pan, someone’s playing music somewhere. Even in lively churches you can hear tambourines. At a club or someone’s fete, people will be dancing. On some moonlit beach, there’s a party. In restaurants and roadside stalls, there’s good food sending out aromas to entice you. Fish Frys, like casual Oistins in the south and lesser known Moontown in the north, attract people to flaming coalpots and sizzling grills. Elegant hotels put their shows on under the stars and on the east coast, the moon and sun rise in turn, lighting the sea that embraces us.

Feature Article 300 Meet a Bajan - Merton Blackman

Flaming coal pots at a local fish fry Photo: Mike Toy

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St. Lawrence Gap A mile-long strip famous for its fine restaurants, diverse accommodation, lively nightlife, fantastic beaches and shopping. Located on the south coast of Barbados, St. Lawrence Gap (or simply The Gap as it’s locally known) is a mile-long strip bustling with activity and packed with a huge variety of bars, restaurants, nightclubs, hotels and some of the best beaches on the island! During the day visitors and locals alike take in the fabulous Dover Beach with its powder white sand and watersports and enjoy a little local flavour with food from one of the many Bajan food vendors housed in quaint beach huts by the sea. But it’s after the sun goes down that The Gap really comes to life! Ever since the early 50’s St. Lawrence Gap has been renowned for its nightlife; today the island beat still permeates – and everyone dances to it – young and old, and everyone in between. The Gap pulsates to the sound of late night entertainment from Reggae to Rock, R&B to Soca and Jazz, you will likely even come across a karaoke session if that’s your thing! Local rum shops rub shoulders with fine-dining, ocean-front restaurants, Mexican food is served up a stone’s throw away from Italian and everyone gets to pause and take in the most spectacular sunsets across the bay. Go for Indian, go for steaks, go for cocktails, but whatever you do, just go!

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Harbour Lights Harbour Lights offers some of Barbados’ best nightlife, the superb, open-air, beachfront location makes it the perfect spot for dancing on the beach, under the stars!

Mondays & Wednesdays Beach Extravaganza Dinner Show: This is the island’s most complete dinner show, with a thrilling cast of Caribbean Characters who hypnotize the crowd with electrifying performances. Marvel at the fire eater, stiltmen and the limbo dancer and journey back in time with the tuk band accompanied by the very well endowed Mother Sally. Feel the vibes of a live band while dancing barefoot in the sand. The energetic presentation, from steel pan artiste, Zige and the beautiful Carnival dancers leaves everyone longing for more. Enjoy a tasty BBQ dinner and unlimited drinks until 2am. All ages welcomed 7pm – 10:30pm. Unrivalled entertainment and excellent value for money, not to be missed! Reservations required, call 436-7225. Club Nights on Wednesdays and Fridays: Whether you want to shake a leg to some of the best club music around, or just ‘lime’ by the bar on their ‘all you can drink’ nights – you are guaranteed a great time at Harbour Lights! Wednesdays - Best Wednesday Night ALWAYS: The weekend starts on Wednesdays at Harbour Lights! Popular with Bajans and visitors alike the entrance fee gets you into the club and all you can drink is FREE from 9:30 –2:00am. Guaranteed great time!

Fridays - OH! WHAT A FRIDAY: Experience the best party on the island! Your rum, gin, vodka, beer, rum punch, soft drinks and juices are all included with your admission fee. The partying starts at 9:30pm and drinks are free until 3am. Taxis available all night. Enjoy the non-stop action at the hottest nightspot in town - it’s all happening at Harbour Lights! Open 3 nights a week - Mondays, Wednesdays & Fridays. Dress code: Guys, no sleeveless shirts or hats. Tel (246) 436-7225 www.harbourlightsbarbados.com Facebook /harbourlightsbdos Marine Villa, Bay Street, St. Michael

Ins & Outs of Barbados  299


Merton Blackman tending his coal pots

Merton’s Place

Photo: Mike Toy

Photo: Andrew Hulsmeier

Merton Blackman

The Man Behind Moontown’s Popular Fish Fry By Sarah Venable

“Our biggest mistake is trying to educate everyone in the same system. The land still has to be tilled, houses have to be built, and boats have to be repaired.” People have to eat too, and hard-working Merton Blackman is a practical man. His grandmother taught him life skills, including how to cook. As a youth (when he wasn’t in the sea) he waited tables at the Coral Reef Club and worked his way up to restaurant supervisor. People kept telling him they wanted to try real, local food. So he started cooking on two coal-pots under the breadfruit tree on his cousin’s sea-cliff land in the tiny fishing village of Half Moon Fort, St. Lucy. “All we did was fry fish, chicken and chips,” he recalls. Thirty years later, he and his son Khoury do complete dinners—fish, chicken or pork with breadfruit and/or ground provisions, macaroni pie, salad and a vegetable—while a colleague mans the bar. Merton’s Place now has a roof and can seat nearly 100 people, but Merton still fuels his grill with scrap mahogany from his network of boat builders and furniture makers.

There’s old-time authenticity around it, on this seaside village road where families have lived for generations. Next door at the fish market, men enjoy a drink and dominoes. Across the street, the homegrown Moontown complex does brisk business on weekends. Part supermarket, part take-away, part bar, part bakery, it’s a place to wander in for a turn at the karaoke microphone or to take a partner on the dance floor after you’ve dined. Merton remains a man of the sea. Like so many men on the coastal stretch from St. Peter into St. Lucy, his father was a boat builder. Young Merton swam with model sailboats, and fished the reef with traps. Merton’s Place serves dinner Thursday through Saturday evenings, while the bar is constant. “I don’t ever relax,” he says. “I’d feel weird.” It must be the daily sea bath that keeps him sane and happy.

meet a Bajan 300  Nightlife


MOJO is one of the most established bars on the South Coast and is hugely popular amongst locals and visitors alike. Black and white portraits of famous musicians line the walls and Bob Marley has his own dedicated “Back Bar” room. The bar is intimate, lively and offers authentic cocktails and friendly service. Well known for their shots, “Blue Bubbie” being a popular choice, MOJO also serves food in their award winning “Chopping Board Kitchen” Restaurant and is open late. If you ask a local what MOJO is really about they will say the music, you are guaranteed to hear something you can sing along to, if not requests are welcomed. Check out their Facebook page for information on specials that run throughout the week. MOJO… Music for the People…Food for the Soul...Libations for the Spirit.

Tel (246) 435-9008 or 262-MOJO fb: Mojo Bar & The Chopping Board Kitchen mojobarbados@gmail.com Worthing Main Road, Christ Church

MOJO

Eat, Drink & Chill at Bert’s – the House of the Daiquiri since 1976. At Bert’s, there’s something for everyone. Enjoy a great meal in the dining room, pull up a stool at the island bar to catch the game, or chill poolside with a daiquiri. Happy Hourand-a-Half 4:30–6pm. Dig into a Bert’s authentic stone-fired pizza, experience traditional Bajan fare or enjoy one of Bert’s original favourites. With state-of-the-art international sports coverage and more than 24 flat screens inside & poolside, sports fans won’t miss any of the action! Come early to catch the pre-game excitement! Major credit cards accepted.

Tel (246) 435-7924 | Pizza Hotline: (246) 431-1111 www.bertsbarbados.com info@bertsbarbados.com Rockley, Christ Church

Bert’s

This vibrant Mexican and Margarita Bar, at the John was born in London,Grill however it was here in located Barbados, entrance to St. Lawrence Gap with an ocean view, is a favourite in his mid-fifties, that he started to paint seriously and with spot locals Using and visitors alike. Open days a week,the Café greatfor passion. a palette knife andseven oils he recreated Sol is and renowned their famous 'Tex-Mex' massive bright cheerfulfor rural scenes of his beloved dishes, Barbadian countryside. John hisatmosphere. family continue his legacy on margarita list,As and thewished, fun, cozy canvas andwas archival visit Café Sol ratedpaper. in thePlease top 5 for "BEST NIGHTLIFE" and top www.johnstuartart.com view many of his paintings. For 20 "MOST POPULAR" in to Barbados in the recent Zagat Survey. family favourites and pricing kindly contact John’s daughter, Daily Happy Hours from 5-7pm and 10-12pm, and 2 for 1

Manty Cooper. Alternatively, John’s art until can be found in many drinks specials every night from 6 pm close! galleries the island. After thethroughout Beach Sundays - A great day at the beach followed by a great spot to hangout. Enjoy live music and an extended happy hour from 4pm-7pm.

Tel (246) 420-7655 www.cafesolbarbados.com | info@cafesolbarbados.com St. Lawrence Gap, Christ Church

Café Sol

Ins & Outs of Barbados  301


Section Restaurant Guide


O

ne of Barbados’ greatest attractions is that this island has so much wonderful variety to offer, all neatly packaged

into a very compact and easily accessible space. This is perhaps never more evident than when considering the incredible range and diversity of restaurants and dining options currently available on the island. Anybody who appreciates good food will relish the dining experience in Barbados, a country that is widely acclaimed as the unofficial ‘Restaurant Capital of the Caribbean’. Barbados has been blessed with a rich culinary heritage that has been fashioned over the centuries by the different styles and influences of Amerindians, Africans, Europeans and Asians.

304 - 306  Restaurant Classifications

Photo courtesy Cin Cin By The Sea

Ins & Outs of Barbados  303


Asian

Italian

Eclectic Bajan Blue (Sandy Lane Hotel)

326

Daphne’s

Beach House , The

323

D’Onofrio’s (The Crane)

307, 328, 329 349

Zen (The Crane)

346, 347

Camelot at Cobblers Cove

311

Mama Mia Italian Deli & Pizzeria

339

Tapas

340

332, 333

Cliff, The

9, 330, 331

Coral Reef Club Daphne’s

319 307, 328, 329

Indian Caribbean 350 326 311

Garden Terrace (Southern Palms)

342

Hilton Barbados

337

Camelot at Cobblers Cove

324, 325

L’Azure (The Crane)

348

Lone Star

316, 317

Asian Spice

Atlantis, The Bajan Blue (Sandy Lane Hotel)

L’Acajou (Sandy Lane Hotel)

332, 333 314

Lone Star

Cin Cin

Cin Cin

316, 317

344 334, 335

322

Relish Epicurea

Café Luna Champers

Asian Spice

Champers

334, 335

Cin Cin

332, 333

Coral Reef Club

319

322

Mexican Café Sol

345

Port St. Charles Yacht Club

309

Garden Terrace (Southern Palms)

342

Seafood

Sandpiper, The

318

Juma’s Restaurant

312

Atlantis, The

350

Tapas

340

L’Azure (The Crane)

348

Bajan Blue (Sandy Lane Hotel)

326

Lobster Alive & All That Jazz

336

Café Luna (Fri. - Lobster night)

344

Mullins Beach Bar

315

Camelot at Cobblers Cove

311

Port St. Charles Yacht Club

309

Champers

Sandpiper, The

318

Chopping Board Kitchen

Zen (The Crane)

346, 347

Mediterranean Beach House , The

323

Champers

334, 335

Chopping Board Kitchen

343

Cin Cin Daphne’s

Cin Cin

332, 333 307, 328, 329

D’Onofrio’s (The Crane)

349

Mama Mia Italian Deli & Pizzeria Relish Epicurea

Cliff, The

Bajan

Coral Reef Club

Atlantis, The

350

Daphne’s

Beach House , The

323

Juma’s Restaurant

Bert’s

301, 305, 341

Cliff, The Coral Reef Club Juma’s Restaurant L’Acajou (Sandy Lane Hotel)

9, 330, 331 319 307, 328, 329 312

L’Acajou (Sandy Lane Hotel)

324 348

339

Chopping Board Kitchen

343

314

Coral Reef Club (Weekly Buffet)

319

Lobster Alive & All That Jazz

336

Lancaster Great House

310

Lobster Pot, The

313

Restaurant at Animal Flower Cave, The 308

Mullins Beach Bar

315

Sandpiper, The

Lone Star

318

French Camelot at Cobblers Cove

343 332, 333

L’Azure (The Crane)

Tapas 340

Nishi

Café La Suite (Un Dimanche à Paris)

334, 335

321 311

Japanese / Sushi Bajan Blue (Sandy Lane Hotel

326

319

Café Luna (Thurs. & Fri.)

344

312

Nishi

9, 330, 331

324, 325

Zen (The Crane)

320 346, 347

304  Restaurant Classifications

316, 317 320

Sandpiper, The

318

Zen (The Crane)

346, 347


Bistros Atlantis, The Bert’s

Private Functions

Lounge / Bar 350

Beach House , The (Drift)

301, 305, 341

Camelot at Cobblers Cove

Café La Suite (Lunch only)

321

Cin Cin

Café Luna

344

Chopping Board Kitchen

Café Sol

345

Cliff, The

Centro at Marriot

338

Hilton Barbados

Champers

334, 335

Lone Star

323

Atlantis, The

350

311

Beach House , The

323

332, 333 343 9, 330, 331 337 316, 317

Champers

334, 335

Cin Cin

332, 333

Cliff, The

9, 330, 331

Hilton Barbados

337

Lancaster Great House 310

Chopping Board Kitchen

343

Mullins Beach Bar

D’Onofrio’s (The Crane)

349

Tapas 340

Juma’s Restaurant

312

Sandy Lane Hotel

Lobster Alive & All That Jazz

336

Lobster Pot, The

313

Beach Bars

Tapas 340

Mama Mia Italian Deli & Pizzeria

339

Lobster Alive & All That Jazz

336

Mullins Beach Bar

315

Mullins Beach Bar

315

Port St. Charles Yacht Club

309

Relish Epicurea

314

Tapas 340

326

Café Sol

345

Hilton Barbados

337

Relish Epicurea

314 324-327

Zen (The Crane)

346

Asian Spice

Sports Bars Mullins Beach Bar

Bajan Blue (Sandy Lane Hotel)

348

L’Azure (The Crane)

Take Away Bert’s

Steak Houses / Grills

315

Bert's 301, 305, 341 315

D’Onofrio’s (The Crane)

349

Lobster Alive & All That Jazz

336

Mama Mia Italian Deli & Pizzeria

339

Nishi 320

Jazz Bars Lobster Alive & All That Jazz

322 301, 305, 341

336

Relish Epicurea

314

Zen (The Crane)

346

Ins & Outs of Barbados  305


Open for Lunch

Special Sunday Lunch

Breakfast

Asian Spice

322

West Coast:

Atlantis, The

350

Atlantis, The

350

Bajan Blue (Sandy Lane Hotel)

326

Bajan Blue (Sandy Lane Hotel)

326

Bajan Blue (Sandy Lane Hotel)

326

Beach House , The (Bajan Buffet)

323

Café Luna

344

Beach House , The

323

Camelot at Cobblers Cove

311

Camelot at Cobblers Cove

311

Centro at Marriott

338

Bert’s

301, 305, 341

Cin Cin

Café La Suite (Un Dimanche à Paris)

321

Coral Reef Club

Café Luna

344

Lone Star

Camelot at Cobblers Cove

311

Lobster Pot, The

Centro at Marriott

338

Port St. Charles Yacht Club

332, 333 319

Coral Reef Club

319

Garden Terrace (Southern Palms)

342

313

L’Azure (The Crane)

348

309

Lobster Pot, The

313

316, 317

Cin Cin

332, 333

East Coast:

Champers

334, 335

Atlantis, The

350

Mama Mia Italian Deli & Pizzeria

339

343

L’Azure (The Crane)

348

Relish Dockside (Port Ferdinand)

314

319

Countryside:

Chopping Board Kitchen Coral Reef Club

Lone Star (Winter months only)

Lancaster Great House

310

342

Sunbury House

228

Juma’s Restaurant

312

South Coast:

L’Azure (The Crane)

348

Champers

Lobster Alive & All That Jazz

336

Garden Terrace (Southern Palms)

313

Daphne’s

307, 328, 329

Garden Terrace (Southern Palms)

334, 335

316, 317

Relish Epicurea (Limegrove)

314

Sandpiper, The

318

Afternoon Tea

342

Atlantis, The

350

Hilton Barbados

337

Bajan Blue (Sandy Lane Hotel)

326

Lobster Alive & All That Jazz

336

Café La Suite (Un Dimanche à Paris)

321

339

Camelot at Cobblers Cove

311

Mullins Beach Bar

315

Coral Reef Club

319

Port St. Charles Yacht Club

309

Lancaster Great House

310

Relish Epicurea

314

L’Azure (The Crane)

348

Sandpiper, The

318

Lobster Pot, The Lone Star Mama Mia Italian Deli & Pizzeria

316, 317

Restaurant at Animal Flower Cave, The 308

Picnics to Go

Sandy Lane Country Club

327

Relish Epicurea (Limegrove)

Sandy Lane Spa Café

327

Sandpiper, The

318

Sunbury House

228

314

Tapas 340

306  Restaurant Classifications



The Restaurant at The

Animal Flower Cave A wonderful new addition to the dining scene! Owner Mannie Ward and his wife Sue opened a beautiful new restaurant at the Animal Flower Cave in November 2014. Located right out on the most northerly point of Barbados, the ocean views are stunning - it feels almost like dining at sea! Tasty local dishes using farmers produce and fresh local fish and seafood.

Reservations (246) 439-8797

Ins & Outs Tip Just 15 minutes from Speightstown and 30 minutes from Holetown and well worth the drive! The best place to spot passing whales between February and mid April

animalflowercave@outlook.com www.facebook.com/animalflowercave www.s-ward.wix.com/animalflowercave Animal Flower Cave, St. Lucy

Salt Fish Cakes Conch Fritters Pumpkin Fritters Buljol Smoked Conch Spicy Chicken Liver Salad Flying Fish, Chicken Liver or Ham Cutters Made with local salt breads Fresh Catch Of The Day Curried Goat Lamb Stew All main courses served with sweet potato, yam, cassava, cou cou or rice and peas. Vegetarian and Gluten Free choices available.

Lunch • Everyday 11am-5pm BB$ Menu prices • 18-45

308  The Restaurant at Animal Flower Cave


Full service bar and restaurant. A wide range of international cuisine prepared by their world class chef. Open for lunch, dinner and bar service in an open air setting with friendly service. Panoramic views along the West Coast. Deck loungers are provided for sunning and a staircase into the sea complements the pool for swimming.

Reservations (246) 419-1000 ext. 2284 www.portstcharles.com psc.yc@caribsurf.com Port St. Charles, St. Peter Homemade 6oz Burger Garnished with panko crusted onion rings, coleslaw and golden crisp fries Chicken and Pepper Jack Panini Pita pocket filled with grilled chicken, pepper jack cheese, tomato salsa and garlic aioli Catch of the Day (Grilled, Blackened or Pan-Fried) Accompanied by saffron couscous, citrus vinaigrette and garden vegetables Bajan Jerk Tortellini Stuffed cheese pasta tossed in Alfredo sauce with local jerk spices, broccoli, mushrooms, peppers topped with parmiggiano reggiano West Indian Curry Your choice of chicken, shrimp or fish simmered in a green Thai coconut curry complemented by basmati rice, poppadums, steamed vegetables and mango chutney

Ins & Outs Tip Sunday buffet - roast beef and yorkshire pudding with live steelpan music. Live music for dancing on Friday nights!

Lunch • 7 days a week 12pm-4pm Dinner • 5 nights a week Tues-Sat 6:30pm-9:30pm Bar Service Tues–Sat 10am-10pm; Sun and Mon 10am-6pm BB$ Starters • 25-34 | Mains • 40-75 | Desserts • 18-26 * (opening times are subject to change in the summer months from April –November)

Port St. Charles Yacht Club  309


Lancaster Great House AN AMAZING BARBADIAN EXPERIENCE!

Ins & Outs Tip This is a marvellous place to have a private dinner or lunch for a special occasion or just because you’re in Barbados - it will be an experience to remember!

John and Rain Chandler, renowned for their planters lunches and entertaining candle light dinners at Fisherpond House in St. Thomas, have bought and renovated the wonderful Lancaster Great House in James. Their collection of whimsical and eclectic antiques and objects d’art in this lovely old home will take you back in time to an era of elegance and sophistication. Tropically landscaped grounds with exotic birds surround their new family home. Lancaster Great House offers a selection of carefully chosen menus of both Barbadian and International cuisine. Their Sunday Planters buffet won an award from the late Michael Winner in his Winner’s Dinners Book. Fabulous flowers, crystal and china. Live piano music. John will regale you with stories from his recently published memoirs - Hotel Barbados - A life of discretion at the Ocean view

Reservations Essential (246) 266-8752 fb LancasterGreatHouse rainchandler@hotmail.com Lancaster, St. James

Sunday - Barbadian Planter’s Buffet Lunch served year round. Friday - Mr. Chandler’s Dinner Party With special menues of international cuisine Thursday - Planters Buffet Lunch – Dec. to Apr. Private Lunch and Dinner functions Fabulous Venue for Small Weddings Cocktail Parties and Corporate Events Personal Tours by John

Lunch • Thursdays and Sundays Dinner • Friday nights Private Functions

310  Lancaster Great House


Stunning ocean-front restaurant at Cobblers Cove Hotel. Popular with guests and locals alike . Winner of Barbados Restaurant of the Year, 2014. Barbados-born chef, Michael Harrison, sources many ingredients from local farmers. The hotel’s fisherman, Barker, brings in a daily catch that goes straight on the menu.

Reservations (246) 422-2291 www.cobblerscove.com reservations@cobblerscove.com Cobblers Cove Hotel, Road View, Speightstown, St. Peter

Pan-fried Foie Gras with Vanilla Apples With truffle potatoes, micro greens and merlot jus Lobster and Melon Tasting Poached lobster and melon salsa, petit lobster cappuccino and lobster salad

Ins & Outs Tip Fridays at Cobblers Cove are a celebration of seafood, featuring the finest caviar, oysters, lobster and the catch of the day.

Pan-fried Duck Breast with Sautéed Bok Choy With cauliflower, polenta and blueberry pool Fisherman Barker’s Daily Seafood Haul Served with christophene, yams, spiced carrot pureé and lemongrass sauce Crab, Shrimp, Scallop and Green Pea Risotto Served with confit cherry tomatoes and Parmesan shavings Cheesecake with Balsamic Strawberries Raspberry and White Chocolate Parfait with mixed melon salsa

Breakfast | Lunch | Dinner • Daily BB$ Lunch Starters from $25 and Main courses from $47 BB$ Dinner – Starters from $35 and Main courses from $70

CAMELOT AT COBBLERS COVE  311


Juma’s received the Trip Advisor Certificate of Excellence 2014. Stunning location, overlooking the beautiful and unspoiled Speightstown beach. The menu is highly eclectic featuring Thai, Classic French and Bajan dishes. Complimentary transport is provided for guests from anywhere on the west coast, as well as beach loungers and umbrellas. Beautifully furnished with unique custom built mahogany tables and an astounding collection of African art.

Ins & Outs Tip Take a walk on the boardwalk and enjoy the beautiful view, then have lunch with friends.

Reservations (246) 432-0232 or 234-7286 www.jumasrestaurant.com info@jumasrestaurant.com Speightstown, St. Peter Curried Pumpkin, Sweet Potato & Coconut Soup with root ginger, garlic, coriander and cumin Coquilles St. Jacques scallops in a white wine, garlic & onion sauce topped with cheese Baked 16oz Lobster Tail marinated in teriyaki, ginger & garlic Braised Oxtail in Red Wine Slow cooked in a fine merlot with sweet potatoes, carrots & christophene Seafood Thermidor Scallops, marlin and shrimps in a classic thermidor sauce Banana Four Ways Warmed banana cake, banana cheesecake, caramelised bananas & an alcoholic banana smoothie Gran’s Coconut Cake Jules’ family recipe - simple but beautiful An English Country Garden in Summer Trifle, Pimms sorbet, white chocolate crème brulee, strawberry cheesecake Breakfast • Everyday from 9am Lunch & Dinner • Everyday BB$ Starters • from 15 | Mains • from 40 |Desserts • from 20

312  Juma’s


Open for Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner. Located on one of the finest beaches on the west coast. The ultimate place to relax and unwind. Sun loungers and beach umbrellas provided. Complimentary transport provided from anywhere on the west coast. Shaded by mature almond trees that are incorporated into the beach decking. The Lobster Pot is always cool, calm and collected.

Reservations (246) 432-0287 or 231-7286 www.thelobsterpotbarbados.com info@thelobsterpotbarbados.com Crab Diablo Au Champignon A large field mushroom stuffed with spicy crabmeat and served with home made tartare sauce Lobster Bisque Classic creamy lobster soup with just a dash of brandy

Ins & Outs Tip Perfect for informal and relaxed dining on the beach in the heart of Speightstown.

Lobster Thermidor Topped with a creamy thermidor sauce then grilled and served with your choice of hand cut chips or rice, salad or vegetables Lobster Patia a classic Indian curry, hot and sweet, served with jasmine rice Curried Goat A Caribbean classic - Goat meat in a hot and spicy sauce with rice and peas Profiteroles Drizzled with chocolate sauce Apple Pie with home made custard Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner • 9am-9:30pm Tuesday-Sunday (Closed Mondays) BB$ Starters • from 20 | Mains • from 50 | Desserts • from 20

The Lobster Pot  313


The food is exciting & the wine list is refreshingly varied. Lots of healthy options. The menu is anchored on world flavours, with unique palates. The culinary emphasis is on cleverly created dishes. Paul Wedgwood of Wedgwood The Restaurant, has joined the team as associate culinary partner.

Reservations (246) 621-0077

Ins & Outs Tip Try the Relish Early Bird Special on Saturdays: Fresh Flying Fish & Bakes with Avocado & Onion Salsa ... Delish!

www.facebook.com/relishepicurea alison@relishepicurea.com Relish Epicurea, Limegrove Lifestyle Centre, St. James Relish Dockside, Port Ferdinand Marina, St. Peter

Café Brasserie Menu Breakfast Relish Raver: 2 eggs, bacon, beans & croissant Steak & Eggs - with sautéed onions & mushrooms Bakers selection: freshly baked breads, muffins, croisants & danish. Healthy Choice Platters & Gluten Free Solutions World Flavour Salads Chipotle Roasted Salmon - with black beans, roasted red pepper avocado & cilantro chipotle dressing Lobster Caesar - with garlic-lemon croutons, anchovies, aged parmesan & relish fresh toss dressing Grilled Sweet Potato Roti - with roasted pineapple, mixed sweet peppers, gourmet greens & jerk vinaigrette Banh Mi Flying Fish - with romain lettuce, radish, shredded carrot, jalapeño & sweet chili garlic sauce World Flavour Mains Moroccan Lamb - with garlic cassava mash, steamed veg, & cucumber pickle Spicy Lobster - with linguine, wiri wiri peppers & roasted cherry tomato sauce Chicken Curry - with rice n peas, pickled veg, relish chutney & dhal roti Small Plate Tasters Boutique cheeses, deli meats, & island ceviche Dec- April: Monday - Saturday • 9am-7pm | Sunday • 9am-3pm May-Nov: Monday - Saturday • 9am-5pm | Sunday • 9am-3pm BB$ Breakfast • 6-40 | Café Brasserie Menu • 18-60

314  Relish Epicurea


This west coast institution is a REAL beach bar. Rory & Jason serve up great local favourites and many tasty beach bar classics. Live music & DJ on certain days. Great for sunset cocktails. Their burger and shrimp roti are rocking! Watch sports on two 60” flat-screens! A great place to arrive by boat. Watersports and water toys available!

No Reservations taken, first come first served basis: Tel (246) 422-2044 harbingerltd@gmail.com Mullins, St. Peter

Buljol with Bakes Bajan favourite salt fish, lime, chopped tomatoes, herbs and spices Shrimp Salad with Avocado fresh mango and citrus dressing Shrimp & Potato Roti

Ins & Outs Tips This is a barefoot, chill out, have a drink, grab a bite, go for a swim, beach bar - its fun! The blue beach chairs are private but there are beach chairs for rent to the right.

Grilled Chicken Breast With mixed quinoa and pineapple salsa Piri Piri Shrimp Shredded vegetable salad with grilled shrimp Fish, Chicken or Beef Tacos With mixed bean salad and a spicy mayonnaise Chocolate Fudge Brownie With vanilla ice-cream Cheesecake with blueberry or strawberry topping

Bar Opens • Daily 10am Beach Grill Service • Daily 11am-7pm

Mullins Beach Bar & Restaurant  315


The Lone Star restaurant and hotel located on the famed platinum coast is renowned for its idyllic setting, celebrity clientele and buzzy yet laid back atmosphere. The new menu is a fusion of Italian fare and their much loved timeless Lone Star classics. The beach and the pizzas from the wood fire oven are sure to be a favourite with the younger customers.

Ins & Outs Tips Sunday lunch is still a must at the Lone Star…. Some things never change! Enjoy a rum sour at sunset or a post dinner glass of champagne in the cocktail lounge.

Reservations (246) 419-0599 www.thelonestar.com Mount Standfast, St. James Lunch Woodstone Oven Pizza Margarita, Diovola, Fruta di Mare, Rucula, Amore American Black Angus Beefburger Hand cut chips Fresh Market Fish Grilled vegetables, tropical fruit salsa Dinner Crab Crusted Mahi-Mahi Watermelon, tomato fondu Fresh Main Lobster and Prawn Risotto Bisque reduction Black Angus Beef Filet Mignon Sautéed potato, mushrooms, asparagus and crispy onions Roasted Rack & Braised Shoulder of Lamb French beans, boulangere potato Banana Donuts With rum caramel, roasted pistachio nuts and coconut ice cream

Lunch • 11.30am-3pm | Dinner • 6pm-11pm BB$ Starters • 21-70 | Mains • 36-125 | Wine • 62-998

316  Restaurant Guide


Lone Star  317


Owner managed with great attention to detail. Elegant and comfortable surroundings. Highly rated for serving consistently excellent cuisine. Chef Christophe Poupardin creates a variety of popular dishes. Sumptuous buffet on Wednesdays. Barbecue on Sundays with live steel pan music. Top notch service!

Ins & Outs Tip With entertainment several nights a week, an excellent chef and top notch service, this is a great west coast hotel at which to enjoy dinner and dancing.

Reservations Essential (246) 422-2251 www.sandpiperbarbados.com reception@sandpiperbarbados.com St. James Beach, St. James

Rare Roasted Beef Salad with Gorgonzola poached plums & asparagus with a roasted tomato aioli Seared Scallops with Caramelized Carrot Purée micro herbs, crisp pancetta & a balsamic reduction Seared Local King Fish with Squash Puree presented with a warm butter bean, tomato & red onion salad Grilled King Prawns with Crispy Fried Chorizo steamed jasmine rice & roasted asparagus Roasted Rack of Lamb with Chargrilled Vegetables crusted with whole grain mustard & served with a rosemary jus Frozen Baileys Irish Cream Parfait coffee bean anglaise poppy seed tuille Molten Dark Chocolate Tart vanilla bean cream sauce with chocolate Malibu ice cream

Breakfast • 7:30-10am | Lunch • 12-2:30pm Dinner • 7-9:30pm BB$ Starters • 30-45 | Mains • 82-95 | Desserts • 28-35

318  The Sandpiper


A reliably enjoyable dining experience. A team of accomplished and experienced chefs. A new a la carte menu each day . Bajan Buffet on Mondays. BBQ Night on Thursdays with a floorshow & steelpan . Fresh seafood, prime meats & vegetarian dishes. Coral Reef is an impeccable family owned hotel

Reservations Essential (246) 422-2372 www.coralreefbarbados.com reception.mail@coralreefbarbados.com St. James Beach, St. James

Flying Fish & Crab Roll on spicy creole lentils with avocado smoothie & beetroot essence Smoked Chicken Risotto with asparagus, chorizo sausage, sundried tomatoes & mozzarella cheese Broiled Fillet of Barracuda on herb and raisin cous cous with wilted greens, vegetable brochette and carrot coulis Tournedos of Beef with garlic mashed potatoes, melted gorgonzola cheese, wild mushrooms, asparagus, pearl onions and sauvignon wine jus

Ins & Outs Tip The spacious and elegant lounge bar is a superb way to start an evening at Coral Reef. Thursday nights BBQ buffet with a floorshow and steelpan is a high quality Caribbean experience.

Deep Fried Filo Wrapped Banana Fritter with coconut ice cream, drizzled with golden syrup Individual White Chocolate Truffle Cake with dark chocolate glaze & dark chocolate sorbet

Breakfast • 7:30-10:30am | Lunch • 1-3pm Dinner • 7:30-9:30pm BB$ Starters • 30-45 | Mains • 80-95 | Desserts • 20-35

Coral Reef Club  319


Are they mad? Sushi and Pies? Chic and elegantly casual. Your hosts - owners Paul Edwards & Steve Prebble. European Bistro with a Caribbean twist! Excellent sushi chefs from Indonesia, trained in Japan. Alfresco courtyard or air-conditioned dining room. New air-conditioned balconies upstairs! Brilliant cocktails.

Reservations (246) 432-8287 or 432-2112

Ins & Outs Tip The Tempura shrimp are delicious Have sushi to start followed by a pie! Wonderful English puddings for dessert

www.nishi-restaurant.com nishirestaurant.com@gmail.com 2nd Street, Holetown, St. James

Lobster Maki Served with lobster tempura Volcano California roll topped with baked hot seafood, shrimp, crabmeat, tobiko and mayo Spicy Maki Tuna or salmon with chili miso and tobiko Bajan Jerk Pork Pie, Chicken, Leeks and Ham Pie and Angus Beef and Mushroom Pie All with garden peas and mash or fat chips Tempura Shrimp Nobashi shrimp & special tempura sauce New York Rib Eye 10 oz Steak au poivre, sautéed field mushrooms, fat chips and mixed green salad Bramley Apple Crumble Sticky Toffee Rum Date Pudding

Dinner • Every night in season Closed on Mondays in summer BB$ Starters • 29-39 | Mains • 48-98 | Wine • 65-895

320  Nishi


Café La Suite Enjoy a delightful taste of Paris at this very unique lifestyle boutique café. Brief refreshing moments or a long leisurely lunch in comfortable chic surroudings. Sit outside watching the Limegrove world go by, or settle indoors in the cool for a relaxing lunch between shopping with family and friends. Fresh French cuisine created daily by the in-house chef, superb French wines, superior coffees, and "Mariages Frères" teas & iced drinks.

Reservations (246) 271-8242 fb UnDimancheàParisBoutique Ground Floor, Limegrove Lifestyle Centre, Holetown, St. James

Smoked Salmon Tartine Tomato Mozzarella Tartine "César" Tartine All Tartines also available as a salad

Ins & Outs Tip When visiting this charming French concept store & café don't forget to pop next door to it's big sister boutique Un Dimanche à Paris with its fine selection of classic and innovative designers.

Tuna Tartare Beef Tagliata Asparagus Risotto with Black Truffle Aroma "Retour du Marché" Basket of crudités Lemon Tart Caramel Salted Butter Cake Red Fruits Crumble Gourmet "Café"

Breakfast • Monday-Saturday 10am Lunch • Mon-Sat 12-4pm (Low season closed on Mondays) BB$ Amuse-bouche + Mains • 50-65 | Desserts • 25

Café La Suite at Un Dimanche à Paris  321


Airy dining room in a relaxed poolside setting. Indian chefs create dishes ranging from traditional Tandoori favourites and delectable kebabs that melt in your mouth, to rich, creamy Kormas and superb vegetarian and vegan selections, all invigorated with authentic spices to create a truly palate-pleasing dining experience. Take away available for lunch and dinner.

Reservations (246) 432-1321

Ins & Outs Tip Their Kebabs are a healthy alternative, seasoned and flame kissed in their tandoor…...worth the wait for the flavour!

www.allseasonsresort.bb asianspice@allseasonsresort.bb All Seasons Resort, Palm Avenue, Sunset Crest, St. James Paneer Tikka Roasted cubes of Cottage Cheese marinated in yogurt, chilli powder & spices Reshmi Kebab Cubes of boneless chicken in a cashew nut paste Dhal Tadka Yellow Lentils cooked with a mild bouquet of Indian spices & tempered with garlic Butter Chicken Boneless chicken enveloped in a rich tomato based sauce cooked with cashew, butter & cream Shrimp Korma A rich creamy combination, in a cashew nut paste & cream Falooda Kulfi Rich creamy homemade ice cream topped with vermicelli & rose syrup Chenna Pais Indian delicacy made with saffron, cardamoms, & homemade sweet cottage cheese Lunch • From 11:30am | Dinner • From 6pm | Closed Mondays (Varied times depending on occupancy. Enquire while making reservations)

BB$ Starters • 14-60 | Mains • 22-59 | Desserts • 18-24

322  Asian Spice


Breathtaking seafront location . Romantic flame lit evenings. Daily local specials at lunchtime - great value! Caribbean flavours with a Mediterranean flair. Busy Friday nights with live music. Famous Beach House Caribbean lunch buffet on Sundays - very popular.

Reservations (246) 432- 1163 info@thebeachhousebarbados.com www.thebeachhousebarbados.com Holetown. St. James

Our picks for lunch BBQ Pork Spare Ribs With sweet potato wedges and home-made BBQ sauce West Indian Curry Marinated chicken with mango chutney Dinner Coconut Shrimp with Spicy Mango and Coconut Dip Wild Mushroom Parmesan Crêpe Sauté mushrooms and julienne carrots in a white wine sauce

Ins & Outs Tip Have cocktails next door at Drift, perhaps at sunset, and then enjoy dinner at The Beach House, or dine first and finish off next door for oceanside cocktails in good company. Ideal for private functions.

Bacon Wrapped Chicken Stuffed with feta Catch of the Night With fresh local produce Spiced Rum Cherry Bread Pudding With nutmeg icecream and a cream sauce Trio of Creme Brulée Jamaican Blue Mountain coffee, vanilla and mango Beach House Cheesecake With seasonal fruit topping and fresh cream

Open everyday • Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner Lunch BB$ 29-68 | Dinner Starters • 14-32 | Main • 29-100

The Beach HOuse  323


Overlooks the Caribbean Sea. Sandy Lane’s signature restaurant. Specializes in light, gourmet cuisine. Impressive range of Old and New World wines. Stunning, open-air, beach-front restaurant.

Reservations (246) 444-2030 www.sandylane.com

Ins & Outs Tip Set the tone for a wonderful evening by starting with canapés and cocktails in the L’Acajou Bar.

diningreservations@sandylane.com Sandy Lane Hotel, Sandy Lane, St. James

Seared Maine Scallops Cauliflower purée, smoked almonds, cauliflower tempura Chilled Cucumber Gazpacho Yogurt, mint, fennel pollen Pan Seared Lemon Marinated Tiger Prawns Quinoa tabouli, heirloom salad Herb Crusted Loin of Colorado Lamb Provençal vegetables, fondant potato and rosemary jus Miso Marinated Black Cod Shrimp har-gau, green asparagus and truffle vinaigrette Chocolate Soufflé Roasted hazelnut, Frangelico sauce, praline ice cream Apple Mirliton Beetroot Almond and candy apple cake, beetroot sorbet, apple ginger espuma * Menu items and prices are subject to change

Dinner • 6:30-10pm BB$ Dinner: Starters • 45-105 | Mains • 110-240 | Dessert • 45-60

324  Restaurant Guide


L’Acajou at Sandy Lane  325


Informal restaurant offering all day dining. European, Caribbean & Asian influenced cuisine. Sunday Brunch is a must, as are the fantastic themed buffet evenings. Modern wine bar, sushi-station and state-of-the-art grill. Breathtaking waterside setting.

Reservations (246) 444-2030

Ins & Outs Tip For a truly delightful experience, try Afternoon Tea on the Lower Terrace.

www.sandylane.com diningreservations@sandylane.com Sandy Lane Hotel, Sandy Lane, St. James Antipasti Table Selection of marinated vegetables, mixed leaves and crudités Thai Curried Mussels Thai styled mussels galangal, kaffir lime leaves and coconut milk Pan Fried Red Tuna Pumpkin, chickpeas, raisins and capsicum salad with aged balsamic 72hr Braised Short Ribs in Red Wine Smoked bacon, mushrooms and shallots Paccheri, Black Angus Beef Bolognese Black Angus beef, vine tomato ragu, flat parsley, parmigiano-reggiano Sushi and Sashimi Combination Plate Chocolate Mango Madagascar chocolate mousse, mango compote, caramelized arlette Stracciatella Panna Cotta Crispy praline, passion curd, vanilla panna cotta * Menu items and prices are subject to change

Breakfast • 7-10:30am | Lunch • 12:30-3pm | Dinner • 7-10pm BB$ Starters • 30-130 | Mains • 60-195 | Dessert • 40

326  Bajan Blue At Sandy Lane


Incredible views of the greens and Caribbean Sea. Perfect place for light leisurely lunches, relaxed coffees or watching a spectacular sunset.

Reservations (246) 444-2030 www.sandylane.com diningreservations@sandylane.com Sandy Lane Hotel, Sandy Lane, St. James Jumbo Lump Crab Cake Celeriac remoulade, tomato jus Chilled Tomato Soup Crisp anchovy and mozzarella beignets Shepherd’s Pie Braised lamb, mashed potatoes, garden vegetables * Menu items and prices are subject to change Open for Lunch • 11am-5pm BB$ Starters • 37-85| Mains • 45-150 | Desserts • 34-60

Ins & Outs Tip At the Country Club: Sip exotic cocktails while enjoying the dazzling views of the picturesque golf course and gorgeous sunset. At The Spa Café: The soothing atmosphere of The Spa Café is a perfect complement to a day at The Spa. Why not book

Offers a casual menu throughout the day. Adjacent to the magnifcent swimming pool and cocooned by the cascading waterfall.

a Sandy Lane Full Body Massage as well?

Reservations (246) 444-2030 www.sandylane.com diningreservations@sandylane.com Sandy Lane Hotel, Sandy Lane, St. James Prosciutto di Parma and Cantaloupe Rocket, aged parmesan and toasted pine nuts Chilled Gazpacho Sour cream, virgin olive oil Smoked Turkey Sandwich Cranberry compote, rocket on homemade ciabatta *Menu items and prices are subject to change Open for Lunch • 12:30-3pm BB$ Starters • 40-85 | Mains • 55-170 | Desserts • 40

The Country Club & The Spa Café  327


One of the top restaurants in Barbados and sister restaurant to the London group of: Le Caprice, Daphne’s, Scott’s, The Ivy, 34 and J. Sheekey. Elegant beachside location. Al Fresco and covered dining in a friendly atmosphere. Extensive wine list - Italian, New World and Classical French. Chef Marco Festini adds his modern style to classic Italian Cuisine. Half price cocktails at the cocktail bar from 5-7pm.

Reservations (246) 432-2731

Ins & Outs Tips Sunset cocktails are half price from 5-7pm every evening. Trip Advisor Certificate of Excellence 2014 All their fish is locally sourced!

www.daphnesbarbados.com daphnes@eleganthotels.com Paynes Bay, St. James Fegato Grasso di Anatra con Mele Caramellate e Salsa al Vin Santo Pan-fried foie gras with caramelized apple & vin santo sauce Agnolotti di Merluzzo Affumicato con Vongole al Pomodoro e Crema di Piselli Smoked haddock agnolotti with clams, tomato salsa & creamy green pea sauce Spaghetti all’Aragosta Spaghetti with lobster Costoletta di Vitello alla Milanese con Rucola e Parmigiano Breaded veal chop with rocket and parmesan Tagliata di Tonno con Ceci Speziati e Verdure Arrostite Yellowfin tuna with spicy chickpeas and roasted vegetables Gelato alla Patata Dolce e Vaniglia con Mango Caramellato Homemade sweet potato ice cream with caramelized mango Crostatina Tiepida di Pera con Nutella e Crema al Cioccolato Warm pear croustade with nutella and dark chocolate cream

Open for lunch & dinner nightly, November-April Closed on Mondays: May-October BB$ Starters • 38-56 | Mains • 54-138 | Desserts • 28

328  Restaurant Guide


Daphne’s  329


The Cliff is the first choice of many people for any special celebration. The cliff top oceanfront setting is truly magical but it is the food which makes The Cliff so special. Chef Paul Owens and his team of 12 chefs remain committed to improving upon their performance using only the finest fresh ingredients. Excellent waiters and knowledgeable wine stewards. Available for private functions.

Ins & Outs Tip With the incredible view and setting, The Cliff is a superb place to drop in for cocktails.

Reservations (246) 432-1922 www.thecliffbarbados.com info@thecliffbarbados.com Derricks, St. James Tandoori Spiced Tuna (Cooked Rare) Pickled cucumber salad, Indian curry oil, mango salsa, coriander Linguine Garlic chive sauce, lobster, rocket, chili flakes, aged parmesan­­­­ Chargrilled Barracuda Baked potato cake, horseradish, smoked salmon sauce wilted greens, fine beans, baby onions Roast Gressingham Duck Breast Wild mushroom fumee, creamed savoy cabbage, morels creamed potatoes, baby onions 12 oz Prime Striploin Steak Peppercorn sauce, tomato & mesclun salad, truffle & parmesan fries Melting Mercury White chocolate sphere, vanilla ice cream, raspberries, pistachio crunch, hot raspberry sauce Dinner • Open Monday through Saturday (Sundays during the high season). BB$ Set price menu. Please call for current pricing.

330  Restaurant Guide


The Cliff Restaurant & Lounge  331


As the name suggests, Cin Cin is chic & fun! Refreshingly contemporary & trés elegant. 'Al Fresco' terrace is perfect for waterside dining. Air-conditioned inner restaurant provides a cool option. A trendy bar lounge area. Friendly and efficient staff. An eclectic range of Mediterranean style dishes with a Caribbean twist using the freshest ingredients.

Reservations (246) 424-4557

Ins & Outs Tip A cool hot spot, not to be missed! Note, Cin Cin is pronounced “chin chin” - It is Italian for cheers.

www.cincinbarbados.com dine@cincinbarbados.com Prospect, St. James

Grilled Asparagus & Parma Ham Salad with poached egg & potato croutons Chicken Liver Parfait with red onion jam & melba toast Seared Fresh King Scallops On Israeli cous cous with ratatouille vegetables & lemon tarragon butter Roasted Best End of Lamb In a honey mustard crust with a creamy polenta & vegetable ragu creamed potatoes, baby onions Steak Frites with French onion rings, Béarnaise or green peppercorn sauce Chocolate Fondant with coffee créme anglaise and vanilla ice cream Pavlova with guava, mango, berries

Lunch • Mon-Fri 11:30am-3pm | Dinner • Mon-Sun 6-11pm BB$ Starters • 28-39 | Mains • 62-125 | Desserts • 21-29

332   Restaurant Guide


Cin Cin by the Sea  333


Located right on the water’s edge. One of the leading restaurants on the South Coast. Solid reputation for consisently good food. Owner run by much admired restaurateur Chiryl Newman. Highest quality locally grown produce and sources the best Barbados caught fish and seafood. Original art on display & a dedicated gallery. Private dining room.

Ins & Outs Tip Champers offers the romance of waterside dining in its Gazebo or Open Terrace. Air condition comfort is also available at lunch in their upstairs Dining Room.

Reservations (246) 434-3463 or 435-6644 www.champersbarbados.com champers@champersinc.com Torrington, Skeetes Hill, Rockley, Christ Church

Champers Ceviche with citrus vinaigrette Shrimp and Mango Salad with mango vinaigrette Parmesan Crusted Barracuda with mashed potatoes, vegetables & wholegrain mustard sauce Grilled Yellow Fin Tuna with mashed potatoes, spring vegetables, wasabi cream & soy ginger emulsion Pan Roasted Breast Of Chicken Served with creamy polenta mushrooms and sherry sauce Champers Coconut Pie with ice cream Warm Bread Pudding with Bajan rum sauce & ice cream

Lunch • (Closed for Saturday lunch) | Dinner • Nightly BB$ Starters • 20-40 | Mains • 55-99 | Wine • 50-455

334  Restaurant Guide


Champers  335


Caribbean spiny lobster flown in from the Grenadines. Wade ashore anchorage. Beach umbrellas and beach bar. Good parking and wheelchair friendly. Sunday lunch with swing jazz sextet. Tues., Thurs. & Sat. dinners with cool jazz quartet. Non-seafood, vegetarian and kids meals available. Good wine list.

Ins & Outs Tip Hire a speedboat - go snorkeling in Carlisle Bay over one of the wrecks - freshen up at Lobster Alive and settle down for an afternoon of lobster and beastly cold wine or bubbly!

Reservations strongly advised (246) 435-0305 www.lobsteralive.net arttaylor@lobsteralive.net On the beach in Carlisle Bay, close to Bridgetown

Art’s Sea Soups Lobster Bisque Conch & Callalou Chowder Lobster live from the tank - pick your own Parboiled in fresh sea water 1 1/4 lbs to 2 1/2lbs Finished on the Barbeque with Garlic Butter, Lobster Thermidor, Lobster Salad, Lobster Pasta Minor variations at your request 5-8lb big lobster - central platter for 3 or more Good economy for the adventurers - crab pickers know! Conch au Vin Bernadette’s down island special 10 oz US Strip Steak Bridgetown Fish Market Daily Catch Garden or Greek Salads Gary and Gail’s Cheesecake

Open everyday | Lunch • 12-3:30pm | Dinner • 6-9pm Reduced openings and jazz sessions in summer BB$ Starters • 18-34 | Mains • 35-130 | Desserts • 15-25

336  lobster alive


Meet for drinks in the charming Careenage Bar adjoining the Grille. Choose from the finest Certified Angus Beef Steaks. Dine in air conditioned comfort. Relax to the sultry songs and rhythmic poetry at “Open Mic” on Thursdays in the Careenage bar. Meet and Eat with the Chefs every Saturday night and enjoy a 3 course menu cooked in front of you by the chefs at $99 per person, reservations are required.

Reservations (246) 426-0200 www.hiltonbarbadosresort.com Needhams Point, St. Michael

Lobster Ravioli with creamed spinach with a lemon grass sauce Crab Cakes with caper butter sauce and pineapple salsa

Ins & Outs Tip Beach, Bonfire, Breadfruit with local delicacies on Friday nights from 7 – 11:30pm

Pan Seared Red Snapper with garlic mash, green beans and citrus salsa New York Strip, Petit Filet, Prime Rib Eye, Baby Back Ribs béarnaise sauce, three peppercorn sauce, mango-mojo salsa and chimichurri salsa The Grille Mix Grill Filet mignon, jumbo shrimp and scallops wrapped in bacon, double baked Idaho potato, asparagus, lemon sauce and peppercorn sauce Curry Chickpea Vegetable Stew A daily selection of freshly prepared desserts

Dinner • Tues-Sat 6.30-10pm BB$ Starters • 20-45 | Mains • 45-90 | Wine • 80-210

The Grille at The Hilton  337


Centrally located on the south coast. Casual dining while promoting an upscale ambience. 3 media pods catering to families with children, small informal meetings, private lunches or dinners. Free WIFI provided to all patrons. Intimate bar setting. Engaging and friendly staff. Wide range of menu options.

Ins & Outs Tip The traditional Bajan breakfast along with delightful pastries and many other “Grab and Go” options, make Centro at Courtyard by Marriott an ideal breakfast rendezvous

Reservations (246) 625-0000 Courtyard by Marriott, Hastings, Ch. Ch.

Bajan Breakfast - Sautéed Salt Fish, Plantain, Pumpkin Fritters and Sweet Potato Choka Eggs Your Way served with bacon or sausage, centro potatoes and toast Salmon Omelette served with toast Catch of the Day served with red bliss potatoes or vegetable rice with a side salad or vegetables Sunrise Starter Sandwich served with fries Pineapple Barbeque Burger served with fries Mahi-Mahi Sandwich served with fries Fully Loaded French Fries served with cheddar cheese, sweet peppers, onions, tomatoes and bacon

Breakfast • Daily 6.30am | All day Menu • 11am-10pm BB$ Breakfast • 12-27 | Lunch & Dinner • 18-80

338  centro at Courtyard by marriott


Delightful atmosphere and tasty cuisine. ‘Mama’ and her friendly staff set the tone of this charming Italian eatery. Authentic Italian pizza from their genuine Italian pizza oven. Relish the undeniable taste of Italy – always accompanied by warm Italian hospitality.

Reservations (246) 434-DELI (3354) www.mamamiadeli.com reservations@mamamiadeli.com Hastings Main Road, Christ Church

Antipasto Italiano Served with a selection of Italian meats and cheeses & a side of ciccio bread Mini Caprese Fresh mozzarella cheese, fresh tomatoes, drizzled with extra virgin olive oil and garlic & served with a side of toasted garlic bread Spaghetti Frutti di Mare A typically Neapolitan dish, a combination of mussels, clams & shrimps, fresh tomatoes, basil and garlic. Mama Mia Pizza Signature pizza made with bruschetta tomatoes, fresh mozzarella cheese and fresh feta cheese and topped with onions and basil Lasagna A traditional lasagna made with fresh pasta, layered with bechamelle and bolognese sauce and lots of Parmesan cheese Chicken Salad Chicken served with fresh lettuce, fresh tomatoes, carrots &­­­ olives

Ins & Outs Tip Relax in the charming airconditioned pizzeria, or feel free to lounge on the open-air veranda!

Mon-Thur • 10:30am-9pm | Fri-Sat • 10:30am-10pm | Sun • 5-10pm BB$ Starters • 15-25 | Mains • 25-45 | Desserts • 10-30

MAMA MIA  339


Trendy restaurant, beautifully positioned along the south coast boardwalk. Exceptional service and delicious cuisine. A wide variety of Tapas dishes as well as an À La Carte menu. Tapas is a favourite amongst locals and visitors alike. Enjoy the casual, bubbly atmosphere at the bar just a few feet from the water’s edge.

Reservations (246) 228-0704

Ins & Outs Tip On Fridays and Saturdays enjoy Tapas menu until late!

www.tapasbarbados.com info@tapasbarbados.com Hastings Main Road, Hastings, Christ Church

Tuna Tartare With sesame soy citronette Lobster Ravioli Lobster & sweet potato parcel with tomato bisque Jumbo Shrimp Seafood risotto topped with jumbo shrimp Grilled Seafood Catch of the day, jumbo shrimp, mussel and cuttlefish on mix leaves Rack of Lamb With goat cheese & walnut mash and ratatouille Chocolate Lava Cake With whisky sauce and vanilla ice cream Tiramisu Mascarpone cream nestled with coffee lady finger biscuit

Lunch • 11:30am-3pm | Dinner • 6-10:30pm BB$ Starters • 14-28 | Mains • 40-90 | Wine • 8-16

340  TAPAS


Perfect mix of island ambience & international sports coverage. World famous daiquiris & authentic stone fired pizza. Traditional Bajan fare, Bert’s original favourites, vegetarian & healthy choices. Delicious meal options just for kids. State-of-the-art satellite sports coverage.

Reservations (246) 435-7924 or Pizza Hotline: 431-1111 www.bertsbarbados.com info@bertsbarbados.com Rockley, Christ Church

Nacho Platter Tortillas layered with diced tomatoes, onions, jalapeño, green peppers & lots of melted cheese. Served with salsa & sour cream Calamari Rings Hand-cut rings marinated in a herb garlic sauce, lightly dusted with flour & deep fried golden brown, served with tartar sauce

Ins & Outs Tip Be sure to try Bert’s legendary Banana Daiquiris!

Fisherman’s Platter Shrimp, flying fish & catch of the day - grilled, pan-fried or blackened Bert’s Sizzling Steak Platter Char-grilled 8oz Top Sirloin Steak, topped with sautéed onions Bert’s Banana Split 3 scoops of ice cream topped with strawberry, pineapple & chocolate sauces, whipped cream & a cherry Triple Chocolate Fudge Brownie Served warm with vanilla ice cream & drizzled with chocolate sauce, topped with a cherry Happy Hour & a Half • 4:30-6pm | Open from 11am daily (Opens earlier for the big sports matches) BB$ Starters • 16-51 | Mains • 27-56 | Desserts • 11-19

Bert’s  341


A lovely beach front hotel in the heart of St. Lawrence Gap. Enjoy a delicious lunch by the sea sipping cocktails. An ideal hotel to dine with live entertainment for dancing. Monday night is Country and Western with the Redmen. Thursday night is a Steelband and Saturday night is the R&B band Syndikyt. All day snack menu and bar. Buffet Breakfast daily.

Reservations (246) 428-7171

Ins & Outs Tip Their Sunday buffet with a live steelband is great value. An ideal hotel to dine with live entertainment for dancing on Monday, Thursday and Saturday

www.southernpalms.net info@southernpalms.net Southern Palms Hotel, St. Lawrence Gap, Christ Church Stirfried Angus Beef with ginger & sweet soy sauce – angel hair pasta Pan Seared Queen Scallops in a Pernod shrimp sauce – seaweed salad Blackened Mahi Mahi with vegetable risotto - champagne citrus Beurre Blanc & basil oil 8 Oz Angus Beef Filets 3 peppercorn sauce – garlic & mustard mash Pan Fried Duck Breast with orange sauce – grilled vegetables in a balsamic reduction Tropical Fruit Cheesecake Flambé Bananas Topped with french vanilla ice cream Ebony & Ivory Bitter sweet dark chocolate mousse & white chocolate mousse with mixed berry sauce Breakfast • 7:30am-10:30am | Lunch • 11am-1pm Dinner • 6-10pm BB$ Starters • 16-35 | Mains • 55-70 | Desserts • 10-18

342  The Garden Terrace at Southern Palms


LIBATIONS FOR THE SPIRIT.

Award-winning restaurant at MOJO. Island wide reputation for the best homemade burgers. Their focus is on healthy and organic eating. Takeout service is also available. Friendly and relaxed atmosphere. Dining available inside, on the deck or in the garden.

Reservations (246) 435-9008 or 262-MOJO fb: Mojo Bar & The Chopping Board Kitchen mojobarbados@gmail.com­­ Worthing Main Road, Christ Church

Nutty Salad Toasted pine nuts, roasted red peppers, soft goat cheese, red onion, tomatoes & lettuce with a homemade balsamic vinaigrette The Famous MOJOAN Burger Homemade 8oz burger served on a toasted sesame seed bun with cheddar cheese, bacon, fresh mushrooms, onions & homemade tomato relish served with fries & coleslaw Catch of the Day (cooked to your liking) Served with Jasmine rice, sautéed veg and tomatoes, with white wine, cream and dill sauce Chicken Pesto Wrap Grilled organic chicken breast, roasted red peppers, rocket romaine and homemade pesto mayo Trio of Mini Desserts Lemon cheesecake, chocolate frenzy, ice cream & berry coulis

Ins & Outs Tip Have a drink at the bar and enjoy the lively atmosphere after dining. A late-night menu is also available.

Photo by Rosemary Parkinson, from her book, Barbados Bu'n-Bu'n

Monday-Saturday • 10am-1:30am | Sunday • 5pm-1am BB$ Salads • 18-32 | Mains • 36-52 | Desserts • 12-16

Chopping BOard Kitchen  343


Award-winning restaurant located al fresco-style on the rooftop of Little Arches Boutique Hotel. A truly romantic setting overlooking the Caribbean Sea and Enterprise Beach. Fine dining at an affordable price is the hallmark of Café Luna, Full a la carte menu, along with the new “Back to Bajan” menu - showcasing local ingredients and produce for only BB $89 for 3 courses.

Ins & Outs Tip Super Sushi Specials on Thursday and Friday nights... Be sure to sample Chef Moo’s giant Crazy Rolls!

Courtesy: Living Barbados

Reservations (246) 428-6172/420-4689 www.cafelunabarbados.com cafelunabarbados@gmail.com Little Arches Boutique Hotel, Enterprise Beach, Christ Church

Smoked Mahi Mahi On a warm potato cake with wasabi mayonnaise and capers Pan-fried Goat Cheese Cake With sliced local tomatoes, mesclun lettuce and balsamic dressing Local Chicken Tempura With mango piquant dipping sauce Penne Pasta With shrimp (Guyana), pumpkin, onions, fresh basil and white wine sauce Beef Striploin (U.S.A) Grilled with a blue cheese green onion demi-glace Luna “Bajan” Fish Stew Fresh local fish, sweet potato and vegetables simmered in local pepper cream fish broth served with garlic, herb, parmesan bread

Dinner • Nightly 6-10pm BB$ Starters • from 20 | Mains • 35-85 | Set Menu • 89

344  Café Luna


The island’s original Mexican restaurant. Menu boasts a wide variety of Mexican favourites, from Cheese Nachos to Sirloin Steak and Shrimp fajitas. A “Gringo” menu features non-Mexican fare such as Striploin Steaks, Mojito Chicken, Buffalo Wings and much more. Margaritas are a specialty with 15 fruity flavours on offer! Enjoy 2 happy hours nightly: 5-7pm & 10-12pm.

Reservations (246) 420-7655 www.cafesolbarbados.com info@cafesolbarbados St. Lawrence Gap, Christ Church

Cheese Nachos Crisp tortilla chips topped with zesty 3-cheese sauce & spicy salsa Mini Taquitos 2 corn tortillas wrapped tight around your choice of chicken or beef filling, deep fried and served with sour cream and guacámole

Ins & Outs Tip A lively, fun spot located at the entrance to St. Lawrence Gap with a fabulous ocean view. Great starting point for a fun night out in The Gap!

Flat-Iron Fajita Sizzlers Sizzlin’ steak, shrimp or chicken fajitas, flour tortillas & all the fixings Fish Tacos Locally caught catch of the day either grilled or beer battered, served in soft flour tortilla topped with fresh pico de gallo and a creamy, spicy Mexi-slaw Mojito Chicken Juicy, boneless chicken breast marinated in our special Mojito seasoning, grilled & finished with a Cockspur Rum glaze

Dinner • 7 nights a week | Lunch • Tues-Sun from 11:30am BB$ Starters • 14-18 | Mains • 30-44 | Desserts • 10-16

Café Sol  345


Zagat rated #1 for Food in Barbados. Authentic Thai & Japanese delicacies. Sophisticated Asian-inspired architecture & decor. Intimate Tatami rooms, designed in traditional Japanese style. 12-person Sushi bar overlooking the the Crane beach. Zen is located at The Crane on the south-east coast.

Reservations (246) 423-6220

Ins & Outs Tip For a celebration book for 6-18 in the private Tatami Room. For a light and relaxed dinner simply have sushi with ice cold Petit Chablis seated at the sushi bar

www.thecrane.com dining@thecrane.com The Crane, St. Philip

Thai - Goong Hom Pha Spicy tiger prawns delicately wrapped in rice paper, deep-fried and served with sesame soy sauce Japanese - Gyozo Pan grilled pork dumplings Thai - Phad Khing Delicious morsels of snapper delicately flavoured with ginger, garlic & shiitake mushrooms together in a mixture of fresh vegetables Japanese - Caribbean Sails Tempura, teriyaki chicken, california roll Japanese - Sushi Pizza Fried sushi rice, with spicy tuna, spicy hamachi or crabmeat Tempura Alaska Vanilla ice cream lightly battered, quick fried and coated in a roasted almond paste

Open for Dinner • 6-9pm | Closed Tuesdays BB$ Starters • 12-48 | Mains • 21-88 | Wine • 14-25

346  Restaurant Guide


Zen  347


Lunches feature an excellent and varied International and Caribbean menu. Relaxed atmosphere, boasting spectacular panoramic views of Crane Beach. In the evening, the restaurant’s romantic candlelit ambiance is the perfect complement to any special occasion.

Reservations Required (246) 423-6220

Ins & Outs Tip A well-established tradition, Sundays at The Crane are extraspecial, offering a Sunday Gospel Breakfast with live performances and a steel-pan accompanied Bajan buffet lunch.

www.thecrane.com dining@thecrane.com The Crane, St. Philip

Blue Swimmer Crab Cake With cucumber relish & chili mayonnaise L’endive, Blue Cheese & Walnut Salad With aromatic mustard dressing Grilled Marinated Salmon On ratatouille with lemon and thyme oil New Zealand Rack of Lamb On garlic potato mash and asparagus with balsamic merlot sauce L’Azure Bouillabaisse Classic seafood stew with lobster, scallops and shrimp East Meets West Trio Selection Tasters platter of cheese cake, sticky rice and banana spring roll Ebony Ivory Milk Chocolate Decadence Served with chocolate ice cream and marinated berries

Open Daily • 7:30am-9pm BB$ Starters • 20-57 | Mains • 48-92 | Desserts • 18-25

348  L’Azure at The Crane


Casual family dining. A delectable selection of antipasto, salads, homemade pastas, paninis and hand tossed thin crust pizzas. Choose to dine on the patio or within the beautifully designed interior. Toast to good friends and good health with a glass of Prosecco while you savour the aromas of authentic Italian cuisine!

Reservations (246) 423-6220 www.thecrane.com dining@thecrane.com The Crane, St. Philip

Rhugetta Tossed arugula, shaved parmesan cheese, lemon oil vinaigrette Napoleon Roasted eggplant, portabella, red pepper with basil coulis

Ins & Outs Tip D’Onofrio’s is the perfect spot to relax, drink and enjoy good company.

Chicken Pizzaiolo Tomato & parmesan cheese Rotelini Gratin Eggplant, basil, ricotta cheese and tomato sauce Risotto Pescatora Shrimp, mussels, clams and calamari with your choice of tomato or white wine sauce. Granita di Caffe Shaved frozen espresso coffee topped with whipped cream Mousse Special Chocolate caramel coffee mousse with an amaretto cookie

Open Daily • 7:30am-9pm BB$ Starters • 20-42 | Mains • 36-62 | Desserts • 25-32

D’Onofrio’s at The Crane  349


Overlooks picturesque Tent Bay in Bathsheba. High quality, traditional Barbadian cuisine. Legendary Buffet Lunches - Sundays & Wednesdays. Open everyday for Breakfast, Lunch, Tea & Dinner*. Chefs use only fresh local produce, seafoods & meats. Reservations suggested for the Buffet's.

Reservations (246) 433-9445 or 433-7180

Ins & Outs Tip There are wonderful coastal walks south to Martin’s Bay or north to Bathsheba from The Atlantis Hotel. Drive down for an early supper and watch the full moon rise!

enquiry@atlantishotelbarbados.com Tent Bay, Bathsheba, St. Joseph

Breadfruit and Parmesan Herb Balls Red onion jam and lemon oil Curry Marinated Scallops Coconut cream styled cauliflower and golden apple chutney Atlantis Pepperpot Rice & peas, steamed market vegetables Tent Bay Chicken Pot Pie Garden salad and garlic crostinis Duo of Chili Sautéed Shrimp and Mussels Basmati rice, thai chili, olive oil, white wine, snow peas, baby corn, mussels Barbeque Pork Quesadilla Mozzarella cheese, sour cream, pineapple salsa, salad and homemade cajun sweet potato wedges Daily Homemade Pies, Ice Creams & Sorbet

Open everyday for breakfast, lunch, tea & dinner*! *Sunday evenings dinner is not served. BB$ Starters • 15-25 | Mains • 25-95 | Wine • 50-90

350    Atlantis Hotel


Index Adventure & Discovery 200 Alleyne Real Estate 255, 284 Altman Real Estate Insert, 257, 287 Always Summer 132, 133 Animal Flower Cave 205, 308 Apes Hill Club 77, 280-283 Apes Hill Golf Club 76 Apes Hill Polo Club 79 Armani Exchange 104, 105 Art & Craft 152 Art & Craft Shows 160 Asian Spice 322 Azul Restaurant 185 Bajan Blue (Sandy Lane) 326 Bajan Services/ Knight Frank 268-277, 285 Barbados A Coral Paradise 150 Barbados Blue Watersports 97 Barbados Coral Stone 148 Barbados Fertility Centre 195 Barbados Golf Club 75 B’dos Museum & Historical Society 225 Barbados Wildlife Reserve 208 Batik Bajan-Style 170 Beaches 236 Bellarri 49 Belle étoile 47 Bert’s 301, 305, 341 Best of Barbados Gift Shops 169 Beth & Tracie 124, 125 BHS Open Gardens 63 Blake Coral Stone Designs 149 BNT Open House Programme 62 Breitling 12, 13 Bridge 60 Bridgetown Experience 110 Broadway to Barbados 68 Bvlgari 16, 17 Café La Suite (Un Dimanche à Paris) 321 Café Luna 344 Café Sol 301, 345 Camelot (Cobblers Cove Hotel) 311 Cartier IFC, 1 Catherine Forter-Chee-a-Tow 161

Cave Shepherd 117 Centro (Courtyard by Marriott) 338 Champers 334 Chandelier Weddings 181 Chanel 65 Chantours Caribbean Inc. 199 Chopping Board Kitchen (Mojo) 343 Cin Cin by the Sea 332 Cobblers Cove Hotel 71 Colombian Emeralds Int’l 7, 11, 41 Cool Runnings 86, 87 Coral Reef Club 319 Courtesy Rent-a-Car 203 Courtyard by Marriott 75 Cover Artist 4 Credits 4 Cricket 56 Crocs 131 Crop Over Festival 46 Cultural Festivals 48 D’Onofrio’s Trattoria (The Crane) 349 Daphne’s 307, 328 David Alleyne 163 DeAction Beach Shop 97 Designers’ Choice 142, 143 DFB Boutique 136, 137 Diamonds International 16, 17, 18, 19, 22, 23, 24, 25, 119, 175, 177 Dingolay 135 DJ Dusty Payne 181 Duty Free Shopping 100 Earth & Fire 164 Earthworks Pottery 101, 171, 215 Events Calendar 38 Exclusive Cottons of the Caribbean Inc. 151, 229 Farmers Markets 246 Five Star Fast Track 189 Flower Forest 221 Food Festivals 70 Forevermark 177 Full Moons 58 Fun in Barbados: For Kids For Thrill Seekers For Wheelchair Users

206 210 217

Fusion Metal Design 149 Gallery Crawl 154 Gallery NuEdge 154, 155 Gallery of Caribbean Art 159 Gardenia 271 Gardens to Visit 220 Gaye Boutique 128, 129 George Washington House 222, 223 Getting Around 202 Gina Foster 163 Gina Francesca Photography 183 Golf 74 Gregory Paul Salon 139 Grenade Hall Signal Station 208 Gucci 11 Harbour Lights 299 Harrison’s Cave 218 Health & Beauty 190 Hearts On Fire 61 Hiking & Running 82 Hilton Barbados Resort 71, 337 Historic Churches of Barbados 218 Horse Racing 72 How to Beat the Heat 130 Hublot 24, 25 Hugo Boss 103 Hunte’s Gardens 220 Ins and Outs At-A-Glance 6, 8, 10, 14, 20, 21 Interiors 140 Island Hopping 196 Island Safari 212 Island Style 122 Island Villas 93 Island Yachts 93 Janice Sylvia Brock 161 Jean Blades 162 Jenny Blanc 144, 145 Joanne Mobile Spray Tan 192 John Hardy 22, 23 John Stuart 162 Jon Farmer Photography 184 Juma’s 312 L’Acajou (Sandy Lane) 324 L’Azure (The Crane) 348 Lancaster Great House 310 LeVian Chocolatier 57 Limegrove Lifestyle Centre 102, OBC

Ins & Outs of Barbados    Index  351


Little Switzerland 65, 115 Lobster Alive 336 Lola Beach 126, 127 Lone Star 316 Longines 45 Magical Moments 179 Mallalieu Motor Museum 224 Mama Mia 339 Marahlago Larimar 41 Marco Bicego 43 Maritime History 26 Massy Stores 245 Maxine Harry – Body Restoration 192 Medical Information 194 Meet a Bajan: Alan Emtage Amelia Chelsea Tuach Dame the Hon. Maizie Barker-Welch Ivan St. Claire Harvey Keith & Barbara Armstrong Merton Blackman Trevor Hunte

213 138 240 120 95 92 300 90

Meetings & Incentives 186 Milano Diamond Gallery 57, 59, 61 Miller Publishing Books 81, 150, 218 Mojo 301 Motor Racing 50 Movado 5 Mullins Beach Bar & Restaurant 315 Multi-generational Villa Life 250 Museum Events 64 Music Festivals 66 MyDestination.com/Barbados 15 Natz’ 147 Nigel Wallace Photography 184 Nightlife 296 Nishi 320 Ocean Two 267 On The Sea 84 On The Wall Gallery 156, 157 Palm Villa 198 Pandora 115 Panerai 18, 19 Patisserie & Bistro Flindt 245 Polo 78 Port Ferdinand Marina &

352  Index Section

Luxury Residences 260, 261 Port St. Charles 253 Port St. Charles Yacht Club 309 Porters Great House 257 Postal Services 32 Pottery in Barbados 214 Predator Fishing Charters 97 Property 248 Rado 51 Ralph Lauren 2, 3 Realtors Luxury Villa Rentals 265 Realtors Real Estate Limited 263, 286 Relish Epicurea 245, 314 Restaurant Classifications 304–306 Restaurant Guide 302 Rolex IBC Ronnie Carrington 162, 219 Royal Westmoreland 278, 279 Safi Kilima 119 Sailing & Fishing Events 54 Sailor’s Valentine 166 Saint Peter’s Bay Luxury Resort & Residences 258, 259 Sandy Lane Hotel 73 Seaduced 91 Sheraton Mall 101 Shopping & Lifestyle 98 Silver Moon 88, 89 Simply Flowers 180 Southern Palms Beach Club 69 Sports Associations Directory 83 Sports Festivals 80 St. Lawrence Gap 298 St. Nicholas Abbey 230-233 Stephanie Barnes Interiors 146 Steve Cumberbatch 179 Stocking Up 242 Sue Holder 162 Sunbury House 181, 228 Sundek 55 Sunshine Kula Yoga 192 Tag Heuer 7 Tailor-made Tours: For just one day For the Beach Bum For the History Buff For Yoga Lovers Rum Shop Crawl

204 238 222, 226 216 234

Tapas 340 Team Sunlinc 189 The Atlantis Hotel 350 The Batik Studio 170 The B’dos Community Foundation 288 The Beach House 323 The Cliff Restaurant 9, 330 The Country Club (Sandy Lane) 327 The Crane Resorts Insert–295 The Garden Terrace (Southern Palms) 342 The Gourmet Shop 245 The Grenadines 198 The Grille (Hilton) 337 The Lobster Pot 313 The Restaurant at Animal Flower Cave 308 The Royal Shop 5, 43, 45, 47, 49, 51 The Sandpiper 318 The Shell Gallery 165 The Spa at Coral Reef Club 193 The Spa Café (Sandy Lane) 327 The Studio 164 Thriller Tours 212 Tiffany & Co. 67 Tiyi By Design 134 Trusted Care Providers Inc. 81 Un Dimanche à Paris 106, 107 Underwater Life 96 Vena d’Amore 175 Very Vanita 157 Vilebrequin 53 Vishni Gopwani 163 Vuemont 266 Walking Tours: of Historic Bridgetown of Historic Speightstown

112 108

Warren Yachting Water Events Weddings Weddings by Malissa Whispers on the Riviera Zen

91 52 172 180 136, 137 346


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Ins & Outs of Barbados

Ins & Outs of

2015 Edition

20 1 5 E d itio n

Barbados

The Sea featuring


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