St Thomas' best kept secret
Locals earn from little known ‘Reggae Falls
BY INGRID BROWN Associate editor — special assignment browni@jamaicaobserver.com
Monday, March 03, 2014
WATERFALLS cascading several feet to the Johnson River in Hillside, St
Thomas not only serve as a relaxing place for visitors wanting to spend
an enjoyable day with nature, but also provide an income to the many
unemployed residents in this farming district.
They have eked out a living working as tour guides, car washers,
babysitters and cooks for the many locals and foreigners alike who are
known to visit the area, which is being described as St Thomas' best
kept secret.
The residents claim the water, which spouts warm from a section of the rock, contains sulphur and assists in healing wounds.
"If you have a wound and you go in the water you frighten fi see how quick it heal," explained resident Deborah Whyte.
Although they have been earning, albeit in an ad hoc manner, the
residents are calling on tourism organisations to help them secure
formal training as official tour guides and to help them improve Reggae
Falls — as they have since dubbed it – by putting in sanitray and other
conveniences. They also want the Jamaica Tourist Board to promote the
facility locally and overseas, to attract more visitors.
According to the residents, visitors prefer to come to Reggae Falls
instead of Bath Fountain because it is much more quiet and there is less
harassment.
Whyte, who often works as tour guide, car washer and even babysitter
said the facility has the potential to provide a steady income.
"When the visitors them come, if wi have some lime or a plantain or some
jelly wi carry it come down here. We might see a crowd and wi tell them
we have some lime and them say go pick it and carry come and just like
that we mek a sale," she said.
According to Whyte, who escorted the Jamaica Observer North East on a
treacherous track to a shallow area in the river which allowed for easy
crossing to the nearby falls, the visitors are the ones who often
request the residents' assistance as tour guides.
"Sometimes them will come from all over Jamaica and overseas, and will
ask us to direct them to the falls and we would take them over to
there," she said.
"Because we know the area, we know when it raining in the head of the
river and we tell them so they can know where to go," she said.
Whyte further explained that when the river is dry some people will
drive their SUVs through the river bed to the closest point to the
falls. When this happens, the residents might not earn from guiding
tours, but they will from cooking and selling food along the river.
The mother of two said only recently a large group of police officers
visited the area, which provided a decent earning for people who were
willing to wash cars.
"Mi mek $13,000 that day washing cars," she said, adding: "Sometimes I
even earn money by babysitting the children while the parents go up to
the falls".
Joan Harris said the summer is the busiest period for the residents as this is when the largest number of persons visit.
"People feel safe to come here because the residents look out for them
and they know they are going to come back and see their vehicle the same
way dem leave it," she said.
"On a holiday, you don't have space up there and not even Dunn's River
can test that time, because people come from as far as Westmoreland,"
she added.
Residents also earn by allowing visitors to park in their yards for $100, or from vending the produce they farm.
"Sometimes when you see the high-end vehicles that come up here and even
more people would come if they knew about it because of how lovely the
falls is and also because the community is safe," said Harris.
Font Hill resident Daneisha Wright, who was visiting the falls at the
time the Observer North East was there, said this was one of her
favourite spot in the parish.
"I always come here as often as I can because it is a lovely place," she
said before diving off a huge rock into the river below.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/St-Thomas--best-kept-secret_16172474
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