Tuesday 22 December 2015

Day 2 Bridgetown Barbados

Choosing Excursions

One of the attractions of Swan Hellenic is that practically everything other than alcohol is included in the price you pay when you book. Hence, three months before we were due to sail, a booklet entitled “Your Cruise Book” arrived through the post. This booklet contained (amongst other things):

  • online embarkation instructions;
  • historical and geographical information about the cruise area;
  • details of the 33 shore excursions included in the cost of the trip and the 2 excursions available at additional cost;
  • the current list and details of the guest speakers.

None of the excursions could be described as extremely active or challenging and it was obvious that they had taken into account the restricted mobility that some of their client group might have by ensuring that there was at least one “sit in a coach and watch the scenery pass by in front of you” offering at each port.

Most of the excursions seemed to be offered by one or other of the cruise ships calling at each port. The way we selected those we wanted to go on included researching the “must-see places” at each port and finding reviews of each excursion on the web. This also requires taking into account the very variable quality and bias of some of reviews.

Depending upon how long the ship was due to be in a port and also the duration of the excursion, you could choose one or two from the three or four on offer. We choose eleven in total and also left ourselves time at a couple of ports to do our own thing onshore. It appears that Swan Hellenic usually provide a free shuttle bus from the ship to town for those who want to do their own thing.

We were told that it was sometimes possible to change booked excursions when you arrived on the Minerva but there was no guarantee. Tickets for the excursions were awaiting for us in our cabin when we arrived.

Tour Tickets

Given that the tour staff produce some 4000 tour tickets per cruise, it is a credit to them that only a few errors are made. We checked ours when we got to the cabin and they were all there, a few people we met found that some were missing or were for different tours to those they had booked. Throughout the cruise, the Tour Desk staff were seeking to accommodate additional people on to tours or to swap tours. They were also very pleased if you handed back a ticket for a tour you had decided not to go on because they could then give it to someone on the waiting list. For all but one of the tours, we found that the difficulty description given in the guide book was either accurate or described it a bit harder than it really was. 

Barbados

We know no more about Barbados than we have found in some guide books and on the web. Google Maps tells us: 

Barbados, in the eastern Caribbean, is an independent island nation within the British Commonwealth. Bridgetown, the capital, is a cruise-ship stop with shopping, colonial buildings and one of the Western Hemisphere’s oldest synagogues. British settlers arrived in Barbados in 1628 and there was little there except for a wooden bridge across the water which eventually gave the town its name. British settlers found Bridgetown to be economically viable due to merchants trading in sugar. Historic Bridgetown and its Garrison area has been declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site with its well-preserved examples of British colonial architecture built between the 17th and 19th centuries.

Barbados

Barbadian traditions range from afternoon tea and cricket (the national sport) to pursuits such as scuba diving at Dottins Reef and golfing on designer oceanside courses.

  • Currency: Barbadian dollar
  • Capital: Bridgetown
  • Population: 284,644 (2013)

This sign was at the entrance to a large cavernous warehouse containing numerous tourist

Tourist Shops

shops through which all passengers had to pass in order to get out of the port.

Welcome Barbados

Also there was this sign, the national sport is of course Cricket

Advert Aids Cricket

and they have managed to it into a warning sign on the quayside.

The tour we are taking is Barbados Coast to Coast

  • Discover Barbados ‘Coast-to-Coast’ taking in some of the island highlights and traditional scenery. Perched on a cliff 246 metres above sea level, St John’s Parish Church affords spectacular views of both the east and south coasts. The present building was constructed in 1836 after the hurricane of 1831 destroyed the one built in 1660. See the pulpit constructed from six different kinds of wood and an interesting sculpture depicting the Madonna and Child with the infant St John. The churchyard contains the tomb of Ferdinand Paleologus – a descendant of the Byzantine Imperial family, who died in Barbados in 1678. You descend through picturesque landscapes and make a short stop in idyllic Bathsheba before heading inland through the central parish of St Thomas. As the road climbs there are marvellous views towards cane fields. The Highland Adventure Centre sits at an elevation of more than 300 metres above sea level on one of the highest ridges in the island. It overlooks the rugged Scotland district and has views of the East Coast that are truly breathtaking. The picturesque landscape sweeps down to the East Coast where you join the East Coast Road with rolling hills on one side and the pounding Atlantic surf on the other. Pass historic Gun Hill Signal Station and see the stone lion carved by an officer at the station in 1868. This ‘Coast-to-Coast’ sightseeing concludes with the highlights of Bridgetown. Pass Parliament Buildings – home to the third oldest parliament in the Commonwealth established in 1639 and a statue of Lord Nelson – older than the statue of the same name and fame standing in London’s Trafalgar Square.

This description was reasonably kept to during the four hours we were travelling around the island.

Tour Bus

Although there were five buses like this doing the tour, they went off indifferent directions and so it never was the care of travelling in convoy and all arriving at the same place at the same time.

Never having been to this area of the world before, we have only assumptions rather than knowledge.

1960s Horrid

Starting with buildings, standing out like a sore thumb in the middle of town is this 1960s disaster which I show just to prove that throughout the world, architects and town planners are capable of the wrong decision !

Chattel House

There were many houses which were more of the style we had expected to see. This is a Chattel House which is a Barbadian 

Chattel Houses

word for a small moveable house which the owner could take with them if they had to move from one plantation / job to another. 

House with veggie plot

Many houses came with a small plot of land

Village Huts 001

which in the past were used more intensively for food cultivation 

Village Huts

than today. Our first impressions of the island were that it is very green and that most of the land in the areas we saw had been turned over to agriculture.

Coconut Banana Grove

in the past at the expense of the forests which originally had covered the island. 

Old Shack

Our first impressions of Coconut trees 

Coconut Tree

were that they could grow very tall. Locals were very concerned that we might get hit on the head by a falling coconut if we stood underneath a tree - we were constantly warned whenever they saw us getting too close.

St Johns Church in Barbados is one of the "must sees” to which all tourists are taken.

SJC St John s Church

The church was built on the site of the first wooden church of 1645. The first stone church was built in 1660 at a cost to the Diocese of 100,000 lbs of sugar.

St John s Church Sign

Three churches have been destroyed by Hurricanes (1675, 1789, 1831) and this one was built in 1836. Its design is typical of early churches in hot countries,

SJC Interior

a design which encourages air to flow through the large doors at the entrance of the church and the windows on the side.

SJC Airy

The design also provides for separation between Europeans and others

SJC Gallery

with a gallery on three sides

SJC Staircase

accessed by a lovely staircase on each side

SJC Organ

of the Organ.

The pulpit was said to be hand carved out of six different local woods

SJC Pulpit

and the detail on it is exquisite

SJC Pulpit Detail

as this detail shows.

SJC Original Stained Glass

The stained glass behind the Altar was said to be from the original church.

The Graveyard was very interesting in that there was a very good view of parts of the island

Graveyard view

and also of one of the Signal Towers which are

Old signal station

dotted around the island and were one of the main reasons as to why the British managed to repulse any other country seeking to land troops on the island. This was because any attempt to land could be signalled across the island and reinforcement troops could be sent.

The Graveyard itself was full of various Family Graves

Family Grave

such as this one with this inscription

Family Grave Inscription 1

above the doorway

Family Grave Inscription 2

this on the side

Family Grave Inscription 3

and spaces for a few more on another wall.

Another Grave is known as the “Bury Me Upright” grave

Bury me Upright

Bury me Upright Inscription

because the occupant wanted to be buried standing

Coffin View

 so that he could see this view from his grave.

 Of particular significance, was the grave of

Paleolocus Grave

Fernando Paleolocus who was a descendent of the brother of the Emperor Constantine XI. His history (follow the link) is somewhat typical of the early settlers who “escaped” t one of the Colonies. 

Barbados has the Atlantic Ocean on its east coast and the Caribbean Sea on its west coast. A crude summary would say that the Atlantic is rough and cold and the Caribbean is gentle and warm.

Atlantic Rollers

Bathsheba Beach is on the east coast and is the location for Surfing Championships. Our first distant view of the beach showed why it was famous for surfing.

Bathsheba Beach View

There were few other visitors near Mushroom Rock when we were there

Bathsheba Lady

but I did come across this lady whom I have met before on my travels.

From the west coast of the island (Atlantic side) we proceeded across to the east coast (Caribbean Side) and back to the ship where the sea is very much calmer.

To us, the Minerva looks a very business like vessel when compared to many

Minerva Moored Barbados

other cruise ships and certainly looks very smart.

Minerva back to

Our Cabin Outside  3rd from left

Our cabin is the third window from the left and is roughly midships above the stabiliser. 

Reboarding Minerva

As we board, we are given a cold flannel to freshen up with - very welcome when it is hot and sticky on the traveller trail.

Prior to its first departure with a new set of passengers, it is compulsory that the

Muster Drill

ship evacuation procedures have be practised. This involved us all assembling at our designated Muster Point when the Fog Horn sounded the alarm, putting on our life jackets and being told how to jump overboard !!

Having passed this test, the mooring ropes were cast off,

Casting Off

a gap started to appear between the Minerva and

Departure

the Quayside,

Heading Open Sea

we slowly turned 90 degrees

Goodbye Bridgetown

and then headed out to sea.

Tonight the various Lecturers on board introduced themselves and the first lecture was delivered. I am now very much the wiser on Plinyian Volcanic Activity and understand how it has changed the nature of this region.

As is always the case, travelling has made us more curious about the things we do not know. Slavery was abolished in Barbados in 1834 and we found an account of the importance of Slavery to the economy of Barbados here and a lot more information about the island here.

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