Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1988-12, Page 28T Grenada Journal he trade wind had stalled; the one thin sheet had long since been kicked off the foot of the bed, yet the mattress still felt clammy. Such are the major problems of a winter tourist in the tropics. We had arrived in Grenada several days earlier to explore this island country, not much bigger than our township back home. Yet, amazingly, it felt very much like a nation. The friendly people are proud of their hilly, green, Lilliputian island. Unfortunates born to the sharp - edged northern zephyrs, once touched by the trade winds, are never free of their seductive summons. These breezes, soft as the clasp of a child's hand, bear a tantalizing fragrance, not quite identifiable — oranges perhaps, or just the anticipation of warm sunny days. The memory of the winds of other islands had flooded back to us. In the wee hours after midnight, however, the breeze had deserted us and it was stuffy. Out on the balcony of our country motel, which had been built well up on a precipitous hillside (there is very little else but precipitous hillsides in Grenada), we could see that traffic on the road below had stilled; the caco- phonic rhythms of calypso, reggae, jazz, and pop from the surrounding houses and the "Dynamic Disco" in the "housing settlement" of the next valley were uncharacteristically quiet. Today, state farms are being broken up and given to small farmers. "This is a laudable goal," says the head of agricultural extension, "but it won't work. Unless a person has a financial stake in his land he will not be successful." The multitude of roosters that live within a quarter mile of our place had not yet begun to outdo each other in proclaiming incessantly, for several dark hours, the imminent arrival of a new day. To northerners used to being sealed inside their triple -glazed, double - story and photos by W. Merle Gunby insulated buildings, the sounds of the tropics are a culture shock. Here much of life is lived publicly. Doors are open, windows are rare, walls are constructed with an opening at the top for ventilation, people crowd onto porches and into the streets and visit. Children play and cry, dogs bark, roosters crow, ghetto blasters pour out a me=lange of sound. The grackle in the north adopts the northern reticence and keeps respectfully away from humans; here, if not discouraged severely, they will land with a piercing shriek and steal tidbits from the table. But now only the moon perched precariously over the summit of the purple hill opposite disturbed the dark stillness. Then the moonlight itself disappeared as a cloud bearing a tropical shower seemed to catch itself on the hilltop. With a gentle rushing sound the cooling breeze returned, the cloud untangled itself from the little mountain, and silver curtains of rain moved across the valley, beating a refreshing tattoo on the galvanized roofs before climbing over our hill and out into the Caribbean. The quiet was 26 THE RURAL VOICE