The
rafting trip covers only 7 miles of the
beautiful RIO GRANDE, but will whet your
appetite to explore more of the lush valley.
This is Maroon country. The runaway slaves
of Portland, called the Windward Maroons
were particularly fierce and bold. In the
early days of British settlement they would
swoop from their mountain strongholds to
raid the coastal settlements, and for more
than a century the Rio Grande was the scene
of guerrilla warfare. For a long time the
Windwards were led by a woman, the legendary
Champong Nanny or Grande Nanny, a fierce
lady, reputed to have magical powers. It
is said that she kept a cauldron of water
boiling without any fire into which unwary
British soldiers fell and perished. It was
also believed that Nanny never went into
battle armed like the rest (but) received
the bullets of her enemy that were aimed
at her and returned them with fatal effectî
ñ in (blush) a manner of which decency
forbids description. The first and most
famous Jamaican matriarch, Nanny was made
a national heroine during the Feminist 1970s
although there is no documentary proof of
her existence. In 1734 the British finally
succeeded in driving the Maroons from their
mountain fortress when the canny Captain
Stoddart approached from ST THOMAS dragging
some swivel guns through a district called
HALF A BOTTLE and over a peak now called
STODDARTíS PEAK.
NANNYTOWN,
high in the JOHN CROW mountains was never
resettled, and to this day people swear
that the site is haunted a spirit place.
The weird experiences of the last military
expedition to visit there (during the 70s)
tend to substantiate the claim. Stalwart
British soldiers reported a landslide on
Mount Abraham opposite Nanny Town when a
piece of the mountain fell away with a roar
like thunder, and told Reuters that they
had seen faces and heard voices among the
trees at night. One of them was mystified
when his watch disappeared from his wrist
while he was securely zipped into his sleeping
bag. The few hardy hikers who tackle the
Nanny Town trail report a profusion of rare
plants and animals. Experienced guides can
be hired at Windsor or Johnís Hall.
After
Nannyís death, the Windwards were
led by Quao, one of her Captains. He has
to his credit the massacre of a large British
force. In 1739, four months after Cudjoe
of the Leeward Maroons made peace with the
British, Quao also signed a treaty. By this,
lands were ceded to the Windward Maroons
and they were allowed to live in peace and
semi-independence. Today many of their descendants
are small farmers in the Rio Grande Valley
where the story of their gallant fight lives
on in legend and place names.
Leaving
Port Antonio by the cluttered, shabby road
south you come first to RED HASSEL where
it is said, the land ran red with blood
after one battle. At BREASTWORKS the British
built a fort to keep the Maroons at bay.
At FELLOWSHIP there was a temporary truce.
Here the road branches R to BERRIDALE, starting
place for the rafting trip.
FELLOWSHIP
is now the headquarters of the RIO GRANDE
VALLEY PROJECT, an agricultural and community
development project funded by the government
of the Netherlands. The project office and
community centre was built by the Womenís
Construction Co-operative. Floods caused
by deforestation and erosion on the hills
are becoming a recurrent problem ñ
and the main reason for abysmal road conditions
in the valley. In response, conservation
has recently become a key element of the
project. Agro-forestry and bench terracing
are being promoted and farmers are being
encouraged to minimize the use of chemicals
that can pollute the river and prevent careless
disposal of the blue plastic bags used to
ìsleeveî the banana bunches.
Project officers Barrington Hall and Hubertus
Gaymans are also assisting communities to
develop eco-tourist accommodation and facilities.
ETAG, a local Eco-Tourism Action Group has
trained guides who are available to accompany
you to nearby eco attractions like the SCATTER
FALLS and FOXES CAVES. To find these you
will cross the river on a raft and take
a short, fairly level hike along the river
bank to a tributary called the Sarah, alias
ìSAYî river where the Scatter
Falls tumble into the river from both sides
for about half a mile. Crossing the river
by stepping stones you walk beside the lower
Scatter Falls to the Thaxter property and
Foxes Caves. The larger cave, which is lighted
has 10 chambers, the smaller one boasts
a stream and waterfall. For information
about guides and other attractions phone
ETAG at the project office, 993-2543.
From
the Fellowship junction the road crosses
the Rio Grande and winds upstream through
farmland and banana cultivations, small
and large farms and government land settlement
schemes. Rich alluvial soil and high rainfall
makes this the most fertile farmland in
the island. Golden Vale, the name of one
large privately owned plantation describes
it well. Proceed with caution, you never
know what lies around the next corner ñ
country bus, market truck, or mega pothole.
Roadside vegetation includes tree ferns,
wild ginger lilies and blue Thumbergia,
a domestic creeper now running wild. Frequent
vantage points reveal vistas of banana fields,
the majestic, blue-green river and the mountains
that guard the almost inaccessible site
of Nanny Town. Some people say that SEAMANíS
VALLEY is the place where Quao ambushed
and massacred a British force including
200 sailors from a warship. Others that
this was the place where Maroon sentinels
could first discern approaching soldiers
and would give the ìsee manî
signal.
Take
the road that branches L to MOORE TOWN,
modern seat of the Windward Maroons. It
is a small village scattered along a stream
with a school, playing field, post office
and seven churches. No one can explain the
name. Some think it was named after a governor
of Jamaica, others that the correct spelling
is More because it was the site chosen when
the Windwards demanded more land. It is
said that Nanny's mortal remains were removed
from Nanny Town and buried here at the BUMP
GRAVE. At the time of her elevation to heroine
status in 1975 the government erected a
memorial here over the alleged grave. Close
by lives the modern leader of the Maroons:
Colonel Harris, better known as Teacher
Harris. Unlike the Accompong Maroons who
hold hotly contested elections at five year
intervals, the Maroons of Moore Town have
retained Harris as Colonel for close to
30 years. He is a retired schoolteacher,
past JLP Senator and frequent author of
letters to the press. As we went to press
Colonel Harris was co-ordinating efforts
to create a Maroon Museum in Moore Town.
Your
valley trip could be enhanced by accepting
the services of guides like Bigger or Lucky
Osborne, two of Col. Harrisís adjutants.
They know everyone in the valley and can
advise on the state of the roads, the sites
of unfrequented waterfalls, how to find
the hot springs on the Guava River, etc.
On
the outskirts of Moore Town a dirt road
follows the river to CORNWALL BARRACKS,
once occupied by British troops, now the
site of another ETAG eco-attraction called
Twin Apple Park where you can sample Maroon
food and absorb Maroon lore. From here a
very old swinging bridge crosses to GINGER
HOUSE where there is a particularly beautiful
waterfall called JUPITER beside a cave and
mineral spring. The river here is ideal
for swimming and picnics. You can cross
by the swinging bridge (locals and their
mules and donkeys still do) or return to
Seamanís Valley and turn L to ALLIGATOR
RIVER where, legend insists, an alligator
dressed in black was once seen entering
the church. Then cross the river by a more
substantial bridge and continue to Ginger
House, COMFORT CASTLE and MILBANK. The river
swirls over and around huge worn stones,
is joined by numerous small springs, and
there are myriad small waterfalls and swimming
holes to tempt you. Comfort Castle has a
post office, police station with telephone
link, and, of course, several churches.
Milbank is headquarters for rangers attached
to the BLUE MOUNTAIN/JOHN CROW MOUNTAIN
NATIONAL PARK. They will be glad to arrange
camping or hiking trips and can recommend
guides from the local community. BOWDEN
PEN on the Mattie River is the end of the
line. Don't be tempted to proceed into St
Thomas unless you have guides, a fourwheel
drive and the weather is very good.
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