Fake Jamaica

Treasure Beach Forum: TB Runnin's: Fake Jamaica
Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message  By Scared for Jamaican Tourism on Friday, June 04, 2010 - 04:05 am: Edit Post

This article is not only about what has happened to Falmouth, but it could very well apply to other places in Jamaica, including Font Hill and maybe even Treasure Beach.

For those of you who are unfamiliar with Arthur Frommer, he is considered the foremost travel expert in America and has written hundreds of travel books and articles.

Budget Travel: Another fake port rises for cruise line passengers

from the Cape Cod Times
By Arthur Frommer
May 30, 2010

I used to regard a cruise as a travel experience - an encounter with cultures, lifestyles or natural phenomena different from what we know at home. I totally underestimated the ability of cruise executives to eliminate those contacts. And my growing concern about what's happening with cruises has been worsened by last week's reports about Falmouth, on the north coast of Jamaica (although the news wasn't entirely unexpected).

Indeed, when I first heard (at least a year ago) about the new port area in construction at Falmouth, I suspected it might be another of those artificial urban theme parks - like Coco Cay (Bahamas), Costa Maya (Mexico), Great Stirrup Cay (Bahamas), Labadee (Haiti), Mahogany Bay (Roatan, Honduras), Little Stirrup Cay (Bahamas) and others - that cruise lines ranging from Royal Caribbean to Norwegian to Carnival have been throwing up at cruise stops in the Caribbean.

These, of course, are not towns but enclaves, “private beaches,” “private villages” or “private islands” fenced off from the life of each surrounding Caribbean nation. Increasingly, the popularly priced, mass-volume cruise lines are fashioning their itineraries to spend one to three days of each weeklong cruise at such totally artificial, contrived, imitations of a real port.

The purpose is to keep the cruise line's passengers grouped in a single confined area serviced by stores, restaurants, bars and beach facilities owned or controlled by the cruise line. That way, the cruise company earns the income from a day's expenditures on shore, without having to see it go to local merchants. And passengers are protected from the occasional unsettling presence of actual residents of the islands they are visiting.

The latest report about Falmouth, though not entirely conclusive, seems to confirm my prediction in toto - and my worst fears. The new port stop has been developed by Royal Caribbean Cruises, which is officially named the developer. The new port is primarily designed for use by those humongous, 6,000-passenger monster vessels of Royal Caribbean, the Oasis of the Seas and the forthcoming, similarly sized Allure of the Seas. The port will open in January 2011. And the announcement of its near-completion is chilling.

To begin with, the new, fake town of Falmouth is built on a landfill where the ocean used to meet the shore. It is not part of the tiny old town of Falmouth. The re-created plot of land eventually will house, according to Travel Weekly, “shops, restaurants and boutique hotels.”

Are these new commercial establishments built by Jamaicans? No, it is Royal Caribbean Cruises that is the developer. And the pedestrian streets of the town will be, according to Royal Caribbean's John Tercek, interviewed by Travel Weekly (May 12), “lined with buildings inspired by local structures that weave building styles into a distinctive pattern of early Jamaican architecture with Georgian-era buildings dating from the 1760s to 1840.”

“Georgian-era buildings dating from the 1760s to 1840”! In other words, the new town will be like Walt Disney's Main Street in the Magic Kingdom, only older. It will not be a real town, but a playground, like the gigantic amusement park (all bells and whistles, toys and games) maintained aboard Oasis of the Seas and Allure of the Seas.

Or, as the latest edition of Cruise Critic puts it, approvingly: The attempt is to “refashion the area into a Colonial Williamsburg of the Caribbean.” No longer will U.S. and Canadian passengers visit the real Jamaica. They will be taken to a fake Jamaica.

If, like me, you're repelled by these new policies of the mammoth cruiselines, you will henceforth study the itineraries of cruise lines and make sure never to board a ship that goes to Falmouth, Coco Cay, Great Stirrup Cay, Mahogany Bay, Labadee, Little Stirrup Cay, Costa Maya or other insults to our intelligence.


Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message  By turey on Friday, June 04, 2010 - 01:44 pm: Edit Post

Thanks SFJT, Mr Frommer, through one of his publications, was one of my first eye openers to the so called alternative tourism.

If we cannot manage Yard as She needs to be cared for, many others are waiting. Some are here already. Some have made themselves one a wi. Some have yet to show their colours.

If we cannot rouse ourselves from Instant Gratification, Posturing, Cyaan Baada, Tek and Ginnal, we deserve to be recipients of the crumbs from the table of those who can never be the Lovers we are meant to be.


Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message  By aha! on Friday, June 04, 2010 - 04:22 pm: Edit Post

Useful article. Thanks.


Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message  By Gross on Friday, June 04, 2010 - 05:07 pm: Edit Post

This is truly disgusting and makes me feel sick. It will probably appeal to the shallow kind of people who cruise the Caribbean for a week and think they've seen every island. Or the kind of people who stay at AIs and think they've seen the whole island. The awful thing is there IS an audience for these kinds of places.


Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message  By Scared 2 on Saturday, June 05, 2010 - 07:23 am: Edit Post

It is pitiful the old Falmouth was allowed to be ruined. Yet another case of Jamaicans selling out for short-term profits and long-term misery. I am so glad the people who come to TB are looking for the real Jamaica. All of us who love TB have an obligation to help stop what's planned for Font Hill. They are coming down the coast. First, [edited by TB.Net]. Now, they want to ruin Font Hill. Next, wait until the go after Treasure Beach. Think it won't happen? By the time it does it will be too late to stop it.


Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message  By Everyone's Responsibility on Monday, June 07, 2010 - 06:42 am: Edit Post

This should be a warning to those who think Font Hill is too far away to make an impact on them. I have actually heard people who say they do not wish to get involved with the canal or the sports park because it is not close enough to where they live to matter. All of Treasure Beach is our community, and all of Jamaica is our country. If we do not take the time and interest to reach out and help others, how can we expect them to come to our assistance when it is our turn to need help.


Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message  By take responsibility on Monday, June 07, 2010 - 04:57 pm: Edit Post

everyone should see "jamaica for sale" .
it is a very powerful, factual film, and clearly shows what has and is happening to our country.

falmouth, font hill, even little treasure beach ... the changes are coming and we are all responsible for allowing them to happen.


Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message  By turey on Tuesday, June 08, 2010 - 08:05 am: Edit Post

Change is guaranteed, time being it's master.

The direction of change may be determined by good information driven by strong collective will and guided by good heart.


Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message  By TB GROWN on Saturday, June 19, 2010 - 03:07 am: Edit Post

TREASURE BEACH WILL BE NEXT IF WE DO NOT STAND UP AS A PEOPLE IN OUR COMMUNITY SOME BELIVED BECAUSE YOU DONT LIVE THER ANNYMORE WE HAVE NO SAY WRONG.i WAS BORN AND RAISE THER SO THAT GIVE ME MY SAY. {edited by TBNet}


Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message  By sentry on Monday, July 12, 2010 - 08:22 am: Edit Post

I always love your posts turey but have to disagree this time. It's about money bredren. Money talks. Everything else is just mumbling.