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The Village Experience |
Our village houses were modest wooden buildings with shingle roofs, slatted windows, shutter doors and was seated on rocks. Entire families would live in these houses with numbers upwards of ten persons or more. There was no electricity and no water nor indoor plumbing. Water was either caught from the roof top or the Villagers would fetch it from the village reservoirs. Many mornings the streets were filled with children carrying buckets of water to their homes. The houses were cool since the breeze would blow from the front door to back door and through all the windows. These houses withstood hurricanes with unyielding strength. The steep gable roof, constructed of corrugated iron adapted to suit the heavy rains and winds. The roof angle deflected the winds which protect it from being lifted off. These small quaint structures were also used as shops and a popular place for villagers to chat, congregate, swap tales, drink rum, purchase supplies or just to idle their time away. Great attention was placed on the elders because they were the backbone of the village and the ones that would teach the younger ones skills that would be past on for generations. Many moonlit nights the elders would gather and tell stories of the “good old days” while the children would play hide and seek in the yard. The villagers would take the cart of sugarcane from the fields to the mill where it would be processed into brown sugar and molasses. Nothing was wasted the husk or baggasse from the cane was used as fuel in the mill. We grew cocoa, breadfruit, breadnut, Christophe, arrowroot, gongo peas, coconut, yams is just samples of provisions from this area’s basket.
Heating the oven is done by starting a fire inside the oven and small coals were rearranged in the center just a few hours later freshly baked bread aromas engulfed the village. As people from all corners of the village would decent upon the baker shop for hot fresh “ Ha-Penny Bread” and butter. Also from the oven the Villagers enjoyed long bread, twist rolls, pork bread, coconut cakes and local fruit tarts. The oven was also used for roasting meats, fish, fowl, parching nuts, roasting coffee and cocoa beans. For personal cooking villagers would cook their meals outdoor on a coal pot. Coal pots were made of red clay and firing in a open fire made of limber and coconut shell. The coal pot consist of two parts - a clay vessel that the coal was placed to the bottom and the pot and lid that would sit on the vessel, this is what food was cooked in. The harvesting of the correct timber to hand chisel the shingles that creates the roof of the building is all a treasured skill in a village. And local volcanic rock that grace the floor would have been done by masons also a skill that would have been passed on. None of these structures stand today as a monument for the many skills that have been engulfed by modern conveniences and prebought materials. The copper is a large iron vessel that was used at the plantation and the later the village used the coppers in fields and at the home to provide water to the livestock. |