Small Farming in Jamaica’s Blue Mountains

Scattered throughout eastern Jamaica’s mountainous interior are small farmers that face innumerable challenges to make a living on some of the island’s most challenging terrain. At 45 kilometres long and 20 kilometres wide, the Blue Mountain Range is one of the Caribbean’s longest continuous mountain ranges and Jamaica’s highest and largest with many of the peaks on the Grand Ridge range from 900 to 2256 metres. Many of the villages here are peopled by descendants of slaves who moved from the coastal plantations into the interior after emancipation from slavery in 1838. Crops grown include cash crops such as potatoes, bananas, carrots, tomato and yam and the world-famous coffee named for this range.

The community of Halls Delight in the road from Mavis Bank to Westphalia in the Blue Mountains of St. Andrew.

The community of Halls Delight in the road from Mavis Bank to Westphalia in the Blue Mountains of St. Andrew.

Originally introduced to Jamaica in 1725 from Martinique, commercial coffee cultivation spread to the Blue Mountains where the altitude of over one thousand metres and the cool climate resulted in coffee berries taking a longer time to mature than at lower altitudes. This resulted in the coffee’s unique flavour and led to the establishment of large coffee estates and factories, some of which still exist today. It is to these factories that small farmers sell their ripe coffee berries.

Olivia Penny picks coffee on her son-in-law's property in Portland in the Blue Mountains.

Olivia Penny picks coffee berries on her son-in-law’s property in Portland in the Blue Mountains.

One might assume that cultivating the world’s most expensive coffee would lead to great wealth for those who grow the crop. While this might be true for the large estates, this is not so for the small coffee farmers who have to sell their berries to licensed processing factories which process and sell the beans locally and overseas. Although one pound of roasted Blue Mountain coffee beans is sold for US$50.00 this sale price is not transferred to the small farmers. As Bertram, a coffee farmer from Penlyne Castle in St. Thomas claims, “I could make more money running a taxi for six months than from coffee for a year.”

In addition to the economic obstacles faced by farming, the residents of the Blue Mountains face many other challenges related to their geography, which were highlighted in the past decade. From 2004 to 2008, hurricanes and tropical storms resulted in landslides, the destruction of buildings and the disruption of water supplies. Much of this is exacerbated by poor farming practices on the steep and fragile slopes which led to land degradation and erosion. This has resulted in many of the communities being necessarily self-sufficient, since they cannot always rely on the authorities to rebuild roads or repair the infrastructure.

A cyclist and pedestrian make their way across one of the landslides at Cascade, Portland.  After five years of neglect, this road has began to be repaired in 2010 after it occurred in 2004.

A cyclist and pedestrian make their way across one of the landslides at Cascade, Portland. After five years of neglect, this road has began to be repaired in 2010 after it occurred in 2004.

Yet there is potential for other sources of income for residents of these mountains. The unique biodiversity of the Blue Mountains resulted in it forming the main component of the 76,000 hectare Blue and John Crow Mountains National Park which was established in 1993. Thus, many residents believe that the Blue Mountains have great potential for heritage and adventure tourism, but requires sustained more marketing from Jamaica’s tourism industry. If this is done the residents believe that they will not be left to the economic and environmental vagaries to which they are now subjected.

Adaptation Fund Photography Contest 2012

Livelihood Support in a Changing Climate: (Simon Golds, United Kingdom)

3rd prize. Threshing rice in rural Tanzania (Simon Golds, United Kingdom. Used with permission.)

This year I was a member of the jury of the Adaptation Fund’s 2012 photography competition, which had the theme of Food and Agriculture. There were many strong images among the 11 semi-finalists, all of which provided   information  well-worth reading, detailing specific issues faced by communities challenged by climate change. The jury selected the top three winners as follows:  3rd prize went to Simon Golds of the UK for his image of a woman threshing rice in Tanzania, 2ndprize went to Antonio Perez on Spain for his photo of strawberry pickers in the Moroccan Rif and the judges winner was Ihsan Ilze of Turkey for his strong yet simple image of a women walking with the produce among greenhouses in Turkey. Women were the dominant subjects in the winning photos, which highlights the global importance of women in working and supporting themselves and their families. All of the winning images combined simple and artistic compositions with creative use of lighting while at the same time highlighting the global issues and solutions faced.

The aim of the competition was to show “how people are adapting their approaches to growing and supplying food as climate change transforms agricultural conditions around the world”. The competition was held in September and October and the winners were announced at the Adaptation Fund’s side event at the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change negotiations in Doha, Qatar on December 3. Other members of the panel were Ms. Alexandra Garcia, Director of Operations, International League of Conservation Photographers; Ms. Karen Kasmauski, Professional Photographer; Pedro Armestre, Professional Photographer and Dr. Samuel Sidibé, Directeur Général, Musée National du Mali. 170 photos were submitted from Bangladesh, Germany, India, Indonesia, Iran, Kenya, Mali, Madagascar, Moldova, Morocco, Nepal, Republic of Congo, Spain, Turkey, Uganda, United Kingdom and the United States.

Congratulations to the Adaptation Fund in organizing their second annual photography competition and I wish them success in their mission to assist developing countries to adapt to the negative effects of climate change.

Visiting Maria

I carried eight of my third-year UTech students to the home of photographer Maria LaYacona in Kingston. Maria (as she insisted on being called) graciously opened up her house to us and shared her experiences of photographing in Jamaica for over fifty years. Among the snippets she shared included volunteering to photograph a new series of advertisements for the Gleaner newspaper, because at the time all the people in the ads were white and didn’t represent the typical Jamaican . She also contrasted the experience of photographing the founders of modern Jamaica – Sir Alexander Bustamante and Norman Washington Manley (2 days vs. 5 minutes). Maria continues to shoot film and develops her black and white film in her personal darkroom, which she showed to the students.