Paget's Belize Journal

 

The Preliminary Trip

- It Begins
- First days
- A tourist trip
- Flying, sand crabs
- San Pedro 1
- San Pedro 2
- Braids, snakes, dogs
- Leaving Dangriga

The Actual Stay

- Help for library
- Books; departure
- Arrival; weather
- Sensations, housing
- Security, more housing
- More security, snorkeling
- Dock activities
- Day-to-day life 1
- Day-to-day life 2
- The Quadrille
- The apartment!
- Cleaning and culture
- Hurricane Irene
- Too much reality
- Hopkins Village 1
- Hopkins Village 2
- Weather
- Minimum wage
- Transportation
- Food Experiments
- The Brits; furniture
- Meeting and greeting
- Night noise, Settlement Day
- Dragonflies!
- More noise
- A good 19th
- Wrapping up the 19th
- Traveling to Mexico
- Thanksgiving in Mexico
- Cockscomb Basin
- A Belizean week-end
- Tobacco Caye
- Is it really Christmas?
- This is the life
- Christmas wishes
- Headwear
- Christmas Experiences
- Lottery
- Caye Caulker haircut
- Caye Caulker 2
- Geckos
- Red Bank
- The last few days

 

Oct 13, 1999 Cleaning and Culture

Well, the weekend did not go quite as I had planned. I got felled by one of those lovely stranger-in-a-strange land bugs and wasn't too lively for most of it. But I did get moved. On Saturday Francine, the woman who cleans here at Naturalight and works part time at Pelican, came to help me clean up the new place. It was pretty dirty. Mostly dust and sawdust and dead bugs which a vacuum likely would have made short work of.

But we didn't have a vacuum. What we had was a broom, bucket, mop, scrub brush and one rag. (Here's some advice. If you're going to live in a foreign country, take more than one rag.) We also had Joy and bleach. So we scrubbed everything up as high as we could reach and called it good. The advantage of that cement floor is you just slosh to your heart's content and then mop down the floor when you're done. I discovered that plastic-coated metal louvers are waaaay harder to wash than windows and learned how to wash screens in a shower that sort of droobles a wad of water.

Washing the body is interesting too. Anyway we worked for about 4 hours with some help from Francine's daughter (about 14 yrs old I guess) and lots of help from her 3-year-old son. In case there was any doubt, three year olds the world over like nothing better than playing in a bucket of soapy water, even if it is full of dead bugs. I was a bit concerned about how much to pay them and finally settled on offering BZ $50 (US $25) and watching for the reaction. It must have been okay, because Francine crossed herself. Lady Bountiful, that's me.

The place is still not very comfortable, nothing but a foam slab and an ice chest, but I did sleep there last night. I have 2 or 3 geckos in residence, which I'm of two minds about. They're kinda cute and have nice little chirpy voices, but they leave little poops here and there. On the other hand, Francine claims they eat cockroaches, which I saw some evidence of. Cockroaches, not geckos eating them. As a matter of fact I haven't really put away anything but my clothes until I deal with the cockroach problem.

The new neighborhood is certainly in the middle of things and quite liberating. I have hardly been out after dark (which arrives at 6:30 this close to the Equator), because of the safety concerns of Pelican staff. I guess they think I might get hit over the head walking the 3/4 mi back from town to the resort. I was a little nervous too. Stores close at 5:00 pm but then re-open at 7:00 pm, so I had a grand time last night wandering around "shelf shopping" (no windows). But I ended up eating the Top Ramen equivalent, because I didn't want to chance a restaurant and I don't have anything to cook with yet, except a hot water pot. Then I watched the passing scene from my balcony.

While we were cleaning on Saturday, there were two funeral processions. Everyone commented on how unusual to have the processions so close together, one funeral party had to wait for the other to leave the cemetery before they could enter. I think the procession down the main street was part of the ceremony, not just the route from the church. It appears that there are no hearses here, or perhaps they're very expensive to rent, because one casket was carried in a pick-up truck and one in a station wagon. A four-member combo--snare, coronet, trombone, clarinet--of older men, playing the traditional songs I associate with dixieland funerals, led each procession. "Just a Closer Walk With Thee" "What a Friend We Have in Jesus" and so forth. Then the casket, then walking mourners, then a few vehicles.

All of the stores and businesses along the route close their doors for the 5 minutes or so that it takes for the procession to pass by. In many cases, the clerks came out of the stores and stood quietly. But most of the guys in the bars just stayed there and drank beer. Apparently there is an intertwined set of customs, encompassing both Catholic elements and the deep, mysterious obeah, in all major life events. In this instance, there is no return celebratory parade, but there will be a lively ritual on the "Ninth Night."

The Garifuna appear to have done a remarkable job of maintaining their culture over hundreds of years. But like so many others, modern communication and transportation opportunities have a terribly corrosive impact. The young people are leaving to go to school and few are returning to maintain the culture. All of the musicians in the two funeral processions, for example, were well over 60. More in future editions. Time to get back to work.


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