February 16, 2023
At 7:00 AM we met up with Bob's relative Chad, who had arrived at about 11:00 PM and checked into the same hotel we were in while we were sleeping. Our first stop was at the airport (which was on our way) to put Chad on the driver list for the car and to get some cash from the ATM. Totally unprepared for the exchange rate ($1 US = $153 Jamaican dollars), I pulled out too little--maybe the equivalent of $100 US--but we made it last until almost the end of the trip, not because we were frugal, but because it was easy to pay in US dollars, and we had plenty of those.
Chad ended up being our primary driver for the trip. It was nice to have that option. We may have to invite him along on future adventures!
Our first stop was Hope Botanical Gardens in Kingston. It was our first experience with the lack of signage for "tourist" spots (and one we would have over and over again). We totally missed it on the first pass, and barely found it on the second. We wondered if foreigners don't drive much in Jamaica but rely instead on tour buses and taxis. Maybe tourists are intimidated by the right-side steering wheel and left-side-of-the-road driving. Bob and Chad did great with it, the main problem being turning on the wipers instead of the blinker (which is also on the wrong side). Or maybe tourists mainly stay at the resorts.
Our first stop was Hope Botanical Gardens, aka the Royal Botanical Gardens, in Kingston. I didn't realize it when we were there, but the land the gardens are on has a dark past. Initially, a large estate including the land the gardens are on was given to the British Major Richard Hope in 1655 for his role in overthrowing the Spanish and taking over Jamaica. In the 19th century the estate land was given to a duke as payment for his lost slaves after the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833. Nothing was given to the liberated people.
In 1873, a section of the estate was turned into the botanical gardens, which now comprise 200 acres.