Caribbean B&B's An Easy Cell
By David Ellis
When the people of the little island of Saba in the Caribbean's Netherlands
Antilles asked authorities in the 1940s for a road to link their scattered farms
and hamlets with their tiny port township, officials in The Hague agreed it
appeared a reasonable enough request.
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A Small Mountainside community
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But once their team of engineers got there to assess the job, it didn't take
them long to realise that Saba was not just any old island. It was a jumbled
collection of high and rugged peaks that rose from suicidally tortuous valleys
and craggy coastal cliffs, and certainly was not the kind of country you could
build a road through - even if the whole island was just eight square kilometres
in size.
So on their return to Holland the engineers sent word back to the Sabans: Nee - a road is impossible.
After digesting this reply, the entrepreneurial Sabans decided that if Holland's
top engineers reckoned they couldn't do it, then they would build their road
themselves.
A 40-year old carpenter, Joseph Hassel was their main inspiration, and because
he knew nothing of road making, enrolled himself in a five year course in the
subject ... by correspondence.
Then he and Saba's just-1000 other residents planned out their road to
villages, isolated farms and communities, and agreed unanimously that every
able-bodied man, woman and child would contribute set hours of voluntary
road-work every week - armed with little more than picks, shovels, rakes,
buckets and spades.
They took and extraordinary twenty-five years to build their concrete
masterpiece - the road The Hague engineers said was impossible.
In most places the tortuous artery rises and falls at up to 35-degrees, and
U-turns almost double back over themselves - so that from the sea or air it cuts
a similar line to China's Great Wall, and thus is dubbed The Great Road of Saba.
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An Easier Section Of The Road
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Nearly fifty years after it was opened, the road - that's never been given an
official name beyond The Road - links the little port of Fort Bay with its
diesel power station, souvenir shop and a couple of dive shops, with The Bottom
(the village at the base of the largest mountain,) picturesque Windwardside,
Hell's Gate and the airport.
Today there are still just 1600 people live here in delightful gingerbread
houses that all have white-washed walls, red tile roofs and green window
shutters - enforced by law.
And old-timers will recall how, before The Road was built, to get from their
wharf to their homes they used a series of ladders with over 900 steps from sea
level to link with mountain walking tracks and trails to their farms, homes,
shops and businesses.
Everything from groceries to furniture and farm goods was hauled-in (and out)
via these ladders and tracks, including with the help of dozens of locals, a
local musician's full-size grand piano.
Saba gets around 25,000 visitors a year who either come by ferry, a few small
cruise-ships, or by air ... although you've need of a stout stomach if flying in:
once again when told it would be impossible to build an airport on the island,
the Sabans simply said No to Nee, carved the top off one of their hills,
pushed it into the sea, and laid a runway across it.
The Sabans don't encourage large cruise ships for fear of damaging their
environment and being over-run by gawkers, and happily point out that, anyway,
they've no beaches, no duty-free shops, and virtually no transport beyond the
few taxi-vans.
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Saba's Police Station
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But they do have some of the Caribbean's most spectacular diving, extraordinary
scenery, quaint little stores selling hand-made souvenirs and exceptional lace
goods, a museum in a 160-year old house, little cafés with wonderful
island/Dutch cuisine including mouth-watering local lobsters and Dutch Tea
(Heineken Beer) ... and the opportunity to climb 1064 steps to take-in the
kaleidoscopic vista from the highest peak.
There are also a few small hotels and guest houses - and if they're all booked
out, Saba Police Station's two cells have never housed a prisoner so the
entrepreneurial police officers have turned these into an emergency peak-season
Bed and Breakfast.
See travel agents about Caribbean Island ferry services to Saba and small
holiday vessels like the 112-passenger SeaDream I and SeaDream II
(www.seadream.com) that visit as part of Caribbean itineraries from November to
April.
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Picturesque Mountain Community
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