I had a chance to visit the very beautiful island nation of Barbados on behalf of
Outdoor Afro. While I partook in Barbados food, hosptitality, culture and scenery for my friend and kindred outdoor spirit Rue of Outdoor Afro (
and blogged all about it), I also couldn't help myself and took in the beautiful nature. I'll be highlighting my wonderful nature and wildlife encounters of the Caribbean Island.
Today, I feature the beautiful landscapes photos of the islands. I think the pictures give a good sense of not only the naturl beauty of the country but give you a big picture view of the ecology of the island, too.
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Dusk - view from the patio of the hotel. That's the Caribbean sea in the distance with various palm trees all around. |
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Sailing out on the Caribbean sea. That's the island nation of Barbados in the distance. |
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Beach view. Crystal blue waters of the Caribbean sea. |
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Row of tall palm trees along the driveway of a former Sugar Plantation. Barbados was once a colony of the United Kingdom and the entire island was basically a series of big sugar plantations. |
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Though sugar isn't the main export anymore, the legacy of the sugar plantation is not lost. This was once a sugar plantation, with a small sugar mill towwe in the distance on the left. This land now is being developed for residental propoerties. Notice the wide open flat landscape. |
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Narrow shot of a gully. The island is only 14 miles long by 21 miles wide, but there are hundreds of miles of gullies - series of small inland streams, sloughs, and water ways. Lots of diverse species of plant, birds, amphians, reptiles and insects call these gullies home. There are some species that exist no other place on earth. But no snakes. Barbados has no snakes (they were all removed/extripated by the colonists long, long ago) |
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View from the hilly region of Barbados called the Scotland district. That's the Altantic Ocean in the far distance. |
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Scotland district, Atlantic Ocean in the background. |
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Standing in that spot from the previous picture. Don't let anyone fool you. People become scientists (biologists, ecologists, geologists) so that we can travel to beautiful places like this and do research. Aren't you ready to become a scientist, too now? |
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Geological formation from when Barbados was 'pushed out of the sea'. Barbados is a sandstone/coral island - connected to the seafloor, not a volcanic island. |
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Beach view of the East side of the island |
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Beach view of the East side of island, Atlantic Ocean. Notice the plastic trash deposited on the beach. I walked past hat plastic laundry detergent bottle (and thousands of pieces like it) on my brief visit to that beach. No telling how far that plastic traveled before getting washed up on the beach. Learn more about plastic trash in the ocean at my friend's blog. She's doing her dissertation research on the impact of this very issue, link here. |
Stay tuned for more Barbados pictures.
In the meantime, check out my posts, to date about the visit to Barbados for Outdoor Afro.
Barbados Bound: An Outdoor Afro Adventure in the CaribbeanBarbados – An Outdoor Afro Adventure (at Jack & Jill Politics)
Outdoor Fun in Barbados: Fun at Sea!Games Outdoor Afros Play – Dominoes