A 7th Heaven Experience for sure
Selah...
A 7th Heaven Experience for sureImagine yourself under a canopy of Pink Poui, beside a harem of royal palms with the royal wave just for you, bamboo chimes calling for total surrender!
Selah...
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"Top Pick" bed and breakfast in KingstonNeita's Nest is proud to be Lonely Planet's Top Choice for Bed and Breakfast service in Kingston, Jamaica. We are in the middle of the winter tourist season, and it was one of our earlier guests who mentioned the good news to us.
This is how we have been described in the travel guide: Lonely Planet review A delightful art-filled bed and breakfast tucked up high in Stony Hill and with great views from the terrace of Kingston and the mountains. Cosy rooms and a gracious host who welcomes you into the family make this feel like a perfect retreat away from the city. Dinner is available on request (and is recommended). Read more: Since then, several of our guests, armed with their Lonely Planet handbooks, have indicated that this recommendation was pivotal in their decision to stay with us. What a great kick-off to the winter season! Our family and staff say Thanks! And, in good ol' Jamaican parlance, Tenk yu! Tenk yu! The many uses of the Lignum VitaeI love the Plumbago and the Lignum Vitae flowers because they are the few plants with blue flowers that bloom on the hot Liguanea Plains on which the city of Kingston lies. You have to travel to the cool hills to find the Forget-me-not or Blue Iris. The Lignum Vitae is our National Flower and it blooms profusely twice per year. The hard and dense wood from this slow-growing tree has been used here to make mortars and pestles for crushing spices, they can be seen at jerk centres and in kitchens as chopping boards, and sculptors use it for wood carvings. In fact, participants in the Mighty Gully Youth Project founded in 1982 near Old Harbour by master wood sculptor, the late Lancelot Bryan, make magnificent pieces and have the distinction of having been commissioned to create gifts for visiting dignitaries, namely Prince Charles and the late Margaret Thatcher of the United Kingston, and Bishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa. ![]() We are pleased to have one piece in our collection. According to Wikipedia, the wood of the Lignum Vitae has been used in the shipping and railroad industries, in hydro-electric plants, for bearings and gears in pendulum clocks and as a lap in the process of cutting gems. In sports, it is used in making heavy balls for cricket, skittles and croquet, and for security, for police batons.
I missed last year's news that Jamaica's National Flower can fight HIV, but it is certainly worth repeating. As Dr Henry Lowe continues his research and development, we look forward to him taking this cure to the many in Jamaica and around the world who suffer from this disease. When we ask, "Why visit like a tourist when you can live with Jamaicans" it is in fact a special invitation to come hang and experience with us, or on your own, the Jamaica we love and want you to know. Oftentimes we do this by encouraging our guests to take city tours with Jamaica Cultural Enterprises, other times it is by recommending a play such as one of Basil Dawkins' bi-annual productions. The National Dance Theatre Company's summer season is not to be missed, neither should opportunities to go bird watching, to have a private picnic or to attend the free concerts by the Jamaica Military Band in the Royal Hope Botanical Gardens. The climatic experience of touring a coffee farm in the cool St Andrew hills or of a lazy afternoon on a chafing south coast beach can contrast like day and night, but each enjoyable in its own unique way. ![]() So, last night, after the appetizer and the entree here at Neita's Nest, Vegard and Heidi joined us at one of the final peformances of Nesta's Rock, an original musical inspired by the childhood of Robert Nesta Marley. Mounted by the Jamaica Musical Theatre Company in partnership with the Bob Marley Group of Companies, its one-month run at the Phillip Sherlock Centre for the Arts on the UWI Mona campus was coming to an end, and I was joining family and friends for a night out. Our Norweigian guests were good to go from the moment they heard of it. Additional tickets were arranged. Heidi and Vegard found it a colourful and lively performance, and were particularly delighted with how even the youngest performers were immersed in the act, thoroughly enjoying themselves. Back at the Nest as we sat to conclude dinner with coffee and dessert, the city lights as our backdrop, Vegard remarked, "How lovely!" Instead of just curling up in bed with a book we had an unexpected evening of Dinner and Theatre. A delicious 3-course fine dining experience, interspersed with a delightful evening of Jamaican theatre, Heidi added. Why visit like a tourist....
![]() Jamaica has a long and deep history of the Chinese being an integral part of our society; from indentured labourers to replace Africans on the sugar plantations after the emancipation of slavery, to the beginning of their commercial activities as shopkeepers in villages throughout every nook and cranny of our country, to their contributions in other enterprises and endeavours including the restaurant business, the music industry, education, manufacturing, government and politics. May Wong, coming all the way from Hong Kong, was our guest here at Neita's Nest this week. She wanted to know where she could go to experience Chinese New Year celebrations in Jamaica. Unfortunately, the main celebration, The Annual Spring Festival Garden Party took place the Sunday before she arrived, but I did direct her to the Chinese Benevolent Association of Jamaica for more information, while sharing with her what I know of the history of the Chinese in Jamaica. Of course, I pulled from our home library, Easton Lee's book of poems, "From Behind the Counter" to authenticate for her some of the early history. We talked about the contributions of the Chinese Embassy to Jamaica through the Confucious Institute at the University of the West Indies' Mona Campus here in Kingston, the lovely new highway from the Norman Manley International Airport, the controversial Chinese Garden being built in our Royal Hope Botanical Gardens, as well as the projected development of Goat Islands. As I went off to sleep that evening, I wondered whether further contributions could not be in the area of a sustained public relations awareness campaign on the rich history and culture of the Chinese in Jamaica. highlighting, for example, their contribution to the development of Jamaican music, as was featured at Tribute to the Greats by Kingsley Goodison last year, and of course, staging a festival to take place in the streets in which we can all celebrate Chinese New Year. Perhaps when our Chinese Garden is complete. Here is what Fodor'sTravel has to say about how it is done in other countries:
You can call it the Spring Festival, Lunar New Year, or Chinese New Year but they all refer to the same thing: one of the world’s biggest annual celebrations. In cities across the globe, colorful and joyous spectacles featuring parades, fireworks and cultural performance ring in the start of a new year according to the traditional Chinese lunar calendar. In 2015, Chinese New Year falls on Thursday, February 19, but many places will host parades and festivals over the weekend, with some parties continuing through the end of the month. With their unique traditions and crowd-pleasing festivities, these celebrations stand out from the rest, so get ready to eat some dumplings for good luck and welcome the Year of the Sheep. By Annie Bruce for Fodor'sTravel See more... So, May, thanks for reminding us that this is Chinese New Year, and to you and all our former Neita's Nest guests who have visited from China, as well as those who visit us online... Happy Chinese New Year! Julia Porter returns to Neita's Nest with her Mom![]() I vividly remember that mid-April morning back in 2013 when Julia stood on the verandah of Neita's Nest, looked to the hills in front, and said, "My mother would love it here!" At the time, Julia was taking time out from volunteerism to celebrate her birthday here at Neita's Nest. Then, on January 18 this year, just days after was wondering how she was doing, I received an email that started like this: "Dear Michelle - remember me? I had a lovely stay at you guesthouse in 2013. How are you?..." Of course I remember you Julia, I replied. True to her word, Julia was making plans to return with her Mom, Una. In doing so, she became our first repeat visitor for 2015, and the first to receive our special gifts; a discount on her stay and a magnetised miniature reproduction of Ewan McAnuff's oil on canvas of the view from Neita's Nest. We couldn't think of a better way to honour our repeat guests and while celebrating our 5th anniversary as a successful Kingston bed and breakfast. Needless to say, Una stood on the verandah on her first monring and exclaimed, "What a view!!!"
Imbibing on Chardonnay or Coconut Water, guests chatted away in the kitchen with Kush, getting tips and suggestions, and just watching chef passionately prepare the 3-course meal. ![]() Kushite's Vegetable Cuisine was the fare for Neita's Nest's first Guest Chef Evening with Kush himself delighting friends and family. Kush created a menu based on what we had in our kitchen. We got off to a flying start with Curried Pumpkin Sambusas served with a Double Apple Salsa. Enter the entree: a Cajon-spiced Tofu with Catalogue-Stuffed Yam Balls, served with a citrusy Nile Salad. ![]() Kush was keeping secrets when he named this dessert Cheesecake in a Cup. There was nothing cheesy about this final course. Think Toasty, Nutty, Spicy, topped with a Creamy, Fruity, Tangy and more spicy flavours popping, bursting then melding in a seamless blend! Mama's vintage glassware glimmered with the Kingston nightscape. Here is the best part of all. Kushite Vegetable Cuisine will be creating a dessert just for Neita's Nest, and gifting us with the recipe. So, future guests of Neita's Nest, you will have a new and delish dessert to look forward to - a token of appreciation for the opportunity of being our first guest chef!
The treat was ours, and will be yours. Guests of Neita's Nest were out and about celebrating Bob Marley's 70th Birthday in Kingston, including visits to Culture Yard in Trench Town where the new Bob Marley statue was unveiled this past weekend. "It's lively" said Hedi and Berith from Sweden on their return from home to their bed and breakfast host.
Bob Marley, still livelying up the world at 70, is a national treasure and a hero to the world. Here is a well-articulated call from Columnist Ian Boyne for Marley to be named a National Hero here in Jamaica. Read more about it.... As we celebrate Reggae month, it is well known that a culture is born out of the experiences of the populace; usually a response to ideology or the times. The Jamaican dance form, Quadrille is rooted in the teasing mimic by the slaves of their owners' ballroom dancing. The Blues of America's southern states wailed lamentations of life's experiences, and reggae began as a protest of the economic experiences of the people, and was certianly not found acceptable as mainstream culture. History has since exonerated Reggae. ![]() Fast forward to Dance Hall, and here I will share comments from master choerographer, Jackie Guy MBE in an open letter from London: Beloved, Finally, Finally, Finally recognition for a dance hall artist, outside the dance theatre circle/basin. I have always felt that the Bogle, Butterfly and Gully Creeper were three of Jamaica's best dance hall movements, which are echoes and spirits of our African Ancestors, emerging out of a country (Jamaica) whose soil is soaked in blood. These three movements are gravity pulling, shape flowing and life giving. Give thanks to Ibo Cooper for this 'Act of Light' in recommending that Master 'Bogle' Gerald Levy be universally recognised for his contribution to choreography in Jamaica. We here in the Diaspora are rejoicing. I am so grateful and honored to have seen the value of these three unique dance hall movements, and made sure it was in my choreography. Jackie used the Bogle in his 1992 work History of the Drum which he took to southern Africa, and in 2013 he incorporated both the Gully Creeper and Butterfly in the CHASE-sponsored dance Bankra (featured in image above) for the National Dance Theatre Company, in tribute to the late Professor Rex Nettleford, its founding director.
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AuthorThe Neita's Nest Blog is managed by Michelle Neita, owner of Jamaican Bed and Breakfast -- Neita's Nest. Contact usCategories
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