Sunday, July 29, 2018

Pilgrimage (other edition)

It was called the Reggae and Culture tour but it could have been called the Get Ripping Fucking High at Bob's Grave Tour. It was $80 and included a swell lunch at Scotchies on the way back which was perfect because by that time, if you did it right, you'd have some serious munchies. And so we filed onto the bus, i was the only person by myself, and the ages and races of my fellow pilgrims were a beautiful mix. A woman who was born in Jamaica but now lived in London and her grand-daughter, an African-American woman in a wheelchair, going to get the ganja tea as a cure for pain, with her sisters and husband, a brother and sister from rural Tennessee, a young couple ready to party, and a Colombian couple and their toddler son. I could tell when they got on the tour guide, Annabeth, was less than pleased that a baby was on board but it all worked out. How could it not?

And so off we went, into the hills of St. Ann's Parish to the town of Nine Mile. I had eaten my man Junior's ganja cake for breakfast just to get me off on the right foot and was feeling pretty good by the time i got on the bus at 8AM. The ride itself was an adventure as we traveled up the side of a mountain with steep drop-offs and little to no guard rails, blind turns where the driver was honking the horn to alert anyone coming the opposite way on the other side, of course those turns usually involved the steepest drops but luckily the road wasn't busy since this part of Jamaica was pretty much void of tourism. Alone, i got to think as i watched the gorgeous Jamaican countryside slide by, i listened to Annabeth talk, she told us the average wage in Jamaica was $52 a week and that most people lived off tips, there is almost no welfare and no unemployment benefit, people scrambled for jobs that tipped because that was the best way to earn money even though taxes were relatively low. She talked of how the banks were a scam (seems to be like that everywhere) and the reason you saw half built houses everywhere was because Jamaicans didn't take out loans or mortgages (interest rates could fluctuate to upwards of 60%), they built the kitchen, bathroom and one room to sleep in first and built the rest as they could afford to, which did make for some interesting looking places. She told us about the Corner Shops, the little shacks we saw where she explained that you could get everything from motor oil, to eggs, to thread. You bought only what you needed or had money for, say one egg and a slice of bread and possibly a sausage to take home and make for breakfast. She was also pulling for Argentina in the World Cup


She informed us that when we got to Nine Mile the bus would stop and we could buy joints or bags of weed, brownies aka ganja cake, and ganja tea (which could be made mild, medium, strong or extra strong, which got my wondering who bought the first three). The tea would be given to you when you left and was brewed there while you took the tour. Since joints were $15 each or two for $20 i went with two, Bob's favorite sensimilla and a fine purple skunk plus a fat slice of ganja cake that lasted me two days.  Nine Mile is a typical Jamaican village. The young boys swarm when the bus stops all begging for dollars, the Marley place has easily become the town's economic engine and is run by the local Rastafari. The site of Bob Marley's birthplace and tomb are the only places in Jamaica where it was currently legal to smoke weed, that said in Jamaica the plant has been decriminalized and it's legal for a family to grow up to five plants.

There is a heavy local Rasta presence inside, the guide told us you couldn't buy weed in the compound but every time i turned around someone was offering it. A particularly menacing fellow offered my some pineapple kush, by this time being as blasted as i was i politely declined but now and then he'd shoot me a look and i about bought some just to make him happy. Another Rasta held a half dozen stalks of the Blue Mountain sensi in one hand and a machete in the other, he smiled and in patois told us it was fresh from the mountain as he pointed with the machete towards the hills above the place, i have no doubt it was harvested from up that hill and the stalks were a sight to behold for an old head. Bob had moved back to this place for a bit after stints in both Kingston and the States, he built the little stone house and wrote the lyrics to Talkin Blues from a stone that was right behind the place, i laughed at the fact everyone kept sitting on the stone and facing the wrong direction, i immediately took a step to see what Bob was looking at, the opposite direction that opened up to the hills and valleys, a sea of green bathed in sunlight. After he became the world famous singer it to this little house where he would come to escape and think. (His main residence being at Hope Road in Kingston.)

While outside i had begun eating some of the ganja cake, Annabeth was laughing at me as she told two women from Philly to hold off on eating it until the tour was over, as i stood grinning at the guide and putting a nice chunk in my mouth she said, somehow i think you'll be alright though. Inside i started on the gigantic joint of sensimilla, a strong and heady strain, i listened to the Rasta and studied the photos and hand written notes from his children and grandchildren, from Rita and his mother, we filed into his tomb one by one, the once huge joint dwindling, i walked slowly around the cold marble, a lit candle to honor the Rastafari religion, the smoke drifting up, at the door you blow out your candle and leave it.

By this time i was so high i was lost in my own thoughts. I think everyone was as the bus ride back down was quiet. I gazed out the window at our descent from the hills and towards the lowlands and beach and nibbled at my piece of cake. The bus pulled into Scotchies and we got out for our lunch of jerk chicken and red beans and rice. There was no need to process the day, as the man once sang, he who feel it/ know it, it was a feeling that i took away, some might wonder how a man with such a cloudy head could see things so clear but that's how it was, things came into focus, things felt in focus... soon we were back on he bus for the short ride back to the resort, i kept my sunglasses on and couldn't wipe the grin from my face, the first two people i saw were the boyos who came running up the beach to give a saltwater infused hug... and that grin spread into a big smile...

5 comments:

savannah said...

What a bus tour! One thing that sent me back in time, the tour guide being "less than pleased" by the couple and their toddler on board. Another life time ago, we were at a party and getting higher, than you know, anyway, their little boy came wandering into this smoke filled room and at that moment, I passed the joint on and we got up and left. At the point, we realized that getting high and our hope for a family were totally incompatible. It was time. Things have changed dramatically since then! xoxo

Exile on Pain Street said...

$15 for a joint! That was a lid of shitty Mex when I was a kid. Do you remember that? I've got a few years on you so might not have been part of your reality.

For me, lost in my own thoughts because of weed always meant raging paranoia. People talk about weed the way a sommelier talks about wine.

Kono said...

Savannah- I understand completely!! and things have changed when it comes to my favorite plant. I haven't told the boyos yet that their old man is a complete head but i will someday if they don't figure it out first. I've always been open and honest about things with them, i'm sure my views on the (failed) drug war are diametrically opposed to those of the DARE set and law enforcement but i want them to understand and know the truth. That the legal drugs like alcohol (144x's more toxic than cannabis) and cigarettes are far worse and don't even get me started on fast food or Big Pharma lol!!! Thanks for stopping by... and hope you saw the photos below!

Exile-Did you see the picture of that joint below? two of them were about a lid except that this two puffs of this stuff got you higher than the whole lid, lol!! And the cure for weed paranoia is black peppercorns, trust me, it works... and yes some of us do talk about it like wine, i'm guilty of being one of them, i love the different properties, the various aromas and tastes and effects, i do use it medicinally as well and i know what strains work for what, when it goes fully legal i'm gonna be a bud-tender at the local coffee shop...

looby said...

I was more worried about whether the bus would fall off the cliff!

Makes me look forward to getting a vape machine -- those tubular things which don't take tobacco just the weed. A friend's got one and it works like magic. We usually end up in fits of laughter -- over nothing of course.

It's 6.30 am here and me and Kim haven't quite made it to bed yet. The day's bright and Groove Armada are playing on the CD. I wish we had some...:)

daisyfae said...

now that i'm retired, and never have to piss in a jar again, i've enjoyed visits to colorado and re-entered the world of the ganja. DAMN, the stuff being grown now is high quality! One hit and i'm indaCOUCH for an hour! Makes me a cheap date...