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Home  >  World  > Caribbean  > Jamaica

Social Profile

Food & Drink: Jamaican food is full of fire, taking advantage of pungent spices and peppers. Jamaican dishes include ‘rice and peas’, a tasty dish with no peas at all but with kidney beans, white rice, coconut milk, scallions (spring onions) and coconut oil. Another dish is salt fish (dried cod) and ackee (the cooked fruit of the ackee tree), curried goat and rice (spicy and strong), Jamaican pepperpot soup (salt pork, salt beef, okra and Indian kale known as callaloo), chicken fricassé Jamaican-style (a rich chicken stew with carrots, scallions, yams, onions, tomatoes and peppers prepared in unrefined coconut oil) and roast suckling pig (a three month old piglet which is boned and stuffed with rice, peppers, diced yam and thyme mixed with shredded coconut and corn meal). Patties are the staple snack of Jamaica (pastries filled with ground beef and bread crumbs) and can be found everywhere, but vary in price and filling. Waiter service is usually available in catering establishments.
Jamaican rum is world famous, especially Gold Label and Appleton. Rumona is a delicious rum cordial. Red Stripe beer is excellent, as is Tia Maria (a Blue Mountain coffee and chocolate liqueur). Fresh fruit juice is also recommended, as is Blue Mountain coffee, an excellent variety. Bars have table and/or counter service. There are no licensing hours and alcohol can be bought all day.


Nightlife: There is no shortage of night-time entertainment on the island that is the home of reggae music. Every town or village has some sort of nightlife, and there are regular street dances. Folkloric shows at larger resort hotels are held and steel bands often play. At least once a week, there is a torchlit, steel band show with limbo dancing and fire-eating demonstrations. Nightclubs feature jazz, soca, reggae and other music. For details of events, visitors should consult local newspapers. The Jamaica Tourist Board arranges ‘Meet the People’ evenings in various scenic locations through the island. Contact the Tourist Board in Kingston, Montego Bay, Port Antonio or Ocho Rios.

Shopping: Special purchases are locally made items and duty-free bargains. Crafts include hand-loomed fabrics, embroidery, silk screening, woodcarvings, oil paintings, woven straw items and sandalmaking. Custom-made rugs and reproductions of pewter and china from the 17th-century ruins of the ancient submerged city of Port Royal can be bought in the In-Craft workshop. At Highgate Village in the mountains, Quakers run a workshop specialising in wicker and wood furniture, floor mats and other tropical furnishings. Jamaican rum, the Rumona liqueur (the world’s only rum-based liqueur, hard to find outside the island) and Ian Sangsters Rum Cream are unique purchases. Other local specialities are Pepper Jellies, jams and spices. There are shops offering facilities for ‘in-bond’ shopping, which allows visitors to purchase a range of international goods free of tax or duty at very competitive prices. These goods are sealed (hence the ‘bond’) and because goods are tax- or duty-free can only be opened once away from Jamaican waters or territory. All goods must be paid for in Jamaican currency. Shopping hours: Mon-Sat 0900-1700. Some shops close half day Wednesday in Kingston, and Thursday in the rest of the island.

Special Events: The following is a selection of the major festivals and other special events celebrated in Jamaica in 2003. For a complete list, contact the Jamaica Tourist Board (see Contact Addresses section).
Jan Accompong Maroon Festival (celebration of the Accompong Maroons of Western Jamaica) Accompong, St Elizabeth. Jan 30-Feb 1 Air Jamaica Jazz and Blues Festival, Montego Bay. Feb Bob Marley Week. Feb 15 Sugar Cane Ball, Montego Bay. Mar-Apr Jamaica Orchid Society Annual Spring Show and Celebration; Jamaica Carnival 2003, Kingston, Montego Bay and Ocho Rios. Mar 28-Apr 1 Montego Bay Yacht Club’s Easter Regatta, Montego Bay. Apr Cariflora Festival, Kingston. May Calabash International Literary Festival 2003, Jakes Village. May-Jun Jamaica Air Carrier’s Invitational Golf Tournament. Jun Ocho Rios Jazz Festival; Portland Jerk Festival. Jul International Reggae Day; Reggae Sumfest; Best of Jamaica Festival. Jul-Aug Jamaica Festival. Oct Seventh Annual Treasure Beach Hook n Line Canoe Tournament; James Bond Oracabessa Marlin Tournament, St Mary. Nov Jamaican Film and Music Festival, Montego Bay. Dec Reggae Marathon and Half Marathon, Negril-Westmoreland.


Social Conventions: Handshaking is the customary form of greeting. As tourism is a major industry in Jamaica, the visitor is well catered for, and hotel and restaurant staff are generally friendly and efficient. Outside Kingston, the pace of life is relaxed and people are welcoming and hospitable. Normal codes of practice should be observed when visiting someone’s home. It may be common to see signs on the island referring to ‘Jah lives’, Jah being the name given to God by the Rastafarians. Casual wear is suitable during the day, but shorts and swimsuits must be confined to beaches and poolsides. Evening dress varies from very casual in Negril to quite formal during the season in other resorts, where some hotels and restaurants require men to wear jackets and ties at dinner. Possession of marijuana may lead to imprisonment and deportation. Tipping: Most Jamaican hotels and restaurants add a service charge of ten per cent; otherwise ten-15 per cent is expected. Chambermaids, waiters, hotel bellboys and airport porters all expect tips. Taxi drivers receive ten per cent of the fare.


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