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Archive for the Category "About Rum Cay"

Annuals are Hardy and Thrive in our Soil Jul 17

This was an article that was released in a Lifestyles article from the Nassau Guardian on July 24th. The following annuals can be planted and/or found in abundance on Rum Cay as well as the rest of the Bahamas. Please view the sources at the bottom of the post for the original articles.


Annuals are Hardy and Thrive in our Soil

Annuals are plants that grow, flower, produce seeds and die in one growing season. The quickest way to enjoy your garden filled with flowers is to purchase young annuals from your local nursery and set them out in your garden.

The following annual plants are hardy and will thrive very well in our soil.

Marigolds: There are two sizes of these plants — dwarfs which are eight inches high and giants, with large blooms and reach a height of four feet. They should be planted at least 12 inches apart and in full sun. Marigolds it is noted, have pest repellent qualities.

Zinnias: Grow to heights of two to three feet and should be planted at least 12 inches apart. The flowers are often referred as “cut-and-come again” and are excellent as cut flowers for your home or office. They should be planted in full sun.

Balsam: These plants consist of white or pink flowers, and should be planted in the shade. They grow to a height of eight to 24 inches.

Nasturtium: A delightful and fragrant flower to grow for picking and use in salads. These flowers require some shade during these hot summer months. The vinegrows from four to 14 inches in length.

Sweet Alyssum: Ideal for hanging baskets or as an edging flower. They grow to a height of three to 12 inches. The plants begin to bloom in six weeks, producing white, pink or purple flowers.

Petunia: In order to have masses of flowers all season, purchase plants from your local nursery. For the greatest show in your garden, get one color only and place them in a sunny place — 12 inches apart.

Sunflowers: Grow to a height of six to eight feet. The flower center provides seeds for the birds that thrive in your garden.

Verbena: These plants require full sun and should be spaced six to 12 inches apart. Plants can be obtained in pink, white red, lavender and salmon colors and are ideal as cut flowers for your home or office.

Biennials: Have a two-year plant cycle. During the first year, they produce leaves and the next year they flower beautifully and then die. Some of the favorites in this group of plants that give an abundance of flowers and color in your garden are Sweet William (Dianthus) which provide clusters of bright blossoms on six to 24-inch plants in various colors. Canterbury Bells, an unusual plant that is often called the “cup and saucer bell flower” because of the shape of its blooms, which grows to a height of four feet, with flowers which may be white, purple or pink; and Foxglove, one of the most stately of all flowers with spines reaching a height of five to eight feet tall. This plant grows best in shade and has tubular flowers in purple, white and yellow flowers which hang down like bells.

Planting guide for July

Flowers: Aster, cosmos, gaillardia, marigold, portulaca, periwinkle, salvia.

Vegetables: Celery, collards, eggplant, okra, pepper, spinach, turnip.

Grasses: Bahia, Bermuda

For help with garden problems, write to Garden Korner, P.O. Box N-3011, Nassau

Sources:

The Nassau Guardian

Solar Powered Lighting System for Airports May 14

Rum Cay’s airport has been included in a Ministry of Transport and Aviation agreement which will install new wireless controlled solar led lights to improve the sustainability of the island.


The Ministry of Transport and Aviation recently signed a $2,244,526 agreement with the leading provider of solar powered lights, Carmanah Technology Corporation, for the wireless controlled solar led lighting systems.

The airports that have been identified for the new lighting system are Colonial Hill, Crooked Island and Spring Point, Acklins; Staniel Cay, Black Point and Farmer’s Cay, Exuma; Congo Town and Mangrove Cay, Andros; Deadman’s Cay, Long Island; Sandy Point and Moore’s Island, Abaco; New Bight, Cat Island; Port Nelson, Rum Cay; Duncan Town, Ragged Island; Great Inagua; Great Harbour Cay in the Berry Islands and South Bimini.


Sources: Cipore.org

For more information about Rum Cay Airport: http://www.rumcayairport.com

Rum Cay Debut in Video Map the World May 11

Paradise is Mine recently released a new Rum Cay video on Video Map the World. Check out this link or watch the video below to view the newest video of the beautiful scenic images on Rum Cay, Bahamas.



 



Source: Videomap the World

New Pictures Jan 17

Marinas.com has some beautiful pictures of Rum Cay Bahamas’ Port Nelson Marina on their site: http://marinas.com/view/anchorage/222

I’ve also been collecting historical Rum Cay pictures on the web and receiving photographs that are emailed to me and adding them to a new photo gallery called: http://www.rumcayhistory.com/ with the help of Frazier Nivens, an ocean imaging/underwater photographer from the early days of Rum Cay who has a collection of images of Rum Cay, his website can be found at Oceanimaging.com, and Billy Davis who also has a collection of images from the island’s history. RumCayHistory.com will be a compilation of photographs from Rum Cay including a section dedicated to the H.M.S. Conqueror, a 101-gun Conqueror class screw propelled first-rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy. The H.M.S. Conqueror was launched in 1855, but spent only six years in service before being wrecked in 1861. The wreck lies in 30 feet of water off Rum Cay and is preserved as an Underwater Museum of the Bahamas. It is a popular dive site.

Another Video of Rum Cay Jan 12

I recently received a video of Rum Cay’s North Shore created by Fabiana Rota. There is a tract of land in the North Central Coast named Lord which will be the future home of villas on Rum Cay. Thanks for the video, Billy. If anyone has any updates, pictures of videos of the island, please email them to rob@rumcaygreen.com and I’ll post them on our website!

SpanishFlyTV.com’s Rum Cay Kiteboarding Videos Dec 28

SpanishFlyTV.com’s Jose Wejebe discovers more of Rum Cay with friends, Emily and Bobby. On the Northwest side in Flamingo Bay, they explore the ruins, visit with locals and find the time to do a little bonefishing and kiteboarding. His high quality video episodes will take your breath away at the beauty of the island.

Jose describes Kiteboarding as ” a new style of water sport where you’re flying a giant wing through the air and you’re on a wakeboard, and basically you’re using the wind with this kite to move you along the water. There’s this organization called Kitehouse that teaches out of Key West. Really it’s a group of kiteboarders who are instructors, and they take a ship and load it with kites, peoples and boards and go out to a flat in Key West.” Visit http://www.thekitehouse.com to learn more about kiteboarding in the Key West area.

Season 2 of Jose’s The Road Less Traveled video mini-series featuring Rum Cay:

Episode 1: Go Fly a Kite

The Road Less Traveled, Season 1 Episode 1: Go Fly a Kite
Watch The Road Less Traveled Season 1 Episode 1: Go Fly a Kite

After several falls and swallowing a few liters of the water off the coast of Key West, Jose takes his new kiteboarding skills to the azure waters of Rum Cay. Join him and Emily as they take advantage of the wind off the beautiful, deserted beaches of the Bahamian island.

Episode 2: Around the Way

The Road Less Traveled, Season 1 Episode 2: Around the Way
Watch The Road Less Traveled Season 1 Episode 2: Around the Way

Jose discovers more of Rum Cay with friends, Emily and Bobby. On the West side in Flamingo Bay, they explore the ruins, visit with locals and find the time to do a little bonefishing.

Episode 3: Work and Play

The Road Less Traveled, Season 1 Episode 3: Work and Play
Watch The Road Less Traveled Season 1 Episode 3: Work and Play

While we call Rum Cay a paradise, a tight-knit community calls it home. Jose’s friend, Bobby, shows the island through the eyes of those who work and play there.

Category: About Rum Cay  | One Comment
Rum Cay Shows Promise for Health Research Dec 19

Billy Davis‘ passion for improving quality of life and land development came across Dr. Gordon Chiu’s quest on the fountain of youth and longevity… Fate brought the great minds together through Billy’s son – Todd Davis – onto the Rum Cay Island. Dr. Chiu had searched the Caribbean seeking a place to conduct a firsthand study of the plant life found on an island, and Rum Cay was an ideal location to find a wealth of natural wild life and vegetation sources that could potentially be used for health, beauty, and survival living research.

Billy Davis offered to fly Dr. Chiu and his assistant Teresa to Rum Cay personally and to show them the beautiful beaches and natural beauty of the island. Upon first arrival, Dr. Chiu stated that he noticed the air on Rum Cay was substantially cleaner than his departure locations of Ft. Lauderdale and Nassau. Many believe the salt in the Rum Cay air attributes to its freshness. As a young scientist more than ten years ago, Dr. Chiu’s had done studies on salt water crops which can also be applied on the abundant and rich plantations on the island.

Under Billy’s arrangement, locals, Bill Shumacher and Kathy Smith housed Dr. Chiu in their beautiful beach front home that they once built with their own hands for the duration of their visit. The Shumacher couple, Bill at age of 75 and Kathy in her 60’s, who sailed around the world together, decided to become residents of Rum Cay when they set foot on the island 20 years ago.

Dr. Chiu and Teresa conducted a two week study on the island of the numerous plants and vegetation that grow wild in the bush. The study included sea life, fish, fruits and plant life with characteristics that could be extracted to create healthy living products. Dr. Chiu marveled over the large quantity of wild plants that can be found on Rum Cay which can be used for health and medicine, including one natural plant that he claims, the oil when refined, is worth over $1,000 per ounce. Because of Rum Cay’s private and desolate temperament, “there is an untapped reservoir of healing and natural vegetation and medicine found. Plants are uncategorized and not fully researched, and this island has an abundance of rumored medical plants that can save your life”.

During their stay, all of the local Rumcayan’s were extremely cooperative and have contributed to the Doctor’s research. Delores Wilson, a life-long resident and business owner of Kay’s Bar in Port Nelson began eagerly comparing plants and knowledge of Bahamian Bush medicine and sharing historical information about Rum Cay, and their families and ancestors. Dr. Chiu remarked to Billy Davis that he may be doing research for a book that would include Rum Cay and its historical background about Caribbean living.

The local citizens of Rum Cay also enjoyed taking Dr. Chiu and Teresa fishing. One of their fondest moments was when Roberto, a local Rumcayan father, drove the boat with one hand, held a cigarette and a fish line with the other, and stopped the boat every minute to pull in a fish line with a big fish on the hook!

There is an enormous overlooked significance of the study of plant life on an uninhabited island. The minimally researched plantation used by the Rumcayan medicine men and women could hold the key to unlocking cures as well as opening doors to substantial new research in the fields of health and medicine. The locals who live on the island of Rum Cay have never needed traditional medicine for colds or headaches, but instead extracted remedies from the local ferns, shrubs and evergreens. Through an interview with Maddy, a local medicine woman, Dr. Chiu estimates that she has saved close to $80,000 US in medication from the many years of using the local plants. Through proper research and characterization of the plant life and bush medicine, Dr. Chiu believes that Rum Cay has an untapped potential to develop cures to some of humanities deadliest diseases.

An example of a wild vegetation, Noni Fruit, which was been characterized to be native in south Pacific areas, was found in pristine quality and abundance on the island. Noni fruit has properties to inhibit cancer causing cells such as p56lck, and has other anti cancer benefits. The accessibility of the fruit in its raw form in Rum Cay’s protected environment is very promising to the future of preventative cancer research. Other cases include a shrubbery that has been used to treat sore throat and rhinoviruses. The oil from another bay shrub is excellent for the healing of the herpes virus causing cold sores and the class of rhinovirus causing colds.


A wild coconut found on Rum Cay

A wild plant found on Rum Cay
 

In the past few years, Dr. Chiu has visited over 42 different locations in the world searching for these habitats of untapped natural resources to conduct his research. These locations on our planet are becoming few and far between, however Rum Cay provides an excellent untapped resource for potential natural health and medical research.

  

About Billy Davis

Billy Davis was a two-term Arizona State Senator with decades of international connections. Today, he is a developer of land for luxury homes on Rum Cay, Bahamas as well as a charitable hurricane relief coordinator in the Bahamas. For more information, visit: http://www.billydavis.com

About Dr. Gordon Chiu

Dr. Gordon Chiu is an international health, beauty and skin consultant. His publications in aesthetics, science and wellness have been distributed in over 8 different countries. Recently, he served as a research scientist at both Merck and Pfizer where his contributions led to a patent and also a publication on drug discovery.

Gordon Chiu received his Bachelors of Science (Summa Cum Laude) in Chemistry at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1996. During his studies Gordon was a Howard Hughes Medical Fellowship Recipient and worked with Pfizer’s Drug Discovery team to generate a Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Protease Inhibitor Library. In 1997, Gordon joined Merck & Co and a year later, he pursued his Masters through The Merck Graduate School Scholars Program with Seton Hall University. In 1999, he received his Masters of Science in Chemistry (Summa Cum Laude). In June 2001, Gordon was the recipient of the M.D./PhD. Fellowship and his academic scholarship was awarded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Medical Scientist Training Program (MSTP). For more information, visit: http://www.gordonyourself.com

About Rum Cay

Rum Cay, first known as Mamana by the Lucayan Indians, is a small, sparsely populated island, located 20 miles southwest of San Salvador, and 185 miles southeast of Nassau (Lat. N23 42’ 30” – Long. W74 50’ 00”).   It is approximately 30 Sq. miles in size, 9.5 miles long by  5 miles wide, and mainly flat, but has a few rolling hills rising to about 130 feet. Settled by Loyalist planters during the 18th century, Rum Cay was once famous for salt and pineapples. Today, Rum Cay has a population of approx. 100, nearly everybody lives in Port Nelson where cottages can be rented. For more information, visit: http://www.rumcaybahamas.com

Category: About Rum Cay  | 3 Comments
New Rum Cay Links Nov 11

I’ve been scouring the web looking for more content and links to add to RumCayGreen.com and came across a few sites with information about its airport, the marina, more pictures of the fabulous beaches and of course, the development of the island’s green resort and spa! I’ll be posting some new content on the island as I hear about, but until then, enjoy:

And there you have it, a dozen new Rum Cay links, we hope you’re not too overloaded with new information. Do you know a great Rum Cay website that we haven’t listed? Let us know in our comments below!

Category: About Rum Cay  | One Comment