Misc

In early April 2013, I was sick and tired of the Canadian winter that was dragging on and on and decided to book a ticket to somewhere warm but not too far from Montréal as I had DJ obligations to attend to four days later.

A friend suggested Turks and Caicos Islands, a British Overseas Territory, reputed for its amazing beaches and a short flight from Montréal, my homebase. A Turks & Caicos vacation is exactly what I needed. I actually should call it an escape or gateaway because it only lasted four days and consisted of two major activities: lying at the beach and racing around Providenciales, the major Island, on a quest to discover it but also feel wind in my hair.

I brought my Nikon D600 camera along — of course — and I managed to capture 780 images but to keep it manageable, I will only share a few with you, if you care.

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Turks & Caicos Islands is reknown for its world class beaches and resorts that are growing like mushrooms. I could go on and tell you about this island nation that is NOT considered part of the Caribbeans but I will rather let Wikipedia do all of the explaining.

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This mural is a painting of the map of the tropical island. As you can see, it’s all about beachs in Turks and Caicos Islands. I was in Providenciales, the most populated part.

See where the water is slightly turquoise? It’s not deep at all. I could have walked 3 good kilometres into the water and it would have only reached my knees. Apparently this is why hurricanes do not really hit this island as hard as it hits the others because by the time they get into that shallow water, they lose their force.

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Resorts in Turks and Caicos Islands are the most popular types of establishments by travellers. Why? Because they are all inclusive and you can just check in and never have to worry about anything else.

This is not my style of travel. I prefer to book a hotel and just explore the island (Providenciales, in this case). A friend advised Ports of Call Resort which was perfect for me. You will notice that they bill themselves as a resort but they’re a hotel and they should be proud of that fact. The rate was affordable because it does not have direct access to any beaches but a 3-minute walk did not kill me. It is Canadian-owned (like almost everything there!) just in case anyone cares.

I never used that pool for a good reason: why travel for hours to go to the beach then spend time in a swimming pool???? We have more than plenty in Montréal!

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Beaches of Turks and Caicos Islands are the reason why this is becoming a travel destination of choice by millions of tourists every year. No matter which side of the island you find yourself on, they are just breath-taking. The waves are not too big and the water is nice and warm.

If you are travelling to Turks & Caicos, travel agents and marketers will try to sell you on many other activities there. The truth is that there is not much to do there that you cannot do better in other islands. But their beaches alone are worth the trip. The one I attended regulary got voted the best two years in a row by the leading travel website on the Internet!

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The truth be told, Providenciales as a city is nothing to get excited about. As a curious person, I needed to check it out with my very own eyes. It’s a typical place like in every island except that it’s slightly pretty high-end which makes sense because this country is chock-full of people who left their rich countries to come and settle here which, I understand completely given how gorgeous it is.

Turks & Caicos Islands should just become an overseas Canadian state or territory given the sheer fact that everything there is run by Canucks even the electricity!

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While I loved Turks and Caicos beaches, I needed to do something else and on my way from a lunch, I came across this scooter rental place and I thought it would be pretty cool to rent a Vespa and just tour the island.

Initially, I wanted to do it by biycle but since I was short on time, I knew there was no way, I could tour the island in less than 4 hours.

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This iPhone 4S snap, shows me (JaBig) on a Vespa S50 ready to visit the island with my camera hanging from my shoulder so that I could make quick stops and take photographs of interesting places or people.

Yes, I did ride with a helmet on. It’s just that for this shot, I did not want to look ridiculous since the helmet that they had provided me with was too big and I looked funny with it on. And, no, I was not scared that my camera would fall of my shoulder. That’s what that strap is for. My only fear was that if I fell, the camera would shatter into pieces. But hey, adventure has its risks, right?

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I would stop, enjoy the scenery , take some photos and move along

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Turks and Caicos Islands is the capital of stray dogs in the world. I would list this as my only downer on this trip. Whenever, I stopped, they’d come running and barking and I had no idea what their intentions were.

My last objective was to get bitten or mauled so I would calmly get back on the scooter and move along. In this case though, I just had to wait for them to get bored and go bark at other interesting subjects.

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Riding a Vespa scooter under the tropical sun meant that I would get hot pretty quickly! My solution was to simply stop, undress, jump in the ocean to cool off and then hop on to the moped again and travel along!

Why am I wearing shoes you ask? I am smart enough to know that I would not want to make an emergency stop on a scooter and put my feet on the ground wearing flip flops!

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At one stage, I took a wrong turn and ended up on this deserted unpaved road. There is no way the Vespa Scooter was going to last 10 minutes so I got off and pushed it back to the nearest paved road.

Don’t trust any maps provided to you by locals. They told me not to trust Google Maps on my iPhone but it bailed me out more often than theirs!

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At one stage, I came across a group of people that were parasailing and they asked me to join them. I was tempted but had no idea if my travel insurance covered any risks associated with it so I politely declined, had a swim and “scooter-ed” on.

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This has to be the biggest home I have ever seen in my life. It is said to belong to a wealthy (obviously!) American celebrity. I went by scooter the first time and surprisingly missed it and on the following day, I finally saw it and from about 3 kilometres away, took a photo of it.

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More interesting sights from Turks and Caicos Islands…

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And of course, there is no way, I was ever going to miss the amazing sunsets!

Conclusion:

Turks and Caicos Islands is a beach destination. You go there to just be lazy and also enjoy the ocean. That is what I did. It’s not far from Canada and I will return there and I encourage everyone to visit it before the party people (yes, that’s me too! There’s a Club Med there too) invade it and completely trash it! I may have found my piece of paradise in the Americas…

 

 

Want to stay up to date with The Big Journey?

by JaBig on April 22, 2012

in Misc

Join the mailing list. No SPAM or other nonsense. Just one or two emails a months with links to photos, latest DJ mix downloads and an update about my fight against child hunger worldwide.

The Big Journey Mailing List

Close to 7000 people worldwide are signed-up at this time of writing so join them!

 


 

Jada is JaBig’s Big Journey’s 2008 Astro Black MINI Cooper S ready for an epic road trip adventure ALL OVER THE WORLD starting with North America (Canada, USA, Mexico).

As I wait for a few documents before the Big Journey, I have been taking some not-so-little road trips which are for pleasure and to put my 2008 MINI Cooper S that will take me all over North America (and the rest of the world if it can handle it!).

I don’t have a camera tripod yet to take self-portraits on my world tour by car but I guess taking automobile photographs is another way of saying “JaBig was here!”

From Saturday October 8th till Sunday October 16th, I road tripped like nobody’s business clocking over 2500 KMs (1600 Miles) in a week!

Here is a route map and some photographs of Jada’s (the Mini Cooper) weeklong adventure across 3 US states and 2 Canadian provinces and countless of cities highways and sometimes tricky back roads.

To find out all about Jada, the MINI Cooper S, check out its official website :)

Feuille de Route

View Larger Map

Meet Jada Coopers

Mont-Tremblant (Québec, Canada)

Lune de Jade & Jada in Mont-Tremblant
(because every car photograph needs a beautiful Asian model :) – Inside joke pro-politically-correctness-people, so relax!)

Jada & Friends in Mont-Tremblant
(Ready for the trip back as I had to attend my DJ gig and we were running late. I promise we did not race! :) )

Gansevoort, New York State
(A bathroom break stop on the way to Storrs, Connecticut. The only time I go to Mc Donald’s and other fast food joints is when I need to use their bathrooms. I also “borrow” some napkins and abuse of the free Wifi to really take advantage of the situation!)

Storrs, Connecticut
(I was visiting a good friend who’s also a DJ. Get this… she’s completing a PHD in Medieval Studies at University of Connecticut!)

On New York State Thruway Rest Area - Little Falls, New York State
(Had to take a Wifi pit stop along the highway from Storrs to Ottawa. I kinda needed to retrieve the exact addy of where I was going!)

Lowville, New York State 
(I was flooring it along some backroads on my way to Ottawa – my sister was expecting for dinner and I hate being late for dinner – when in my rear view I saw a chopper. Yes, a helicopter! I slammed on the brakes, busted a crazy u-turn – the MINI’s low centre of gravity allows for some daredevil stunts, posed the car for a photo, snapped away, go back in the car, pulled another U and was on my way. Total time? Less than 3 minutes!)

Maple Ridge Wind Farm in Lowville, New York
(I saw the windmills from 50 kilometres away and they just kept getting bigger and bigger. I had never seen a windmill up close and personal in my life so I decided to veer off the course and just drive towards them. I ended up in front of the farm. There was a sign saying “No trespassing”.  I may have or may have not chosen to ignore this sign, only God knows, but I had my “stupid Canadian tourist who only speaks French and no word of English who did not see/read the sign” script rehearsed in my head just in case some sort of machine-gun yielding mercenaries appeared in the horizon!)

Copenhagen, New York State
(Don’t ask me why — I have no idea — why I love these silo thingies or whatever their proper name is. I drove by a gazillions and could not find one that was close enough to the road to take a photo next to. When I saw this, again I stood on my brakes and since I knew that no policeman — peace officer, sorry! — would be there as the town has like 600 people, I simply reversed carefully aligned Jada the MINI to these two rockets, crossed the street of cars racing by at 100 KM/H and took some photos.)

North Watertown Cemetery, Watertown, New York State
(Someone I have read about is resting there so since I was passing through, I decided to pay my respects)

Ottawa
(I was visited family and while I was in town did super secret shopping for the trip)

Fassett, Québec
(I like cathedrals and churches and on Quebec’s backroads — I was driving from Ottawa to Montreal through little streets as opposed to the faster yet boring highway — there are so many. This one was so cool that I pulled over and took some photos!)

Fassett, Québec
(This must be a store — Had other things to bother about than figure out what they were selling. I found it cool so I u-turned and took photos. It was Sunday so this was a DEAD town. Most of the little towns I crossed where empty. In this particular town, I saw not even a single soul! It felt creepy so in this photo, the engine is still running so that should have something weird jumped out, I would have jumped back in the car and got myself out of there in a hurry!)

Somewhere between Ottawa and Montreal
(In this photo, I almost got hit by a car as I was calmly in the middle of the street — this is a mini-highway, I should stress! — focused on getting the perfect shot that when I heard oncoming traffic, I thought I was off the road. What I found odd is that these people did not even hoot but waited for me to finish waved, smiled and drove along. Ô Canada! How you amaze me all the time!)

Saint-Lazare, Quebec
(Don’t ask me what I am doing in the middle of a real life forest!)

Sherbrooke, Quebec
(It’s my third time in this city and I have to admit that it’s pretty rare that I find nothing interesting to say about a particular destination. To be fair, it may perhaps due to the fact that all 3 times, the weather was whack and I was running on less than 3-hours of sleep. I shall return here on my tour and investigate the city further.)

 

So that was a week on the road. I really enjoyed myself and I cannot wait for this tour to kick-off at long last. It’s going to be epic and with this sports car, the driving will be divine as long as I stay on the roads. Anyway, the worst roads in North America are in Québec so if I fare well here, I will do great everywhere else!

By the way, like said earlier, Jada Coopers has its own blog. If you’re a Mini Cooper owner or enthusiast, check it out!

JaBig’s Tribute to Montréal DJs

by JaBig on October 7, 2011

in Misc

As JaBig sets for his DJ world tour by car to fight child hunger, he takes a moment to salute all the Montréal DJs met in his 8 wonderful years in Canada’s coolest city.

On Wednesday 22nd of June 2011 while on my East African pre-Big Journey tour, I visited the United Nations World Food Programme‘s School Meals project in Mathare, a slum or shanty town in Nairobi (Kenya) with a population of approximately 500,000 people.

Mathare in Nairobi Kenya

(Photograph by indymedia.ie)

Rose Ogola, public information officer at WFP Kenya took me to Mathare Outreach, a school that provides free education to hundreds of children who reside in the slum.

A little background of Mathare is in order, to better understand the importance of the crucial role played by Mathare Outreach and the United Nations World Food Programme:

The population of Nairobi, the capital city city of Kenya is estimated at 4million people of which approximately 55% live in the informal settlement (slums).

People in Mathare live in abject poverty with no functional utilities; no clean water , no sewage system and limited access to electricity. They live in shacks made of mud, bits and cardboard and rusty corrugated iron.

Over 90% of the household are headed by single women, many of whom have been in abusive relationships. While mathare valley is often associated with a community rife with violent crime, prostitution, illegal alcohol and drugs, it is also a community of people struggling to improve their lives, educate their children, and live with dignity.

Source: Mathare Outreach 

You can imagine that Mathare Outreach is a beacon of hope for the hundreds of children who attend the school as education is what will allow them to break out of the poverty cycle thanks partly to WFP’s meals.

JaBig in the Mega Kitchen

(I am not the greatest cook but I can stir. It felt as if I was a captain and was rowing a large ship!)

The United Nations World Food Programme provides one hot, balanced and yummy meal every school day to every child at the school. This directly impacts the community in a big way:

1) Hungry children are fed (sometimes this is the only meal of the day that they will have since their parents may not have the means to feed them. I even heard of a story of some children hiding their school meal to take home to share with non-schooled siblings).

2) Children get an education that will allow them to have a future out of the slums.

3) Girls are sent to school instead of staying at home working which gives them an equal chance with boys.

Lunch is Served!

More?

More of that yummy food!

I was very curious to taste the lunch which is a “meal of bulgar wheat, peas, vegetable oil fortified with vitamins and cooked in iodised salt” (source).

I can attest that the meal is yummy and filling! I only had half a cup at lunchtime with the kids but until dinner time, my stomach was still full.

Can't wait!

I always fear that the food given to people in distress or in extreme poverty may be not so appetizing but I really enjoyed it and even was caught scooping in one little girl’s plate as the food was so yummy!

Is your food as good too?

(I pulled the sneaky stunt — that I have perfected all these years on my lovely sisters — of asking if her food was as good as mine while helping myself :) — Note the amusement on the security detail’s faces in the background.

Yes, those are machine guns. I know nothing about firearms so cannot tell you which models they’re packing but I would not want to know in the first place!)

I was able to meet some children and speak with them and even did the obligatory “ask children a — what did you learn today? — question” but I chose the wrong topic: Mathematics, a subject I am useless at. I asked a child to solve a division and when he did, I could not tell if he was right or wrong because I don’t remember how to that manually.

Luckily, my iPhone’s calculator came to the rescue!

While having lunch, I also spoke to two individuals whose stories were very important to me.

Millicent Awuor Odhiambo and Michael Kyalo are two Mathare Outreach graduates who eventually came back to the school as teachers. I asked them (separately) how important the school meals were to them and they both said that it had played a great role in their education as they were able to focus and do well at school (think about it: have you ever tried to do anything on an empty stomach?).

Millicent Awuor Odhiambo

Michael Kyalo

Here’s a short video of Millicent explaining the School Meals in her life shot while I was visiting Mathare Outreach:

Then I asked them why they came back to the school given the fact that with the education they’d had they could have gone on to work for big corporations and make tons of money. Again the answer was unanimous: they wanted to give back to the school that helped them break out of the poverty cycle but they also wanted to help their community.

I also asked them if they were on Facebook, a question I cheekily ask everyone I meet on my travels. Judging by their reactions they did not expect that one (they get many international visitors and I noticed that some of their answers were nicely rehearsed to please these donors which is why in situations like these, I like to throw some curveballs to get the real answers :) ) as I told them that I genuinely wanted to keep in touch.

While at Mathare Outreach, I also got to answer questions and pose for photographs as Billy Muiruri, a journalist and Anthony Njoroge, a photojournalist for Nation, Kenya’s largest newspaper were preparing a feature about me set to appear in the Saturday edition, one of the widely circulated edition.

The Nation

(Full article: A taste of a DJ’s epic journey to feed world)

At the end of the trip, I took home my red cup that I had my lunch in as visual souvenir of my fascinating tour but also as a visual symbol that I will use on my 7 year journey around the world as I ask the world to fill the cup to fight child hunger worldwide. You may read about my personal adventures in Ethiopia and Kenya.

Boys Being Boys

(My friend and I were chatting about the usual stuff guys chat about while enjoying our delicious lunch when the camera lady surprised us and took a photo of us when we least expected it hence the “caught-0ff-guard/mouth-full-of-food” stare)

A great thank you to:

- Julie Marshall from WFP Canada who organised the tour a week prior (I am the king of last minute requests!). I needed to see things with my very own eyes to better tell the world the importance of your agency’s wonderful work worldwide as I circumnavigate the globe for 7 years.

- Rose Ogola from WFP Kenya to take me on the tour and share the photographs of the afternoon with me (all images except for the first one are copyright Rose Ogola/WFP Kenya). Since I am the world’s most unprofessional person, I made her “blush” when I asked her rather personal questions. Sorry about that but hey, that’s what you get with us Monteralers :)

- The staff at Mathare Outreach for patiently answering my billions of questions and politely smiling and laughing at my jokes

- The children at Mathare Outreach for the warm welcome, the lovely songs and for allowing me to hang out with you all. When I drive by you will be all grown up so hope you remember me! Keep that inner joy and those happy faces. I tell you the honest truth: kids in North America are not as full of life as you are…

- The Nation team for the great feature in your newspaper. I appreciate the kind words. But! Did we have to advertise to the world that I am a skinny, err… slender, person? :)

- The security detail for watching over us. You guys never added me on Facebook! What’s up with that?

- Last and foremost to YOU dear reader, friend or supporter who will be so kind as to donate as little as 25 cents to support the World Food Programme and I in our joint fight against child hunger worldwide. Please, help fill the cup! Oh by the way, please feel free to share the link on your Facebook wall! Thanks ;)







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