Dominica Community Service
Putney Student Travel
 

About Dominica: The lush, mountainous island of Dominica lies between Guadeloupe and Martinique in the eastern Caribbean. The Commonwealth of Dominica gained complete independence from Great Britain in 1978. This diverse, impoverished nation reflects a variety of influences: Carib Indian, French, British, and African. The dominant language is English, but some still speak Creole and Carib. The Carib Indians are the original inhabitants of the Caribbean, and Dominica holds the last remaining indigenous population. The tropical rainforest, rivers, and waterfalls of the island’s rugged terrain are home to abundant wildlife, including unique native birds, sea turtles, wild pigs, and reptiles. The hot climate and fertile land provide an ideal location for fruit crops, and most islanders rely on some form of agricultural production for their living. Sugar cane, mangoes, cinnamon, papayas, yams, coconuts, bananas, and citrus crops are all grown around the project village.

 

The Project: Our group lives in the small town of Bense, tucked into the volcanic cliffs of Dominica’s northeast coast, where locals still do laundry, swim, and bathe in the pristine rivers that flow from nearby mountains to untouched beaches. Past Putney groups made improvements to the village’s simple school, painted the bus station, and taught reading and art to under-privileged children. The Government Council has invited us to return to continue work based on the island’s greatest needs. Students share in the life of this simple community, living and working alongside islanders to repave roads, run enrichment programs for local children, paint a community building and undertake agricultural and forestry projects. The group resides together in a local village house overlooking spectacular mountains, banana plantations and the sea. Neighbors often stop by with gifts of fresh fruit. Each day, several students help local women prepare dinner for the group.

 

Weekends: In the late afternoon and on weekends there is time to enjoy remote beaches and explore the natural beauty of the island. The group treks into the mountains to the hot sulfur springs of Boiling Lake, visits the Victorian capital of Roseau, hikes to majestic Trafalgar Falls to bathe in the mineral pools, and makes weekend trips to swim in the spray of spectacular waterfalls in the swiftly flowing Rosalie River.