Unlike Friday and Saturday, our wake-up on our last morning in Jamaica was not marked by torrential rain. We were up at 6:45am and were at the restaurant by 7:15am. The Village was very peaceful at that hour. We enjoyed our last breakfast leisurely over lattes and were at the beach by 8:15am. I convinced Pam to don her snorkel gear and get in the ocean with me - thankfully she agreed! It wasn't a top-notch snorkeling spot by any means, but we did see a lot of different kinds of fish. We ended our beach time with a nice walk down the sandy stretch and then headed back to the room to pack and prepare to leave by the 11am checkout time. The last morning of vacation is always kind of sad, because you know full well you are leaving all the pampering and have a long haul, a late night and the stress of back-to-work ahead of you.
[Our last breakfast. What a peaceful spot! And great omelettes!]
[As we were sitting on the beach, this little crab came out of his shell and started darting across the sand. Small but mighty.]
[Ok. Just rocks. Nice rocks, though!]
[We ended our last morning with a walk. Ahhh... I'll miss the feeling of sand between the ole' toes!]
Turning out of the resort property onto highway A-1 towards Montego Bay, we planned to stop at the most famous of the Jamaican plantations -- Rose Hall Great House -- before returning the rental car. Rose Hall is one of the most popular tourist destinations on the island, so we were prepared for hoards of tourists there. Instead, it was practically deserted. We took the obligatory tour of the house with a guide, who knew her history well.
[Rose Hall Great House. Construction began in 1750.]
[The view looking towards the sea, from Rose Hall Great House.]
Rose Hall's construction was started by a plantation owner in 1750, who named it for his wife, Rose. To cut to the chase, it took 30 years to build and eventually ended up in the hands of a young lady named Ann, who had been raised by a voodoo priestess in Haiti. Long story short, she married and murdered three rich husbands in three different bedrooms of the house, pushed her maid off the balcony to her death, and at age 29 was stabbed in her own bed by her slave lover, who had helped her kill one of her husbands. Add to that countless beheadings and merciless torture of slaves on the plantation, and you have a place that has a horrible air of both death and evil. Ann was known as the White Witch, and accounts of her ghost sighting around the house are prolific.
[You need to read the above to understand the context for these bedroom pics. This is where Ann murdered husband #1 - strangulation. In all three cases, she told the authorities her husbands died from Yellow Fever. They believed her.]
[Where Ann killed husband #2. Multiple stab wounds. The blood was found in the walls as late as 1905.]
[And this is Ann's own bedroom, where at age 29, her black slave lover stabbed her to death.]
[The dungeon entrance. Oh, the horrible things that happened to slaves here...]
[And here lies Ann. Or at least, this is where Ann wonders the grounds FROM! (if you believe what the people say)]
And here we thought we were visiting a sweet ole' traditional plantation house!
We left Rose Hall and headed towards Sangster International Airport. By 1pm, we had gassed up the rental and returned it with none of the skanky ripoff 'damages' the internet had warned us about. Budget Rent-a-Car was a breeze. The same attendant who had released the car to us said, "See? I told you renting a car in Jamaica wasn't a bad idea!" We spent an hour in the Club Mobay Business Lounge and then boarded our WestJet flight to Toronto. Everything went well with the flights to Toronto and onward to Halifax, and we arrived home on schedule at 12:30am.
[Our Westjet from Montego Bay to Toronto.]
[The rare 'Super Moon' over the wing.]